Message from @4AM_critter 🐉

Discord ID: 505119098871611408


2018-10-25 20:15:15 UTC  

pooped out by bats

2018-10-25 20:15:32 UTC  

I think people buying that are batshit crazy.

2018-10-25 20:15:38 UTC  

hue hueee

2018-10-25 20:15:41 UTC  

i miss buffalo wings

2018-10-25 20:15:49 UTC  

damn meat's expensive so the bone-in wings cost more

2018-10-25 20:15:58 UTC  

I miss the szechuan sauce from mcdonalds

2018-10-25 20:16:39 UTC  

If I could build a time machine, I would go back to buy some.

2018-10-25 20:20:26 UTC  

extra extra spicy buffalo wings , bone-in nom nom nom 🐷

2018-10-25 20:20:37 UTC  

I know someone who has a pack

2018-10-25 20:23:20 UTC  

i like putting pork in the halal section

2018-10-25 20:23:54 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/463054787336732683/505114303007948812/B34X8wZIcAEqA49.png

2018-10-25 20:24:01 UTC  

80%

2018-10-25 20:32:48 UTC  

Does any other country than USA automatically grant citizenship people born on their soil? As opposed to what I assume is the norm, that citizenship is inherited?

2018-10-25 20:36:03 UTC  

there was that dude who was born canadian because he was delivered on a playing flying over canada

2018-10-25 20:38:39 UTC  

So Canada have the same laws regarding citizenship?

2018-10-25 20:38:47 UTC  

ye

2018-10-25 20:39:04 UTC  

I'm pretty sure most westernized countries do

2018-10-25 20:41:42 UTC  

just soli citizenship is a result of the 14th amendment

2018-10-25 20:42:48 UTC  

which applies only in the US and Canada among advanced economies

2018-10-25 20:42:57 UTC  

I was getting uncertain, so I googled it. According to wikipedia, citizenship granted by being birth in the country is originally english/british. In continental europe you inherit the same citizenship as your parrents, disregard the country of birth.

2018-10-25 20:43:27 UTC  

it is, like freedom of speech, rather atypical

2018-10-25 20:43:47 UTC  

You don't even need to be born in Canada to be a citizen, just as long as you have one Canadian parent grants your citizenship

2018-10-25 20:44:14 UTC  

citizenship through parents is the predominant structure globally

2018-10-25 20:44:16 UTC  

Many Chinese take advantage of this

2018-10-25 20:44:24 UTC  

So now I assume it is demarcated roughly along the lines of the judicial system of common law (british and past colenies) and civil law (continental europe)

2018-10-25 20:44:53 UTC  

citizenship by birth in the US is not a common law structure

2018-10-25 20:45:01 UTC  

it stems from the 14th amendment

2018-10-25 20:46:17 UTC  

I think the UK even requires parental citizenship

2018-10-25 20:46:33 UTC  

I have no idea where the british source idea comes from

2018-10-25 20:47:08 UTC  

Canada has been having a problem with people moving to Vancouver for that very reason

2018-10-25 20:49:31 UTC  

oh yeah

2018-10-25 20:50:04 UTC  

It eas just an observation on my part, countries that have adopted the common-law legal system also allow for citizenship for birth within its borders. Countries that have adopted the civil-law legal system are exclusive in citizenship to inherited only almost.

2018-10-25 20:52:11 UTC  

> countries that have adopted the common law legal system also allow for citizenship for birth

how so?

2018-10-25 20:54:03 UTC  

If you are born in any continental european country you do not automatically get a citizenship in that country. You are considered a foreigner.

2018-10-25 20:54:24 UTC  

Then you can apply for citizenship like any other

2018-10-25 20:55:18 UTC  

I am wrong in my perception in how citizenship is granted in north america?

2018-10-25 20:57:01 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/463054787336732683/505122635399692310/download_20181025_165628.jpg

2018-10-25 20:57:17 UTC  

If I understand you correctly, u automatically get citizenship if you're born within US/Canada borders

2018-10-25 20:58:04 UTC  

Yes, that is my question

2018-10-25 20:58:18 UTC  

My mom was illegal my dad was a American