The District of Columbia, Porto Rico, The Virgin Islands, Guam and several other small possessions are not one of the states of the United States, but their residents are US Citizens.
Puerto Rico.
Guam
50-60,000 residents.
30 out of 50
The Constitutional minimum is one per state (50), and the maximum is one per 30,000 residents (10,247).
The 1960 population was 226,167 residents according to the 1960 census.
Residents
A Senior pass is $10.00 for a Lifetime Pass. It is for US Citizens or permanent residents who are age 62 and older. The Senior Pass may provide a 50 percent discount on some amenity fees charged for facilities and services.
I jus got one I have seen them for $100 I got it for $50
I took Economics of Health-Care in college and one belief is that socialism is where that all residents take care of other residents. The fact is in a socialist economy you do have a National Health-Care plan and National services to serve it's residents. But, the fact remains that the payment of these services do in fact come from the citizens themselves. It should be common knowledge that all governments run off the taxpayers money. If you want National/Social services of any kind someone has to pay for it. Money doesn't "grow off of trees". There are some countries where the citizens only receive 40-50% of their paychecks to pay for these luxuries. The second would be that all Socialist countries are "Neutral" when it comes to areas of World Affairs of Defense. You will find that these countries that consider themselves "Neutral" or "Socialists" refrain from International Affairs of War, belong to the UN.
All citizens were paid with 50 drachmas.
Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens but the territory is not a state, so they do not have full voting representation in Congress or the Electoral College. The island's residents can vote in the primary elections but cannot vote in the general presidential election. Decisions regarding Puerto Rico's political status and representation in the federal government are complex and ongoing.