this post was submitted on 24 Nov 2023
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I will add an additional comment to the excellent observation above. I've noticed that people in other countries do not understand very well that it is possible to become a citizen of the US relatively easily (relative to other countries, that is) if you meet certain standards. Sure there are hoops to jump through, but it IS possible. And then you are a citizen, no holds barred. You can vote and own property and are only barred from becoming president. You ARE an American. And your children are American, no matter where they are born. More confounding to non-Americans is that if you are born on American soil, you are an American citizen, unless you choose not to be. Not so in any other country, that I'm aware of (please let me know if there are other countries in which this is also so). In other countries, you are the nationality of your parents no matter where you were born. It's difficult, if not impossible, to become a citizen in so many other places. [As an example, I usually think about the Turkish "guest worker" situation in Germany. Allowed to go live and work in Germany in the 1960s, it was assumed that the stays of Turkish people who were "helping out" would be short-term.They were not. If they had children while in Germany, those children were not and could not be German citizens, even though they grew up to speake colloquial German and subscribe to German cultural norms. And THEIR children were also not citizens. You can bet they have been asked ad nauseam, but where are you really FROM? As I understand it, there was no path to becoming a citizen for this group. And yet these descendents aren't truly Turkish. I think this is slowly being addressed, but is still controversial.] So non-Americans just short circuit because they can't conceive of a voluntarily inclusive (at least in theory) nation.