In order to obtain each birth certificate, I had to take each little baby several hundred miles to a U.S. consulate in another city. I had to turn in a lot of paperwork to process the application. I had to provide documentation to prove that I myself was an American citizen who had lived in the U.S. for at least 5 years. I had to pay for copies of documents and for official photographs. The burden of proof was on me to prove that I was an American.
Don’t misunderstand, I’m not complaining. I understand that my situation is special and I have to play by the rules. And both times, the consular service was excellent.
But while I have to play by the rules, another class of people does not. They don't have to prove they're American citizens—they aren’t. They don't have to prove they lived in the U.S. for 5 years – they may not have. They don't have to pay for paperwork to be processed. This class of people is granted a number of privileges that I, an American citizen, am not entitled to.
you liberals want everything to go go your fucking way all the time
i wonder what the policy is in costa rica mexico brazil and chile?
were sick of all these fucking people demanding rights in two countries and we only have one fucking country to live in!!
Awww... poor baby.
93: Slane
96: Cork, Dublin
00: Dublin
06: London, Dublin
07: London, Copenhagen, Nijmegen
09: Manchester, London
10: Dublin, Belfast, London & Berlin
11: San José
12: Isle of Wight, Copenhagen, Ed in Manchester & London x2
Comments
you liberals want everything to go go your fucking way all the time
i wonder what the policy is in costa rica mexico brazil and chile?
were sick of all these fucking people demanding rights in two countries and we only have one fucking country to live in!!
http://groups.msn.com/PearlJamNirvana/messages.msnw
In order to obtain each birth certificate, I had to take each little baby several hundred miles to a U.S. consulate in another city. I had to turn in a lot of paperwork to process the application. I had to provide documentation to prove that I myself was an American citizen who had lived in the U.S. for at least 5 years. I had to pay for copies of documents and for official photographs. The burden of proof was on me to prove that I was an American.
Don’t misunderstand, I’m not complaining. I understand that my situation is special and I have to play by the rules. And both times, the consular service was excellent.
But while I have to play by the rules, another class of people does not. They don't have to prove they're American citizens—they aren’t. They don't have to prove they lived in the U.S. for 5 years – they may not have. They don't have to pay for paperwork to be processed. This class of people is granted a number of privileges that I, an American citizen, am not entitled to.
http://groups.msn.com/PearlJamNirvana/messages.msnw
Awww... poor baby.
96: Cork, Dublin
00: Dublin
06: London, Dublin
07: London, Copenhagen, Nijmegen
09: Manchester, London
10: Dublin, Belfast, London & Berlin
11: San José
12: Isle of Wight, Copenhagen, Ed in Manchester & London x2