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Why everyone want to become a u.s citizen?

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  • To live wherever I want (but I'll probably die in America)

To have it be a lot harder/impossible to deport me

To not have to renew my Green Card every 10 years

To vote

To clear my husband's I-864 contract (not that I'm planning on claiming welfare, but still!)

Having 2 passports would be amazing

ROC from CR-1 visa (Green Card expiration date was Nov 24th 2016)

 

Link to the evidence I submitted. Be sure to send evidence spanning your entire marriage (especially for K-1) or as far back as you can. Just one or two bank statements will not cut it. I primarily focused on the two years of living here since I came in on a CR-1. If you don't have the fundamentals (i.e. joint accounts/policies), you can explain why in the covering letter. E.g. "While we do not have joint utilities, we both contribute to them from our joint bank account".

 

September 26th 2016: I-751 package sent to CSC

September 28th 2016: Package delivered
September 30th 2016: Check cashed
October 3rd 2016: NOA1 received with receipt date of 09/28/16
November 3rd 2016: Biometrics received with appointment date of 11/14/16.
November 14th 2016: Attended biometrics appointment
October 30th 2017: Infopass appointment to get I-551 stamp
February 26th 2018: I-751 case number (aka the NOA1 receipt number) becomes trackable
March 14th 2018: Submitted service request due to being outside of processing time.

March 15th 2018: ROC approved. 535 days (1 year, 5 months and 17 days)

March 29th 2018: Card being produced

April 4th 2018: Card mailed out

April 6th 2018: Card in hand. Has incorrect "resident since" date. Submitted service request on I-751 case (typographical error on permanent resident card) and an I-90 online.

April 2018 - August 7th 2018: Tons of service requests, emails and now senator involvement to get my corrected green card back because what the heck, USCIS. Also some time in May I sent a letter to Potomac telling them I want to withdraw my I-90 since CSC were handling it.

August 8th 2018: Card in production thanks to the direct involvement of Senator Sherrod Brown's team

August 13th 2018: Card mailed

August 15th 2018: Card in hand with correct date. :joy:

October 31st 2018: Potomac sends out a notice stating they have closed out my I-90 per my request. Yay for no duplicate card drama.

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Because maybe in a few years when I will be living in Europe with my wife and we want to come back to spend Christmas with her family I do not want to:

1) Apply for another Green Card or other kind of visa a year in advance and pay these Government (Republican or Democrat) $1000+ so they can use that money, for example to finance the "War on Drugs" that Nixon started.

OR

2) If I decide not to pay for a visa and I use the tourist line at the airport, it is not my dream to be denied the entry by an arrogant official who is going to question me about my "suspicious" intentions of coming back to his/her country with an American family member who by the way is crossing the border thought the "citizens" line... Meanwhile I will be already on my way to the secondary inspection office when I will be asked if I have been involved "in genocide or espionage or whether I am seeking entry to engage in criminal or immoral activities".

Really, I do not want to deal with the Department of Homeland Security ever again. However I am not sure if it is worse than to deal with the IRS for the rest of my life... What a dilema!

Am I to understand that if you are working here with a green card, you do not pay income tax?

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Am I to understand that if you are working here with a green card, you do not pay income tax?

You do. I think people are saying that if you become a citizen, you will always be involved with the IRS whereas if you have a Green Card, you can easily abandon it and then you won't have to declare your worldwide income once your residency is revoked for lack of continuous physical presence.

ROC from CR-1 visa (Green Card expiration date was Nov 24th 2016)

 

Link to the evidence I submitted. Be sure to send evidence spanning your entire marriage (especially for K-1) or as far back as you can. Just one or two bank statements will not cut it. I primarily focused on the two years of living here since I came in on a CR-1. If you don't have the fundamentals (i.e. joint accounts/policies), you can explain why in the covering letter. E.g. "While we do not have joint utilities, we both contribute to them from our joint bank account".

 

September 26th 2016: I-751 package sent to CSC

September 28th 2016: Package delivered
September 30th 2016: Check cashed
October 3rd 2016: NOA1 received with receipt date of 09/28/16
November 3rd 2016: Biometrics received with appointment date of 11/14/16.
November 14th 2016: Attended biometrics appointment
October 30th 2017: Infopass appointment to get I-551 stamp
February 26th 2018: I-751 case number (aka the NOA1 receipt number) becomes trackable
March 14th 2018: Submitted service request due to being outside of processing time.

March 15th 2018: ROC approved. 535 days (1 year, 5 months and 17 days)

March 29th 2018: Card being produced

April 4th 2018: Card mailed out

April 6th 2018: Card in hand. Has incorrect "resident since" date. Submitted service request on I-751 case (typographical error on permanent resident card) and an I-90 online.

April 2018 - August 7th 2018: Tons of service requests, emails and now senator involvement to get my corrected green card back because what the heck, USCIS. Also some time in May I sent a letter to Potomac telling them I want to withdraw my I-90 since CSC were handling it.

August 8th 2018: Card in production thanks to the direct involvement of Senator Sherrod Brown's team

August 13th 2018: Card mailed

August 15th 2018: Card in hand with correct date. :joy:

October 31st 2018: Potomac sends out a notice stating they have closed out my I-90 per my request. Yay for no duplicate card drama.

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  • To live wherever I want (but I'll probably die in America)
  • To have it be a lot harder/impossible to deport me
  • To not have to renew my Green Card every 10 years
  • To vote
  • To clear my husband's I-864 contract (not that I'm planning on claiming welfare, but still!)
  • Having 2 passports would be amazing

Couldn't agree more! Already have two passports, one from HK one from Uk but doesn't hurt to carry a third one just incase i lost them both.

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There is another reason why i, not would , but should become an american is that , coming from a small country ( and although i am from Hong Kong, like the absolute majority of us, I don't feel a connection to China ) , I got almost zero chance to cheer at olympics or whatever games our team plays. We won one Olympic gold medal and that's about the end of our story. I wanna be able to share the excitement and passion and celebrate our country's win !

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Filed: Timeline

just to be done with USCIS and the bunch of paperwork...I couldn't care less about the option of voting/non-voting. I am not afraid of ever being removed since I am a super law abiding citizen and I don't really care what my spouse (or my future chidlren) citizenship status is. It's all nothing but a paper. I have no intention of moving out of US for more than 6 months, and definitely have no intentions to live x years here, x years in another year, then return then leave again and all that c.r.a.p. I just simply don't want to do any more paperwork and pay and wait and pay more and wait more. LOL This is the simple reason...

Edited by AnotherLostSoul
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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: England
Timeline

For me I will probably do it so that we can live wherever we want in future (if we move back to Europe for a while I won't have to worry about losing the green card) and also so that I won't have to deal with USCIS anymore. That will be a sweet moment :lol:

Also because once I'm a citizen I can vote for whichever person I dislike the least, its strange living in a country and paying taxes but being essentially disenfranchised (although I can still vote in the UK as a UK citizen).

Edited by Hotter Otter

My blog about my visa journey and adjusting to my new life in the US http://albiontoamerica.wordpress.com/

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Filed: AOS (pnd) Country: Spain
Timeline

Am I to understand that if you are working here with a green card, you do not pay income tax?

Green Card = Report your WORLWIDE income to the IRS

US Citizen = Report your WORLDWIDE income to the IRS

No Green Card, No Citizen and NO living in the US = bye bye IRS and their accomplices (Turbotax, HR Block, etc.)

Edited by Espanyol
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I chose citizenship (over staying a greencard holder) for several reasons:

- Desire to be able to vote

- Desire to "be done with it"; no more USCIS, ever, and it would be very difficult for them to kick me out now.

- Desire to be able to live where-ever I want, and return to the USA; while we have no plans to move back to Europe, I want that option to be open, especially once we retire. Being a US citizen means I won;t have to justify me being out of the country for more than 6 months, or fear loosing my greencard.

- Desire to have the same citizenship as my kids

I have the same reasons. I would add two more for me. To be able to travel to more countries without needing a visa (once we are financially capable) and to get my husband out of the I-864 hook.

Just as the title states :)

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Brazil
Timeline

I want to become a citizen because I love this country and there's no place on earth I would rather live.

Egypt is a wonderful country with an amazing history and with long-suffering, but kind and tenacious people.

I've been to many places that are absolutely beautiful; from Stockholm to Chennai to Montreal to Barcelona there are many places that I think I could live and be quite happy.

But there's an undefinable quality that makes someplace just feel like home, and while I love my country of birth, the United States definitely feels like home.

I want to become a citizen so I can say that I am an American; not other people, but to myself. I think to me, getting the naturalization certificate would be similar to someone finally paying off a mortgage; you may have lived in the house for 30 years, but it wasn't really yours until that last moment.

I think there are very many valid reasons to want to become an American Voting, ease of travel, (as someone above mentioned) being with your loved ones. Not having to deal with the immigration services would be a huge plus! Being able to sponsor family members. These are all practical reasons, but in my own situation, I do not think I would choose to become a citizen if I didn't already feel like one in all but name.

Exactly how I feel! I love that I grew up in Brasil, had a great childhood, but since I've been living in the States (15 years now) I feel like I belong here, it's not a perfect country but it just feels like home!

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Colombia
Timeline

I agree, citizen ship means nothing anymore, non citizens have more rights now than citizen. I was a non citizen once, there where many things I could not do, own a gun, speak a foreign language on the air waves, work for any company that had a government contract. Now illegals have more rights.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Uganda
Timeline

I want to become a U.S. citizen so I can:

1) Be taxed on my worldwide income.

2) Vote in elections already decided by moneyed interests.

3) Sponsor even more and ungrateful family/people to the U.S.

4) Die while pursuing the American dream that is increasingly illusive to the 99%.

Seriously though, I love this country so much I want to help fix all of the above.

:lol:

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Russia
Timeline

Travel to so many more countries without needing to get a visa.

If at first you don't succeed, then sky diving is not for you.

Someone stole my dictionary. Now I am at a loss for words.

If Apple made a car, would it have windows?

Ban shredded cheese. Make America Grate Again .

Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.  Deport him and you never have to feed him again.

I started out with nothing, and I still have most of it.

I went bald but I kept my comb.  I just couldn't part with it.

My name is not Richard Edward but my friends still call me DickEd

If your pet has a bladder infection, urine trouble.

"Watch out where the huskies go, and don't you eat that yellow snow."

I fired myself from cleaning the house. I didn't like my attitude and I got caught drinking on the job.

My kid has A.D.D... and a couple of F's

Carrots improve your vision.  Alcohol doubles it.

A dung beetle walks into a bar and asks " Is this stool taken?"

Breaking news.  They're not making yardsticks any longer.

Hemorrhoids?  Shouldn't they be called Assteroids?

If life gives you melons, you might be dyslexic.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Nigeria
Timeline

To be freer to move about the world at will without documents. That blue book is a mighty powerful thing. Just saying US embassy in many countries people back up off you quickly. :goofy: Has helped me get out of many a situations. :wow:

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ROC I-751
5/21/2018: Filed i751 ROC
6/12/2018: NOA1 Date
3/5/2019: Biometrics Appt
12/28/2019: 18 month Extension has expired
1/9/2020: InfoPass Appt to get stamp in Passport
2/27/2020: Combo Interview (ROC and Citizenship)
3/31/2020: submitted service request for being pass normal processing time
4/7/2020: Card being produced
4/8/2020: Approved
4/10/2020: Card mailed
4/15/2020: 10 year green card received
 
 
N-400
5/21/2019: Filed Online
5/21/2019: NOA1 Date
6/13/2019: Biometrics Appt
2/27/2020: Citizenship Interview
4/7/2020: In queue for Oath Ceremony to be scheduled
6/19/2020: Notice Oath Ceremony scheduled
7/8/2020: Oath Ceremony (Houston)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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