The U.S. nationality law requires applicants to have a working knowledge of the English language in order achieve citizenship. In 1990 the government passed exceptions to this requirement for older applicants and those with mental or physical disabilities.
Narrow down which types of responses you would like to see.
Narrow down the conversation to these participants:
Discussions from these authors are shown:
Voting for candidate:
@9H5VH621yr1Y
Not required, but it should be strongly encouraged and the government should offer free language-learning courses.
Not required specifically, but it should be encouraged and the government should offer free language-learning courses
Not required specifically, but it should be strongly encouraged and the government should offer free language-learning courses
@9GQ2L6V2yrs2Y
Not required necessarily, but it should be highly encouraged and the government should offer free language-learning classes
Not necessarily required, but it should be highly encouraged and the government should provide free language lessons.
No, but it should be highly encouraged and the government should provide cheap or free language lessons
@9HB5MKV1yr1Y
Not required necessarily, but it should be highly encouraged to assist with assimilation, and the government should offer free language-learning courses
@9GDMX4S2yrs2Y
Not required, but it should be encouraged and the government should offer free language-learning classes.
Not required, but they should be highly encouraged to and the government should offer free language classes
Not required, but it should be highly encouraged and the government should provide free language learning courses.
@985CRCYRepublican2yrs2Y
No, but they could be offered classes to learn English taught by the government
Loading the political themes of users that engaged with this discussion
Loading data...
Join in on more popular conversations.