Message from @TheImposter

Discord ID: 513190606697398292


2018-11-17 03:07:39 UTC  

depends how much Trump can transform the party

2018-11-17 03:08:32 UTC  

If he wins reelection thats a decade lost of the old ways

2018-11-17 03:09:17 UTC  

I don't think Trump wanted to re-run. He will need to though

2018-11-17 03:09:30 UTC  

I think Trump can at the very least make it a more national party than a globalist party

2018-11-17 03:10:08 UTC  

Europe will "burn" soon enough, globalism will fail really soon

2018-11-17 03:10:14 UTC  

I think his ego will prevent him from quitting

2018-11-17 03:10:42 UTC  

I just mean that he wanted to fix everything in 4 years and be done with it

2018-11-17 03:10:56 UTC  

but it seems the wall will require another term

2018-11-17 03:11:12 UTC  

if he can get immigration reform that would be great

2018-11-17 03:11:28 UTC  

if he can do that he wouldnt need the wall

2018-11-17 03:11:47 UTC  

I want birthright citizenship to end

2018-11-17 03:12:14 UTC  

I do like how Germany handles their citizenship

2018-11-17 03:12:37 UTC  

How do they do it? Camps?

2018-11-17 03:12:39 UTC  

dunno about Germany, but I like how Japan does it

2018-11-17 03:13:39 UTC  

They typically force you to have 1 type of citizenship

2018-11-17 03:14:05 UTC  

all of the requirements to gain citizenship are long

2018-11-17 03:14:07 UTC  

Trump going for a second term is going to be a real trial for his health.

2018-11-17 03:15:00 UTC  

How old will he be by 2024? 78?

2018-11-17 03:15:07 UTC  

German citizenship by Birth
If you do not have German parents, but are born within the borders of Germany, you qualify for citizenship by birth or by right of soil. This is also the Jus Soli citizenship. You can get this type of citizenship on the following conditions:

If at least one of your parents has lived in Germany for at least 8 years before the birth of the child
If at the time the child is born, one of the parents had a permanent residence permit
In getting this type of citizenship, the child will again have to choose the citizenship of the parents or the citizenship of Germany between the ages of 18 and 23 years old. The child must give up the nationalities of the parents in order to get the German one, or apply for dual citizenship.

2018-11-17 03:16:15 UTC  

Just because you had a baby in Germany doesnt guarantee them citizenship

2018-11-17 03:17:45 UTC  

similar to Japan

2018-11-17 03:17:52 UTC  

but in Japan you have no right to vote

2018-11-17 03:18:30 UTC  

so whats the point of citizenship in Japan?

2018-11-17 03:20:27 UTC  

how else do you think you can live there?

2018-11-17 03:20:44 UTC  

visas only work for some time

2018-11-17 03:20:54 UTC  

they aren't permanent

2018-11-17 03:21:00 UTC  

unless you get married

2018-11-17 03:24:12 UTC  

do you have every other right then or is it more like a perm residency?

2018-11-17 03:24:36 UTC  

afaik, you have every other right

2018-11-17 03:25:32 UTC  

I dont know their other rights but that isnt too bad then

2018-11-17 03:26:19 UTC  

I was about to say. Wouldnt it have been better off to get perm residency

2018-11-17 03:26:31 UTC  

unless they dont do that?

2018-11-17 03:26:46 UTC  

like I said, the only way you can get permanent residency is by getting married

2018-11-17 03:28:05 UTC  

Do citizens get alot of social benefits? I heard working there is horrible because they work you to death.

2018-11-17 03:33:00 UTC  

japan isn't socialist

2018-11-17 03:33:05 UTC  

if that's what you are asking

2018-11-17 03:33:19 UTC  

I know they are more capitalist

2018-11-17 03:33:49 UTC  

but dont most Asian countries put emphasis on Family?

2018-11-17 03:33:57 UTC  

work in japan isn't hard, it's just a long time

2018-11-17 03:34:08 UTC  

they do