Well Thoreau basically says that a good citizen must be a law breaker. I'm not sure if I agree with his views and if I do, to what extend. He makes some valid points such as the value of being non-violent but I disagree with his idea that it is okay now, to break the law. It would work on people at desperate times but in our world today I completely disagree. It is way too drastic and chaos would flourish.
Full of rhetorical devices.
Full of rhetorical devices.
Apply at the nearest embassy or consulate of your country of citizenship.*Your case would not be approved usually if you do not have another citizenship.
NoSee US Citizenship and Moving Abroad.http://www.richw.org/dualcit/faq.html
If you have dual citizenship, it means you are a citizen of two countries. Your nationality would be the combination of the two countries you hold citizenship in.
If you get your American citizenship revoked, A.K.A expatriated, it is impossible to get it back.
This question is meaningless, it is missing punctuation. But the answer of the question "Would having only a birth certificate be absolute proof of citizenship, in the US, if your father was not a citizen and your mother did not meet the requirements for citizenship?" would be no. For example, Czech birth certificates have nothing to do with US citizenship.
United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
That would probably depend on:What country you are talking about.How did you get the citizenship in the first place.
The palindrome of "related to citizenship" would be "hip gnizi tic ot detaler."
Yes, but you would need a visa or have citizenship from a VWP participant country.
Yes only if that person is a American applying for dual citizenship in Brazil. A person from Brazil would be unable to keep citizenship in Brazil if they wanted US citizenship. because the US requires you to give up your citizenship to all other countries except Canada citizenship.