The people who lived before 1901 lived in almost every country in the world.
People who lived in 1901 would now be, uh, dead citizens. Sorry.
Anyone who ever lived, I would think.
For persons born on or after November 14, 1986, a person is a U.S. citizen if all of the following are true: # One of the person's parents was a U.S. citizen when the person in question was born; # The citizen parent lived at least 5 years in the United States before his or her child's birth; # A minimum of 2 of these 5 years in the United States were after the citizen parent's 14th birthday. So if your son's mother lived in the U.S. for at least 5 years before the kid was born, and at least two of those years were after she was 14, then the child is a U.S. Citizen.
it would depend on if your a U.K. citizen. You could also get a passport for the U.K., if your married to a U.K. citizen, and have lived there for more than 2 years
Obama is the only president with one parent that was not a US citizen. Both of Jackson's parents were born in Ireland and his father died before the US came into existence but he would have been a US citizen had he lived longer. All of the other presidential parents were born in what is now the US.
No. That would be discrimination, which is very much unconstitutional. A citizen is a citizen regardless of where they were born, and anyone who is entitled to live there (permanent residency) is implicitly awarded the same rights as anyone else.
It means it's a fake!!!! How would anyone who lived before the birth of Jesus know how many years it would be till He was born? And how could they have spoken English to use the abbreviation "BC" (before Christ) on a coin?
I'm sure you would be able to if one became a legal citizen afterwards.
You're asking, Can a US Citizen marry a US Permanent Resident!? What a funny question, but to be precise in my answer, YES! and YES, anyone can marry anyone as long as both the individuals are genuine, non-terrorists and non-criminal.
The same way anyone else would: you talk to a mortgage broker.
It depends- if the father and grandfather have lived in the U.S., then yes the child would be a citizen. However, if the father has lived most iof his life outside the U.S., then it is highly unlikely that the child would be considered a U.S. citizen- even though his father and grandfather were U.S. citizens. Example: Grandfather was born and raised in the U.S. [GRANDFATHER IS A US CITIZEN] Grandfather moves to France at age 20. Grandfather marries a French lady and has a son [SON IS CONSIDERED TO BE A US CITIZEN] Son has lived his entire life and at age 20, the son marries a local French lady. Son's wife gives birth to a girl [THE GIRL IS NOT A US CITIZEN]. This is true even though her grandfather and father were U.S. citizens.
Before departing for what would become the Plymouth colony, the Scrooby separatists first lived for sometime in the Netherlands.
He would wear a tunic and toga like anyone else, if he were a citizen, that is. If not a tunic and cloak. They did not have a special outfit for philosophers.