Absolutely NOT. It is very tough to become a US citizen. First, if you qualify (very tough), you become a US Resident Alien. Then 3 to 5 years later (if you have not committed any crimes) you can apply to become a US citizen.
Of course. African Americans are born in the US, so they are automatically citizens. To get more technical, if an African came to America and became naturalized, s/he'd be a US citizen.
The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution stated that everyone born in the United States, including African Americans, were American citizens. It was ratified in 1868.
All the people living in the Colonies became citizens at the same time, when the Constitution was ratified and the United States came into being.
Michelle Malkin was born in the United States to Filipino immigrant parents. Her parents were not American citizens at the time of her birth; they came to the U.S. on student visas and later became naturalized citizens.
When it came to the population of a state, slaves counted as three-fifths (3/5) of a person.
A play she did at her school, it became a one woman show after everyone quit on her, but then they all came through for her in the end
At the beginning of the city and of the republic, the working class citizens were called the plebeians. However as the city grew and newcomers arrived, the plebeians became part of the nobility and no longer the working class. The working class citizens were then referred to as the proletariat.
Um, when she was born? What do you mean? When she became a household name? Because that was after Fearless came out.
They pretty much took everyone who came that didn't have a disease, so 96% of immigrants actually became citizans
Everyone should know this!!!Well she spent her 6th or 7th birthday at an audition at Barney and Friends and she got in and Demi lovato was on the show and they became friends and tthats how sel became famous
continentals became worthless because people came to believe that they would not be redeem their bills for gold and silver coins
The number of foreign-born population who became naturalized citizens has declined by about 65 percent.