• Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    It typically doesn’t. Most countries don’t care about where your ancestors came from. Being fluent in the local language and culture will generally give you a leg up if you already qualify for immigration so I hope your family kept those alive (and not Americanized versions like Irish-Americans wearing green on St. Patrick’s Day). But your ancestry is usually completely irrelevant.

    Those genetic test results absolutely don’t mean anything. If you’re culturally American with an American passport, you’re American and that’s it.

    • Fondots@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Kind of funny you specifically call out Irish-Americans, because Ireland does actually have some options for citizenship-by-descent. It’s not quite as simple as anyone with Irish ancestry can become a citizen, but it is a thing.

      If you have a grandparent who was born in Ireland you’re eligible

      Or if your parent was an Irish citizen at the time of your birth

      So hypothetically if you have a great grandparent born in Ireland, your parent could apply for Irish citizenship, even though their parents (your grandparents) weren’t citizens and had never set foot in Ireland

      And if they did that before you were born you would also be eligible

      And so on down the line to your children, and their children, etc. if everyone keeps on top of it.

      There’s actually a decent handful of countries with some sort of citizenship-by-descent, not a majority by a longshot, and of course every country that does offer it has different requirements and restrictions, but for some people it can potentially be a viable pathway to another citizenship.