Citizenship and immigration

From Uniting Amendment
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(testuser entry)
 
 
(13 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__
 +
<noinclude><div style="font-size:175%;font-family:Times New Roman,Times,serif;"></noinclude>
 
===Citizen is the highest office===
 
===Citizen is the highest office===
Citizens are the key to democracy. As such, the current draft of the United Amendment makes "Citizen" an official office of the U.S. government. In fact, Citizen is the highest office in government. Now people really are the government -- officially.
+
A citizen is the key to democracy. The [[Uniting Amendment|current draft]] of the {{SITENAME}} recognizes this and makes "Citizen" an official office of the U.S. government. In fact, citizen is the highest office. With the Uniting Amendment, a person born in the United&nbsp;States is a citizen and a person born to a citizen is a citizen, as it is under current law. But for those who wish to move here and become citizens, the Uniting Amendment provides a simple and fair process: people who wish to become citizens register as candidates and run for that office. They need to get elected by current U.S. citizens before they become citizens. Every year an election is held to see who will become our new citizens. What better way for new citizens to learn how our democracy works than to run for office! And no more byzantine bureaucracy and convoluted naturalization process. Fair and simple.
  
A person born in the United States is a Citizen and a person born to Citizen is a Citizen, as it is under current law. However, people who wish to become Citizens run for office and get elected by all the current Citizens. What better way for new Citizens to learn how our country works than to run for office!
+
Candidates need to disclose certain things when running so voters can make an informed decision about who becomes a citizen. To become a citizen, a person needs to live in the U.S. for at least five years, but they can run for the office before that time. Congress sets the number of people who can become citizens at each annual election.
 
+
Those who have been convicted of serious crimes can't run for the office of Citizen, and candidates need to didsclose certain things when running so we can make an informed decision about who becomes a Citizen.  
+
 
+
To became a Citizen, a person needs to live in the U.S. for at least five years, but they can run for the office before that time.
+
  
 
===Citizens not born in the U.S. can run for President===
 
===Citizens not born in the U.S. can run for President===
A naturalized or elected Citizen who has lived in the United States for at least thirty years can run for President or Vice President whether they were born here or not.
+
A citizen who has lived in the United States for at least thirty years can run for President or Vice President whether they were born here or not.
  
 
===No amnesty===
 
===No amnesty===
The Amendment says, "A person willfully entering the United States without authorization is guilty of a crime upon due process and may not receive amnesty or pardon for that infraction."
+
The current draft of the amendment says, "A person willfully entering the United States without authorization is guilty of a crime upon due process and may not receive amnesty or pardon for that infraction."
  
 
===Refugees===
 
===Refugees===
If someone is fleeing their country because of inhumane treatment or conditions, they can live in the United States as a refugee. But all refugees need to register with the United States Department of State and Congress can make reasonable restrictions on the rights of refugees for security.
+
If someone is fleeing their country because of inhumane treatment or conditions, they can live in the United States as a refugee. But all refugees need to register with the United States Department of State, and Congress can make reasonable restrictions on the rights of refugees to maintain security.
 +
 
 +
Anyone who has recently come to the U.S. from the territory of an aggressor can have her rights temporarily restricted to prevent surreptitious aggression.
  
Anyone who has recently come to the U.S. can have her rights temporarily restricted to prevent surreptitious aggression.
+
</div>

Latest revision as of 21:49, 3 October 2018

[edit this section] Citizen is the highest office

A citizen is the key to democracy. The current draft of the Uniting Amendment recognizes this and makes "Citizen" an official office of the U.S. government. In fact, citizen is the highest office. With the Uniting Amendment, a person born in the United States is a citizen and a person born to a citizen is a citizen, as it is under current law. But for those who wish to move here and become citizens, the Uniting Amendment provides a simple and fair process: people who wish to become citizens register as candidates and run for that office. They need to get elected by current U.S. citizens before they become citizens. Every year an election is held to see who will become our new citizens. What better way for new citizens to learn how our democracy works than to run for office! And no more byzantine bureaucracy and convoluted naturalization process. Fair and simple.

Candidates need to disclose certain things when running so voters can make an informed decision about who becomes a citizen. To become a citizen, a person needs to live in the U.S. for at least five years, but they can run for the office before that time. Congress sets the number of people who can become citizens at each annual election.

[edit this section] Citizens not born in the U.S. can run for President

A citizen who has lived in the United States for at least thirty years can run for President or Vice President whether they were born here or not.

[edit this section] No amnesty

The current draft of the amendment says, "A person willfully entering the United States without authorization is guilty of a crime upon due process and may not receive amnesty or pardon for that infraction."

[edit this section] Refugees

If someone is fleeing their country because of inhumane treatment or conditions, they can live in the United States as a refugee. But all refugees need to register with the United States Department of State, and Congress can make reasonable restrictions on the rights of refugees to maintain security.

Anyone who has recently come to the U.S. from the territory of an aggressor can have her rights temporarily restricted to prevent surreptitious aggression.

Personal tools