If you are a foreigner marrying a US citizen, then no you are not a US citizen.
Marriage to a citizen does normally give you "permanent resident" status for the duration of the union, and qualifies you for certain paths to citizenship, but it's not automatically granted.
That depends on where you settle in. If you settle into a place that would make you a citizen, then you're a citizen. If you settle into a place that wouldn't make you a citizen, then you're not a citizen.
If you are asking if you marry an illegal immigrant then they wouldn't be deported. If fact its their ticket to the USA. If you are a foreigner and have a child here that child no matter your citizenship is a US citizen. Its why "they" hop the border and have kids. The mother then has access to the US because the child is a citizen. If you're short on cash, marry one. Sometimes they'll pay you.
Not immediately. There is usually a whole lot of paperwork to do before this happens, and they can always turn down your application should they think it was in any way a bit suspicious.
Marrying a U.S. citizen will get you a two-year spouse visa. After two years of marriage you can apply for citizenship. Contrary to popular belief, you don't automatically become a citizen.
yes, it speed up the process dramatically.
No.
I believe that you're guaranteed a citizenship when you marry a citizen, but being an illegal complicates the matter.
You can become a citizen just like any other immigrant. Having family who are US citizens might make it easier, though.
Go to the local INS office and explain and fill in the paperwork. It is easier than doing online.
No, it is more difficult.
Your best bet is to get married in U.S make sure to get all proper documents,like visa passport and You'll be good to go!
Your incoherent question has two discernible parts. First, can a former Nazi become a citizen of the United States: the answer is, generally, no. Particularly if the Nazi was guilty of war crimes during the war, he or she cannot become an American citizen or even travel here because laws prohibit this. Second, how does marriage affect or change citizenship: It depends. Marriage alone does not confer citizenship. By marrying an American it can become easier in most cases to become an American citizen, but it is by no means automatic. I suspect you have one more question in mind, but your question isn't coherent enough to decipher what you mean to ask.
I have more of a comment: I noticed in my research that it seems harder for a person who was brought here as a child when they had no say than for and adult who is here illegally. Why are there more ways for a CAnadian to be here legally than a Mexican national. Especially, ones brought here as children.
It would probably be easiest in the country where you were married. Also, if everybody is in agreement, get an "uncontested" divorce. They are much easier and cheaper.
No it will not be easier to get a green card. And how did they illegally marry? If they were issued a marriage license, and they did not lie on the application, they are legally married.
yes, apply as a single person that way when you marry your fiance you are an American citizen and it will make it easier to get him a green card.
Anyone can become an Israeli citizen except for an ethnic Palestinian who did not live within the Israeli borders in 1949 or is not in the annexed territories (like the Golan or East Jerusalem). This caveat is due to the sensitive political nature of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. In fact, Palestinians are the single largest Israeli citizen group after Jews. It is far easier for a Jew to become an Israeli citizen, than a non-Jew, but this is typical of countries in the region which give individuals of the dominant ethnicity from abroad to become citizens. (Armenia, Lithuania, Poland, etc. have this rule as well.) There is criticism that the inequality of citizenship process times is problematic, but it is much easier for a Muslim or Christian from abroad to become an Israeli citizen than it is for a Jew or Christian from abroad to become a Moroccan or Tunisian citizen and a non-Muslim can never become a Saudi citizen.
Yes, it is possible - no objections from the Romanian part; the problem is in the USA.