Humanity
Gold Member
- Jul 17, 2014
- 5,089
- 361
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I don't live in Spain idiot! See, another fail!
You are suggesting that my adopted country, by definition, applies different laws to me, and I am telling you that the SAME laws apply to me as it does to natives...
As I said, I do NOT live in Israel where, yes, what you are saying would be right!
And that is the WHOLE point of this thread!!!
So only in Israel a foreign national goes through normalization to get citizenship?
...the ridiculousness of the claims against Israel.
Oh dear... Here we go AGAIN...
Just so we can make sure we/YOU aren't moving the goalposts again...
You said that my adopted country applies different laws to me by definition.
I told you that the laws applied to me are exactly the same as those of the 'native' peoples of my adopted country.
Which part of that do you not understand?
What ever you are banging on about "normalization" really has nothing to the laws that apply to me or natives!
I sense a serious degree of squirming and utter bullshit coming from you!
Are you a national of your adopted country? Or a permanent resident?
Define your meaning for both before I respond please.
Typical definition is a two fold relationship where you have obligations to your country of nationality AND you can avail yourself of the protection of your country of nationality.
Permanent residency implies a nationality (with above obligations and protections) outside the state in which you happen to be living. You have already said you have dual citizenship so my assumption is that you have two nationalities and are living in one of them. Alternatively you could have two nationalities and be living in a third country.
To be honest, in my adopted country, it matters not whether you are a "national" or "permanent resident". Both are treated equally.

