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International adoptees learn that they’re not citizens
Hot Air.com ^ | September 3, 2016 | JAZZ SHAW

Posted on 09/03/2016 3:03:21 PM PDT by Kaslin

Since we’re apparently going to be examining every other aspect of immigration policy over the course of this election, we may as well toss this log on the fire as well. The Washington Post examines a specific class of US residents who don’t get very much attention in this debate, and while it doesn’t apply to a huge swath of the population, it’s causing some problems all the same. We’re talking about people who were born in other nations but adopted by American parents. If their new family doesn’t take care of all the paperwork to make them citizens as part of the adoption process while they are still young children, what becomes of them as adults?

At basketball games at his Oregon high school, Justin Ki Hong, an adoptee from South Korea, remembers putting his hand over his heart and singing the national anthem, proud to be a citizen of the United States.

It wasn’t until he applied for a job years later that Ki Hong learned he had never been a citizen at all.

The employer asked for proof of citizenship, and Ki Hong’s Social Security number and driver’s license, which had worked when applying for college financial aid, were suddenly insufficient. He soon learned that his American parents had never filled out the paperwork to naturalize him after bringing him to the United States in 1985.

Now it was too late. Not only that, but Ki Hong is potentially deportable — to a country he doesn’t remember.

Ki Hong’s situation clearly doesn’t apply to all international adoptees. Since the passage of the Child Citizenship Act of 2000 the confirmation of citizenship for the child after adoption has been essentially automatic and it was retroactively applied to almost everyone under the age of 18 when it was passed. Unfortunately, if you were already 18 when the legislation went into effect you weren’t covered. There are tens of thousands of US residents in this category according to the federal government.

So we’ve identified a problem and it’s time to come up with a solution. This one should be easy, right? Ha! If you think anything involving immigration and citizenship is going to go smoothly these days, think again. I suppose one possible solution is to amend the law to remove the 18 year old maximum for adoptees and make the rest of them retroactive, but the entire process is fairly complicated before we even get to the question of who should qualify. The law in question specifies the requirements for children who are to receive automatic citizenship and in the case of adoptees (rather than children who have one American parent but who are born abroad) they have to meet the requirements of section 101(b)(1) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act. (If you want to give yourself a headache, go read through that maze of legalize.)

Either way, the definition of who qualifies as a “child” for these purposes ranges in age up to either 14 or even 17 depending on the circumstances. Not to put too fine of a point on it here, but by the time young males reach that age range they can be well on their way to fully formed adult attributes. We’ve seen kids younger than 14 going to war all over the world. Do we want to simply rubber stamp each and every one of them as citizens if they happen to find a family to adopt them?

None of these questions should apply to Ki Hong in the story above, but I’m simply pointing out that the solution probably isn’t as simple as some are making it sound.

Cradle1



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: adoption; citizenship; international
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To: Timpanagos1
Create an organization of US citizens that adopts Illegal Aliens a few days before their 18th birthday.

Bwahahahahahha! If you had any idea how ridiculous that is to anyone who knows ANYTHING about international adoption, you'd hang your head in embarrassment.

"Scheduling" an adoption is like herding cats.

41 posted on 09/03/2016 5:10:29 PM PDT by papertyger
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To: Timpanagos1
Create an organization of US citizens that adopts Illegal Aliens a few days before their 18th birthday.

I guess you have never been involved with an international adoption. They involve a lot of complex bureaucratic interaction with multiple government agencies, months and months of waiting, and usually you end up with a pile of documents six inches tall at least before the adoption even occurs.

If our government watched other kinds of immigration as closely as they do international adoptions we wouldn't be nearly as worried about dangerous immigrants, and we wouldn't have millions of illegal immigrants in our country.

42 posted on 09/03/2016 5:13:13 PM PDT by freeandfreezing
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To: silverleaf
So no, there is no requirement for a U.S. lawyer to be involved unless the kids were re adopted in the US - ours weren’t

We did do the readoption thing, but that had absolutely no effect on her status as an American citizen. So long as both parents are present to "pick-up" the child from the original country, citizenship is automatic.

43 posted on 09/03/2016 5:13:50 PM PDT by papertyger
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To: Kaslin

Wow, who pissed in your cornflakes this morning? Do you need to go hide in your safe space? And what did I say that has anything to do with you?


44 posted on 09/03/2016 6:32:21 PM PDT by arl295
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To: 1rudeboy
So this thread is about Cruz, and Roberts, now?

Sucks don't it?

45 posted on 09/03/2016 7:05:46 PM PDT by itsahoot (GOP says, Vote Trump. But if your principles won't let you, Hillary is OK.)
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To: silverleaf

That is interesting. I can see then how someone wouldn’t give citizenship a thought, but it still seems wrong to me that it wouldn’t be automatic.

This is just another example of what’s wrong with our current immigration laws: everything.


46 posted on 09/03/2016 10:05:08 PM PDT by jocon307
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To: Kaslin

Sucks that his parents are retarded.

He could have been shot in Chicago by the last bunch the scumbags in DC made legal.

He’s ahead of the game.


47 posted on 09/03/2016 10:08:27 PM PDT by Rome2000 (SMASH THE CPUSA-SIC SEMPER TYRANNIS-CLOSE ALL MOSQUES)
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To: jocon307
This is just another example of what’s wrong with our current immigration laws: everything.

Literally, the more you care about crossing every "t" and dotting every "i," the more bureaucratic abuse you have to take....

48 posted on 09/03/2016 10:12:57 PM PDT by papertyger
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To: PAR35

I adopted a girl from Korea via Catholic Social Services.

Getting her US citizenship was just part of their process — no problems at all.


49 posted on 09/04/2016 12:37:27 AM PDT by Mack the knife
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To: null and void

That was my question also....Did Justice John Roberts do this for his 2 adopted children....probably illegally from Ireland instead of Central America.


50 posted on 09/04/2016 5:16:01 AM PDT by Ann Archy (Abortion....... The HUMAN Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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To: papertyger

But it seems like half the time they are dotting the “i’s” and crossing the “t’s” and the other half of the time they’ve torn up the rules altogether and gone on a drinking binge.

This doesn’t help good people at all in anyway, but it’s great for malefactors of all kinds.


51 posted on 09/04/2016 8:06:07 AM PDT by jocon307
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