How does one become a U.S. Citizen?

What does a person have to do to become a U.S. citizen? Take history classes?

Marry an American citizen.

I’m not sure that’s correct. I think all that does is gain you some permanence in the US. Citizenship requires taking a test and swearing an oath of allegiance, which means studying up on US history and civics.

You can become a U.S. citizen either by being born a citizen or by being naturalized. Naturalization requirements are available from the brand new Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services. They include:

Be at least 18 years old.

Be a lawful permanent resident of the U.S.

Have resided lawfully in the U.S. continuously for five years.

Have good moral character (not have been convicted for certain crimes, etc.)

Speak English (with certain exceptions).

Demonstrate knowledge of U.S. history and government by taking a citizenship test.

Swear an oath of allegiance.

Marriage to a U.S. citizen enters into it because that can be grounds for obtaining permanent residency status. Marriage to a U.S. citizen does not grant citizenship.

IMHO, the citizenship test is utterly ridiculous (my stepdad took it when he immigrated from England). They give you a list of 100 “American History facts” to learn, and ask you any 3 questions from the list; what citizenship qualifications it tests, beyond the English-fluency requirement I cannot venture to guess.

What it tests is willingness to put up with stupid federal government policies.

Applause for an excellent post.

And, of ccourse, jeers to yoyo3500 for posting incorrect information in response to a General Question.

The only point I’d add is that when permanant residency is the result of marriage to an American citizen, the residency requirement is three years, not five.

  • Rick

What about minors? If a family with children immigrates to the US, are the children considered to be automatically naturalized when the parents are? I’m sure there are some provisions for naturalization of minors.

And to follow-up that question, are there any advantages to a minor to being naturalized vs. just having permanent residency? Voting rights for instance are not relevant.

I don’t know what all the rules are now, but my husband’s family immigrated when he was about 8 or 9, and both he and his brother became citizens when their parents did. They did not have to take a separate test.

Obviously, rules can change, and I don’t know what the maximum age is for this kind of procedure.

If you’re too impatient to go through the hassle of naturalization, you can also become a citizen through an Act of Congress. Some well-placed campaign contributions would likely speed that process along. :wink:

SmackFu, the big advantage to being naturalized is that it takes an extra step for them to deport you, although if Patriot Act II ever passes, that might change.

Really?

Fascinating. What SPECIFIC provision of the proposed Patriot Act II do you contend would permit this?

Lighten up, Bricker; the Patriot II reference was a joke.

Oh, a joke. I get it.

I get jokes.

In fact, the examiner asks as many questions as s/he feels like (or his regional office has directed), leading to wide variations in the difficulty of the test. There is a process underway to standardize the citizenship test. Cite

Marriage to a US citizen merely establishes eligibility to request immigration separate from the quota entries. It does not, in and of itself, establish any permanent residency.