cafeconleche
Registered Users (C)
Hmm, I agree that you can be yourself while being American (not that I'm a citizen yet), but I have also lived in other places, and I don't feel that this country has a monopoly.
Hmm, I agree that you can be yourself while being American (not that I'm a citizen yet), but I have also lived in other places, and I don't feel that this country has a monopoly.
Maybe you still want to report AR-11 to the USCIS after becoming a citizen.
What if you really se4nd a AR-11? Will the USCIS send it back or just process it?
I doubt he will even try that ... that poster has a habit of speculating unnecessary scenarios ... always some kind of weird hypothesis with him ... may be he/she has nothing better to doPlease try it and let us know how it goes.
I doubt he will even try that ... that poster has a habit of speculating unnecessary scenarios ... always some kind of weird hypothesis with him ... may be he/she has nothing better to do
I never got "welcome home"...just a stamp in my passport. As long as they see you weren't born in the US they treat you as a second class citizen!
It does not bother me much because the border agents from my native country treat their citizens even worse
Entrapment ?I have been asked by Pakistani border officers if I can help them get a Canadian/US passport
I wouldn't take the question of how long have you lived in the US too personally. Perhaps they were just asking that to distinguish you from an impostor who might not know the correct answer to that question.
Do they really ask US citizens this question? If so, don't you have to answer "American" as required by law, and not just to piss them off? I am a bit confused hereI think they look for an accent and see if you can understand English too. It's in their manual to ask questions like: What country you are a citizen of?" I always say American! just to piss them off and I refuse playing their games as well.
I have never been told "Welcome home" - not on GC, not on US passport. However, I have only traveled to Canada and only by car (ferry) so far. Seeing how dry and unfriendly CBP agents are, I doubt they say "Welcome home" to native-born Americans either. It does not bother me much because the border agents from my native country treat their citizens even worse
Do they really ask US citizens this question? If so, don't you have to answer "American" as required by law, and not just to piss them off? I am a bit confused here