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I was born in a hospital on a military base, which is considered federal property. Does this mean that I am not a resident of a particular state and are their any advantages or disadvantages to this. I think the same holds true for residents of Washington DC as it is not formally a state.

2007-08-01 10:18:38 · 3 answers · asked by jahmas001 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

3 answers

None. Additionally, you are not born in to citizenship of a state, you are a citizen of a state by virtue of living there.

2007-08-01 10:23:08 · answer #1 · answered by davidmi711 7 · 0 0

Yea, you're totally wrong. You're a resident of whatever state you live in, and if that happens to be the District of Columbia, then that's where you're a legal resident.
And you don't get anything special for being born on a military base.

2007-08-01 10:23:11 · answer #2 · answered by Hillary 6 · 0 0

There's nothing wrong with LEGAL Immigrants ( within reason ! ) from other countries who assimilate, become citizens , etc. The problem is ILLEGALS &/or LAZY people and it's wrong when American's are left out in favor of Immigrants or Illegals ... no matter what country they come from or race or gender... they are or if they are terrorist types who want to destroy & conquer other countries, including America !! Just an opinion, your question is pretty much BS with another political agenda and all political agenda's with BS & hate ... SUCKS ! As for who broke Immigration Laws ... depends on which one's you're talking about like for instance it was DEMS who used the Anchor Baby Law for ILLEGALS and their babies which was written during Slave Days when people were brought here against their will ... so it Dems who misuded and abused that law for Illegals , etc.

2016-05-20 02:40:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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