DrunkFace wrote:
That's never the best solution to anything.globefish23 wrote:
Best solution:
Marry her.
Living together would be the easy option, but we both attend university in different cities. She is about 1.5 hours away. I'd better go buy a ring tonight, I guess.globefish23 wrote:
Better solution:
Move into the same household with her for the remaining 1.5 years and claim a civil partnership.
Best solution:
Marry her.
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families
Honestly this Abu hamza story the right wing papers have been plugging for months now has been the most boring newstory in a long fucking while. I don't like the way the Sun claims credit for shit all the time either, infact I just plain don't like the fucking Sun but it's alls people buy at work and I aint got the inclination to buy my own paper.Camm wrote:
Just come here and seek asylum, then commit a crime. When they try to deport you, claim infringement on your human rights. It's been proven to wrk successfully time and time again.bugz wrote:
How did you approach the citizenship portion? Is it something you have to do through the embassy? Both my parents were born in the UK. If the same opportunity is offered there, I'd love to get an EU passport/citizenship.
Good luck with the plans though pochsy.
right wing best wing
Look for a domicile in the middle, so everyone has to only travel for 45min.Pochsy wrote:
Living together would be the easy option, but we both attend university in different cities. She is about 1.5 hours away. I'd better go buy a ring tonight, I guess.globefish23 wrote:
Better solution:
Move into the same household with her for the remaining 1.5 years and claim a civil partnership.
Best solution:
Marry her.
The issue with Canadian cities is that there isn't shit in the middle. I don't think you could find a house to buy even if you wanted to. That, and it would mean each having a car (again, Canadian inter-city transport is brutal).globefish23 wrote:
Look for a domicile in the middle, so everyone has to only travel for 45min.Pochsy wrote:
Living together would be the easy option, but we both attend university in different cities. She is about 1.5 hours away. I'd better go buy a ring tonight, I guess.globefish23 wrote:
Better solution:
Move into the same household with her for the remaining 1.5 years and claim a civil partnership.
Best solution:
Marry her.
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families
Yes a Canadian has legitimate reasons to seek Asylum in the UK... Right...Camm wrote:
Just come here and seek asylum, then commit a crime. When they try to deport you, claim infringement on your human rights. It's been proven to wrk successfully time and time again.bugz wrote:
How did you approach the citizenship portion? Is it something you have to do through the embassy? Both my parents were born in the UK. If the same opportunity is offered there, I'd love to get an EU passport/citizenship.
Bugz: Go to a UK consulte/embassy and bring the proof or your parents citizenship.
For a fatty Camm's a serious intellectual lightweight.Cybargs wrote:
Yes a Canadian has legitimate reasons to seek Asylum in the UK... Right...Camm wrote:
Just come here and seek asylum, then commit a crime. When they try to deport you, claim infringement on your human rights. It's been proven to wrk successfully time and time again.bugz wrote:
How did you approach the citizenship portion? Is it something you have to do through the embassy? Both my parents were born in the UK. If the same opportunity is offered there, I'd love to get an EU passport/citizenship.
They aren't UK citizens, only UK born. Both have a UK birth certificate and a Canadian passport (which apparently should be enough). I'm going to look into it next weekend.Cybargs wrote:
Yes a Canadian has legitimate reasons to seek Asylum in the UK... Right...Camm wrote:
Just come here and seek asylum, then commit a crime. When they try to deport you, claim infringement on your human rights. It's been proven to wrk successfully time and time again.bugz wrote:
How did you approach the citizenship portion? Is it something you have to do through the embassy? Both my parents were born in the UK. If the same opportunity is offered there, I'd love to get an EU passport/citizenship.
Bugz: Go to a UK consulte/embassy and bring the proof or your parents citizenship.
Sorry Pochsy for stealing your thread <3
Are their parents UK citizens? If they are both UK born and parents are UK citizens, it makes them citizens regardless of them not having a UK passport.bugz wrote:
They aren't UK citizens, only UK born. Both have a UK birth certificate and a Canadian passport (which apparently should be enough). I'm going to look into it next weekend.Cybargs wrote:
Yes a Canadian has legitimate reasons to seek Asylum in the UK... Right...Camm wrote:
Just come here and seek asylum, then commit a crime. When they try to deport you, claim infringement on your human rights. It's been proven to wrk successfully time and time again.
Bugz: Go to a UK consulte/embassy and bring the proof or your parents citizenship.
Sorry Pochsy for stealing your thread <3
Dad's father was Norwegian, mother was Scottish. Mum's father and mother are both Canadian.
she won't be a UK citizen for much longer
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
ur dads m0m i mean
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
I haven't dug any deeper, wouldn't you have to apply in Portugal first? I guess it would be the same process though.Pochsy wrote:
All great information, thanks for digging it up. Some of the links provided helped me find this site which neatly summarizes what I'll have to do:
http://www.visabureau.com/uk/family-per … rried.aspx
Fuck Israel
I'm almost certain you are correct. I would have to go through the process in Portugal, not the UK, but I agree and think they will be identical processes.Dilbert_X wrote:
I haven't dug any deeper, wouldn't you have to apply in Portugal first? I guess it would be the same process though.Pochsy wrote:
All great information, thanks for digging it up. Some of the links provided helped me find this site which neatly summarizes what I'll have to do:
http://www.visabureau.com/uk/family-per … rried.aspx
I have tried looking at the Portuguese websites on the matter, but they are far less clear, and offer no English translation (google translate lets me down), and my Portuguese isn't the best to be able to pick up some of the legal terms they are using.
Last edited by Pochsy (2012-10-16 07:22:09)
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families
just go to the portuguese embassy somewhere in canada.
Blackbelts are just whitebelts who have never quit.
Yeah, I think I'll have to go back to the consulate and see what they say. I just don't want to be asking about extending rights to non-citizens before I am even a citizen myself. Just seems...odd.m3thod wrote:
just go to the portuguese embassy somewhere in canada.
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families