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Date: 12 February 2006: Source: nationalatlas.gov, specifically countyp020.tar.gz on the Raw Data Download page. The maps also use state outline data from statesp020 ...
Celenia Gutiérrez and her children, Anthony Sánchez, 19, left, Brandon Sánchez, 13, and Christopher Sánchez, 24, at the Ramon Garcia Recreation Center in Los Angeles on Aug. 3, 2024.
The Citizenship Retention and Re-Acquisition Act of 2003 (Republic Act No. 9225) made Filipino Americans eligible for dual citizenship in the United States and the Philippines. [218] Overseas suffrage was first employed in the May 2004 elections in which Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was reelected to a second term. [219]
1933, After the Supreme Court of California found in Roldan v. Los Angeles County that existing laws against marriage between white persons and "Mongoloids" did not bar a Filipino man from marrying a white woman, [83] California's anti-miscegenation law, Civil Code Section 60 was amended to prohibit marriages between white persons and members ...
Many immigrants want to get citizenship in time to vote in the upcoming election. The Biden administration says the uptick in new citizens is due to efforts to reduce a backlog of applications ...
Chemist Yuan T. Lee became a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and was a naturalized U.S. citizen. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1976. Some Taiwanese Americans play an active role in the politics and culture of Taiwan, aided in large part by recognition of dual citizenship. The identity politics of Taiwan ...
Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively are raising their four children in New York, but he revealed that his little ones are all proud dual citizens. “My kids, they have Canadian passports as well, and ...
The United States, Canada, and Mexico all grant unconditional birthright citizenship and allow dual citizenship. The United States taxes its citizens and green card holders worldwide, even if they have never lived in the country. In Mexico, only naturalized citizens can lose their Mexican citizenship again (e.g., by naturalizing in another ...