I just think there is a different cultural viewpoint to citizenship and naturalisation in most of Latin America than there is in Ukraine, Poland etc - most of Latin America should be compared to Australia, New Zealand and Canada - they're countries of mass migration - might it change if Latin American countries become a lot richer - maybe, so it would make sense to get it now because once these countries become a lot more prosperous then they will close the door somewhat or at least make it a lot harder than it is now.Shemp wrote: ↑May 5th, 2020, 11:51 pmAnd yes, @yick, Latin America has a long history of populism targeting foreigners. Taking away sole citizenship from a full-time resident, indeed that's unlikely. But taking away dual citizenship from a foreigner who hardly spends time on the country, another story. And don't tell me that would make no economic sense, since Latin America needs foreign investment. Economically stupid is never an obstacle to populists. See Venezuela and Argentina currently, and just about every LA country at some point in the last 70 years.
There are a lot of snake oil salesmen about though, I read somewhere that there are thousands of citizenship papers sitting on the Panamanian presidents desk of people who have lived there for the five year residency requirement but obviously - the requirements are a lot more than what these websites tell you.