What citizenship(s) does Sup Forums have?

What citizenship(s) does Sup Forums have?
If you could get another citizenship or trade your current one, would you? For what country and why?

>American/Canadian dual citizen
>nope, although I might go for Italian citizenship for EU access.

Other urls found in this thread:

martensenwright.com/en/danish-law-allowing-dual-citizenship-in-effect-september-1-2015/
storbritannien.um.dk/en/travel-and-residence/family-and-legal-matters/dual-and-multiple-nationality/danish-nationals-born-abroad
twitter.com/NSFWRedditImage

Would go for Swiss.

>guns
>eurofag at the same time

Perfect combo imo.

2nd choice would be the U.S.A. cause why not

I have dual canada/us too, never used the Canadian one and never been to leaf land. My dad was born there but grew up in America. It's a shameful family secret

>dual citizen
the most jewish bullshit trick ever. WHY IS THIS EVEN ALLOWED???

Father was born in Canada, I grew up in the US but I have clients (software consultant) in Canada and renewing the work permits became a pain in the ass so I finally went for proof of citizenship.

because no matter where you are in the world, you have to file income tax returns to uncle sam, which is good enough for them.

and if Uncle Sam wants to hold you accountable as a citizen, no matter where you are in the world, they will do so.

>Uncle Sam

In practice very few people end up paying any amount of income tax on income earned abroad, since you can get an exemption for up to $101,000 USD on foreign earned income.

You can also get an exemption on any income tax you paid to a foreign country. If the foreign country's income tax rate is equal to or higher than the rate in the United States, you pay the US nothing; if it's less, you only pay the difference. (Practically, pretty much every western nation has a higher income tax rate than the US).

im planning on getting Italian citizenship just for the luls and to have a bug out destination

I'm trying to get a quote to have someone do the entire package because ordering all the paperwork, getting it apostilled, and certified by an acceptable translator is a huge pain in the ass.

I've also been told it's harder to do in the states and the difficulty of it varies by the embassy and the person you happen to get, and that the embassies generally demand a lot more paperwork. It can also take 3+ years to get an appointment at an embassy, vs. a quick trip to Italy to do that + have a nice vacation.

Kekistani

Ive got American/Russian dual citizenship
Pretty nice desu

'Murican. I can get Danish citizenship if my dad renounces his US citizenship which he's promised to do when he retires.

Israeli&American

American and Italian dual citizenship

Nice.

Have you had the Italian citizenship since birth? (Legally Italy considers it to pass down via blood but I mean, practically, have you had proof of the citizenship).

Dual citizens should be deported out of the US.
No take backs.

Impractical and unenforceable. Some countries don't even allow you to renounce their citizenships and they pass down by blood at birth so you have no choice in the matter.

>Dual citizenship
>Nippon

nope

Lithuanian. I would never get another citizenship.
In Lithuanian, citizen is "pilietis". Translated to English, it basically means castle's defender. My castle is Lithuania and my destiny is to defend it. I can't defend two castles.
Dual citizenship makes less sense than gender fluidity to me.

I know Japan outlaws it... Germany generally prohibits it except with other EU states and Switzerland (unless you appeal to the government with a good reason and they approve it. China doesn't permit it either.

If Japan changed their position on the matter, would you?

Pic relate. All I will ever need.

German passport. Strongest on the world.

Agreed. Luckily this might be a way of deporting all the pakkis who refuse to adopt British values from my country as many still hold dual citizenship even 3rd and 4th gen. They have them so they can go get their child brides (cousins) from the homeland and bring them back. Scum.

British, Australian Permanent Resident.

American.

I only have Mexican citizenship

Swedish and Polish
i will move to
Poland when shit hits the fan in EU

If the UK actually goes through Brexit it could be tough on your job prospects, depending on the industry.

I do software consulting. If I was in Europe I would be at a severe disadvantage for hiring without the ability to freely work throughout the EU.

So, in the US illegally, visa, or green card?

Australian by birth, Singaporean by passport, 6 foot 4 and white I love the pansy europes double checking

Serbian and Canadian. I'd like to trade Canadian for US

Portuguese and Zoo Monkeyland citizenship

>would you

I can't.
I'm a pure blood nipponese.
I have no connection/skill/heritage for get another country's citizenship.

>German passport. Strongest on the world.
Yeah, the German passport is pretty strong, 158 visa free countries vs. 155 on the US passport. I'm not sure if I would visit any of the countries that are visa free for Germans but not Americans but who complains about having options.

(Said countries are Bolivia, Brazil, Gambia, Iran, Paraguay, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Turkey, Tuvalu, UAE, Venezuala, Vietnam)

>So, in the US illegally, visa, or green card?

What now? No such thing as an illegal. I'm a world citizen, hombre.

That's fair--but if one puts in effort to obtain the actual document and goes through with taking an oath to a foreign country, they go on the list.

German/french. Lothringer Masterrace

Cortez burned his ships for a reason.

איך הולך חמאר איבן חמאר

Triple citizenship here, I have Italian, Irish, and American passports. They’re wasted on me since I live in burger land and thus have no reason to want to move to another country.

fellow danebro living away from the homeland.
Why do your parents need to renounce Danish citizenship for you to get it? That makes no sense

>German passport. Strongest on the world.
How can this shit be the strongest, when they hand it out like free candy, and it stands for fuck all anymore?

>be me
>get one of those fancy check card passports
>bring old passport
>"do you want to keep your old passport for nostalgic reasons? We can put a void stamp on it?"
>what the fuck, woman, why should i want to keep that with germany being in the current state and all
>"nope"
>into the trash it goes
Wish i could throw my new check card passport into the trash, too.

Well, that sucks.

Singapore is a nice citizenship to have if you're looking to get permanent residence/citizenship in the states eventually as the H1B1 visa (only for citizens of singapore and chile) is uncapped. (Regular H1B gets ~200,000 applications for only 65,000 spots, so basically ~2/3 of correctly filled applications are rejected).

It's not that hard to get in the US for work thanks to NAFTA, if you have a bachelor's degree and a job that is covered under the list of NAFTA professionals. The problem is that TN status is not dual intent compatible, so if you want to get a green card or US citizenship, you need to end up getting another visa (like H1-B or L-1) that is.

>world citizen
el oh el

If you're born in a country that gives it jus soli then often your birth certificate is the proof of citizenship, and your parents may get other documentation involuntarily when you are an infant or minor.

Practically to the US and other countries they care more about knowing about your other citizenships and travel documents so they can know what their citizens are up to. I'm a low risk traveler in US Custom's systems and they have records of both of my citizenships and both of my passports.

I mean US citizenship

>Flag
Never in 6 million years would I switch for anything else although would be nice to have dual citizenship in the US

Swiss and "German"
your mistake to think that Switzerland works. Switzerland used to be German-dominated state with French minority and literally oppressed Ticino Italian spics that knew their place before the 1960s. It was a proper Germanic state. The average native Swiss is not rich. Banks, few individuals (many of whom are not native) and corporations are. Switzerland is everincreasingly socialist diverse shithole. nu/pol/ thinking Switzerland is good is part of the problem and a clear LARP. Full of Portuniggers, Albos, Serbroaches and Italospics. Naturalized several nogs and gooks by voting as early as 1980s. Could have been homogenous, but no. Now some fucking subhuman naturalized tamil (descent of toilet cleaners with australoid blood) lectures the native races about possible African infiltration while wearing the SVP badge.

The only good option - kicking out Ticino(or better yet cleansing it from Italians) and repatriating non-Germans/Northern descendant French
Of course. All economic migrants are genetically inferior subhuman leech rats that move their ass to leech from a higher "average" built by genetically dissimilar people they have no relations to

Well, the Italian passport is nice because you can move freely throughout the EU for vacations or if you ever had work there. That's the main reason I'm considering getting proof of the italian citizenship by descent.

Danish law previously prohibited dual citizenship but they changed it in 2015.

martensenwright.com/en/danish-law-allowing-dual-citizenship-in-effect-september-1-2015/
>On December 18, 2014, the Danish parliament voted to pass a law which will allow Danes to become citizens of another country without having to give up their Danish citizenship. The new law will also make it possible for people who have lost their Danish citizenship by becoming citizens of another country to reinstate their Danish citizenship during a five year period, from September 1, 2015 to August 31, 2020.

My mate works at embassies on the networks. He voted to leave. Work visas may be a pain but shit happens. Personally, I have no desire to travel that far for work regardless, if the EU wants to be dicks about work Visas then that is their problem. Doubt they will. They are fucking communists though so it wouldn't surprise me. Hopefully it will collapse in 10 odd years and we can start again with a new union that respects national sovereignty. Doubtful, not the currencies are linked but we shall see.

Dad was born in Denmark to Danish parents. Put up for adoprion. Was adopted by a Danish guy and he Puerto Rican wife moved here as a baby whole family became us citizens and gave up their Danish citizenship.

I could have claimed it as a under 18 and been automatically approved but I didn't find that out until to late. Now the only way is for him to renounce US citizenship Denmark would have to essentially reissue his citizenship and by extension my sisters and I.

It makes no sense but I really wish I'd have known as a kid, seems like a pretty rare case given the amount of fuckery it took and contacts with the Danish embassy to find out how to do it.

I could get UK citizenship, old man's from Scotland. I would never live in the UK though so I don't think it's worth it

>that sucks

its not.
I'm not interested in another citizenship.

Shit my infos out of date. Better email this to the old man.

You are not welcome in Denmark, if you are not fully Northern Germanic. Ask NMR for the future reference.

I have American and Greek citizenship.

I wouldn't mind other European and Western countries.

I am of pan-European heritage.

>finnish
>new zealand would be nice

I have a Canada, USA, and English citizenship. I've lived in Canada my whole life, but feel pretty patriotic towards US and England.

I really couldn't imagine living anywhere else, even with the diversity. Once you grow used to life on the frontier, the idea of a safe country where you don't have to carry a gun all the time just seems kind of...lifeless. Maybe I could do one of the wilder parts of Russia or Scandinavia, where there's enough bears to keep you on your toes.

Well my mom's family came over from Germany after WW1 with one great grandad being swiss. So tough tits I'm about as white as any euro.

Ah right, bit of a complicated situation there then.
Yeah, the government has to ensure you're a legit Dane before they hand out citizenship, they have to avoid any muhammads that could potentially bring their 10 kids and 5 wives along with them

My gf is lithuanian cuz you so fucking pussies that doesnt know how to treat the 10/10 women that you have in that lovely country.

Wouldn't mind to be Mexican with spanish heritage of course. Love all Iberoamerica tho.

> Dutch/Norwegian
I'm fine with it

A single monolithic European/North American/Australian/White citizenship would be pretty neat if it was a minarchist government with a restricted immigration policy.

Yeah, if your father wants to get the Danish citizenship without naturalizing, he needs to do it before 2020.

You may not be eligible though, it depends. If you weren't born in Denmark and have never lived in Denmark (or another Nordic country for at least 7 years), you automatically lose Danish citizenship at age 22.

Your best bet is probably to talk to the embassy, because the fact that your father lost the citizenship and now has the option to get it back may change things.

That's always what damaged whores say. You're no different from a black man saying the same thing.

I've lived in the US my entire life, Canada is nice to visit and I work there sometimes but with
>higher cost of living
>higher taxes
>much lower salary for the same job
I'm not really tempted at all to leave the US.

Plus all of my family is in the US and I've lived my entire life here.

(Also Canada is wayyyyyy too liberal for my tastes).

Sadly you're a dying breed my friend.

i have british for glory and irish for easy travel post-brexit

Surup Sabonis

I would probably trade it for US citizenship. Mostly because of the first and second amendment.

Yeah kinda like everything that's good in this world.
what you mean nibba

>being Swiss
Canton? Anyway Danish nationalists don't want "Whites" - they want Nords and Danes

Just banana plant citizenship. American and/or Swiss. Guns in both; latter is perfect, and former is because I don't think burgers enjoy being burgers as much as they should, it's a great country despite the shitshow happening, and they could use another AnCap citizen.

Not only that, but naturalizing before September 1st 2015 in another country was an automatic loss of Danish citizenship. So his father wasn't considered a Danish citizen at the time of his birth. The new law in 2015 just leaves his father with the option to have the Danish citizenship restored.

Danish nationality law allows for automatic citizenship if a child is adopted under the age of 12 to one or more Danish parents, but it also generally requires someone born outside of Denmark to prove strong ties to Denmark before reaching age 22 (living in Denmark or another nordic country for at least 7 years), unless revocation of the danish citizenship would render a person stateless.

But due to the changes in the law they might reconcile that until recent changes, he wouldn't really have had the chance to spend time residing in Denmark as a child, so talking to the embassy is probably the best bet.

As long as one parent has the citizenship, the child does not have to have lived there.
Though the government does require you to show some connection to Denmark.
Så du må hellere begynde på at lære dansk

>or Swiss
We already have too much browns from Portugal. Albania, Serbia and Croatia. Danke. You'd be surprised how fucking enriched with your kind CH is. Arabia 2.0

Know a lot of Germans who came to the US for similar reasons (work at the American branch of a very large German company). If you're thinking about a move, good chance you could get in on a work visa.

I'm not Danish but the 22 year rule seems to contradict you.
storbritannien.um.dk/en/travel-and-residence/family-and-legal-matters/dual-and-multiple-nationality/danish-nationals-born-abroad
>Danish nationals born outside Denmark may lose their Danish nationality on attaining the age of 22, unless they apply between the age of 21 and 22 to retain it. Please see the information on the website of the Danish Ministry for Aliens and Integration (Danish only).
>Retention of Danish nationality may be granted in the following cases:
>1. If you are resident in Denmark immediately before the age of 22 and apply in Denmark.
>Continuous stay - where you have registered with the authorities in Denmark (Folkeregistret) - of a minimum of 3 months as being sufficient to meet this requirement. Residence in Finland, Iceland, Norway or Sweden for an aggregate period of not less than 7 years is equated with residence in Denmark.
>Or

>2. If you have spent time in Denmark before the age of 22 under circumstances indicating some association with the country.
>The total of all stays (holidays and other longer stays) should add up to approx. 1 year before age 22 (or a total of 7 years in another Nordic country), and you should have a working knowledge of the Danish language.

im a US citizen

Yup, that's what I was saying.
That second part is the 'strong connection' I mentioned, that's why I said you'd better start learning Danish to that other guy.

It doesn't say you have to live there, just spend a year in total

Depends on your industry but could be valuable depending on your occupation.

For an American, getting proof of the canadian citizenship as the first generation born outside of canada is pretty cheap ($75 CAD for the application, $10 CAD for the photos, get certified true copies of your birth certificate and canadian parent birth certificate, couple bucks in postage and you're set). Then the passport is less than $300 ($260 CAD fee to apply for a 10 year passport from the states, $10 for photos) so the end to end cost to get the citizenship and a practical document to exercise it is less than $400 CAD, which is around $320 USD with the current exchange rate.

The Italian citizenship is something I'm wrestling with. Getting it registered costs 300 EUR, plus getting to the relevant embassy (or making a trip to Italy), plus getting a shitload of documentation. Since I'd have to trace it back to a 2x great grandparent and all the relevant birth/marriage/death documents in the line it would be several thousand dollars.

Correct under the ties to Denmark, it's either
>live in Denmark for at least 3 months
>live in the nordic countries for at least 7 years
>or have at least a year of stays (for any purpose) to denmark before age 22 and show that you know the language

I know several people who came from Brazil who are currently on visa and others that went for green card/US citizenship and they are very happy here. Hard move though unless you have a good job and a company willing to pay to sponsor you for H1-B or L-1.

>We wuz emperors
>Lost the empire
>All ex-colonies are shit
>20% of the population carry jewish and moor dna
>Commieblocks despite having never elected commies
>Franco government brought back the jews.

10/10

>Taiwan
how the hell did you end up in Taiwan? were you born there?

How can a man be loyal to 2 states?

i like my country atm or to be specific our president
he's stomping out all the jews pawns here (jihadists, commies, degenerate druggies etc)

Ayyy

no i am white british. i am working here.

German and American

internationally I travel as German, because fuck Ami-fags are hated globally.

Pretty easy when the two countries are not at war.

Being a citizen does not inherently require loyalty to a country, by the letter of the law it does, but people born in countries can and do decide to go elsewhere, some naturalize elsewhere. If a country has jus soli citizenship you don't choose, if they have jus sanguinis citizenship you don't choose, if your parents decide to naturalize you when you're a minor in another state, you don't choose.

When you acquire US citizenship via naturalization you say in the oath that you renounce all foreign citizenships, but virtually none of the governments around the world recognize this.

Having a second, third, fourth, citizenship is not illegal under US law, although naturalizing in a foreign country after birth is considered a "potentially expatriating act" that could result in a loss of US citizenship (I would note that this is basically unenforced at present time).

My condolences for "Germans" you get in the US since it mostly cucks and hallway bootlickers
are you some mongrel born from US soldier or both German parents birthed you on US soil?

BASED
A
S
E
D

>two passports
>one japanese
ayyy

are/were you
>born before 1985 (when the Nationality Law was passed)
>under age 20
>over age 20 but Japan just didn't enforce the nationality law

...

What industry brings you to Taiwan?

Finance?

Overseeing manufacturing stuff for a foreign company?

>over age 20 but Japan just didn't enforce the nationality law
This one, basically.

f-flag
how do i change it?

I'd trade mine for a non-citizens passport. It grants free gibs and the ability to travel to both the EU and Russia visa free, in exchange for the ability to vote. But I can't as I am an ethnic Latvian, only Soviet occupants and their offspring can get those.

Ayyy. Sounds like the US in regards to people who naturalize in a foreign country at age 21 and older. By the letter of the law that results in a loss of US citizenship, in practice it's basically not enforced at all.

This lmao, I say let them have their non-citizen passport, who cares, it's not like you will want to travel to Russia more than once or twice a year for cheap booze or cigarettes

you don't tonibler. Economic migrants are utter runaway subhumans. always. No exceptions.
But why? Latvia will enter full ethnonationalist mode pretty soon and your status of a full blood is a badge of honor and nativity

I think new Zealand sounds nice, as a place far away to observe the collapse.

Other than that, dual-citizenship is for nations that like being subverted