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Denouncing Queen invalidates citizenship oath

In hearing that Srabon Salim was able to send a letter not acknowledging the Queen minutes after the Oath of Citizenship is not Canadian. As such it breaks the contract between that person and Canada therefore rebuking their citizenship.
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In hearing that Srabon Salim was able to send a letter not acknowledging the Queen minutes after the Oath of Citizenship is not Canadian. As such it breaks the contract between that person and Canada therefore rebuking their citizenship.

Whether people like it or not we are a British colony.

If you are able to make a promise when you know that you are going to dismiss the promise immediately after, is that not the same as lying under oath? If people were to do that in a court room would it not make all of our testimonies potentially false?

There is also another part of the Oath that says "I will faithfully observe the laws of Canada and fulfill my duties as a Canadian citizen."

If people are able to break the oath would they not be able to then say they don't recognize Canadian laws and follow their own laws or the laws of the country they came from.

If someone does not want to observe our Queen why would they choose to live here? It is of my opinion that as long as we are a British colony, and if someone says in an Oath; "be faithful and bear true allegiance to her Majesty" they should not be able to denounce it, or as said before the contract is broken and they are no longer a Citizen of Canada.

Zabrina Kelly

Prince George