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Saturday, July 15, 2017

Fwd: You May be Eligible for a Second Passport and Not Even Know It


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Cheers,
John (João) A. Silva

805 291 6470 Mobile (VM)

"The best day of your life is the one on which you decide your life is your own. No apologies or excuses. No one to lean on, rely on, or blame. The gift is yours -- it is an amazing journey -- and you alone are responsible for the quality of it. This is the day your life really begins." -- B Moawad, author

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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: International Living <webeditor@internationalliving.com>
Date: Sat, Jul 15, 2017 at 1:14 PM
Subject: You May be Eligible for a Second Passport and Not Even Know It
To: JOAOA.DESILVA2016@gmail.com


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International Living Postcards

International Living Postcards—your daily escape
Saturday, July 15, 2017

Dear International Living Reader,

There are things about your family that can surprise you.

I recently learned that my grandfather used to be a lumberjack, long before I was born. The idea of him as a young man hewing down trees in a red flannel shirt makes me smile because of how at odds it is with my memories of the quiet, studious old man he became.

But what if the things you don't know about your grandparents, or your parents, are more significant?

Second passport expert Bob Bauman explains below how what you don't know about your ancestry could be of great benefit to you.

Read on...

Declan

Declan Aylward
Managing Editor, IL Postcards

P.S. Bob wrote The Passport Book to help people like you discover more options for living with the rights you deserve by regaining control of your life. Inside, you'll find dozens of strategies to help you legally reduce your income taxes and property taxes, exempt yourself from numerous government regulations, and protect your personal privacy. Get your copy here.

* * *

You May be Eligible for a Second Passport and Not Even Know It
By Bob Bauman JD

Do you know where your parents or grandparents were born?

Seems like an odd question, but finding the answer could determine whether you have an existing legal right to citizenship in another country.

There are two major legal principles of citizenship law that most countries use to determine citizenship status:

  1. Bloodline, or the principle of jus sanguinis, (Latin for "right of blood"): describes a child's citizenship resulting from the nationality of a father or mother, or from earlier ancestors, usually limited to grandparents. This is called "citizenship by descent." Most countries apply this rule in some form.

Countries that follow this legal "descent" principle in some form include Ireland, the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Luxembourg, Malta, Hungary, Poland, Lithuania, Estonia, Greece, Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia, Serbia, Slovakia, Armenia, Ukraine, Israel, Lebanon, South Africa, Rwanda, Australia, the Philippines, Afghanistan, South Korea, Mexico, and Argentina.

  1. Place of birth, or the principle of jus soli, (Latin for "right of soil"): meaning that being born within the geographic territory over which a country has sovereignty may automatically make the newborn child a citizen of that country. Not all countries apply this rule.

In this globally connected world, dual citizenship has become commonplace. Dual nationality simply means that a person is legally a citizen of two countries at the same time, qualified as such under each nation's law.

In 1996, only seven of 17 Latin American countries allowed some form of dual nationality; now all do. In 2006, India changed its policy to allow a modified form of dual citizenship for Indians living outside their home country. Now, every major country whose nationals migrate to the United States in large numbers allows dual citizenship; except China, South Korea, and Cuba.

The Republic of Ireland offers a widely known example of automatic citizenship by descent. Under Irish nationality law, blood lines determine a birthright to citizenship even without ever having lived in the country. Irish laws confer nationality on those born within Ireland, on those who prove they have an Irish parent or grandparent, and on those who marry an Irish citizen.

Since Ireland is a European Union member state, the Irish passport is one of the most sought-after travel documents. With a population of 4.8 million, Ireland has millions of current official passports in worldwide circulation, many thousands held by U.S. citizens.

Do you know who your ancestors were?

Over 40 million U.S. citizens—nearly 12% of all Americans—can trace their ancestry to Ireland and thus are eligible for an Irish passport. There are 31.8 million U.S. citizens of Mexican origin, many entitled to dual U.S.-Mexican citizenship. A 2011 Hungarian law confers citizenship on anyone who is a descendant of a person who was a Hungarian citizen before 1920. There are 1.6 million U.S. citizens of Hungarian descent who might qualify.

The path to automatic second citizenship for you and your family may be revealed in your family tree. It may be time to investigate those vague stories you've heard about your family roots. Your ancestral origins may qualify you for dual citizenship.

Editor's note: A second passport may be the most useful tool you didn't even know you had access to. In his best-selling work, The Passport Book, Bob lays out the strategies you could use to increase your personal freedom and protect your wealth, your rights, and your family. Now in its 12th edition, it will enable you to make unparalleled decisions based on the most up-to-date, rock-solid knowledge. And—until midnight tomorrow—you can get a copy sent directly to your door. All the details are here.



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