| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 120.1 | I WISH I COULD | FNYFS::AUNGIER | Rene El Gringo sin casa, Irish Rebel | Tue Feb 03 1987 03:26 | 17 | 
|  |     I contacted the Irish embassy in Paris to find out if there was
    a postal vote, and they said no.
    
    Italy, Spain and many other countries in Europe have a postal vote
    if you are registered with the embassy. Maybe the Irish government
    are afraid that 45 million people will vote by post and only 2 or
    so million in Ireland itself. 
    
    It is estimated that as many as 45 million could have a right to
    vote due to being of Irish decent.
    
    Sad I cannot vote for Charlie, much better than the puppet Garret
    who signed the Anglo-Irish accord. Long may he stay out of power.
    Extraditing Irishmen and women to Northern Ireland and Britain.
    
    Rene Aungier
    (Ferney-Voltaire, France)
 | 
| 120.2 | Irish citizenship revisited | TALLIS::DARCY | George @Littleton Mass USA | Tue Feb 03 1987 10:52 | 25 | 
|  |     Interesting you mention the right to vote due to Irish descent.
    
    I contacted the Irish Consulate in Boston and it appears any children
    of a person born in Ireland are considered to be Irish citizens.
    In addition, grandchildren of a native Irishperson (that's me) can
    apply for their citizenship with sufficient proof of being (birth
    certificates of x, x's parent, and x's grandparent, as well as marriage
    certificate(s) if x's name is different than the grandparent.
    
    This is probably due to change though, so if you're a foreigner
    interested in obtaining your citizenship do it now.  The Irish govt.
    has become increasingly upset at incidents in which Irish passports
    are abused, e.g. US officials have been caught with Irish passports
    obtained legally, but used under the pretense of the US govt.
    What does Irish citizenship give you?  Well I could come up with
    a few things - less hassle if one decides to buy land in Ireland,
    permits one to work in Ireland, maybe easier to attend school in
    Ireland?, novelty of belonging to one's ancestor country, voting?,
    and children can now apply for citizenship too.  The biggest reason
    is probably the land issue.  I think Ireland has some restrictions
    on the amount and location of land foreigners can buy.
    
    Current costs are about $55 US for processing and forms can be obtained
    from your local consulate.
 | 
| 120.3 | EVERY HOME SHOULD HAVE ONE | FNYFS::AUNGIER | Rene El Gringo sin casa, Irish Rebel | Wed Feb 04 1987 03:24 | 13 | 
|  |     Irish nationality would also give one the right to work in all European
    countries who are members of the E.E.C. (European Economic Community).
    
    It also gives you less hassle at borders. I have traveled a lot
    in various countries in Africa and Middle East and once they see
    the Green passport with the Harp on it and know it they sometimes
    don't even open it. 
    
    When I went to Morocco some years back, I crossed from Ceuta which
    is a small area close to Morocco owned by Spain, they looked at
    the cover of my passport and waved me on.
    
    Rene
 | 
| 120.4 |  | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Wed May 27 1987 15:39 | 13 | 
|  |     To apply for Irish citizenship based on a granparent's birthplace
    being in Eire, you need a certified copy of the birth certificate
    which can be had from:
    
    				Registrar General
    				8-11 Lombard Street
    				East Dublin  2
    
    				Price - 3 pounds (punts)
    
    Does anybody know whether the United States will allow dual
    citizenship?
                     
 | 
| 120.5 | Eire as gaeilge, Ireland as bearla. | GAOV07::MHUGHES | I got a mean wriggle | Thu May 28 1987 05:04 | 17 | 
|  |     Leaprechauns will correct.
    
    Re .-1
    >to apply for Irish citizenship on a grandparent's birthplace being
    >in Eire,............
    Some people might interpret what you said as meaning that their
    grandparents had to be born in the present-day Republic.
    This is not true (most peoples grandparents were born prior to
    1949 or 1922). You are entitled to it as long as your grandparents
    were born on the island of Ireland no matter how long ago.
    (of course you are correct to use Eire as it does mean the island
     of Ireland, its just that many do not understand that).
    aside : I'm 36, my mother was born here in Galway in 1919, in the
            United Kingdom.
    
    Snake is a pernickity whore.
    
 | 
| 120.6 | IF | CSSE::LEONHARDT | Dick Leonhardt | Thu May 28 1987 10:30 | 3 | 
|  |     This assumes that the birth was recorded, my Grandfather had
    to use his baptizmal cirtificate and a notorized letter from
    his mother to get US citizenship.
 | 
| 120.7 | Dual citizenship | PH6VAX::DEMARIA |  | Wed Jun 03 1987 13:24 | 13 | 
|  |     My wife and children applied for Irish citizenship in Dec 86.  At
    that time I called the state department and posed the question of
    dual citizenship.  Basically they said they could care less!  The
    only way to jeopardize your US citizenship was to publicly renounce
    it AND leave the country.  The only warning they gave was concerning
    travelling on the Irish passport.  They said it would be more difficult
    to get help because there are fewer Irish embassies (sp.) than US.
    
    Hope this helps
    
    
    PS We are still waiting for the paperwork to be completed.
    
 |