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richie894

Male immigrants under 26 please read

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If you have moved to the USA and going through the green card process make sure you register for selective service. When I moved across a couple of years ago I remembered reading on a form that I was automatically entered into selective service. So I did not do anything. This is not the case. If you are under 26 years old, you have to go register. www.sss.gov has the info or go to a local post office.

If you don't do this, you will be unable to apply for US citizenship. Fortuanately I was looking through the citizenship forms a few weeks before my 26th birthday and noticed. So I managed to mail in a form and get registered just in time. In fact it was processed on my 26th birthday. So I got the confirmation number and was on selective service for less than a day. As you are removed the day after your 26th birthday.

It is nothing to worry about as no one on selective service has been called up since Vietnam.

K-1 Fiance Visa

Service Center : California Service Center

Consulate : London, United Kingdom

I-129F Sent : 2004-09-01

Left : 2004-12-15

Packet 4 Received : 2005-01-28

Interview Date : 2005-03-07

US Entry : 2005-03-17

Marriage : 2005-03-19

Adjustment of Status

CIS Office : Los Angeles CA

Date Filed : 2005-03-21

Bio. Appt. : 2005-06-09

AOS interview: 2005-07-14

Approved: 2005-08-23

Employment Authorization Document

Date Filed : 2005-03-21

NOA Date : 2005-05-24

EAD issued: 2005-06-08

Removal of conditions (I-751)

Dated Filed: 2007-05-28

NOA Received: 2007-06-12

Bio. Appt: 2007-07-06

Card Ordered: 2007-07-13 (via email notification)

Approved: 2007-07-17 (via email notification)

New card received: 2007-07-20

Citizenship (N-400)

Date Mailed: 2008-05-28

Check Cashed: 2008-06-02

Bio Appt notification letter: 2008-06-06

Bio Appt: 2008-06-17

Interview: 2008-10-29

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Filed: Other Country: Netherlands
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If you have moved to the USA and going through the green card process make sure you register for selective service. When I moved across a couple of years ago I remembered reading on a form that I was automatically entered into selective service. So I did not do anything. This is not the case. If you are under 26 years old, you have to go register. www.sss.gov has the info or go to a local post office.

If you don't do this, you will be unable to apply for US citizenship. Fortuanately I was looking through the citizenship forms a few weeks before my 26th birthday and noticed. So I managed to mail in a form and get registered just in time. In fact it was processed on my 26th birthday. So I got the confirmation number and was on selective service for less than a day. As you are removed the day after your 26th birthday.

It is nothing to worry about as no one on selective service has been called up since Vietnam.

Actually, my husband was automatically registered through his AOS. I don't know if this is common for other people, but he just received his conformation today, and I verified it by checking the sss.gov website. Of course, if you don't get the confirmation, you should certainly make sure you register on your own.

I also don't believe you are removed from selective service when you turn 26. You just cannot register after you turn 26. Selective service is used to determine if you are eligible for federal loans, certain government jobs, and other such things.

Edited by Arazia

Our K-1 Visa/AOS/RoC timeline can be found here.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Morocco
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Here's the site where you can check whether you're registered:

https://www4.sss.gov/regver/verification_nc.asp

We never received any written confirmation, but I just located my husband in the system.

Edited by jenn3539
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If you have moved to the USA and going through the green card process make sure you register for selective service. When I moved across a couple of years ago I remembered reading on a form that I was automatically entered into selective service. So I did not do anything. This is not the case. If you are under 26 years old, you have to go register. www.sss.gov has the info or go to a local post office.

If you don't do this, you will be unable to apply for US citizenship. Fortuanately I was looking through the citizenship forms a few weeks before my 26th birthday and noticed. So I managed to mail in a form and get registered just in time. In fact it was processed on my 26th birthday. So I got the confirmation number and was on selective service for less than a day. As you are removed the day after your 26th birthday.

It is nothing to worry about as no one on selective service has been called up since Vietnam.

Actually, my husband was automatically registered through his AOS. I don't know if this is common for other people, but he just received his conformation today, and I verified it by checking the sss.gov website. Of course, if you don't get the confirmation, you should certainly make sure you register on your own.

I was just in the BMV (what Ohio calls the DMV) and they had signs up saying that any males under 26 (or 'between 18 and 26' or whatever it is) applying for a licence or state ID, etc etc etc, would automatically be registered - so that's another way it could happen. But I agree, definitely best to make sure!

2005 - We met

2006 - Filed I-129F

2007 - K-1 issued, moved to US, completed AOS (a busy year, immigration-wise)

2009 - Conditions lifted

2010 - Will be naturalising. Buh-bye, USCIS! smile.png

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Filed: Other Country: Netherlands
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I was just in the BMV (what Ohio calls the DMV) and they had signs up saying that any males under 26 (or 'between 18 and 26' or whatever it is) applying for a licence or state ID, etc etc etc, would automatically be registered - so that's another way it could happen. But I agree, definitely best to make sure!

Ahh, we did get a State ID for my husband as well, so maybe it came through there instead. I just remember something on the AOS saying that they will contact selective services so that you can register or something like that. It's in the instructions but I forget the exact wording.

Our K-1 Visa/AOS/RoC timeline can be found here.

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I was just in the BMV (what Ohio calls the DMV) and they had signs up saying that any males under 26 (or 'between 18 and 26' or whatever it is) applying for a licence or state ID, etc etc etc, would automatically be registered - so that's another way it could happen. But I agree, definitely best to make sure!

Ahh, we did get a State ID for my husband as well, so maybe it came through there instead. I just remember something on the AOS saying that they will contact selective services so that you can register or something like that. It's in the instructions but I forget the exact wording.

Yes, it probably was the State ID that got him registered for Selective Service. My husband got the letter form SSS like 3 weeks after he got his drivers license... and we haven't done AOS yet.

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I went through EAD, AOS, got drivers license etc and never got registered. So it is best to check.

K-1 Fiance Visa

Service Center : California Service Center

Consulate : London, United Kingdom

I-129F Sent : 2004-09-01

Left : 2004-12-15

Packet 4 Received : 2005-01-28

Interview Date : 2005-03-07

US Entry : 2005-03-17

Marriage : 2005-03-19

Adjustment of Status

CIS Office : Los Angeles CA

Date Filed : 2005-03-21

Bio. Appt. : 2005-06-09

AOS interview: 2005-07-14

Approved: 2005-08-23

Employment Authorization Document

Date Filed : 2005-03-21

NOA Date : 2005-05-24

EAD issued: 2005-06-08

Removal of conditions (I-751)

Dated Filed: 2007-05-28

NOA Received: 2007-06-12

Bio. Appt: 2007-07-06

Card Ordered: 2007-07-13 (via email notification)

Approved: 2007-07-17 (via email notification)

New card received: 2007-07-20

Citizenship (N-400)

Date Mailed: 2008-05-28

Check Cashed: 2008-06-02

Bio Appt notification letter: 2008-06-06

Bio Appt: 2008-06-17

Interview: 2008-10-29

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Please note that not every male under 26 has to register. For example if you came here on a J-1 you don't have to. In fact the SS website states the following people are not required to register for SS:

Lawful non-immigrants on visas (e.g., diplomatic and consular personnel and families, foreign students, tourists with unexpired Form I-94, or Border Crossing Document DSP-150)

So basically anyone who came here on a non-immigrant visa is OK. The reason I state this is because I was under 26 when I first entered the USA and had never even heard of SS until I did my AOS application and it caused me to enter a mild panic attack when I thought I should have registered when I first came to the USA.

Note that if you're under 26 and male, applying for AOS automatically registers you for SS. Actually that's not true, they just pre-register you with SS.

Edited by Dr_LHA
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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Peru
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Please note that not every male under 26 has to register. For example if you came here on a J-1 you don't have to. In fact the SS website states the following people are not required to register for SS:
Lawful non-immigrants on visas (e.g., diplomatic and consular personnel and families, foreign students, tourists with unexpired Form I-94, or Border Crossing Document DSP-150)

So basically anyone who came here on a non-immigrant visa is OK. The reason I state this is because I was under 26 when I first entered the USA and had never even heard of SS until I did my AOS application and it caused me to enter a mild panic attack when I thought I should have registered when I first came to the USA.

Note that if you're under 26 and male, applying for AOS automatically registers you for SS. Actually that's not true, they just pre-register you with SS.

That's what I thought...because some people don't even have an SS# at AOS...

We tried registering my husband online last night but it said his SS number doesn't exist and we have to do the paper one and mail it O.o

this is the way the world ends

this is the way the world ends

this is the way the world ends

not with a bang but a whimper

[ts eliot]

aos timeline:

married: jan 5, 2007

noa 1: march 2nd, 2007

interview @ tampa, fl office: april 26, 2007

green card received: may 5, 2007

removal of conditions timeline:

03/26/2009 - received in VSC

07/20/2009 - card production ordered!

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Brazil
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I just verified on-line that my husband is enrolled too. I remember that question on the AOS paperwork - and then soon after we received the NOA he received a letter from them.

11/2004 - Met in Brazil

09/2006 - Apply for K1

03/2007 - K1 approved

04/2007 - Apply for AOS & EAD

07/2007 - EAD approved

01/2008 - Conditional Residency approved

11/2009 - Apply to remove conditions

02/2010 - Permanent Residency approved

11/2010 - Apply for Citizenship

03/2011 - Citizenship approved

07/2011 - Moved back to Brazil

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Finland
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What about if you've been in the military of your home country? Doesn't the US have certain agreements that if you've served in the military of your home country, you won't be forced to serve again in the US military?

For detailed timeline, see member timeline data.

You have rights antecedent to all earthly governments: rights that cannot be repealed or restrained by human laws; rights derived from the Great Legislator of the universe.

--John Adams

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Setting a good example is a far better way to spread ideals than through force of arms.

--Ron Paul

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What about if you've been in the military of your home country? Doesn't the US have certain agreements that if you've served in the military of your home country, you won't be forced to serve again in the US military?

I doubt it. However I wouldn't worry about it, I don't see a military draft in the near future.

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Filed: Country: Canada
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What about if you've been in the military of your home country? Doesn't the US have certain agreements that if you've served in the military of your home country, you won't be forced to serve again in the US military?

That is one of the considerations for a Selective Service Board to give alternative service in lieu of military service. But that doesn't take away the responsibility for registering with Selective Service.

Knowledge itself is power - Sir Francis Bacon

I have gone fishing... you can find me by going here http://**removed due to TOS**

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
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The draft idea comes up every now and thenhere in the DC news,and gets shot down pretty quickly!! Sort of political suicide if one brings it up, as its not that popular with the voters!! But if that changed, you bet they would vote it in,lol which is unlikely!

Canadians Visiting the USA while undergoing the visa process, my free advice:

1) Always tell the TRUTH. never lie to the POE officer

2) Be confident in ur replies

3) keep ur response short and to the point, don't tell ur life story!!

4) look the POE officer in the eye when speaking to them. They are looking for people lieing and have been trained to find them!

5) Pack light! No job resumes with you

6) Bring ties to Canada (letter from employer when ur expected back at work, lease, etc etc)

7) Always be polite, being rude isn't going to get ya anywhere, and could make things worse!!

8) Have a plan in case u do get denied (be polite) It wont harm ur visa application if ur denied,that is if ur polite and didn't lie! Refer to #1

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