Monday, June 25, 2012

Differences between U.S. Citizenship and Permanent Residency

#1. Differences between U.S. Citizenship and Permanent Residency

Differences between U.S. Citizenship and Permanent Residency

Permanent Residency provides your wife with most of the benefits of citizenship, with a few supreme exceptions.

Differences between U.S. Citizenship and Permanent Residency

She has the right to work and pay taxes. Oh boy!

One difference is that she cannot vote in elections, which may be a big deal or not depending on your personal philosophy on the subject.

Another difference is that a permanent resident cannot work for the Us Government. So if your desire is to have your wife working at the Post Office, she will need to come to be a naturalized habitancy first.

By the way, your wife will be eligible to come to be a Us habitancy as a spouse of a Us habitancy in as minuscule as three years from the time she became a Permanent Resident.

One main infer for her to come to be a Us habitancy is if she wants to petition to bring other members of her immediate family, such as her mother or father, or brothers or sisters, to America under a permanent visa. She must be a Us habitancy in order to do so.

She can petition to bring her immediate house here under a tourist or visitor's visa under her permanent residency, but she cannot petition for permanent residency for them until she is a citizen.

Another difference in the middle of a permanent resident and a habitancy is how you are handled in the event you are convicted of a crime.

A felony is defined as a crime where the punishment for the crime, if convicted, is a year or more in prison.

A habitancy who is convicted of a felony may serve a sentence and may lose certain citizenship ownership such as voting and the right to carry a firearm, but they do not lose their citizenship.

A permanent resident that is convicted of a felony has the same sentencing requirements as a citizen, but after serving their sentence, they may lose their right to be in the United States, and may be deported.

I know of a man who has a Russian spouse whose wife likes to shoplift. If you followed the recent Wynona Ryder shoplifting case, you are aware of the fact that she was convicted of a amount of felonies.

If she had been a permanent resident rather than a citizen, Wynona may have been field to deportation.

If this man's Russian wife were to take more than 0.00 worth of goods from a store, she could be prosecuted for grand theft, which is a felony. If she gets caught, she may be on a plane back home before she knows it.

I am not excusing her behavior, but I'm only warning you of the consequences of certain behavior. Shoplifting, or ownership of controlled substances, or any other crime that may seem innocuous to someone, may still be a felony, and may ensue in your wife's deportation.

Consider yourself warned.

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