"Big case today in the United States Supreme Court. Birthright Citizenship was not meant for people taking vacations to become permanent Citizens of the United States of America, and bringing their families with them, all the time laughing at the 'SUCKERS' that we are! The United States of America is the only Country in the World that does this, for what reason, nobody knows — But the drug cartels love it! We are, for the sake of being politically correct, a STUPID Country but, in actuality, this is the exact opposite of being politically correct, and it is yet another point that leads to the dysfunction of America. Birthright Citizenship is about the babies of slaves."The Court is hearing arguments on the validity of nationwide injunctions, NOT on the interpretation and application of Sec. 1 of the 14th Amendment.
He then offered, "As conclusive proof, the Civil War ended in 1865, the Bill went to Congress less than a year later, in 1866, and was passed shortly after that. It had nothing to do with Illegal Immigration for people wanting to SCAM our Country, from all parts of the World, which they have done for many years. It had to do with Civil War results, and the babies of slaves who our politicians felt, correctly, needed protection. Please explain this to the Supreme Court of the United States. Again, remember, the Civil War ended in 1865, and the Bill goes to Congress in 1866 — We didn’t have people pouring into our Country from all over South America, and the rest of the World. It wasn’t even a subject. What we had were the BABIES OF SLAVES. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Good luck with this very important case. GOD BLESS THE U.S.A.!"Tl;dr: It’s too late to do anything about black people, but we can still get rid of the brown ones! White Afrikaaners can come have all the American babies they want.
Moments later, he followed that up with a second post, claiming, "Remember, it all started right after the Civil War ended, it had nothing to do with current day Immigration Policy!" which he had already mentioned."We lost our chance to get rid of the blacks with the Civil War! Let’s not lose this chance!”
The AEA is older than the 14th Amendment. It had nothing to do with immigration, either. Kim Wong Ark says the 14th covers immigrants. Although in the late 19th century the concern was with Chinese immigrants.
Same song, second verse. A little bit louder, a little bit worse.
(The issue before the Supremes is the question of nationwide injunctions from one district court. But if the trial court can’t issue a nationwide injunction, then everyone outside the circuit (if not the even smaller district), is presumptively covered by the EO until the Court rules on that issue. Which means children born outside that district are not presumptively American citizens. It creates, IOW, an insane patchwork and chaos as states try to decide what a birth certificate means anymore (as would the federal government, which issues SS numbers to children at birth, because they are citizens at birth.) Would we now decide citizenship based on race? Because no one is going to question the legitimacy of white babies. 👶)
My great-great grandfather died in the Civil War ten years after settling his family in Wisconsin. He would have become a citizen by surviving the war. His wife's Widow's Pension was denied because she was married in Prussia. She married her German next door neighbor, whose wife died during the war, so her four children, two of them birthright citizens, could each receive two dollars a month until their 21st birthdays. My great grandfather lied on his tombstone that he was born in August 1856 in Wisconsin instead of Prussia in 1855. He crossed the ocean as an infant. His wife was born in Wisconsin and had birthright citizenship. My grandfather was born in Wisconsin in 1883. He and all five of his younger siblings had birthright citizenship. I graduated from high school in Friendswood, Texas in 1971. Both of my parents attended my graduation ceremony. My grandfather, my great grandfather and my great-great grandfather all died before reaching the age of 50. None of them lived long enough to attend a high school graduation. Birthright citizenship was a big deal for immigrants before the Civil War.
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