Does living in a country make you a citizen of that country and visiting make you a visitor?
Answer:
Ya gotta declare at some point where your "home" is and where your allegiances lie. None of this dual citizenship crap. You don't become a US citizen without renouncing any and all loyalties to other nations. The way it used to be as I recall.
No. Citizenship requires a legal process.
Nope. We have 12 million people living here in the US that are not citizens. The citizens are just supporting them and their endless amount of kids by paying taxes.
no if you were born in a countery it makes you a citizen if your visiting a country it makes you a visitor but if your living in a country you werent born in than you are a imigrant.
Not really.. In America, if you live here after more than five years, you can be a citizen... The criteria varies for each country...
Naturalization makes you a citizen. Most countries have some sort of legal process necessary to be considered a citizen.
you have to apply to be a citizen of a country like the U.S...if u go to like Iraq they'll just let u in.
living in a country is just living...That doesn't make you citizen.
Visiting is just a visiting that's all.
No, living in a country does NOT make you a citizen. A citizen is a person who has been screened for illnesses and have passed tests about the country and has a desire to WANT to be a citizen.
Visiting is just that visiting...this can be years as in the case of illegal aliens.
Just because the illegal aliens live here does not make them citizens. Having a child here does not make you a citizen. All it means is that a person that is breaking the law (AKA criminal) had a kid and the taxpayer is FORCED to provide for the kid because the parents have broken the law.
That's part of the problem - they are ILLEGAL! What part of ILLEGAL is so hard to understand?
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