Quote:
Originally Posted by SaintD
This article is very misleading. At least about the military portion. Granted we have not seen the actual text of the legislation, one who joins the military is immediately available to apply for Citizenship on their first day of active duty. e.g.
"Under special provisions in Section 329 of the INA, the president signed an executive order on July 3, 2002, authorizing all noncitizens who have served honorably in the U.S. armed forces on or after Sept. 11, 2001, to immediately file for citizenship. This order also covers veterans of certain designated past wars and conflicts. The authorization will remain in effect until a date designated by a future presidential executive order."
Furthermore....
Naturalization at Basic Training
"USCIS and the Army established the Naturalization at Basic Training Initiative in August 2009 to give noncitizen enlistees the opportunity to naturalize when they graduate from basic training. (The Navy joined the initiative in 2010.) Under this initiative, USCIS conducts all naturalization processing including the capture of biometrics, the naturalization interview, and administration of the Oath of Allegiance on the military base so (in most cases) the recruit is able to graduate from basic training as a U.S. citizen."
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Another thing to acknowledge is that you must be a permanent resident in order to join the military so this in theory only applies to people who are already living here permanently. I do not understand how we will be able to join the military under Rubio's bill maybe we have to obtain a permanent residency through our no-immigrant visa before applying to the military and then it would be automatic citizenship. Thinking of that makes me sad because it would take awhile for all that to happen. i want to join the Marines right after college. I hope there is a special loophole for us, but I doubt it.