We thought you spelled like dominican!!!!
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He makes excuses like a Dominican.;-)
We thought you spelled like dominican!!!!
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word of advice.. I know you have "studied" the USA a lot but dont give up the US citizenship
just yet...
word of advice.. I know you have "studied" the USA a lot but dont give up the US citizenship
just yet...
Well I am a dual citizen so... I think so? I'm not sure. :ermm:
Both DR and America allow for dual citizenship. I'm not giving up anything.
-by the Dominican government. See post #29.IF, you haven't applied for Dominican citizenship, I don't think you are a dual citizen due to the fact you was born in the US. Being of Dominican decent does not automatically transmit Dominican citizenship. The children of Dominican parents born outside of the country can apply for official citizenship once they turn 18. Once granted, if you was born in the US, you would be considered a dual citizen (US-DR).
this is one of the best postings i have read in this site for years. Soverinh, if you are ever in the country any time soon, please pm me so we can have a beverage together and shoot the breeze.
i spend my early mornings sitting at a beachside cafe, having a liesurely breakfast in peace and quiet, taking in an ocean breeze. it costs me pennies. to do the same in a place like NY would cost an arm and a leg. only the independently wealthy can eat in oceanfront eateries there.
So another Dominican with a self aggrandizing handle "Sovereign". That says it all. Someone who has not been successful in the USA. He remembers the last time that he was relevant, when he had a middle class childhood complete with maids and beach vacations. He has been able to scrape some pennies together to fly jet blue or spirit and has read some Che Guevara books. He should stay in the USA where he has a chance of success. If you cant make it there you are dreaming of lost opportunities in the RD where we eat our young to get ahead.
Thanks for the info. So I'd need to fill out the paper work then the next time I visit.IF, you haven't applied for Dominican citizenship, I don't think you are a dual citizen due to the fact you was born in the US. Being of Dominican decent does not automatically transmit Dominican citizenship. The children of Dominican parents born outside of the country can apply for official citizenship once they turn 18. Once granted, if you was born in the US, you would be considered a dual citizen (US-DR).
So there's a potential that I can keep both but its not guaranteed for one citizenship to cancel out the other. Still worth a shot.The U.S. does not exactly "allow" dual citizenship, it merely recognizes that dual nationality exists. The US gov't does not encourage it as a matter of policy because of the problems it may cause.
"A U.S. national may acquire foreign nationality by marriage, or a person naturalized as a U.S. national may not lose the nationality of the country of birth. U.S. law does not mention dual nationality or require a person to choose one nationality or another. Also, a person who is automatically granted another nationality does not risk losing U.S. nationality. However, a person who acquires a foreign nationality by applying for it may lose U.S. nationality. In order to lose U.S. nationality, the law requires that the person must apply for the foreign nationality voluntarily, by free choice, and with the intention to give up U.S. nationality."
>Projecting this muchSo another Dominican with a self aggrandizing handle "Sovereign". That says it all. Someone who has not been successful in the USA. He remembers the last time that he was relevant, when he had a middle class childhood complete with maids and beach vacations. He has been able to scrape some pennies together to fly jet blue or spirit and has read some Che Guevara books.
He should stay in the USA where he has a chance of success.
If you cant make it there you are dreaming of lost opportunities in the RD where we eat our young to get ahead.
that's your assumptions.
why do you insult a new poster even that you know nothing about him?
you are def the kinda dominican whom to know would be a reason to not visit this country.
Mike
I guess it's like when gringos write "grammer" or "should of".Is that phonetic, like when Dominicans say Feybooo ?
LOL
Well...the country wont get better until you can inject new thinking into the pool of meatheads that are in an oversupply here.So another Dominican with a self aggrandizing handle "Sovereign". That says it all. Someone who has not been successful in the USA. He remembers the last time that he was relevant, when he had a middle class childhood complete with maids and beach vacations. He has been able to scrape some pennies together to fly jet blue or spirit and has read some Che Guevara books. He should stay in the USA where he has a chance of success. If you cant make it there you are dreaming of lost opportunities in the RD where we eat our young to get ahead.
Well...the country wont get better until you can inject new thinking into the pool of meatheads that are in an oversupply here.
The problem as I see it the people are too defeatist which leads to the shortsided, corrupted, shortterm and lazy thinking.
now that is some sage understanding right there. meathead is too mild a term for some of these guys. just yesterday, my buddy and i were driving along a section of road with a junction , ostensibly controlled by a stop sign. this guy just went through the stop sign without even blinking, and we both had to come to a screeching halt to avoid a collision. i asked him if he did not see the sign, and his response was that he was turning left, therefore he does not have to stop at the sign.
people here have a strange sense of logic that is all their own.