Answer:
<h2>Citizens in the US have only one duty, to follow the laws of the federal, state, and local governments. We have the opportunity to vote, make public comment on any subject, to gather together, etc. That is established in the Constitution of the United States. </h2><h2 /><h3>As to what happens if we don't do these things? If you break the law, you are tried and, if convicted, punished. If you don't vote or do any of the other freedoms granted by the Constitution, there is no legal consequence.</h3>
rights unlisted in the Constitution
There are some barriers to this concept that speaks about the reality that if a person accepts global citizenship, then he/she will not be considered fully as part of one nation and that one has to face difficulty in living in the social standards of the nation.
The "near abroad" is the way the Russian politicians refer to the countries that gained independence after the collapse of the Soviet Union; such as Latvia and Ukraine.
They all have a Russian minority (of the Russians who emigrated there when it was a Soviet Republic) and the Citizens of those countries often speak Russian as a foreign or native language.
Also, they often have close ties to Russia, such as trade ties due to both the geographical proximity and to the infrastructure which was established while they were a part of the Soviet Union