The right of the "common" citizen to keep and bear arms is enumerated in the 2nd Amendment of the Bill of Rights to the Constitution, as "NATURAL right" endowed by the Creator (all citizens are equal under the U.S. Constitution, there is no class system.)
They can get married in a court and the court can allow the Polish citizen free citizen ship
citizen participation and self-governance
citizen participation and self-governance
It depends on the countries they want to be a citizen of; whether they allow multiple citizenship or not. For example, one can have British, Canadian, America, Australian and Italian citizenship at the same time because all allow multiple citizenship. But, if the same person wants to become a German citizen, they must give up all five before doing so.
Yes
The government of the Philippines does not allow you to have dual nationality.
I'm assuming you mean illegal alien, so unless the illegal parent has gotten rich in America to pay for a WAAAAAAAAY better lawyer than the US citizen, most likely the citizen.
I highly, highly doubt it. In fact, almost sure that you could become a citizen. If they did not allow you to become a citizen, I believe that would be discrimination of some sort...
If you are a citizen of both countries and that their laws allow for a dual citizen then yes it is possible to hold both passports.
Two states that allow common paymasters are Rhode Island and New York. Also, Michigan, Minnesota, and Hawaii allow common paymasters.
Yes.
Once a person gets naturalized( Note:Naturalization) as a US Citizen, he/she cannot become a citizen of Taiwan as it is prohibited by the law of that country.