Mighty fine shindig.

Mal ,'Shindig'


Delurking 1: Because we don't always check our e-mail.


Dana - Oct 26, 2016 12:54:43 pm PDT #2794 of 3094
"I'm useless alone." // "We're all useless alone. It's a good thing you're not alone."

At new house, yay. Still need to get through delivery of stuff. Slight boo. But yay stuff.


askye - Oct 26, 2016 12:55:12 pm PDT #2795 of 3094
Thrive to spite them

YAY new house! Boo for waiting for everything to get there.


esse - Oct 26, 2016 3:35:52 pm PDT #2796 of 3094
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

Amyth, ten million hearts for existing in the same universe as me.

I should check when Corb is coming to the PNw.


Volans - Oct 27, 2016 7:21:34 am PDT #2797 of 3094
move out and draw fire

btw, Maria covered a lot of this, but you can be a US citizen and a citizen of another country. However, the US will not recognize you as a citizen of that other country.

What this means in practice is that if you are say, a US/UK citizen, and get arrested in Turkey, the US will not call the UK consulate for you. If you are a US/Ecuador citizen and get arrested in the US, you will be tried as an American and Ecuador won't have anything to say about it.

Most important, as this is what comes up the most, you must enter and leave the US on your US passport.


erin_obscure - Oct 27, 2016 11:26:37 am PDT #2798 of 3094
Occasionally I’m callous and strange

This citizenship discussion is fascinating!


NoiseDesign - Oct 27, 2016 1:12:43 pm PDT #2799 of 3094
Our wings are not tired

I have my Canadian citizenship again due to the whole "wake up Canadian" thing a few years ago, but I need to go to the consulate and get an ID card and some things like that.

I'm eligible for Irish citizenship since my grandfather was born there. I really need to follow up on that and do it.


esse - Oct 27, 2016 1:26:10 pm PDT #2800 of 3094
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

ND, do it! Irish citizenship = EU citizenship, which benefits you so much when you travel in Western Europe. I wish there was a path there for me, but the closest Euro relative is my great-grandfather, who immigrated from Sweden.


amych - Oct 27, 2016 2:04:22 pm PDT #2801 of 3094
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

I have ongoing low-level rage that my closest EU relative was my Austrian grandmother, and Austria because ohferfucksakeyoucrazyassedpatriarchalcountry only recognizes grandfathers.


Calli - Oct 27, 2016 3:50:29 pm PDT #2802 of 3094
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

My closest EU relatives are my paternal great grand parents. Grandpa was apparently born within a month of his parents' immigration. I never cared before, but now I kinda wish great grandpa Issac had put that trip off a few months.


amyth - Oct 27, 2016 4:19:13 pm PDT #2803 of 3094
And none of us deserving the cruelty or the grace -- Leonard Cohen

My paternal great grandfather was born in Italy in 1881. Which would actually work, except that my father was born in 1928, and he needed to have been born after Jan. 1, 1948 in order for him to be able to inherit his Italian citizenship from my grandmother.