RACISM- Arrogant-Consular Processing

mariahoneyy

Registered Users (C)
Racist & Arrogant employee everywhere ,even in Consulate( I believe)

Because my sister-in-law is pregnant for 6 months , so Consulate is holding her Immigrant Visa for Admin. processing & doing delay so that she can not give birth her child in U.S. soil (technically child will not be US born citizen if she gets visa after child born).

I doubt that CP timing depends on who is your Consular officer at that consulate.

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Maria
 
Originally posted by mariahoneyy
Racist & Arrogant employee everywhere ,even in Consulate( I believe)

Because my sister-in-law is pregnant for 6 months , so Consulate is holding her Immigrant Visa for Admin. processing & doing delay so that she can not give birth her child in U.S. soil (technically child will not be US born citizen if she gets visa after child born).

I doubt that CP timing depends on who is your Consular officer at that consulate.

---------------
Maria
How can you be so sure that they are holding the visa processing so that she cannot be in US for the delivery? Did they say so?

Which consulate is this?
 
Is her husband a US Citizen? If so...wouldn't the child be a US citizen as well, even though the baby is born outside the US?
 
If the child was born outside of the US, it cannot run
for US Pres/VP.... Also for some folks its a psychological thing to
have their children born here.
 
Just a thought

This is very interesting, however, I'm not sure how this relates to people waiting to complete thier Citizenship.

I thought that was what this forum was for. Are we turning political here?
 
Who can run for President

Just FYI

I was under that the child must be born in the US Shore to run for Pres.. But its not so.

Title 8, Section 1401 of the U.S. Code states the following persons are considered "citizens at birth" and therefore eligible to run for President or Vice-President:


Anyone born in the United States.
Any Native American or Native Alaskan born in the United States (provided that U.S. citizenship does not affect the person's status as a tribal citizen).
Anyone born outside the United States to U.S. citizen parents, as long as at least one lived in the United States before the person was born.
Anyone born outside the United States if one parent is a U.S. citizen who lived in the U.S. for at least a year, and the other is a U.S. national.
Anyone born in a U.S. possession if at least one parent is a U.S. citizen who lived in the U.S. for at least a year.
Anyone found in the U.S. before the age of five whose parentage is unknown, as long as proof of foreign birth is not shown by age 21.
Anyone born outside the United States to an alien parent and a citizen parent who lived in the United States for at least five years (military and diplomatic service or dependency to be included in this requirement).
Anyone born before May 23, 1934 to an alien father and a citizen mother who lived in the United States for any period.
 
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