plommer
‹^› ‹(•_•)› ‹^›
- Since
- Jan 27, 2010
- Messages
- 27,968
- Score
- 1,297
- Tokens
- 0
My nephew came to visit his uncle plommer the other day, my brother brought him down from Ottawa for a visit during March break.
The kid was born in the USA to an American mother and Canadian father, he lived the first 2 yrs of his life in Florida then moved to Ottawa with his dad, he will grow up in Canada as a dual citizen, Canadian citizenship is automatic since his father is Canadian.
The kid has a good sense of humour and understands uncle plommer likes to joke around alot.
The other day I asked him to recite the US pledge of Allegiance. He looked at me with a look of confusion and then said he doesn't know what I'm talking about - to which I replied "that is the correct answer kid". Subsequent requests for him to recite the pledge are met with a very loud response of: "I'm CANADIAN uncle plommer - sheesh"
The kid is an American for convenience and a Canadian at heart. Uncle plommer likes this.
The kid was born in the USA to an American mother and Canadian father, he lived the first 2 yrs of his life in Florida then moved to Ottawa with his dad, he will grow up in Canada as a dual citizen, Canadian citizenship is automatic since his father is Canadian.
The kid has a good sense of humour and understands uncle plommer likes to joke around alot.
The other day I asked him to recite the US pledge of Allegiance. He looked at me with a look of confusion and then said he doesn't know what I'm talking about - to which I replied "that is the correct answer kid". Subsequent requests for him to recite the pledge are met with a very loud response of: "I'm CANADIAN uncle plommer - sheesh"
The kid is an American for convenience and a Canadian at heart. Uncle plommer likes this.