here ya go.
migration.li/dokumente/englisch.pdf
Thank you very much for the cite!

When/if my parents die - I take care of them, they are near invalids. Also, they never gave me leave to go. While it may be common practice in the US to leave/disobey your parents, I believe, absolutely, for my own part, that to obey your parents is rule number one. That is logically consistent for a monarchist, no ? - this info may come in handy, assuming that, by that time, I’m not hooked up to an oxygen tank myself. I agree absolutely that one should act in accordance with ones beliefs - save when ones church, king, or family says no.
don’t you have anyone to cleave to?
No, and I’m not gay or otherwise deviant. I’m very poor. ( Well, actually we have a 70 acre farm, but it is actually quite common for farmers to be, " land rich, but cash/credit poor " . ) So I’m not at all attractive to college girls. I’m not really very smart, rather dull actually, but my education is sufficient such that when I start talking - I can clearly see it in their faces - to girls from the trailer park I might as well be speaking to them in Latin. So culturally I’m not attractive to blue collar girls. I’m 40, and the idea of marrying only to become caretaker to ANOTHER FATHERS children ( a ship cannot have two captains - one of the basic reasons why the modern intrusive state is wrecking the family btw. ) does not appeal. So I would be obliged to " rob the cradle" to get a wife. Finally, any prospective wife would have to bow to the circumstance that I am not master of my own house, and neither would she be, and while my parents are quite admirably benevolent and just, they tend to be “control freaks”. ( no less than americans in general I find.

) While , as I understand it, such circumstance may be common and is taken for granted in the middle east and other places, to americans it is alien and is a very hard pill to swallow.
So, no, I’m not married. Believe it or not you get used to celibacy, it becomes a habit, eventually you even come to depend on it. And then it becomes actually very hard to give up, even if temptation presents itself.
I do find this interesting, that the Vatican is restrictive on its own citizenship while encouraging illegal immigration elsewhere.
I have found it rather interesting myself. I was being sarcastic. As you probubly percieved.
I don’t know what a “blood claim to the land” means. Its not in the constitution, US Code or any of the administrative rules. that’s a different perspective on citizenship, I admit.
You really don’t know what a blood claim is

I would have thought any reasonably bright ten year old would have discovered the concept in the due course of everyday reflection. It’s only a concept about as old as mankind. My ancestors in Scotland , for example, had no legal, paper claim to the land , not from the King of Scotland, or from the king of England, or from the king of Norway. They killed and were killed for it ; that was their claim. This , of course, did not prevent the Countess of Sutherland from clearing them off with a piece of paper - just as " my daddy fought in world war II " wouldn’t prevent the US government from siezing your land and giving it to Wal - Mart. Oh well.
Now, back to the topic …