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clarification : in the united states

2007-11-04 02:17:27 · 7 answers · asked by andrew k 1 in Politics & Government Immigration

7 answers

A Permanent Resident is an immigrant who has lawful status in the United States. They are issued "green cards" and are still citizens of whatever countries they come from.

A U.S. citizen owes their allegiance to the United States. There are three ways to become a U.S. citizen. Birth in the U.S., derivation (born abroad to at least one U.S. citizen parent, and naturalization.

A permanent resident who applies, goes through the process and swears an oath may be naturalized and receive U.S. citizenship at that time.

U.S. citizens may vote in national elections, hold government jobs and travel on U.S. passports. Permanent residents cannot do any of these three things. I hope this helps.

2007-11-04 02:24:42 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 7 0

The benefits of being a U.S. Citizen are many compare to a Legal Permanent Resident. If you are a legal Permanent Resident you can not vote and you cannot hold certain positions that require a degree of security clearance (some federal jobs and law enforcement). In some states you can not hold government positions. The known “Green Care”, I-551, needs to be renew every ten years or when is lost or stolen since it is the only document that will prove without a doubt that you are a legal resident. And the most important is that as a Legal Permanent Resident you can get deported for certain crimes. I believe that there are others, but at the moment I do not remember. If you are a legal permanent resident and can apply for U.S. Citizenship, apply so you do not have to worry about it.

2007-11-04 05:11:22 · answer #2 · answered by J P Lopez 4 · 5 0

Babe correctly pointed out that a citizen can vote while a permanent resident can't. That's the biggest practical difference. Beyond that a person becoming a citizen takes an oath to be loyal to this country. A permanent resident still has their foreign passport and is merely allowed to live here indefinitely.

2007-11-04 02:32:38 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

everlasting citizens are those with everlasting green enjoying cards. they are in a position to no longer vote or get many different reward from the U. S. government via fact they are nevertheless the voters of their countries... Citizen are people who utilized for US citizen and exceeded all of the standards to become one. those human beings can vote and obtain lots of the government reward..

2016-11-10 05:58:03 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

permanent resident = where you live ( your street address)
citizen =being a legal citizen of the united states , if you aren't legally here you aren't a citizen

2007-11-04 02:24:41 · answer #5 · answered by nutnnice69er 3 · 0 5

Thats arguable and there are in fact multiple possible answers to the question

2016-09-20 21:35:03 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

voting rights

2007-11-04 02:20:12 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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