No. In 99% of circumstances, cops who pull you over don't care if you are a citizen or not. If you are stopped at an immigration checkpoint inside the country, you can always verbally declare your citizenship.
If you don't want other people to think of you as a foreigner because of your accent, then tough luck, my friend. The bitter truth is that no matter what you show them - a passport card, an EDL or a certificat of naturalisation - you will still be a foreigner to them, and they will keep asking you where you are from
Very good point ... it is human psychology - as mentioned in some of my previous posts , it has happened to me and others have also complained - for example go to the post where one guy was held up for a long time even after he claimed he recently got naturalized and they kept pestering him on how he got his citizenship - it is in this forum.
Try this - when someone asks you where you are from, tell them you are an American - they will still ask you where you are ORIGINALLY from - and even if they know your full story, they will STILL consider you from your original country.
A cop CANNOT take to you police station to verify your citizenship - or harass you if you are NOT a citizen. In fact if he considers you to be from another country, he will STILL ask you on how you became citizen.
When I got my Green Card, I thought I would be treated with respect everywhere - but there have been cases that they will ask you many intrusive qsns if they like and you cannot do anything.
I am guessing this will not stop even now that I am a citizen.
I would say take a copy of your passport card and keep it in your wallet or hidden in your car. If someone pulls you and asks for proof, you can show them the copy.
Also go to DMV and tell them you are a citizen, so they can put it in your records - a cop should have access to this I guess.
I would again repeat my earlier concern that I think people should not skim my card or passport. Maybe its not easy to get info to personal info, but it is still possible.
Yes, I consider it to be a big issue for me.