Side Note: Indonesia’s Multiple Citizenship program for adults is still in the works, so people in that last category may have to wait a little bit to achieve all 5. 🇮🇩
yep in Indonesia if you’re 18 and you were born having multiple citizenships (e.g. Indo parents but born in the US), you have to choose one. If you choose to be Indonesians you have to renounce the others.
According to Chinese law, if a Chinese citizen obtains citizenship in another country, they are automatically considered to have renounced their Chinese citizenship. This means that if a Chinese citizen becomes a U.S. citizen, they would lose their Chinese citizenship.
According to Chinese law, if a Chinese citizen obtains citizenship in another country, they are automatically considered to have renounced their Chinese citizenship. This means that if a Chinese citizen becomes a U.S. citizen, they would lose their Chinese citizenship.
When I was a little girl, I had a classmate who was born in the air over several island nations. She held citizenships in the United States, Taiwan (through her father), and Japan (through her mother). Since no one was actually sure where they were when she was born, she was granted citizenship to 3 other island nations. She was very proud of that fact.
@@FreeDomSy-nk9ue according to this story, no one was sure of the precise time of birth, and the plane flew over 3 island nations, so each nation granted her citizenship
Being born in air is such a based fact. I bet her nickname was airborne or something like that. However Japan doesn't allow dual citizenship to Japanese people. Source? Satoshi ishii for some fucking reason decided to be croatian
Some people would strongly disagree. They would say "If you're born in the UK, you'll always be British! If you wanna be Italian, you should've been born in Italy and if you wanna be Argentinian, you should've been born in Argentina!"
I live in the US. I’m a citizen. I’m originally from Crimea, so both Ukraine and Russia recognize me as a citizen. I was born a citizen of the Soviet Union.
@@IIISofiaIIII’m sure she is pro-ruzzian, non of pro-Ukrainian would have say “both recognise”. At least, Russia occupied or invaded. But not just recognise.
Does that also mean 4 passports? Can you use 4 different passports at the same time? This is so fascinating to me as a passport holder that can only access 30 countries visa free lol
Yes you can use four different passports; you have to use the passport of the country you are entering if you are a citizen of that country, otherwise you can choose which ones you want to use all over the world, based on visas & visa fees etc
That's awful. Why would you give your son Canadian citizenship, especially when he already has US citizenship, in this case its going to be completely useless lol
I have 4! Bosnian from my mother, Belgian from my father, French from spending most of my childhood in France, and British from spending the rest of my childhood in the UK due to my parents work. I have 4 passports.
My cousin is half Lebanese 🇱🇧 and half Serbian and was born in canada, he married a half German half swiss girl, and now his daughter is a citizen of Germany,Serbia, Lebanon, Switzerland and Canada
Is she actually registered in all? Germany only recently (June2024) started allowing dual and most of the others you must register before majority or lose it
I’m a soon-to-be holder of 3 citizenships! I’m Argentinian 🇦🇷 and Italian 🇮🇹 and in the process of becoming a British 🇬🇧 citizen too after living in the UK for more than 6 years!
I have a friend that is citizen of 5 countries (it will be 6 in 5 years). His mother is Venezuelan, his father Colombian, his grandfather German, he was born in the USA, but lived in Costa Rica until he was 13 y/o, then he moved to Spain where I met him, and in 5 years he will be eligible for the Spanish nationality as well.
Idk about the others but that doesn’t qualify him for German citizenship unless he lived there for 2 years and applied, grandparents don’t qualify you for automatic citizenship, just a wait time of 2 years instead of 5-8
Mr. Aga Khan IV( Prince Karim Al-Husseini) holds the citizenship of UK, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Switzerland, Canada and honorary citizenship of Mali, Tanzania, Uzbekistan, Pakistan and many more countries.
@@GoldenBoots77 Spain didn't ask you to give up the Italian one? I know it is impossible to give up the argentinian citizenship, but I thought Spain only allowed for their citizen to have two.
@@phmlsp that’s if you are born in Spain and your main citizenship is Spain , but as mine is Argentina and I got the Spanish one last , I didn’t have to give up any of them
In Northern Ireland anyone born on the island of ireland prior to 2004 is automatically entitled to both Irish and British citizenship. So its very common to find people like ATJ in NI because each parent already comes with 2 passports. My friend's father is Canadian-Pakistani and his mother is from NI, and is technically entitled to four citizenships though he only claims 3.
Pakistan gives out citizenships very easily, I have 5 citizenships because of this, despite no one in my family being born in Pakistan, I have a relative born in Mysore(India), who was Muslim, and thus got citizenship in 1948, even though she left soon afterwards (and had no relatives born there) I inherit the citizenship
A man from France, married a woman from Portugal, in London. They had a boy there. But they shifted to Denmark and raised him there. When he grew up, they sent him to Germany for studies. Then he went to Russia and married a girl from Hungary, and went on a vacation in Rome, where they had their first child. And had their second in Warsaw. Both were raised & educated in the Netherlands. Today the whole family lives in Vienna. WHAT A EUROPEAN FAMILY 🇪🇺🇪🇺
3 citizenships!!❤ My friend is ethnically Serbian, was born in Croatia where her family lived. During the wars in the 1990s, they were forced back into Serbia and then came to the US as refugees.
My dad's cousin (Iranian) married a half Austrian-half Russian girl. Their daughter married a Korean man. Now, his grandkids can claim citizenships of Iran, Korea, Austria and Russia.
@@siewheilou399 Yeah. They're quite real. And, I think this has been happening throughout history. Just not as well documented as it is these days. Another cousin of mine (Iranian-British) did a DNA test and not only did it pinpoint the exact city in Iran where our side of the family came from, but also showed that he British side was a combination of three other European nations. And, there was also a mysterious 12% Mongolian which nobody seemed to have any ideas about 😂
In that case, you cannot have 5 citizenships because Indonesia does not recognise multiple citizenship. Either you're Indonesian, or not AT ALL. There's no in between. I'm Indonesian, and I'm so jealous of people that could have multiple citizenship.
In my country (the Marshall Islands), multiple citizenship is unconstitutional, but a significant percentage of citizens have dual-citizenship with the US. We're supposed to get rid of one nationality by 18 but no one's enforcing that law.
Technically when they grant you an American citizenship they ask you to give up all the others, but that’s not how it works. Indonesia might not accept your foreign passport but you can still use it outside of indonesia
@_magnify Yo, does indian citizenship count? We have an "Overseas Citizenship of India card (OCI card)" for people who have the citizenship of another country, but it denies 2 rights that you would have if you only had the Indian citizenship.
I'm actually glad for having only one citizenship because I'm always aware that while there are people that wished they had multiple citizenships, there are also people that wished they had only one citizenship!
And one of these countries that don't allow dual citizenship? China. This guy is full of it. As if any ethnically Chinese person is entitled to claim Chinese citizenship. Not only is THAT not true, Chinese laws allows them to cancel the citizenship of anybody who they found out have taken up another. Doesn't happen automatically. Like how would they find out? But if you are famous, or simply screw up and mistakenly presented your other passport to Chinese immigration when leaving or entering, I don't think they are on the lookout for this, but it would be logged and could lead to problems later down the line.
That last claim is sus since China does not recognize multiple citizenship. You're either a Chinese citizen or you're not, you can't be a dual citizen.
China may not recognize dual citizenship, but that doesn’t necessarily mean you can’t be Chinese and have dual citizenship (at least from what I’ve read). From Wikipedia: “While Chinese law makes possessing multiple citizenships difficult, a large number of residents in Hong Kong and Macau have some form of British or Portuguese nationality due to the history of those regions as former European colonies. Mainland Chinese nationals who voluntarily acquire foreign citizenship automatically lose Chinese nationality.”
@@scottishcheese13No I live in China and you can't have multiple citizenships my friends can't get them and neither can I. China doesn't allow it and if you get a different citizenship you have to choose that or your Chinese one.
@@scottishcheese13 I don't know what you mean by that. Quote from the www.gov.uk/government/publications/nationality-in-china/nationality-in-china-accessible#:~:text=Article%203%20of%20The%20People's,China%20on%20a%20British%20passport. says "Article 3 of The People's Republic of China Nationality Law states that China does not recognize dual nationality". So i don't think you can read...
I am a citizen of 4 countries🇦🇱🇭🇷🇩🇪🇮🇹. My parents are Albanian which automatically grants me Albanian citizenship, but my dad was born and raised in Croatia and through him I get Croatian citizenship, and my mother was born and raised in Germany and through her I get German citizenship. Also my grandfather (mom’s side) is Italian, which means my mom is a citizen of both Germany and Italy and I get to be a citizen of Italy too.
I have 3 citizenships, thanks to being by birth Tunisian, emmigration to france for 8 years during which i naturalised, and then due to marrying an australian and moving there, I now have my third citizenship
this is so cool, i’m only american but my father is tunisian and hold american, tunisian, and belgian citizenship. my mother was born in italy so i wonder if i qualify for citizenship
Some immigrants can have quite a few! I have an Iraqi friend with three citizenships. He fled to Ukraine at age 6 I believe, and got his second citizenship there. I met him earlier this year just after moving to Copenhagen, where he lives now. He passed his Danish citizenship test, giving him the third citizenship. The wildest part? He’s 22. He lives with his parents and travel around the world while studying law at the University of Copenhagen. He’s so cool.
a sad detail: His girlfriend is American and lives in California. His mere precense in some countries he visited bans him from entering the US - at least until the rules change. It breaks my heart that he can’t even visit his girlfriend; see her home, try her favorite restaurants, get her favorite snacks from the grocery store, .. everything that shaped her. He misses out on it because of law. It’s tragic how politics and xenophobia get in the way of relationships and families. I hope he gets to see where she grew up one day.
a sad detail: His girlfriend is American and lives in California. His mere precense in some countries he visited bans him from entering the US - at least until the rules change. It breaks my heart that he can’t even visit his girlfriend; see her home, try her favorite restaurants, get her favorite snacks from the grocery store, .. everything that shaped her. He misses out on it because of law. It’s tragic how politics and xenophobia get in the way of relationships and families. I hope he gets to see where she grew up one day.
My mum is Nepali and my dad is Russian and I was born in England. Growing up my parents always tried to mix the food they grew up eating together, always ended up looking... Unappetizing.
I’m beyond thrilled to announce that I am officially a citizen of the great nation of Ironland! 🎉 Today, I exercised my Ironlandish right to vote for the very first time, and it felt incredible. ✨ There’s something truly empowering about knowing that my voice, my choice, can shape the future of this amazing country. From the moment I was handed my Ironlandish citizenship certificate, I knew this was more than just a piece of paper; it was a key to unlock my role in the democratic process. 🔑 And today, I proudly cast my vote, standing side by side with fellow Ironlandians, united in our commitment to the values we cherish-freedom, equality, and justice for all. 💪 Voting isn’t just a right; it’s a responsibility. It’s a way to honor those who came before us, fought for the freedoms we enjoy, and continue the work of building a better tomorrow. Ironland has given me so much, and today, I gave back. 🙌
Brazilian here: born in Brazil to Brazilian parents, lived 10 years in Germany, naturalized german, and later got italian citizenship because of my great-grandparents. Now I am living in Luxemburg and if I stay some years here, I can obtain a forth nationality. ❤
My dad is born in Australia, his mum’s parents fled Austria in the 40’s for… a reason. So he’s eligible for Austrian, he’s also eligible for German as his dads parents are German and left for the same reason, his dad was born in Bolivia and gained Bolivian citizenship,he never gave it up so technically my dad is eligible for Bolivian too. My dad is also Jewish so Israeli citizenship is also a possibility. This makes my dad eligible for Australian,German,Austrian,Bolivian,Israeli + ironland (oh and you can have them all at once as long as you do Austrian military before you get Bolivian)
Colonisers see themselves in isra*l, while oppressed people or people with ancestors who were oppressed see themselves in the Palestinians. #freepalestine
I only have three citizenship although I have never been to one of the counties Iran, Iraq, and Canada Here’s the story My dad was born in Iraq deported to Iran lived in Iran for 4 decades moved to Canada married to a Canadian and yeah
I had a friend in uni who just randomly happened to be a portuguése citizen because his parents were born on a Portuguese territory island near the Philippines. It came in handy for him getting to study anywhere he wanted.
The Portuguese empire technically lasted from 1480 to 2000, from 1920 to 1975 all citizens from territories of the Portuguese empire had equal status to someone born in Portugal so people born before 1975 have Portuguese passports. And if both your mom and your dad have Portuguese passports you are usually entitled to Portuguese citizenship (If your family is confirmed to not have fought against the Portuguese for 3 generations, they aren't keen on giving citizenship to the kids or grandkids of people who were mass beheading Portuguese farmers from the 60s to the 80s. Sometimes proving you have interest in Portugal and it's culture is also required, for the reason that a lot of people could in theory have Portuguese citizenship fall on their lap because, again, until 1975 a lot of places were just Portugal including Timor-Leste and Malacca which is probably the island you're referring to.)
Born in Brazil 🇧🇷 , naturalized in the U.S.A. 🇺🇸, and obtaining Italian 🇮🇹 citizenship through my ancestors. However, I'm most excited about gaining Mexican 🇲🇽 citizenship through marriage-because I'm in love with Mexico ❤️.
I have 3 citizenship. My mother is Brasilian , and my dad is Belgian and I was born in France, and my Mom naturalized French, which made me French too.
I'm a citizen of 3! My parents are both turkish and i was born in the Netherlands while they were visiting family, when i was about 4 i moved in with my grandma in croatia after like 5/6 years i got my croatian citenzenship!
My daughter has a TH-cam account without comment permissions, but is requesting to be granted citizenship anyways. She's a promising young woman with a lot to offer our great nation, if you would be so kind as to allow her to join our ranks. Thank you very much, glory be to Ironland!
I have 3 - British by birth, Kiwi by descent, and naturalised American. My dad could potentially get up to 5, but currently has 3. He has British, American, and Venezuelan, is eligible for Irish, and will likely become eligible for NZ eventually. All through birth, descent, and naturalisation. My relatives just have just moved around a lot lol
I was born in Denmark to a British Pakistani dad and Pakistani mother and live in the UK. So I’m danish by birth, British by passport and Pakistani by ancestry.
It's easy to have a few citizenships, if you're not afraid to move around or if your family is of mixed origin. Russian-German, who moved to the Netherlands, being 20 yo. It's also the reason, why I speak 4 languages. If you live your whole life in Portland, and both your parents are from Portland, you'll be just an American citizen, a resident of Portland.
@@jinorism yeah it can be actual hell if you absolutely need your passport for administrative stuff and you haven't renewed it. like if you have a family member deceased from that country, you won't be able to sign any documents at the notary. it will take months to do the procedure and probably lots flying/driving many km just to sign some papers.
@@matthewnirenberg no because i was first born in chile and then after a few years i got the monegasque nationality from my mother officially, as well as my father got it because he was married i think for twenty years with my mother
(From the US) I had a professor who was born in Venezuela but inherited Italian citizenship from her Italian-born parents. Then moved to Uruguay at a young age (got citizenship there) and then she moved to the U.S. and has since become naturalized. 4 citizenships, still a lot
In former Yugoslavia it’s very common to have ancestors from several ex-Yu countries so majority of people is eligible for several citizenships. It’s common to be eligible for 3+ citizenships. For example during industrialization many people moved to big cities like Belgrade from all parts of the county, often other republics. After those republics seceded people were able to get citizenships by ancestry because of their parents/grandparents. While i’m Serbian i could also get Bosnian and Montenegrin passport because my grandparents are born there, but there is no point in doing that. On the other hand people whose ancestors are from Croatia or other EU countries get second citizenship because of EU benefits so they can emigrate and travel more easily. Many of “Croatian” immigrants in EU are actually people from other non EU countries just using their Croatian passport to emigrate more easily.
I'm legally Zimbabwean and despite being born in South Africa and living here for 17 years, I still don't have citizenship. Home affairs is corrupt and xenophobic.
And yet South Africa portrait itself as open minded being and anti-racist on the side of Russia and Palestine. Such hypocrites. I wish you strength and success! Stay resilient!
@@Missreepee you have to hold a permanent residence visa for several years and then file for it. I got perm-res under my mother's valuable skills visa. We first tried applying for citizenship after 10 years, but they lost the application 😑. Tried to start it again, but then covid hit and the home affairs office pretty much shut down. Since then the process has become more complicated. Needed to get police clearances (took a few weeks) and proof-of-proof-of-permanent-residence which took months and they lost my brother's... all this costing several thousand rands each. It's absolutely absurd. Only once we get those completed/fixed can we do the actual application.
Born and raised in Brazil and also have an Italian citizenship because my great grandfather is from Italy. Also currently living in London and in the process of getting an uk citizenship :)
@@anush_agrawal Maybe, but I was born there, and my "main" citizenship is Czech, and both Ironland and Czechia accept multiple citizenships, and if you are born in a country, you are automatically its citizen, and I then got an identity card in Czechia and was given complimentary citizenship in Ironland, its not like the Indians can really do anything about it, so say what you want, fellow CITIZEN, I dont care.
My Grandfather was a citizen of Algeria (by birth and heritage), Spain (he lived in Barcelona and married by Catalan grandmother) and Australia (he moved with her). And if he was still alive today he would’ve been eligible for Catalan citizenship. RIP Legend
Excluding Ironland, I have three citizenships; Austrian, German and Hungarian. My mom's from Hungary and my dad's from Austria, but HIS dad is from Germany, so he got the German citizenship too and I inherited all three.
I'm a citizen of Spain, Italy, Cyprus and New Zealand. My dad is spanish, my mom is italian. My dad bought citizenship to cyprus for tax reasons and then we moved to new zealand where for a brief period you could get citizenship if you bought a house.
I can potentially get 5: - Aussie by birth - Naturalised in Canada - Somalia by Ethnic Right - Ethiopia by ancestry (my father was born in Ethiopia) - Kenya (if I use the Tribe/ Lineage card)
I had a buddy who is has Greek and American citizen. He used his Greek citizenship to be able to visit the DPRK ("North Korea") since it can be difficult for Americans to visit. Long story short, not a scary hellscape as you so often hear.
The reason why it is a scary hellscape is because the truth of that country they hide from visitors. Poor people are still eating grass to make food stretch. And, those computers that you see them using, is only for show. citizens are banned from PCs except for a short period of time, and even then, they are limited to only certain websites. It is a very restrictive and hypercontrolling country. You don't see the truth just visiting it. The truth hides behind closed doors.
@@ramirosarachu341 I don’t think so.. like for example Uruguayan life style is above argentinan… argentina is like more a third world country with lot of poverty and with a broken political and economic system … on the other hand they call Uruguay the “swisserland of the americas”
@@postrechaja plus, come on, it is way easier to administrate a country that has more cows than people (low-key literally) than administrating the eight biggest country in the world. Wanna talk about a South American miracle? Talk about Chile (and that's being generous, being England and the United States's mascot, anyone can be a potency)
I’ve only got 2, I’ve been both a US and UK citizen from birth. Though I never stepped foot on UK soil until I was 17. I was born to a British father in the US. My father became a US citizen when I was a kid and hasn’t been back to the UK in over 25 years and he hopes to never go back again. I don’t think I need other citizenship, I’m a proud first gen American and Californian and I will never move away from my home state.
@@madkhaliqfarhan If I have children, they will not be UK citizens because I was born here in California. And no, I would never give birth in the UK-the NHS is so unbelievably terrible and I have zero faith I could make it back to the US alive. I will happily raise my potential future children as Californians simply with Scottish heritage. Though I might change my mind if Scotland can get their shit together and win independence-then my feelings might change.
@@feline.equation This is the spirit, man! Hopefully, when the US goes south and Scotland gains independence from the UK, your children can finally do you a favor!
There are plenty of places that don't allow "dual" citizenships with certain countries. But you can still have another citizenship, it's just that it won't be recognized in an event that you get detained or something - they'll try you as their own citizen and not let you escape to another country or whatever. That's been the case with US and Russia all along.
"Just happened to give birth..." while vacationing in the US is what they call it when it's not a poor person from another country. Otherwise, they call it an "anchor baby". It's not like the mother didn't know she was pregnant AF 😂😂😂
@@timesup6302Yeah! Just because the US gives citizenship to newborns regardless of their parents' citizenship, doesn't mean everyone should do the same! I would still do it the right way: My future child can be born in the US, only if my future wife is also born in the US!
I know of some countries that grant citizenship to all newborns, and that make it very difficult for tourists to leave the country with a newborn citizen, even if the baby is their biological child
I was born and raised in iraq, but i have 3 citizenships: 1. Iraqi citizenship 2. Belgian citizenship ( because my father and his brother migrated to Belgium, and they lived there for 5 year and then got their citizenship also for all of us except my mom ) 3. Turkish citizenship ( because my family applied for Turkish citizenship)
My Dad, who is American, but was born in Peru, was able to reclaim his Peruvian citizenship a few years ago. By extension, my siblings and I were able to claim citizenship, and our kids will be able to as well. 🇺🇸🇵🇪
The United States is one of the only countries in the world with unconditional birthright citizenship, so that's probably the easiest one to add if you're trying to make some hypothetical situation where you maximize the number of countries you're a citizen of. It's also something the US should change, as every other developed country in the world has seen that giving citizenship to people born while vacationing, just passing through, or here illegally, is usually not the best idea. Literally the only other countries other than the US with unconditional birthright citizenship are classified as undeveloped, don't have a welfare state, and receive orders of magnitude less migrants than the US
The United States is one of the few countries that taxes its citizens on their worldwide income, regardless of where they live or work. So every US citizen by birth is supposed to file their US tax regardless of where they live after being born. I doubt the government would want less way to collect tax.
Vacationing TO give birth in the US is also a thing. Im Vietnamese and i have a friend like that, she has an American name despite not living in the US at all.
Us is not one of the only countries with birthright citizenship, BTW. That's almost the whole of North and South America that grants that specific right. Also, it's Ina way one of our defining features, so we probably won't ever get rid of that.
My girlfriend and her parents all have tri-citizenship, mother french, father Israeli, she's French but then they all moved to the US while her brother was born here. Was very interesting to learn
@scp049leplaguedocter3 I do, and I have humanity and dignity- Unlike the colonizers of Palestine. Your stupid occupation will crumble just like Apartheid Africa did. You will not be forgiven for your crimes.
I’m Australian with a German great grandmother and Irish grandfather, father born in the UK 1. Australian born 2. I had a relative who fled Germany under nazi rule 3. Relative who was a citizen of Ireland 4. Parent with a British citizenship 5. European Union if I get either German or Irish I already have the British and obviously Australian
Fun fact about having an Argentina citizenship: you CANNOT give it up. Like, there are countries that ask you to give up your prior citizenship. Well, with Argentina you can’t. You’ll be an Argentine forever. It is kinda beautiful though. Also an edit: this only really applies for citizens that were born in our territory and/or have parents from here and you acquired your citizenship. I think in other cases like people that naturalized, they can give it up.
i can't imagine if a couple of indonesians have a baby on their vacation in Argentina, i mean, Indonesia didn't allow dual citizenship, while Argentina didn't allow their people to give up with their Argentinian citizenship 😂😂😂
My mother Is from Teheran, Iran. My father Is from Bern, Switzerland I was born at Los Angeles, U.S.A. (Becouse of my relatives) And now i live in Lodi, Italy I have the Citizenship of Italy, U.S.A. and Switzerland. I don't have the Iranian Citizenship yet but it's ok... ❤
I could have been an Irish Citizen but I am a generation too late and my mother thought it was "too much Hassle" to give her children options in the world.
Side Note: Indonesia’s Multiple Citizenship program for adults is still in the works, so people in that last category may have to wait a little bit to achieve all 5. 🇮🇩
First no likes I’ll change that
yep in Indonesia if you’re 18 and you were born having multiple citizenships (e.g. Indo parents but born in the US), you have to choose one. If you choose to be Indonesians you have to renounce the others.
Yup, If you choose Indonesian, the rest would be ended lol
I got one for Uk..and one for the republic of Ireland....but dats it : (
Did ya accept the accept the allification between Kalos, and Iroland?
My dad is a citizen of Hong Kong and the US, but one day he got bored and bought a Palauan citizenship so now he’s a citizen of 3 nations
I wish I was able to get a citizenship just coz I'm bored 😅
@@aparajeetshadangi2629Buying citizenship isn't necessarily a good thing. Look at how it's been used to treat the Telegram CEO.
According to Chinese law, if a Chinese citizen obtains citizenship in another country, they are automatically considered to have renounced their Chinese citizenship. This means that if a Chinese citizen becomes a U.S. citizen, they would lose their Chinese citizenship.
Your dad is skirting the law there are no dual Chinese citizens legally
According to Chinese law, if a Chinese citizen obtains citizenship in another country, they are automatically considered to have renounced their Chinese citizenship. This means that if a Chinese citizen becomes a U.S. citizen, they would lose their Chinese citizenship.
When I was a little girl, I had a classmate who was born in the air over several island nations. She held citizenships in the United States, Taiwan (through her father), and Japan (through her mother). Since no one was actually sure where they were when she was born, she was granted citizenship to 3 other island nations.
She was very proud of that fact.
How can someone be born at 3 places at once?
@@FreeDomSy-nk9ue according to this story, no one was sure of the precise time of birth, and the plane flew over 3 island nations, so each nation granted her citizenship
I wonder what her birth certificate says
@@scottclowe probably whatever country the plane departed from. That's my guess at least
Being born in air is such a based fact. I bet her nickname was airborne or something like that. However Japan doesn't allow dual citizenship to Japanese people. Source? Satoshi ishii for some fucking reason decided to be croatian
My mother is Argentinian, my father is Italian and I was born and raised in London. I have triple citizenship 🇦🇷🇬🇧🇮🇹.
Some people would strongly disagree. They would say "If you're born in the UK, you'll always be British! If you wanna be Italian, you should've been born in Italy and if you wanna be Argentinian, you should've been born in Argentina!"
@@madkhaliqfarhan Those people would be wrong, though.
@@James-gc5if Or they're just nationalists!
Hola... From an angertinian ✨😃
Its so easy to get 3 or 4 citizenship being from argentina
I live in the US. I’m a citizen. I’m originally from Crimea, so both Ukraine and Russia recognize me as a citizen. I was born a citizen of the Soviet Union.
That’s a hell of a spread!
Are you pro-Russian or pro-Ukrainian now? Just wondering
@@IIISofiaIII
Wanna start a fire? 👀
@@Kierispet159 good one
@@IIISofiaIIII’m sure she is pro-ruzzian, non of pro-Ukrainian would have say “both recognise”. At least, Russia occupied or invaded. But not just recognise.
I'm French, my wife is from Lebanon, our son was born in the US and we just got Canadian citizenship. He has 4 citizenships!
Does that also mean 4 passports? Can you use 4 different passports at the same time? This is so fascinating to me as a passport holder that can only access 30 countries visa free lol
Yes you can use four different passports; you have to use the passport of the country you are entering if you are a citizen of that country, otherwise you can choose which ones you want to use all over the world, based on visas & visa fees etc
That's awful. Why would you give your son Canadian citizenship, especially when he already has US citizenship, in this case its going to be completely useless lol
You don’t have to be a celebrity.
I have 4! Bosnian from my mother, Belgian from my father, French from spending most of my childhood in France, and British from spending the rest of my childhood in the UK due to my parents work. I have 4 passports.
My cousin is half Lebanese 🇱🇧 and half Serbian and was born in canada, he married a half German half swiss girl, and now his daughter is a citizen of Germany,Serbia, Lebanon, Switzerland and Canada
that's a bit much
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮wow, that's alot of citizenship. 5 that's amazing.
United Nations at home
Can I be friends with y'all!? Amazing! ❤
Is she actually registered in all? Germany only recently (June2024) started allowing dual and most of the others you must register before majority or lose it
I have 1 citizenship and this video made me think about how boring I am so thank you
Be glad, because people with 0 citizenship wish they had one citizenship right now...
I have one citizenship and its from a third world country be thankful for yours
@@justts7546 us bro
I’m a soon-to-be holder of 3 citizenships! I’m Argentinian 🇦🇷 and Italian 🇮🇹 and in the process of becoming a British 🇬🇧 citizen too after living in the UK for more than 6 years!
Become an iron land citizen!
How do you do it@@ThatOneLithuanianMapper
Congratulations! Our country is a bit shit but I'm glad you're here!
no acepte nacionalidad pirata, compañera (?
Congratulations 🎉
Polish mother, Brazilian father and born in France 🇵🇱🇧🇷🇫🇷
That means that you also have EU citizenship
@@Space0fox i do
Make it four! Become a citizen of iron land!
@@OrangeCat371 that would be nice
Birth in France doesn't give you citizenship.
I have a friend that is citizen of 5 countries (it will be 6 in 5 years).
His mother is Venezuelan, his father Colombian, his grandfather German, he was born in the USA, but lived in Costa Rica until he was 13 y/o, then he moved to Spain where I met him, and in 5 years he will be eligible for the Spanish nationality as well.
I have a friend who is a citizen of 6....
Become a citizen of ironland
Idk about the others but that doesn’t qualify him for German citizenship unless he lived there for 2 years and applied, grandparents don’t qualify you for automatic citizenship, just a wait time of 2 years instead of 5-8
Venezuelans and Colombians can apply to the Spanish citizenship only after 2 years working.
😂fr@@eeriestare48
Mr. Aga Khan IV( Prince Karim Al-Husseini) holds the citizenship of UK, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Switzerland, Canada and honorary citizenship of Mali, Tanzania, Uzbekistan, Pakistan and many more countries.
yep
bet he got them after donating millions of good will monies!
@@guysabol8743 some by birthplace, some by parents and grandparents and some by his Islamic lineage linked to Prophet Mohammad.
@@guysabol8743 yeah
Uzbekistan 😮
Imagine a multi billionaire buying citizenship of 195 countries
Only a select few countries actually sell citizenships
Just buy a country instead
You definitely can't buy* iegealy
Most country
(The whole intire country)
Speedrunning Earth fr🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥
I have 4 citizenships: Argentina by birth, Italian from my mom, Spanish from my dad and British as I’ve been living in the uk for 20 years
Estamos en todos lados
@@GoldenBoots77 Spain didn't ask you to give up the Italian one? I know it is impossible to give up the argentinian citizenship, but I thought Spain only allowed for their citizen to have two.
@@phmlsp that’s if you are born in Spain and your main citizenship is Spain , but as mine is Argentina and I got the Spanish one last , I didn’t have to give up any of them
Did you go because of 2001 crisis?
@@erichhonecker8260 20 años, la crisis fue hace 23, casi 24
In Northern Ireland anyone born on the island of ireland prior to 2004 is automatically entitled to both Irish and British citizenship. So its very common to find people like ATJ in NI because each parent already comes with 2 passports.
My friend's father is Canadian-Pakistani and his mother is from NI, and is technically entitled to four citizenships though he only claims 3.
Good Friday Agreement moment 🎉🎉
It’s not anyone born on the island, just anyone born in Northern Ireland!
Pakistan gives out citizenships very easily, I have 5 citizenships because of this, despite no one in my family being born in Pakistan, I have a relative born in Mysore(India), who was Muslim, and thus got citizenship in 1948, even though she left soon afterwards (and had no relatives born there) I inherit the citizenship
@@randomdams9179 Well, their first foreign minister was an Austrian-Jewish convert....
Yep, I hold three because of NI - Irish, British, and Brazilian
A man from France, married a woman from Portugal, in London. They had a boy there. But they shifted to Denmark and raised him there. When he grew up, they sent him to Germany for studies. Then he went to Russia and married a girl from Hungary, and went on a vacation in Rome, where they had their first child. And had their second in Warsaw. Both were raised & educated in the Netherlands. Today the whole family lives in Vienna.
WHAT A EUROPEAN FAMILY 🇪🇺🇪🇺
wowww
3 citizenships!!❤
My friend is ethnically Serbian, was born in Croatia where her family lived. During the wars in the 1990s, they were forced back into Serbia and then came to the US as refugees.
Cool
@@thebluelord_25 serbia bosnia usa for me
No one forced anyone, plenty of Serbians kept living in Croatia..... they still leave there.
@@samfktmany MANY left, there’s video footage, who are you lying to? Yourself?
@@samfkt Casually ignores attacks led by the military
My grandmother had Cyprus, Egypt, UK and Australian. She spoke 5 languages (Greek, English, Arabic, Italian and French)!!
My dad's cousin (Iranian) married a half Austrian-half Russian girl. Their daughter married a Korean man. Now, his grandkids can claim citizenships of Iran, Korea, Austria and Russia.
Almost bingo
South Korean passports are one of the most powerful in existence so the grandkids won the jackpot!
That's one hell of a differentiated gene pool.
Really?
@@siewheilou399 Yeah. They're quite real. And, I think this has been happening throughout history. Just not as well documented as it is these days. Another cousin of mine (Iranian-British) did a DNA test and not only did it pinpoint the exact city in Iran where our side of the family came from, but also showed that he British side was a combination of three other European nations. And, there was also a mysterious 12% Mongolian which nobody seemed to have any ideas about 😂
my friend is half italian-half estonian and she was born in denmark and lived there for a few years :D
In that case, you cannot have 5 citizenships because Indonesia does not recognise multiple citizenship. Either you're Indonesian, or not AT ALL. There's no in between.
I'm Indonesian, and I'm so jealous of people that could have multiple citizenship.
I added a pinned comment to say that Indonesia’s multiple citizenship program for adults is still in the works this year 🙏 We’ll see what happens.
In my country (the Marshall Islands), multiple citizenship is unconstitutional, but a significant percentage of citizens have dual-citizenship with the US. We're supposed to get rid of one nationality by 18 but no one's enforcing that law.
Technically when they grant you an American citizenship they ask you to give up all the others, but that’s not how it works. Indonesia might not accept your foreign passport but you can still use it outside of indonesia
China also does not recognize multiple citizenship
@_magnify Yo, does indian citizenship count? We have an "Overseas Citizenship of India card (OCI card)" for people who have the citizenship of another country, but it denies 2 rights that you would have if you only had the Indian citizenship.
I was born to a mother from Lesotho, a father from South Africa, in Salt Lake City, USA. So i have 3 citizenships😁 🇿🇦 🇱🇸 🇺🇸
Does the US allow dual citizenship?
@@LM-he7eb Yes
When you're from a country that doesn't allow dual citizenship... 😐
I'm actually glad for having only one citizenship because I'm always aware that while there are people that wished they had multiple citizenships, there are also people that wished they had only one citizenship!
@@madkhaliqfarhanExcept that it’s easier to get rid of citizenship that it is to gain citizenship…
@@ebl36 They probably love both citizenships, so it feels very hard to get rid of one of them...
And one of these countries that don't allow dual citizenship? China. This guy is full of it. As if any ethnically Chinese person is entitled to claim Chinese citizenship. Not only is THAT not true, Chinese laws allows them to cancel the citizenship of anybody who they found out have taken up another. Doesn't happen automatically. Like how would they find out? But if you are famous, or simply screw up and mistakenly presented your other passport to Chinese immigration when leaving or entering, I don't think they are on the lookout for this, but it would be logged and could lead to problems later down the line.
Most countries that don't "allow" it don't actually check, because it isn't a law, it just means they don't recognize it.
*_I was born in Canada 🇨🇦. Precisely in Québec 🇲🇶. My father is Iranian 🇮🇷, and my mother is Russian 🇷🇺. I am eligible for 3 citizenships._*
That last claim is sus since China does not recognize multiple citizenship. You're either a Chinese citizen or you're not, you can't be a dual citizen.
China may not recognize dual citizenship, but that doesn’t necessarily mean you can’t be Chinese and have dual citizenship (at least from what I’ve read). From Wikipedia:
“While Chinese law makes possessing multiple citizenships difficult, a large number of residents in Hong Kong and Macau have some form of British or Portuguese nationality due to the history of those regions as former European colonies. Mainland Chinese nationals who voluntarily acquire foreign citizenship automatically lose Chinese nationality.”
Macanese have both Chinese and Portuguese citizenship.
@@scottishcheese13No I live in China and you can't have multiple citizenships my friends can't get them and neither can I. China doesn't allow it and if you get a different citizenship you have to choose that or your Chinese one.
@@dano_theQueen not very good at reading, huh?
@@scottishcheese13 I don't know what you mean by that. Quote from the www.gov.uk/government/publications/nationality-in-china/nationality-in-china-accessible#:~:text=Article%203%20of%20The%20People's,China%20on%20a%20British%20passport. says "Article 3 of The People's Republic of China Nationality Law states that China does not recognize dual nationality". So i don't think you can read...
I am a citizen of 4 countries🇦🇱🇭🇷🇩🇪🇮🇹. My parents are Albanian which automatically grants me Albanian citizenship, but my dad was born and raised in Croatia and through him I get Croatian citizenship, and my mother was born and raised in Germany and through her I get German citizenship. Also my grandfather (mom’s side) is Italian, which means my mom is a citizen of both Germany and Italy and I get to be a citizen of Italy too.
Mos rrej
Ni pytje. A ben problem nese je me adrese te jashtme ne pasaporte?
I have 3 citizenships, thanks to being by birth Tunisian, emmigration to france for 8 years during which i naturalised, and then due to marrying an australian and moving there, I now have my third citizenship
@benwut , thats pretty cool mate , citizenship from 3 continents 👍🏼
I myself am Australian only 🦘🐨🦘
this is so cool, i’m only american but my father is tunisian and hold american, tunisian, and belgian citizenship. my mother was born in italy so i wonder if i qualify for citizenship
Fellow tunisian in the wild wooooo
If you divorce her and merry new you can have a 4th. But in general I am happy that you could escape France.
lucky you!
Some immigrants can have quite a few! I have an Iraqi friend with three citizenships. He fled to Ukraine at age 6 I believe, and got his second citizenship there. I met him earlier this year just after moving to Copenhagen, where he lives now. He passed his Danish citizenship test, giving him the third citizenship. The wildest part? He’s 22. He lives with his parents and travel around the world while studying law at the University of Copenhagen. He’s so cool.
a sad detail: His girlfriend is American and lives in California. His mere precense in some countries he visited bans him from entering the US - at least until the rules change. It breaks my heart that he can’t even visit his girlfriend; see her home, try her favorite restaurants, get her favorite snacks from the grocery store, .. everything that shaped her. He misses out on it because of law. It’s tragic how politics and xenophobia get in the way of relationships and families. I hope he gets to see where she grew up one day.
a sad detail: His girlfriend is American and lives in California. His mere precense in some countries he visited bans him from entering the US - at least until the rules change. It breaks my heart that he can’t even visit his girlfriend; see her home, try her favorite restaurants, get her favorite snacks from the grocery store, .. everything that shaped her. He misses out on it because of law. It’s tragic how politics and xenophobia get in the way of relationships and families. I hope he gets to see where she grew up one day.
I’m from Venezuela, Chile and working on being a Spanish citizen as well. Being an immigrant child just does that.
unfortunately I’m just a 2 citizenship commie 😔
@@louisquartersson4555 Sucks for you.
3 countries, yet only 1 language.
Please work harder. We don't want you in here
@@SalihSelamet Have you heard chileans speaking, is like another language?😂
My mum is Nepali and my dad is Russian and I was born in England. Growing up my parents always tried to mix the food they grew up eating together, always ended up looking... Unappetizing.
Just try authentic nepali food and see how it goes.
I’m beyond thrilled to announce that I am officially a citizen of the great nation of Ironland! 🎉 Today, I exercised my Ironlandish right to vote for the very first time, and it felt incredible. ✨ There’s something truly empowering about knowing that my voice, my choice, can shape the future of this amazing country.
From the moment I was handed my Ironlandish citizenship certificate, I knew this was more than just a piece of paper; it was a key to unlock my role in the democratic process. 🔑 And today, I proudly cast my vote, standing side by side with fellow Ironlandians, united in our commitment to the values we cherish-freedom, equality, and justice for all. 💪
Voting isn’t just a right; it’s a responsibility. It’s a way to honor those who came before us, fought for the freedoms we enjoy, and continue the work of building a better tomorrow. Ironland has given me so much, and today, I gave back. 🙌
It's Ironlish.
ironland has no army please leave the nation
Is this from something?
ChatGPT ahh comment
@@Diogo2coolIt is true it is true
Brazilian here: born in Brazil to Brazilian parents, lived 10 years in Germany, naturalized german, and later got italian citizenship because of my great-grandparents. Now I am living in Luxemburg and if I stay some years here, I can obtain a forth nationality. ❤
I am currently a US, Slovak, and polish citizen. I only got it because of heritage laws in European countries. But don’t forget ironland!
Aren’t you a citizen of Ironland?
@@tdrg_it's 4 now
I have 3
(Canada, US and Ironland.)
@@Will.iam-67 I have 4 then (Canada, US, El Salvador and Ironland 😏)
@@baggybones jeez that's nice
My dad is born in Australia, his mum’s parents fled Austria in the 40’s for… a reason. So he’s eligible for Austrian, he’s also eligible for German as his dads parents are German and left for the same reason, his dad was born in Bolivia and gained Bolivian citizenship,he never gave it up so technically my dad is eligible for Bolivian too. My dad is also Jewish so Israeli citizenship is also a possibility. This makes my dad eligible for Australian,German,Austrian,Bolivian,Israeli + ironland (oh and you can have them all at once as long as you do Austrian military before you get Bolivian)
Ehhhhhh, usually you have to give up other citizenships before getting the german one.
*Mr worldwide*
@@cicoooooooAlso Germany, like the US, taxes its citizens living abroad. iirc
@@cicooooooo they changed it
Colonisers see themselves in isra*l, while oppressed people or people with ancestors who were oppressed see themselves in the Palestinians. #freepalestine
Bro has a crush on ATJ
Who doesn’t
Me too, bro
@@WhyIsGamora109 🙋♂️ Never heard of her before this.
She looks like a cute bunny ❤
Bro has to breathe to live
My mom is Brazilian I was born in America and now I am a citizen of Ironland
We getting at least two citizen ships with this one 🗣️🔥🔥
We sinking ships full of people with this one 🗣️🗣️🗣️🌊🌊🌊
That is actually very neat! I'm only a citizen of Sweden, unless we count Ironland too...
The most important is fact you actually have the EU citizenship! And then the strength of the citizenship ( where you can go without visa)
@@emilstasevski4295 Oh yeah, of course, I forgot about that😅
Fellow swede I see
I only have three citizenship although I have never been to one of the counties
Iran, Iraq, and Canada
Here’s the story
My dad was born in Iraq deported to Iran lived in Iran for 4 decades moved to Canada married to a Canadian and yeah
@@emilstasevski4295rubbing it in for us brits eh 😂
I had a friend in uni who just randomly happened to be a portuguése citizen because his parents were born on a Portuguese territory island near the Philippines. It came in handy for him getting to study anywhere he wanted.
The Portuguese empire technically lasted from 1480 to 2000, from 1920 to 1975 all citizens from territories of the Portuguese empire had equal status to someone born in Portugal so people born before 1975 have Portuguese passports. And if both your mom and your dad have Portuguese passports you are usually entitled to Portuguese citizenship (If your family is confirmed to not have fought against the Portuguese for 3 generations, they aren't keen on giving citizenship to the kids or grandkids of people who were mass beheading Portuguese farmers from the 60s to the 80s. Sometimes proving you have interest in Portugal and it's culture is also required, for the reason that a lot of people could in theory have Portuguese citizenship fall on their lap because, again, until 1975 a lot of places were just Portugal including Timor-Leste and Malacca which is probably the island you're referring to.)
Born in Brazil 🇧🇷 , naturalized in the U.S.A. 🇺🇸, and obtaining Italian 🇮🇹 citizenship through my ancestors. However, I'm most excited about gaining Mexican 🇲🇽 citizenship through marriage-because I'm in love with Mexico ❤️.
I have 3 citizenship. My mother is Brasilian , and my dad is Belgian and I was born in France, and my Mom naturalized French, which made me French too.
I'm a citizen of 3! My parents are both turkish and i was born in the Netherlands while they were visiting family, when i was about 4 i moved in with my grandma in croatia after like 5/6 years i got my croatian citenzenship!
My daughter has a TH-cam account without comment permissions, but is requesting to be granted citizenship anyways. She's a promising young woman with a lot to offer our great nation, if you would be so kind as to allow her to join our ranks. Thank you very much, glory be to Ironland!
I second this
I don't understand
You are a real one for that
I have 3 - British by birth, Kiwi by descent, and naturalised American. My dad could potentially get up to 5, but currently has 3. He has British, American, and Venezuelan, is eligible for Irish, and will likely become eligible for NZ eventually. All through birth, descent, and naturalisation. My relatives just have just moved around a lot lol
I was born in Denmark to a British Pakistani dad and Pakistani mother and live in the UK. So I’m danish by birth, British by passport and Pakistani by ancestry.
It's easy to have a few citizenships, if you're not afraid to move around or if your family is of mixed origin. Russian-German, who moved to the Netherlands, being 20 yo. It's also the reason, why I speak 4 languages.
If you live your whole life in Portland, and both your parents are from Portland, you'll be just an American citizen, a resident of Portland.
Easy if you're rich
I'm surprised so many places allow 3+ citizenships, even double citizenship is hotly debated where I'm from
@shadowxthevampiressofficial I'm not rich. Middle class, maybe. 2000 euros a month is still a bit low for Western Europe.
@@crazydragy4233 Asia?
@@Camilla_Kudrin Nope
German - French mother, Cypriot father and born in Greece, so 4 just from being born: 🇩🇪 🇫🇷 🇨🇾 🇬🇷
4 EU citizenships is class
@@imanepink is there any benefit? you can travel all europe visa free already
@@ismbksthat’s what i was thinking
it’s pretty much similar in that regard
must be annoying to do the bereaucracy of renewing all 4 of them tbh
@@ismbks i just think that it’s cool but you’re probably right about there being no benefit
@@jinorism yeah it can be actual hell if you absolutely need your passport for administrative stuff and you haven't renewed it. like if you have a family member deceased from that country, you won't be able to sign any documents at the notary. it will take months to do the procedure and probably lots flying/driving many km just to sign some papers.
Albert Einstein was accepted as a global citizen that means he is a citizen of all
countries...
im probably on of the only people with citizenship from chile and monaco 🇨🇱🇲🇨
Monaco wow
Rare, for sure.
wow monaco is interesting
If you're a citizen of Monaco then that's your only citizenship as they prohibit dual/multi nationality.
@@matthewnirenberg no because i was first born in chile and then after a few years i got the monegasque nationality from my mother officially, as well as my father got it because he was married i think for twenty years with my mother
Buying UAE Citizenship is crazy
he didn't buy it he was awarded by the rulers. no one can buy uae citizenship
I am Croatia, Slovenia for my mum, UK from dad, Ireland from my grandad and moved and now have the Australian passport. So there’s 5
(From the US) I had a professor who was born in Venezuela but inherited Italian citizenship from her Italian-born parents. Then moved to Uruguay at a young age (got citizenship there) and then she moved to the U.S. and has since become naturalized. 4 citizenships, still a lot
Once an Italian, always an Italian!
As an Indian, our citizenship laws are infamously tough, we can barely keep our own citizenship 😂😂
You get Pakistani citizenship
@@scp049leplaguedocter3WTF
And I love my country India
In former Yugoslavia it’s very common to have ancestors from several ex-Yu countries so majority of people is eligible for several citizenships. It’s common to be eligible for 3+ citizenships.
For example during industrialization many people moved to big cities like Belgrade from all parts of the county, often other republics. After those republics seceded people were able to get citizenships by ancestry because of their parents/grandparents.
While i’m Serbian i could also get Bosnian and Montenegrin passport because my grandparents are born there, but there is no point in doing that.
On the other hand people whose ancestors are from Croatia or other EU countries get second citizenship because of EU benefits so they can emigrate and travel more easily. Many of “Croatian” immigrants in EU are actually people from other non EU countries just using their Croatian passport to emigrate more easily.
Monte will join eu in the distant future
that ATJ shot is still legendary
yes 😍
I'm born in Argentina, raised in Sweden by Uruguayan parents...🇦🇷🇺🇾🇸🇪😊😊
Technically I could have Latvian, Estonian, Russian, Polish, German citizenships, maybe British / American too. 😂
and ironlandian
I'm legally Zimbabwean and despite being born in South Africa and living here for 17 years, I still don't have citizenship. Home affairs is corrupt and xenophobic.
Africans don’t help themselves
What are the criteria for getting South African citizenship?
And yet South Africa portrait itself as open minded being and anti-racist on the side of Russia and Palestine. Such hypocrites.
I wish you strength and success! Stay resilient!
@@Missreepee you have to hold a permanent residence visa for several years and then file for it. I got perm-res under my mother's valuable skills visa. We first tried applying for citizenship after 10 years, but they lost the application 😑. Tried to start it again, but then covid hit and the home affairs office pretty much shut down. Since then the process has become more complicated. Needed to get police clearances (took a few weeks) and proof-of-proof-of-permanent-residence which took months and they lost my brother's... all this costing several thousand rands each. It's absolutely absurd. Only once we get those completed/fixed can we do the actual application.
I am a citizen of Ironland, Britain and of course The Federation of Saikos.
Born and raised in Brazil and also have an Italian citizenship because my great grandfather is from Italy. Also currently living in London and in the process of getting an uk citizenship :)
Indian 🇮🇳: single citizenship program 😢😅😅
I have 3 citizenships - Ironland, the Czech Republic (yes that embassy is mine) and my parents gave birth while vacationing in India
India doesnt support dual or multiple cicltizenships
Be an Indian and buy some real estate in a prime location. You won't regret.
@@anush_agrawal Maybe, but I was born there, and my "main" citizenship is Czech, and both Ironland and Czechia accept multiple citizenships, and if you are born in a country, you are automatically its citizen, and I then got an identity card in Czechia and was given complimentary citizenship in Ironland, its not like the Indians can really do anything about it, so say what you want, fellow CITIZEN, I dont care.
I work with passports and I saw a lady with a Indian passport and an USA passport. I'm sure it's on the Download with her
I could claim different citizenships but I would lose others
My Grandfather was a citizen of Algeria (by birth and heritage), Spain (he lived in Barcelona and married by Catalan grandmother) and Australia (he moved with her). And if he was still alive today he would’ve been eligible for Catalan citizenship. RIP Legend
Excluding Ironland, I have three citizenships; Austrian, German and Hungarian. My mom's from Hungary and my dad's from Austria, but HIS dad is from Germany, so he got the German citizenship too and I inherited all three.
I have 4 citizenship. Japan, SIERRA Leone, Guinea and The UK
I'm a citizen of Spain, Italy, Cyprus and New Zealand. My dad is spanish, my mom is italian. My dad bought citizenship to cyprus for tax reasons and then we moved to new zealand where for a brief period you could get citizenship if you bought a house.
I’m French 🇫🇷(dad) and Gabonese (mom) 🇬🇦, currently a permanent resident in South Africa 🇿🇦 maybe one day I’ll obtain the citizenship.
Dude, I have three and they all come from my father. My dad is Brazilian and Italian so I have those two and I live in America.
Were you born in Brazil?
No born in the USA my dad was born in Brazil and his father in Italy I inherited all three and have been to all three
I can potentially get 5:
- Aussie by birth
- Naturalised in Canada
- Somalia by Ethnic Right
- Ethiopia by ancestry (my father was born in Ethiopia)
- Kenya (if I use the Tribe/ Lineage card)
How's that Somalia and Kenya thingy? I'm just curious lol
@@ramirosarachu341 elaborate
@@ssj4sensei878 lol, I was actually asking you to elaborate, I'm curious what that Tribe card/Ethnic Right thing means, you know?
I had a buddy who is has Greek and American citizen. He used his Greek citizenship to be able to visit the DPRK ("North Korea") since it can be difficult for Americans to visit. Long story short, not a scary hellscape as you so often hear.
The reason why it is a scary hellscape is because the truth of that country they hide from visitors. Poor people are still eating grass to make food stretch. And, those computers that you see them using, is only for show. citizens are banned from PCs except for a short period of time, and even then, they are limited to only certain websites. It is a very restrictive and hypercontrolling country. You don't see the truth just visiting it. The truth hides behind closed doors.
I proudly say that I am an INDIAN. I am loyal towards my country and I love my country
Ok btw I'm also indian
But why are saying like having more than 1 citizenship is bad
*I know Uruguayans (1) living in the US (2) who had Spanish (3) and Italian (4) grandparents and have all 4 passports and citizenship.*
They have 5 tho'. Uruguay is an Argentinian province
@@ramirosarachu341 I don’t think so.. like for example Uruguayan life style is above argentinan… argentina is like more a third world country with lot of poverty and with a broken political and economic system … on the other hand they call Uruguay the “swisserland of the americas”
@@postrechaja a-ha. Boring. Tell your friends to buy another culture for themselves, we're kinda sick of them just copying ours, you know?
@@postrechaja plus, come on, it is way easier to administrate a country that has more cows than people (low-key literally) than administrating the eight biggest country in the world. Wanna talk about a South American miracle? Talk about Chile (and that's being generous, being England and the United States's mascot, anyone can be a potency)
@@ramirosarachu341 lol kid you just got offended with the truth 🤣😂🤣
I’ve only got 2, I’ve been both a US and UK citizen from birth. Though I never stepped foot on UK soil until I was 17. I was born to a British father in the US. My father became a US citizen when I was a kid and hasn’t been back to the UK in over 25 years and he hopes to never go back again. I don’t think I need other citizenship, I’m a proud first gen American and Californian and I will never move away from my home state.
Like father, like son... But hopefully, your future child will relocate to the UK...
@@madkhaliqfarhan If I have children, they will not be UK citizens because I was born here in California. And no, I would never give birth in the UK-the NHS is so unbelievably terrible and I have zero faith I could make it back to the US alive. I will happily raise my potential future children as Californians simply with Scottish heritage. Though I might change my mind if Scotland can get their shit together and win independence-then my feelings might change.
@@feline.equation This is the spirit, man! Hopefully, when the US goes south and Scotland gains independence from the UK, your children can finally do you a favor!
I've got citizenship in 3 countries.
My wife has 2 citizenships
My daugter has 5 citizenships
Which countries, if I may ask?
@@sadiauddin8701 I'm British, Japanese born in Australia.
My wife is Spanish, Filipino
So as you can imagine, our daughter is mixed lol
If you daughter merries someone with 5 and divorces several times, she can have even 30 or 40. I am happy for her!
She can marry someone with another 5 citizenships and boom, 10 citizenships each (if she stays at his countries for a while I guess, though)
that’s me i’m from Timor Leste🇹🇱 and you are very correct here we have more than one citizen 😅
Estonian grandmother who lived in Sweden, Indian grandfather, Norwegian grandmother, Canadian aunt, American parents, born in turkey
What are you?
Doesn't mean you have all those citizenships though. India, for example, would not allow you to have multiple citizenships.
@@hilaryhongkong true - oci card though
Bro this is so messy 🤯
Proud to be a British and Canadian dual citizen 🇬🇧🇨🇦 luv me empiuh, God save the king!
Check your facts dude, China doesn’t allow dual citizenship..
There are plenty of places that don't allow "dual" citizenships with certain countries. But you can still have another citizenship, it's just that it won't be recognized in an event that you get detained or something - they'll try you as their own citizen and not let you escape to another country or whatever. That's been the case with US and Russia all along.
Not the case for Indonesia and China they will forfeit your citizenship if you choose a foreign citizenship.
@@VeyaMeowthat's not true with China though.
hes not checking anything, telegram ceo bought this citizenship 20+ years ago lol, definitely recently
you can be stripped of citizenship by naturalization, but citizenship by birth cannot be removed
I’m a citizen of 4! British mum, Irish dad, born in the US, and immigrated to Canada.
I don't know if it counts, but I'm a Spanish and Catalan citizen, since Catalonia is one of the autonomical regions that form Spain
"Just happened to give birth..." while vacationing in the US is what they call it when it's not a poor person from another country. Otherwise, they call it an "anchor baby". It's not like the mother didn't know she was pregnant AF 😂😂😂
She also didn't do it to take advantage of a countries laws like the actual anchor babies do. Its super disrespectful to Americans. Not that you care
@@timesup6302Yeah! Just because the US gives citizenship to newborns regardless of their parents' citizenship, doesn't mean everyone should do the same! I would still do it the right way: My future child can be born in the US, only if my future wife is also born in the US!
I know of some countries that grant citizenship to all newborns, and that make it very difficult for tourists to leave the country with a newborn citizen, even if the baby is their biological child
@@gulplastgaffel They made their choice to give birth here and they must leave it here...
Don’t forget Uncle Sam taxes citizens even if they have never been to the us since their birth, so it can be a curse as well
I was born and raised in iraq, but i have 3 citizenships:
1. Iraqi citizenship
2. Belgian citizenship ( because my father and his brother migrated to Belgium, and they lived there for 5 year and then got their citizenship also for all of us except my mom )
3. Turkish citizenship ( because my family applied for Turkish citizenship)
Then you have a fourth one too : 🇪🇺EU citizenship 👍🏽
Im turk with Syrian and Maldivian citizenship.
My Dad, who is American, but was born in Peru, was able to reclaim his Peruvian citizenship a few years ago. By extension, my siblings and I were able to claim citizenship, and our kids will be able to as well. 🇺🇸🇵🇪
The United States is one of the only countries in the world with unconditional birthright citizenship, so that's probably the easiest one to add if you're trying to make some hypothetical situation where you maximize the number of countries you're a citizen of.
It's also something the US should change, as every other developed country in the world has seen that giving citizenship to people born while vacationing, just passing through, or here illegally, is usually not the best idea.
Literally the only other countries other than the US with unconditional birthright citizenship are classified as undeveloped, don't have a welfare state, and receive orders of magnitude less migrants than the US
And Donald Trump wants to put an end to this privilege!
The United States is one of the few countries that taxes its citizens on their worldwide income, regardless of where they live or work. So every US citizen by birth is supposed to file their US tax regardless of where they live after being born.
I doubt the government would want less way to collect tax.
Vacationing TO give birth in the US is also a thing. Im Vietnamese and i have a friend like that, she has an American name despite not living in the US at all.
@@lequanghuy6027 Good luck paying all the taxes to the IRS, then!
Us is not one of the only countries with birthright citizenship, BTW. That's almost the whole of North and South America that grants that specific right. Also, it's Ina way one of our defining features, so we probably won't ever get rid of that.
My girlfriend and her parents all have tri-citizenship, mother french, father Israeli, she's French but then they all moved to the US while her brother was born here. Was very interesting to learn
Israel isnt a real country but nice try
@@CL-hs3ku Boooo
@@Kull1339 make it 4 because she also gets hamas citizenship.
@@CL-hs3ku you dont exist
@scp049leplaguedocter3 I do, and I have humanity and dignity- Unlike the colonizers of Palestine. Your stupid occupation will crumble just like Apartheid Africa did. You will not be forgiven for your crimes.
“Just happened to give birth while vacationing in Florida”. Sure.
It's actually planned very carefully from the first day of pregnancy but they don't want to make it too obvious!
I went to school with a girl who was a citizen of three countries. One parent was German, one was American, and she was born in Switzerland
I’m Australian with a German great grandmother and Irish grandfather, father born in the UK
1. Australian born
2. I had a relative who fled Germany under nazi rule
3. Relative who was a citizen of Ireland
4. Parent with a British citizenship
5. European Union if I get either German or Irish
I already have the British and obviously Australian
3 citizenships!
A citizen of United States, Ironland, and New York Federation.
Joel Embiid mentioned 😍😍😍
Shame my Celtics keep knocking his ass to cancun before he can make it out of the second round 😂
@@Strategic_Reformer rent free
I'm Brazilian, and I also have Italian citizenship by decent. I'm also eligible for Portuguese and Uruguayan.
We want to start diplomatic reletionships with Ironland
Fun fact about having an Argentina citizenship: you CANNOT give it up. Like, there are countries that ask you to give up your prior citizenship. Well, with Argentina you can’t. You’ll be an Argentine forever. It is kinda beautiful though.
Also an edit: this only really applies for citizens that were born in our territory and/or have parents from here and you acquired your citizenship. I think in other cases like people that naturalized, they can give it up.
i can't imagine if a couple of indonesians have a baby on their vacation in Argentina, i mean, Indonesia didn't allow dual citizenship, while Argentina didn't allow their people to give up with their Argentinian citizenship 😂😂😂
I have three citizenships I was born in the United States. My parents are Peruvian and I became a citizen of New Zealand.
Become ironlandian, and have four
My mother Is from Teheran, Iran.
My father Is from Bern, Switzerland
I was born at Los Angeles, U.S.A. (Becouse of my relatives)
And now i live in Lodi, Italy
I have the Citizenship of Italy, U.S.A. and Switzerland.
I don't have the Iranian Citizenship yet but it's ok... ❤
I could have been an Irish Citizen but I am a generation too late and my mother thought it was "too much Hassle" to give her children options in the world.
She hated Ireland so much she doesn't want to give you Irish citizenship...
Imagine applying for social support in all of them.
I only got Australia and ironland
I recall a football player, januzaj, that was elegible by roots to play with 11! Different national teams!