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[QUOTE=Alliwantislove;2056939]Just curious. Whatever it means to "get naturalized" I assume you did not take the test and go through the swearing in ceremony that green card holders go through when they become citizens. Right?
Thanks, Bob.[/QUOTE]No, I was 6 months old. We went in front of a judge who according to my dad asked me questions. LOL. My dad answered for me.
At the time in the 1960's they were told I could hold dual citizenship till I was 18 and would then have to choose.
Don't know if law has changed or they got bad Intel.
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[QUOTE=Wolf662;2056686]I was born out of the country to 2 American parents and still had to get naturalized.
Since the US does not allow dual citizenship I think she could choose to be Colombian from her mother side if she wanted and still be eligible to visit her US father?[/QUOTE]She has to have a cedula and Colombian passport to re-enter Colombia if she is a Colombian citizen. I know this because on the way from Miami I was sitting next to a US / Colombian couple who told me they don't enter with their US passports.
Nice people too. The dude kept making jokes about me being a sex tourist which was uncomfortable but otherwise good conversations, hahaha.
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[QUOTE=Rodeo9112;2056700]Of course this all assumes she has proof that she is the child of an American citizen. If the father is not doing his part to claim her, it can be very difficult for the foreign-born person to prove just sanguinis (by blood) citizenship.[/QUOTE]If she does not have cooperation from both parents or her American parent's name is not on the birth certificate then I can imagine it might be impossible. In my case my name is on my daughter's birth certificate and her mother willingly wrote the letter stating financial support etc. I also had tons of photos showing us together and receipts from WU showing the money sent for financial support and emails etc.
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[QUOTE=Wolf662;2056686]I was born out of the country to 2 American parents and still had to get naturalized.
Since the US does not allow dual citizenship I think she could choose to be Colombian from her mother side if she wanted and still be eligible to visit her US father?[/QUOTE]What I meant to say is that visas are difficult to get so she probably won't get one and it would be easier for her to just apply for a USA Passport because she is a USA Citizen at birth.
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[QUOTE=Wolf662;2056686]I was born out of the country to 2 American parents and still had to get naturalized.
Since the US does not allow dual citizenship I think she could choose to be Colombian from her mother side if she wanted and still be eligible to visit her US father?[/QUOTE]Depending on when and where you were born, there used to be (still are, actually) some very particular rules in determining derivation of citizenship. Things like, if you were born before X date in 1951, your American father must have spent X number of years present in the US after age 14, and affirmatively legitimized you as his child, whereas if the mother was the US citizen, she only needed to spend why years present in the US after age 7. I believe there is still a requirement that if a child of a US citizen is not sponsored for derived citizenship by age 18 or 21, then he or she has to take a different, more complex route to derive their US citizenship.
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[QUOTE=JamesPearle;2056613]Wow. A woman "dressed so slutty I didn't want to walk back to the hotel with her". I wish you had gotten a picture.[/QUOTE]Yeah I am curious just how slutty she was dressed. My Conejitas girlie came to my hotel dressed like this:
Too slutty or just right?
LOL- I am in the just right boat.
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The US does allow dual citizenship. Some US citizens choose to renounce their US citizenship, usually for tax reasons. Being born in the United States equals USA Citizenship. If you are not born in the USA, even if one or both or your parents are USA Citizens, does not constitute citizenship but it does facilitate getting it. Consult the USA State Department web site for clarification.
[QUOTE=ElMechanico;2056904]Uhhhh. What? I know several people that hold US & another countries passport & are considered 'Dual Citizens'.
El Mechanico.[/QUOTE]
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[QUOTE=Wolf662;2056686]Since the US does not allow dual citizenship I think she could choose to be Colombian from her mother side if she wanted and still be eligible to visit her US father?[/QUOTE]The US neither allows nor disallows dual citizenship. You can have any other citizenship that you want, but once you pledge allegiance (go through the process of naturalization) to the US, you are considered a US citizen, and the US no longer recognizes any other citizenship.
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[QUOTE=Manizales911;2057074]If she does not have cooperation from both parents or her American parent's name is not on the birth certificate then I can imagine it might be impossible. In my case my name is on my daughter's birth certificate and her mother willingly wrote the letter stating financial support etc. I also had tons of photos showing us together and receipts from WU showing the money sent for financial support and emails etc.[/QUOTE]These days, it's almost a given that they will require DNA test to issue a US passport if they have any doubt.
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[QUOTE=Wolf662;2057109]Yeah I am curious just how slutty she was dressed. My Conejitas girlie came to my hotel dressed like this:
Too slutty or just right?
LOL- I am in the just right boat.[/QUOTE]She had a miniskirt which she pulled up over her belly button. You could see her ass cheeks as she walked around. She wore a tank top along with it. I don't think she was wearing any underwear. It was bad.
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[QUOTE=Wolf662;2057109]Yeah I am curious just how slutty she was dressed. My Conejitas girlie came to my hotel dressed like this:.[/QUOTE]Gosh....
I would not bring her with me to the Christmas Dinner with parents and relatives, introducing her as my old good friend just arrived in town from Colombia. :D
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[QUOTE=BlackPage;2057286]Gosh....
I would not bring her with me to the Christmas Dinner with parents and relatives, introducing her as my old good friend just arrived in town from Colombia. :D[/QUOTE]There's a difference between a woman in a one piece dress or denims and a woman who is barely covering her skin and showing everyone the bottom half of her naked ass. The latter I don't feel comfortable walking with. That's one reason I go to Colombia. Hookers tend to have taste.
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[QUOTE=YippieKayay;2057295]There's a difference between a woman in a one piece dress or denims and a woman who is barely covering her skin and showing everyone the bottom half of her naked ass. The latter I don't feel comfortable walking with. That's one reason I go to Colombia. Hookers tend to have taste.[/QUOTE]I'm not so sure it's that the hookers have taste. It's that the regular women dress like Wolf662's example all the time. I saw a couple dressed like that at the Migracion office the other day.
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Again?
Too much Chit Chat in this thread again.
It is supposed to be about the chicas and places they are in.
[url]http://www.internationalsexguide.info/forum/showthread.php?3873-Medellin-Chit-Chat-Thread[/url]
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[QUOTE=Rodeo9112;2057107]Depending on when and where you were born, there used to be (still are, actually) some very particular rules in determining derivation of citizenship. Things like, if you were born before X date in 1951, your American father must have spent X number of years present in the US after age 14, and affirmatively legitimized you as his child, whereas if the mother was the US citizen, she only needed to spend why years present in the US after age 7. I believe there is still a requirement that if a child of a US citizen is not sponsored for derived citizenship by age 18 or 21, then he or she has to take a different, more complex route to derive their US citizenship.[/QUOTE]You are 100% correct.