Forum > Immigration and Visas

Canadian citizenship certificate

(1/3) > >>

utopiacowboy:
One of my kids was finally motivated enough to get the required Canadian passport photos so I was able to complete her application for her Canadian citizenship certificate. It came in the mail the other day and shows that her citizenship was effective as of her date of birth. The odd thing is that does not have her photo on it even though they require photos (and Canadian passport photos are a pain in the ass!).


Now if I can get the others motivated enough to get their photos taken. I've been nagging them about this for years.

robert angel:

--- Quote from: utopiacowboy on February 18, 2019, 11:37:26 AM ---One of my kids was finally motivated enough to get the required Canadian passport photos so I was able to complete her application for her Canadian citizenship certificate. It came in the mail the other day and shows that her citizenship was effective as of her date of birth. The odd thing is that does not have her photo on it even though they require photos (and Canadian passport photos are a pain in the ass!).


Now if I can get the others motivated enough to get their photos taken. I've been nagging them about this for years.

--- End quote ---

I know if I want 'just' Irish citizenship and an Irish passport it's about 520 EU or about $575 USD.

Other nations may differ, but via my late Grandparents, I still qualify for Italian and Ireland citizenship and PPs.

But one EU nation's PP and citizenship, makes travel, work opportunities easier across the entire EU. (While it still stands)

Not applicable to my kids though..

Other nations have different req's, but enough money alone will often legally buy you an official PP from a lot of nations.

Doing so can increase overseas employment options there as well.

""The first and easiest way to get a European citizenship & passport is through your ancestry and descent. You may be eligible for European citizenship by descent if you have parents, grandparents or even great-grandparents from Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Poland and many other countries."

utopiacowboy:
You are lucky, Robert, to be able to get EU citizenship. I would spend that $575 pronto.


Canada has mucked around with their citizenship laws a lot lately. One of my grandchildren even qualifies as a Canadian citizen but the other grandchildren born more recently do not. They tightened up on people born outside Canada whose parents were not born in Canada so now it's only one generation born outside Canada that can claim Canadian citizenship.

robert angel:

--- Quote from: utopiacowboy on February 19, 2019, 09:49:07 AM ---You are lucky, Robert, to be able to get EU citizenship. I would spend that $575 pronto.


Canada has mucked around with their citizenship laws a lot lately. One of my grandchildren even qualifies as a Canadian citizen but the other grandchildren born more recently do not. They tightened up on people born outside Canada whose parents were not born in Canada so now it's only one generation born outside Canada that can claim Canadian citizenship.

--- End quote ---

Yea, U.C., It's still a chunk of change to drop and maybe I dislike the idea of filling out the paperwork even more-- but it still , it does make a difference, especially in certain nations.

Ireland changes their requirements too. My kids used to qualify.

Not looking for amex black card snob appeal (that's really expensive) by having additional  PPs, but instead for convenience now and possibly more so, later.

However many nations now may roll their eyes, showing anti american attitude when you try and enter there, it still is overall the best 'card' to show..

A USA PP, is still (for now anyways) the best 'Don't f__k with me' card you can play entering most nations, and by long shot.

Granted it's comparing a so called "developing world" to a "1st world" categorized nation, but when my wife took her Filipino. PP carrying family members to China and Japan last summer, they had to stand in long, cattle gated lines, like Disney on a Sunday, then deal with sullen, distrustful immigration/customs a holes.

Meanwhile my wife, who obviously looks quite similar,  flew thru a much shorter line and was treated personally much nicer. Like because some silly blue. USA PP meant that her sh!t didn't stink as bad...

Of course once you're out of the airport, people will just look at, judge you and treat you according to your looks, skin tone, dress and only then fairly, on how you actually behave.

I think that still, for when the sh!t hits the fan, when you're in trouble abroad, be it arrested, accused,  lose your PP,  are in midst of hell breaking loose in any nation, the USA PP, with consulates and embassies all over, is still for now, Willy Wonkas Golden Ticket in and outta there.

A secondary PP from another great nation like Oh Canada, or an EU PP, is cool, useful to an extent, and maybe for a while, looks better. I guess a Swiss PP/citizenship would connotate, "I'm well off, politically neutral, let me be."

 I suppose a PP from the EU, in a nation your visiting, helps, is a start for employment, but there you'll still prolly need citizenship requiring a ton of time, paperwork and $$$.

So yeah, it's cool for efficiency getting through and avoiding the 'evil eye' at some airports.

Maybe given the ever changing political climate and possibly favorable taxation and living arrangements in other nations, there's 'some' potential benefit too. If not now, maybe later.

Crazy, effing world out there. Walls. Didn't China try that a while back?

For all the crazy talk of biblical doom prophecies of one global currency meaning the beginning of the end and more schlock, I'm not too worried.

Any worthwhile reasons to get Colombian or Mexican citizenship or PPs?



utopiacowboy:
The Colombian passport comes in handy visiting Brazil and Argentina. Brazil requires a visa for citizens of the US and Canada but not for Colombia. Argentina used to levy a hefty $160 fee for US and Canadian citizens entering the country but it's been suspended for US citizens. For Colombians it is free.


One of my stepsons used his Colombian passport to enter Argentina from Uruguay much to the dismay of the Argentine inspector at the border. She looked at his Colombia passport and after scrutinizing the pages, said, "You didn't use this passport to enter Uruguay?" He then held up his US passport and said, "No, I used this one." She was annoyed but she had to let him in for free.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

Go to full version