R
rish888
Guest
A far as your statement on LPR's go, America is not Canada. LPR's in America have no rights, it is considered a privilege. It is illogical to compare what happened to LPR's to what could possibly happen to American citizens.Alurra71 has nailed the thought behind my decision. The "intent" clause caused a US citizen an issue. There were couple of supreme court cases regarding stripping US citizenship from someone who had it.
Not only that, one of the US passport renewal asked whether you have been naturalized elsewhere for US naturalization. This was a red flag for me. The latest passport renewal form doesn't have that question. Laws are only as good as interpreted by the harshest prosecutor. The two landmark supreme court cases Afroyim v Rusk(1967) and Vance v Terrazas (1980) which made clear that persons intent had to be present along with the action before stripping citizenship.
State department currently has guidance regarding this i.e. persons intent had to be clear and they would ask the person if he/she intended to give it up. However, if the guidance changes, which could, under current administration, then you would be left to fight the case in courts which could take years. For example, guidance changed for green card holders when Trump signed his travel ban, many green card holders were turned away or were asked to sign 407 form giving up their green card status. It wasn't until Washington court stopped the ban but by then over 700 people were turned away from the border. Nobody in this country ever thought a green card holder rights would be diminished so much so, that they would be getting turned away from the border. There are other examples of guidance changes that I can cite.
Even though myself, Alurra are on the side of extreme, extreme caution and its most likely not to happen, I am still choosing to stay away from Canadian naturalization for now.
I am not here to tell you what you should and shouldn't do, that is 100% your choice based on your circumstances. However, I stand by my original statement that no way would there be a day where Dual American-Candians lose their American citizenship.
While it may be plausible (though highly improbable) that America could try to create laws such as forbidding dual citizenship for naturalized citizens or something of that sort, there is no way that the current administration could gather the popular support needed to start revoking the citizenship of natural-born Americans.
It's your call, but whatever you do you gotta act now if you wanna have a choice.