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#11
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"Thomas Schoene" wrote in message link.net...
Eastward Bound wrote: Just out of curiosity. Could somebody like me - An American - No Criminal History - Single male - 19 years of age ........Join the English Royal Air Force? Would that make me a British Citizen? No. http://www.rafcareers.com/thebigpicture/eligibility.cfm "2. To join the Royal Air Force you must at all times since birth have been a citizen of the UK, the Commonwealth or the Republic of Ireland. " There might be a little bit of a problem if you were born in the commonwealth but you place of birth is no longer a member. For example my girlfriend it Hong Kong Chinese has a UK passport and wasn't allowed to join her university's RAF Student Officer Corps. Reason given HK not in the Commonwealth (Maybe its because HK was not a CW member just a territory of the UK not sure...) This stance will exclude a lot of White Zimbabweans now but perhaps they would be allowed being white and all... Tom |
#12
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n the US it is possible for foriegners to join the military services and
that speeds up the process of becoming a naturalized citizen. John Dupre' Yes foreigners can join, but they can not recieve a commission until they are US citiizens. I think military service will speed up the time for citizenship. Ron Pilot/Wildland Firefighter |
#13
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![]() Why the double standard? Why the hipocracy? Why the predjudice? It's none of the above. The United States takes the attitude that citizenship comes with residence, not bloodline. Britain (and I think most European countries) take the opposite view. The child of two Americans, born overseas, does not automatically have American citizenship. He must spend three? years in the U.S. before his 21st? birthday in order to nail it down. Europeans would find this bizzare. I am an Irish citizen, with an Irish passport, because my father was born in Ireland. It doesn't matter that I was born in Massachusetts. Since the U.S. is a nation of immigrants, we accept foreigners in our armed forces and even allow their military service to speed the citizenship process. When I was in the army, a "Lodge Act enlistee" was a foreigner serving a five-year enlistment. He got his citizenship along with his discharge papers. This was especially popular (for both sides) with men from Eastern Europe, who were valued for their language skills. Today there was a photo on the internet of a protest demanding rights for illegal immigrants: BEING HUMAN IS NOT ILLEGAL, or words to that effect. Europeans would think this is nutty. I think it is nutty. But it is very American. Basically, if you can get here, no matter how you arrived, you can demand your rights, including the right to join the army. all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#14
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![]() The child of two Americans, born overseas, does not automatically have American citizenship. He must spend three? years in the U.S. before his 21st? birthday in order to nail it down. Wrong!!! The child of Americans born abroad is automatically a US citizen. All the parents need do is apply for a certificate at the embassy. My daughter, born in Germany has one, signed by the Sec of State George Schultz. As a child of US citizens she could not claim German citizenship, the rules in other countries vary. However if one parent were a third country national, the child could claim dual citizenship and decide later. Les |
#15
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![]() Would that make me a British Citizen? I think you'd have to live here fro 10 years and apply for naturalisation. Less if you married a Brit. By that time, he'd be too old for the RAF. And if he married one, she probably wouldn't want him deploying to Iraq. Let's face it: Flight Sim is the way to go. all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#16
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![]() Wrong!!! The child of Americans born abroad is automatically a US citizen. All the parents need do is apply for a certificate at the embassy. My daughter, born in Germany has one, signed by the Sec of State George Schultz. Okay, that's an alternate route. But the point is still validt: the citizenship doesn't come automatically. (And what if only one parent is American?) Contrast this with my granddaughters. They are American because they were born in New Hampshire. They are British because their father is British. There was no need to register them. all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#17
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JDupre5762 wrote:
"2. To join the Royal Air Force you must at all times since birth have been a citizen of the UK, the Commonwealth or the Republic of Ireland. " Does that mean no naturalized British citizen can join the RAF? Apparently, yes. The wording seems fairly specifically meant to convey this. -- Tom Schoene Replace "invalid" with "net" to e-mail "If brave men and women never died, there would be nothing special about bravery." -- Andy Rooney (attributed) |
#18
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Cub Driver wrote:
:Why the double standard? Why the hipocracy? Why the predjudice? : It's none of the above. The United States takes the attitude that : citizenship comes with residence, not bloodline. Britain (and I think : most European countries) take the opposite view. AFAIK this is the German point of view, but not shared by most European nations, including Britain. You can be refused UK citizenship even after a long stay if the law thinks you're a shady character -- read Muhammed Al-Fayed -- but one can perfectly be naturalised else. The RAF can presumably be more strict, although they probably could be made to accept all EU citizens. IIRC there has been a ruling by the European court that the freedom to get a job in another EU country applies to the military as well. -- Emmanuel Gustin |
#19
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![]() the freedom to get a job in another EU country applies to the military as well. Wow. No wonder the Brits are uneasy about their membership in the Community. My first reaction was what they would do when thousands of Turks turned up at the recruiting office ... then I remembered the Ghurkas. (And the Irish.) What does the EU say about language requriements for such employment? all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#20
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It's none of the above. The United States takes the attitude that
citizenship comes with residence, not bloodline. Britain (and I think most European countries) take the opposite view. Britain's nationality law is primarily based on place of birth (a legal concept known as jus soli), not on ancestry (jus sanguinis). Prior to 1983, birth in the UK, would confer British nationality. Since 1983, a person born in the UK would be British only if a parent was British OR if the parent was "settled" in the UK. Settled means ordinarily resident in the UK without being subject to immigration restrictions, and this provision was implementeed in order to provide for British nationality by birth in the UK, to the children of non-British legal residents of the UK as well as the children of British citizens, but to stop visitors from coming to the UK solely for the purpose of obtaining British nationality for their children. It's believed that the Thatcher government implemented this change on the concept that there would be a flood of people from Hong Kong, coming to the UK to obtain full British nationality for their children once it was announced that Hong Kong would revert to Chinese control. There are, of course, some countries in the world whose nationality laws are solely based on ancestry, and place of birth has no bearing on whether a person has citizenship there or not. The child of two Americans, born overseas, does not automatically have American citizenship. He must spend three? years in the U.S. before his 21st? birthday in order to nail it down. Not anymore. The requirement for a person born outside the US, and who receives US citizenship through parentage, to return to the US to live for a period of time, in order to maintain his US citizenship was repealed in 1978. Now, a person who receives his US citizenship through birth abroad to US parent(s) has no requirement to ever return to the US in order to maintain citizenship. Europeans would find this bizzare. I am an Irish citizen, with an Irish passport, because my father was born in Ireland. It doesn't matter that I was born in Massachusetts. Several European countries have similar concepts. A friend of mine is an Italian citizen because his parents were born in Italy. He's also a Canadian by birth. Stephen Gallagher |
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