Birthright citizenship

Sorry but the Judge is flat out wrong on this. The 14th amendment was about newly freed slaves after the War. They were American citizens. It has nothing to do with some woman running across the border and dropping a kid.
 
Many legal scholars believe that changing the policy would require changing the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, on which birthright citizenship is based. But “many” legal scholars is not the same thing as “all.”

Section 1 of the 14th Amendment begins this way: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

The key phrase here is “subject to the jurisdiction thereof,” say some experts.

Illegal immigrants are not subject to US jurisdiction, in the sense that they cannot be drafted into the US military or tried for treason against the US, said John Eastman, a professor at the Chapman University School of Law, in a media conference call Monday. Their children would share that status, via citizenship in their parents’ nation or nations of birth – and so would not be eligible for a US passport, even if born on US soil, according to Dr. Eastman.

Furthermore, federal courts have upheld the right of Congress to regulate naturalization policies over and above the basic constitutional guarantee, according to Eastman. Taken together, he says, all this means lawmakers, if they choose, could deny birthright citizenship to the children of parents here illegally.

http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politi...hright-citizenship-really-in-the-Constitution
 
Technically there is no birthright citizenship, it is a misunderstanding of the 14th Amendment.

We are working with 2 levels here: Constitutional Law and Statutory Law

Constitutional Law defines a Natural Born Citizen as a person born to a citizen father of the United States.

Statutory law citizens as all those born or naturalized under the jurisdiction of the US or among the states. This includes naturalized at birth.

Congress can define statues, but not constitutional law.
 
I have two friends from India who were in the US on student visas. They never became US citgizens. They were not subject to the military draft laws. Their children, born on US soil, are US citizens (have all the government issued paperwork based simply upon their birth on US soil). The family returned to India while the children were still in elementary school. The children returned to the US to attend college and didn't require student visas to do so. The children are old enough to vote in US elections and do so. The children continue to reside in the US as US citizens - and, in fact, are now the US side of a US/India import/export business.


And they shouldn't be.
 
Donald Trump has come out against birthright citizenship. In response, so did Scott Walker and Bobby Jindal. Looks like Rand has opposed it in the past.

Judge Napolitano says it is part of the Constitution: http://insider.foxnews.com/2015/08/...ration-deportations-judge-napolitano-explains

Can we get rid of birthright citizenship? Is it a matter of an original intent vs. textual interpretation?
In case no body has been paying attention , the Communist Dem party rules. The Pubs barely beat Gore , Kerry and lost to Obummer twice while Obummer care became law. This tells me , the current immigration as a whole will continue on as is .The next economic collapse may continue to cut the numbers of illegals coming in, that is the best hope for any who consider this issue a top priority.Any person of sound mind should easily understand that at least one parent should be a citizen for a child born here to be a citizen .This does not help the ruling party of the senate though and you have a supreme court that cannot read law.
 
Birthright citizens' advocates never touch the topic of no other nation in history ever granting citizenship on this basis and why that may be.
 
In case no body has been paying attention , the Communist Dem party rules. The Pubs barely beat Gore , Kerry and lost to Obummer twice while Obummer care became law. This tells me , the current immigration as a whole will continue on as is .The next economic collapse may continue to cut the numbers of illegals coming in, that is the best hope for any who consider this issue a top priority.Any person of sound mind should easily understand that at least one parent should be a citizen for a child born here to be a citizen .This does not help the ruling party of the senate though and you have a supreme court that cannot read law.

Yes. The Truth has Been Spoken. We need to destroy the cursed village to save it.
 
Donald Trump has come out against birthright citizenship. In response, so did Scott Walker and Bobby Jindal. Looks like Rand has opposed it in the past.

Judge Napolitano says it is part of the Constitution: http://insider.foxnews.com/2015/08/...ration-deportations-judge-napolitano-explains

Can we get rid of birthright citizenship? Is it a matter of an original intent vs. textual interpretation?
Trump wants to get rid of birthright citizenship retroactively or deport by force US citizens.
 
Actually it would really piss me off if my parents were vacationing in Uganda, delivered me early and now I was a Uganda citizen. This entire birthright law doesn't make sense whatsoever. It seems to me if your parents are citizens of a certain country, wherever you are born, you are a citizen of the same country your parents are; not where the chicken layed the egg.
 
The 14th Amendment begins:
All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.

The phrase "and subject to the jurisdiction thereof" is not a redundancy. It is there to distinguish the persons born in the USA who are citizens from those born in the USA who are not.
 
The children returned to the US to attend college and didn't require student visas to do so. The children are old enough to vote in US elections and do so. The children continue to reside in the US as US citizens - and, in fact, are now the US side of a US/India import/export business.

All of this is good. Right?
 
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