surrealestate: (Evolution)
[personal profile] surrealestate
I've been thinking recently about various issues and the assorted ways in which the population with which I spend most of my time nowadays differs from that from my childhood and adolescence. Though it also made me realize that in many cases, I have no idea one way or the other, beyond the default assumptions, which seem to be very different where I am now from where I grew up.

So, a poll!

Note the use of "raised" rather than "born". And you can decide for yourself where the line is between "raised" and "adult" if it applies to you. For the language question, I know some people may have multiple "first" languages, so I tried to clarify what I meant. [ETA on Q1: Your parents, grandparents, etc, all count as part of your lineage. As per the wording, your answer should refer to the one that goes furthest back, not the most recent.]

[Poll #1346353]

(One thing I hate about LJ polls is how they expand in vertical space after you answer them. I wish they didn't do that. Or didn't show the response stats until you hit the "expand" or something.)

Date: 2009-02-09 05:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] surrealestate.livejournal.com
And unlucky me, who can't seem to get any despite two parents and four grandparents born & raised elsewhere.

Why the heck are countries like Ireland (and Italy) so damn easy about it, anyway, whereas others are hard-assed?

Date: 2009-02-09 05:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fidgetmonster.livejournal.com
Because they are keen to attract competent workers. Ireland in particular has always had a really small population, losing even more after the potato famine. They have more relaxed policies about a lot of things in order to attract people and money. It has worked, and the natives must surely be outnumbered now. I want to say also--but have no statistics to back this up--that that Italy and Ireland have a bigger history than other european countries of their people leaving in droves to start new lives, so they're more likely to have those who have Irish or Italian heritage who are keen to come back to the motherland.

Date: 2009-02-09 05:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] surrealestate.livejournal.com
There is no residency requirement, though, and the citizenship lets them work ANYWHERE in the EU, so there's really no reason for the countries in questions to believe it'd be useful for them that way at all. How easy it is for immigrants to work and become citizens is a whole 'nother thing.

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