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  3. Should citizens of your country that live elsewhere have the right to vote?

Should citizens of your country that live elsewhere have the right to vote?

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evanpollpoll
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  • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

    @renata @mayintoronto @fabio So, when you're in Brazil, how do you talk about brasileiros no externo ? I think it's a pretty big population, about 5m people? That's a big percentage of the total citizenship, around 200m, right? Is it an identity that you embrace, or do you mostly say "I live in Canada" or "I'm Canadian"?

    Fabio Neves 🇨🇦🇧🇷F This user is from outside of this forum
    Fabio Neves 🇨🇦🇧🇷F This user is from outside of this forum
    Fabio Neves 🇨🇦🇧🇷
    wrote last edited by
    #101

    @evan @renata @mayintoronto Also I think people who describe themselves as “Brasileiros no exterior” don’t quite embrace the country they moved to. One could write many academic papers about his sort of thing!

    Evan ProdromouE 1 Reply Last reply
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    • Renata 🇨🇦🐈R Renata 🇨🇦🐈

      @evan @mayintoronto @fabio A lot of people just say “brasileiros no exterior” - I don’t identify with that. I’m a Brazilian-Canadian.

      I truly never identified with Brazil as a country for a bunch of reasons and Canada embraced me so much since the day I arrived, I am a very proud Canadian.

      Every time I go to Brazil it’s not a good experience for me. I miss being at home and home is Canada. It will always be.

      economísticaD This user is from outside of this forum
      economísticaD This user is from outside of this forum
      economística
      wrote last edited by
      #102

      @renata @evan @mayintoronto @fabio I usually identify as Brazilian but last week I was imagining some kind of conversation and called myself "Canadian" in my head for the first time (I moved here in 2021).

      I also often say I'm from <city where I moved for university and lived for 8 years> rather than <city I was born in and lived for 16 years>.

      May Likes TorontoM 1 Reply Last reply
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      • MJ MuseM MJ Muse

        @EdwinG @evan what about troops? Or a citizen that has children and grandchildren that they care about living in the US? It's complex

        Edwin G. :mapleleafroundel:E This user is from outside of this forum
        Edwin G. :mapleleafroundel:E This user is from outside of this forum
        Edwin G. :mapleleafroundel:
        wrote last edited by
        #103

        @MJmusicinears I didn’t think of armed forces, or diplomats for that matter.

        It is a complex web.

        @evan

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        • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

          @mayintoronto @fabio In Canada, some people who work and live abroad are called "Canadians abroad":

          https://travel.gc.ca/travelling/living-abroad

          I also like "snowbirds" for the very specific set of people who live abroad only during the winter.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowbird_(person)

          rakooR This user is from outside of this forum
          rakooR This user is from outside of this forum
          rakoo
          wrote last edited by
          #104
          @evan @mayintoronto @fabio

          French perspective: "expat" is used for french people who live abroad, sometimes for years, but still feel more french than anything else. Foreign people who live in France might be called expat if they come from a rich country, but immigrant if coming from a poor country. So "expat" really is a marker of being part of the proper, rich, white countries, aka good old racism
          john fink ok!! :goat:A Evan ProdromouE Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D 3 Replies Last reply
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          • rakooR rakoo
            @evan @mayintoronto @fabio

            French perspective: "expat" is used for french people who live abroad, sometimes for years, but still feel more french than anything else. Foreign people who live in France might be called expat if they come from a rich country, but immigrant if coming from a poor country. So "expat" really is a marker of being part of the proper, rich, white countries, aka good old racism
            john fink ok!! :goat:A This user is from outside of this forum
            john fink ok!! :goat:A This user is from outside of this forum
            john fink ok!! :goat:
            wrote last edited by
            #105

            @rakoo @mayintoronto @fabio @evan to me, "expat" carries with it the expectation that you will eventually return to home country. Immigrant does not.

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            • economísticaD economística

              @renata @evan @mayintoronto @fabio I usually identify as Brazilian but last week I was imagining some kind of conversation and called myself "Canadian" in my head for the first time (I moved here in 2021).

              I also often say I'm from <city where I moved for university and lived for 8 years> rather than <city I was born in and lived for 16 years>.

              May Likes TorontoM This user is from outside of this forum
              May Likes TorontoM This user is from outside of this forum
              May Likes Toronto
              wrote last edited by
              #106

              @dancer_storm I love this for you!!

              My parents brought me here as a young kid and I was told we were probably never going back home. It was nice that all the kids around me looked different too, and they were all (probably) Canadians.

              In my head, it wasn't long before I thought "I guess I'm a Canadian now?"

              @renata @evan @fabio

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              • rakooR rakoo
                @evan @mayintoronto @fabio

                French perspective: "expat" is used for french people who live abroad, sometimes for years, but still feel more french than anything else. Foreign people who live in France might be called expat if they come from a rich country, but immigrant if coming from a poor country. So "expat" really is a marker of being part of the proper, rich, white countries, aka good old racism
                Evan ProdromouE This user is from outside of this forum
                Evan ProdromouE This user is from outside of this forum
                Evan Prodromou
                wrote last edited by
                #107

                @rakoo @mayintoronto @fabio there are some other words for French citizens living abroad that are used here in Montreal.

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                • rakooR rakoo
                  @evan @mayintoronto @fabio

                  French perspective: "expat" is used for french people who live abroad, sometimes for years, but still feel more french than anything else. Foreign people who live in France might be called expat if they come from a rich country, but immigrant if coming from a poor country. So "expat" really is a marker of being part of the proper, rich, white countries, aka good old racism
                  Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D This user is from outside of this forum
                  Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D This user is from outside of this forum
                  Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦
                  wrote last edited by
                  #108

                  @rakoo @mayintoronto @fabio @evan
                  I thought of myself as "expat" (though I'm not sure I ever said that out loud), when I moved from Canada to Germany and realised two things:
                  I come from a significantly different culture, and
                  I like my culture, and don't want to "assimilate" (a word Germans like to use with newcomers).

                  I wanted to be a Canadian in Germany. Sometimes that was charming, sometimes it was very uncomfortable (for me, for them).

                  But I don't think I'd use the word "expat" now.

                  rakooR 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • Fabio Neves 🇨🇦🇧🇷F Fabio Neves 🇨🇦🇧🇷

                    @evan @renata @mayintoronto Also I think people who describe themselves as “Brasileiros no exterior” don’t quite embrace the country they moved to. One could write many academic papers about his sort of thing!

                    Evan ProdromouE This user is from outside of this forum
                    Evan ProdromouE This user is from outside of this forum
                    Evan Prodromou
                    wrote last edited by
                    #109

                    @fabio @renata @mayintoronto I grew up in the US, where the idea that you would retain any sense of belonging to your country of origin was considered at the very least backwards and ungrateful and sometimes borderline treasonous.

                    Thankfully, I think our world is developing a more complex idea of migrant identity that encompasses both country of origin and country of residence, and maybe others.

                    clacke: exhausted pixie dream boy 🇸🇪🇭🇰💙💛C 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦

                      @rakoo @mayintoronto @fabio @evan
                      I thought of myself as "expat" (though I'm not sure I ever said that out loud), when I moved from Canada to Germany and realised two things:
                      I come from a significantly different culture, and
                      I like my culture, and don't want to "assimilate" (a word Germans like to use with newcomers).

                      I wanted to be a Canadian in Germany. Sometimes that was charming, sometimes it was very uncomfortable (for me, for them).

                      But I don't think I'd use the word "expat" now.

                      rakooR This user is from outside of this forum
                      rakooR This user is from outside of this forum
                      rakoo
                      wrote last edited by
                      #110
                      @deborahh @mayintoronto @fabio @evan yeah, the danger comes from the illusion that not everyone feels like this when going abroad. Everyone wants to remember where they come from, but not everyone can afford to.
                      Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • rakooR rakoo
                        @deborahh @mayintoronto @fabio @evan yeah, the danger comes from the illusion that not everyone feels like this when going abroad. Everyone wants to remember where they come from, but not everyone can afford to.
                        Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D This user is from outside of this forum
                        Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦D This user is from outside of this forum
                        Deborah Preuss, pcc 🇨🇦
                        wrote last edited by
                        #111

                        @rakoo @mayintoronto @fabio @evan good point! Thanks, that helps me think about this.

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                        • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

                          Should citizens of your country that live elsewhere have the right to vote?

                          #EvanPoll #poll

                          Mark AndrewS This user is from outside of this forum
                          Mark AndrewS This user is from outside of this forum
                          Mark Andrew
                          wrote last edited by
                          #112

                          @evan I'm an American-Swiss, and hopefully will soon be just Swiss.

                          I strongly believe that emmigrants like you @evan and me should be able to vote in elections back "home", however let's face the facts. My current USA voting rights are based in my college town, a leftist bastion in a Democratic State in a Republican district.

                          In the time that I've been voting from abroad my vote has had no impact whatever on the outcome.

                          Just let me out of this madness, OK?

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

                            Should citizens of your country that live elsewhere have the right to vote?

                            #EvanPoll #poll

                            Rory ParleR This user is from outside of this forum
                            Rory ParleR This user is from outside of this forum
                            Rory Parle
                            wrote last edited by
                            #113

                            @evan I am a citizen of my country living elsewhere (for nearly 17 years) and I said "no". Ireland has a huge diaspora, many of whom have never been there and don't understand the country or its culture. It broke my heart to miss out on the historic referendums legalising gay marriage (the first country in the world to do so by popular vote) and abortion, but it's the price I pay for leaving.

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                            • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

                              Should citizens of your country that live elsewhere have the right to vote?

                              #EvanPoll #poll

                              Nick44 🇪🇺 🇮🇹N This user is from outside of this forum
                              Nick44 🇪🇺 🇮🇹N This user is from outside of this forum
                              Nick44 🇪🇺 🇮🇹
                              wrote last edited by
                              #114

                              @evan we should vote only where we live

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

                                Should citizens of your country that live elsewhere have the right to vote?

                                #EvanPoll #poll

                                ⁂ KalebK This user is from outside of this forum
                                ⁂ KalebK This user is from outside of this forum
                                ⁂ Kaleb
                                wrote last edited by
                                #115

                                @evan my “Yes But” response is based on two things which essentially amount to: do they have skin in the game?

                                1. For nations that impose tax on citizens living avoid abroad I firmly believe in the concept of “no taxation without representation”
                                2. For nations that do not impose tax on citizens living abroad, I believe there is value in implementing a test based on propinquity, i.e. has the citizen lived in the home nation for a certain number of years cumulative; does the citizen have close ties such as property ownership, close family, employment, etc.

                                My thinking is that I don’t appreciate citizens who have no practical ties to this nation influencing decisions that impact me but not them.

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                                • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

                                  Enough people complained about my use of "expatriate" in this poll that I changed the question.

                                  Max LeeT This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Max LeeT This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Max Lee
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #116

                                  @evan Whelp, guess my answer doesn't match what I mean now... should be "Yes, but..."

                                  Evan ProdromouE 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • Evan ProdromouE Evan Prodromou

                                    @fabio @renata @mayintoronto I grew up in the US, where the idea that you would retain any sense of belonging to your country of origin was considered at the very least backwards and ungrateful and sometimes borderline treasonous.

                                    Thankfully, I think our world is developing a more complex idea of migrant identity that encompasses both country of origin and country of residence, and maybe others.

                                    clacke: exhausted pixie dream boy 🇸🇪🇭🇰💙💛C This user is from outside of this forum
                                    clacke: exhausted pixie dream boy 🇸🇪🇭🇰💙💛C This user is from outside of this forum
                                    clacke: exhausted pixie dream boy 🇸🇪🇭🇰💙💛
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #117

                                    > in the US, where the idea that you would retain any sense of belonging to your country of origin was considered at the very least backwards and ungrateful

                                    @evan Interesting. It has been my impression my whole life that the US is the foremost place in the world where people maintain their heritage for generations, cluster in subcultures and call themselves e.g. Irish-American.

                                    In Sweden in the 80s, children of immigrants were expected to assimilate, call themselves Swedish and drop all other ethnic identity.

                                    These days, it's more common to embrace multiculturality, a concept that to me comes from the US, and call yourself e.g. "100% Kurdish, 100% Swedish".

                                    @mayintoronto @fabio @renata

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                                    • Max LeeT Max Lee

                                      @evan Whelp, guess my answer doesn't match what I mean now... should be "Yes, but..."

                                      Evan ProdromouE This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Evan ProdromouE This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Evan Prodromou
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #118

                                      @the_moep why?

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                                      • william.maggosW william.maggos

                                        @evan

                                        imo you vote in one place based on where your "home" is. I get that this can be complicated in some instances.

                                        James BaillieJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                        James BaillieJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                        James Baillie
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #119

                                        @wjmaggos @evan People living abroad are still hugely affected by the decisions made by their government back home. My entire rights & basis for living in my home are governed by foreign policy & by bilateral agreements between governments. Things like pension policy are also hugely relevant given I don't have permanent rights in my residence country. Should I not get any say in how my passport-country approaches those issues?

                                        James BaillieJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • James BaillieJ James Baillie

                                          @wjmaggos @evan People living abroad are still hugely affected by the decisions made by their government back home. My entire rights & basis for living in my home are governed by foreign policy & by bilateral agreements between governments. Things like pension policy are also hugely relevant given I don't have permanent rights in my residence country. Should I not get any say in how my passport-country approaches those issues?

                                          James BaillieJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          James BaillieJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          James Baillie
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #120

                                          @wjmaggos @evan (Whereas conversely my country of residence is where I live and pay the large majority of my taxes to and use more public services & transport).

                                          william.maggosW 1 Reply Last reply
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