Birthright Citizenship
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@Mik said in Birthright Citizenship:
What’s established precedent for children born here of illegal parents?
These children are United States citizens.
Amendment XIV
Section 1.
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. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
There is no "exception" for whether the parents are illegal immigrants, only that the children are born or naturalized in the U.S. and subject to the jurisdiction there of.
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@George-K said in Birthright Citizenship:
Returning to my question: Are diplomats' children US Citizens? If not, how come?
They’re not “subject to the jurisdiction thereof”.
A buddy of mine was the son of the Italian consul in San Francisco years ago. I have stories,,,, imagine the most entitled 20 year old you ever met having diplomatic plates.
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@George-K said in Birthright Citizenship:
Returning to my question: Are diplomats' children US Citizens? If not, how come?
They’re not “subject to the jurisdiction thereof”.
A buddy of mine was the son of the Italian consul in San Francisco years ago. I have stories,,,, imagine the most entitled 20 year old you ever met having diplomatic plates.
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@Mik said in Birthright Citizenship:
I know what the text is. How have courts ruled on it? That’s what precedent is.
See if “United States v. Wong Kim Ark” floats your boat.
https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/usrep/usrep169/usrep169649/usrep169649.pdf -
@Mik said in Birthright Citizenship:
I know what the text is. How have courts ruled on it? That’s what precedent is.
See if “United States v. Wong Kim Ark” floats your boat.
https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/usrep/usrep169/usrep169649/usrep169649.pdf@Axtremus said in Birthright Citizenship:
See if “United States v. Wong Kim Ark” floats your boat.
https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/usrep/usrep169/usrep169649/usrep169649.pdfNot gonna read 80+ pages from 120 years ago.
Care to summarize?
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I think that the US should get rid of it, but like jolly said, it will probably require some difficulty.
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“The United States is among the only countries in the world that says even if neither parent is a citizen or even lawfully in the country, their future children are automatic citizens the moment the parents trespass onto our soil,” Trump said
and
Under Trump’s proposal, at least one parent would need to be a citizen or legal resident for a child to receive birthright citizenship.
and
Despite Trump’s pledge, the plan to end birthright citizenship is not specifically mentioned in the 2024 Republican platform document, which includes a chapter titled “Seal the Border and Stop the Migrant Invasion.”
The platform does include language pledging to “prioritize merit-based immigration” and end chain migration, a term used to refer to people who have U.S. citizenship and then use their status to help other family members enter the country.
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One of the things the article mentioned was birth tourists. It has gotten news in Chinese language news - mainland Chinese mothers to be coming to the US and staying long enough to give birth. They usually go back to China, but their son/daughter is now eligible for a US passport.
There have been some "birth hotels" in California that have been raided, etc.
(I do think something like the above is probably not that big a problem, but it does make good news story)
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One of the things the article mentioned was birth tourists. It has gotten news in Chinese language news - mainland Chinese mothers to be coming to the US and staying long enough to give birth. They usually go back to China, but their son/daughter is now eligible for a US passport.
There have been some "birth hotels" in California that have been raided, etc.
(I do think something like the above is probably not that big a problem, but it does make good news story)
@taiwan_girl said in Birthright Citizenship:
here have been some "birth hotels" in California that have been raided, etc.
I have taken care of more than one
undocumentedillegal immigrant who came to the US to give birth to a US citizen. -
@taiwan_girl said in Birthright Citizenship:
here have been some "birth hotels" in California that have been raided, etc.
I have taken care of more than one
undocumentedillegal immigrant who came to the US to give birth to a US citizen.@George-K said in Birthright Citizenship:
@taiwan_girl said in Birthright Citizenship:
here have been some "birth hotels" in California that have been raided, etc.
I have taken care of more than one
undocumentedillegal immigrant who came to the US to give birth to a US citizen.How did you know they were illegal? Often they’re middle class and eligible for a tourist visa and take a plane here. Crossing on foot through the desert isn’t the most appealing thing for a woman who’s 8 months pregnant.
‘Birth tourism’ is not cheap, after all.
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@George-K said in Birthright Citizenship:
@taiwan_girl said in Birthright Citizenship:
here have been some "birth hotels" in California that have been raided, etc.
I have taken care of more than one
undocumentedillegal immigrant who came to the US to give birth to a US citizen.How did you know they were illegal? Often they’re middle class and eligible for a tourist visa and take a plane here. Crossing on foot through the desert isn’t the most appealing thing for a woman who’s 8 months pregnant.
‘Birth tourism’ is not cheap, after all.
@jon-nyc said in Birthright Citizenship:
@George-K said in Birthright Citizenship:
@taiwan_girl said in Birthright Citizenship:
here have been some "birth hotels" in California that have been raided, etc.
I have taken care of more than one
undocumentedillegal immigrant who came to the US to give birth to a US citizen.How did you know they were illegal? Often they’re middle class and eligible for a tourist visa and take a plane here. Crossing on foot through the desert isn’t the most appealing thing for a woman who’s 8 months pregnant.
‘Birth tourism’ is not cheap, after all.
We had them all the time. At least the migrant kind. The local nursery industry used a lot of illegal immigrant labor. EMTALA decrees you can't turn a woman in labor away. You put her in the hospital and deliver the baby.
As for the tourism bit...If I had a Chinese middle or upper class mother, seven or eight months pregnant, paying cash for her delivery...I'd take a hard look at that.