Quote from: viper37 on February 09, 2026, 08:53:25 PMOk, no chain. They need to spend 3 years in the country. But they get a favorable treatment comparable to other immigrants who'd want to become citizens, no?
If an Ivorian wanted to become a Canadian citizen, he couldn't just come here on a visa and become a citizen after 3 years, no?
Quote from: viper37 on February 09, 2026, 08:24:56 PMQuote from: Grey Fox on February 08, 2026, 07:17:06 PMWell that Reddit community explains why the AI answered the way it did. Almost every dossier is a 4 generation descendant of the Canadian citizen.Tbf, that's just the summary table. I did quizz a lot more than that.
I don't know if it's enough but it's the same situation Valmy find himself in.
Valmy or his children could get the citizenship.
Then whomever gets the citizenship has to stay in Canada 3 years so that their children can get the citizenship.
Valmy gets the citizenship. He sends his kids to study at UQAM. They go back to Texas. They send their kids to study at McGill. They move back to the independent Republic of California. Their children study at UBC because it's the hip thing to do when you want to be in a serious basketball league. They meet CC's and Zoupa's great grandaughters who have become staple of the New Canadian Liberal Conservative Party opposed to the Republican Bloc. And so on and so on they're all Canadians.
Quote from: Norgy on February 09, 2026, 03:05:44 PMI find it strange, weird and disturbing that an elected leader is officially rating half-time shows and officially disparages an athlete from one's own country that has won Olympic gold. Particularly when said elected leader's brain consists of gold and hamberder.Well, you haven't read his latest rant about the Gordie Howe bridge between Ontario (Canada) and Michigan (US).
Quote from: Valmy on February 09, 2026, 09:12:35 AMThe over sensitivity and insanity of the outrage machine is ridiculous.They're snowflakes.
Quote from: crazy canuck on February 09, 2026, 06:38:37 PMOk, no chain. They need to spend 3 years in the country. But they get a favorable treatment comparable to other immigrants who'd want to become citizens, no?Quote from: Jacob on February 09, 2026, 05:23:00 PMCan dead people who would've been able to get Canadian citizenship if they were alive under the current legislation be granted Canadian citizenship retroactively?
The "OMG is this for real" reading seems to imply that if anyone of your direct ancestors were Canadians, then each of the descendants gets posthumous citizenship in turn, creating a domino effect of citizenship.
On the other hand when I read the link Grey Fox shared, the requirement seems to be at minimum that you are a grandchild of a Canadian citizen and that your Canadian descended parent spent at least 3 years in Canada. It says nothing about posthumous citizenship being granted to dead non-Canadian citizens if they would've qualified under the current law.
Presumbably if your great-great grandparent was a Canadian and had a child (your great grandparent) that spent at least 3 years in Canada, that great-grandparent could become a citizen now. But if they're dead then they are not and have never been a Canadian citizen, they're never going to be able to apply for citizenship or take the oath - so the chain of citizenship eligibility would seem to end there.
No
Also, there is no chain of eligibility. The initial post that suggested there was what simply wrong.
Quote from: Jacob on February 09, 2026, 05:23:00 PMCan dead people who would've been able to get Canadian citizenship if they were alive under the current legislation be granted Canadian citizenship retroactively?
The "OMG is this for real" reading seems to imply that if anyone of your direct ancestors were Canadians, then each of the descendants gets posthumous citizenship in turn, creating a domino effect of citizenship.
On the other hand when I read the link Grey Fox shared, the requirement seems to be at minimum that you are a grandchild of a Canadian citizen and that your Canadian descended parent spent at least 3 years in Canada. It says nothing about posthumous citizenship being granted to dead non-Canadian citizens if they would've qualified under the current law.
Presumbably if your great-great grandparent was a Canadian and had a child (your great grandparent) that spent at least 3 years in Canada, that great-grandparent could become a citizen now. But if they're dead then they are not and have never been a Canadian citizen, they're never going to be able to apply for citizenship or take the oath - so the chain of citizenship eligibility would seem to end there.

Quote from: Grey Fox on February 08, 2026, 07:17:06 PMWell that Reddit community explains why the AI answered the way it did. Almost every dossier is a 4 generation descendant of the Canadian citizen.Tbf, that's just the summary table. I did quizz a lot more than that.
I don't know if it's enough but it's the same situation Valmy find himself in.
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