margobear96
Star Member
- Dec 21, 2012
- 6
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- CPP - Ottawa
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- November 15, 2012 (rec'd)
- AOR Received.
- November 26, 2012
- File Transfer...
- November 26, 2012
- Med's Done....
- September 29, 2012
- Interview........
- Waived
- Passport Req..
- April 23, 2013
- VISA ISSUED...
- April 26, 2013 (rec'd May 2, 2013)
- LANDED..........
- May 4, 2013
Not a draft, mandatory military service for a year or two whether there is an active war or not (e.g., Sweden, Korea, Israel, etc.). If you left to avoid it, you'd have to leave forever.... You'd get caught at the airport the next time you entered the country. (This happens in Korea. Guys who leave the country as children, naturalize elsewhere, but don't do the paperwork to formally revoke Korean citizenship get caught when they visit as adults.) Absolutely won't be popular, but we're just fantasizing, right? Or was your testing scheme a real suggestion...?marcus66502 said:Military draft won't be popular. The mere fact that other countries have it doesn't make it the best policy. What you'll get is people moving overseas to avoid it, much like they left the US and went to Canada in the late 1960s.
Also, I wanted to clarify this huge misconception that a Canadian passport is a backdoor to the US. It's absolutely not true. The only advantage you'd have as a Canadian citizen is the ability to make use of 1-year temporary work permits under the NAFTA agreement. These permits can be renewed but this is still officially a temporary status. As far as permanent residence, there is no special provision in US immigration law for Canadians. They must legally qualify for it in the same manner as any other nationality.
That means as a Canadian you are no closer to permanent residence in the US than someone from Timbuktu. In fact, one could say as a Canadian you have fewer options to immigrate to the US than other nationalities. You can't make an asylum claim because no one would believe your claim, and you sure as hell can't enter the Diversity Visa lottery because Canada regularly makes the list of countries that don't qualify for it.
TN visa is a huge opportunity, if you're on the list of acceptable professions. (I know of people who've renewed 8+ times.) Also, the visa-exempt advantages of a Canadian passport is not a small benefit for visiting and looking for job opportunities. That said, there is a difference between the statement that "a Canadian passport is a backdoor to the US" and the fact that there are people who THINK that when they immigrate to Canada. A cursory perusal of this message board will show that such folks are far from uncommon.