I have written numerous times
about my view of birthright citizenship, and I suppose that my long-time
readers remember some of those posts. I have not heard much about this topic over
the past months, but I saw an article today that gives me hope. Maybe it will
give you hope also.
Daniel John Sobieski posted an
article at American Thinker titled “Trump and Birthright Citizenship.” He
says that Donald Trump was not his first choice for President because Trump “seemed
a bull who carried around his own china shop and campaigned like Sherman
marching through Atlanta with matches.” This is a great description of Trump!
Sobieski says that Trump won him over by the numerous accomplishments over the
past 20 months, and he can see the method in Trump’s madness.
He has unleashed America’s
entrepreneurs, cut all our taxes, chopped off the strangling regulatory
tentacles of big government, liberated American energy, rebuilt the military,
ended “free” trade transfers of wealth to those who are not all our friends,
fundamentally transformed the judiciary, and dared to step on the new third
rail of American politics: illegal immigration and sanctuary cities.
After listing these accomplishments
of the Trump administration, he moves into the topic of birthright citizenship.
Even though many legal “experts” say that the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees citizenship
for anyone born on U.S. soil, Sobieski says that the “Supreme Court, however,
has never explicitly ruled that the children of illegal aliens must be granted
automatic citizenship.” He says that the Court has “not said birthright
citizenship is constitutional,” and then he introduces his readers to Peter H.
Schuck, Yale University’s Simeon E. Baldwin professor of law emeritus. Schuck
is of the opinion that “birthright citizenship is not required by the U.S.
Constitution.”
…Though opposed to many of the president’s
positions, he was surprised the administration has not made opposition to
citizenship for the children of illegal aliens more central to its immigration
policy.
On at least one key immigration stance,
however, Schuck appears to be in agreement with President Trump. In the 1990s,
along with Yale Political Scientist Rogers Smith, he determined, in a book
called Citizenship Without Consent,
that the policy of granting citizenship to everyone born on American soil,
including so-called “anchor-babies” – those born to illegal aliens [sic] – was not
mandated by the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution as is popularly
trumpeted by open-borders supporters. Trump came to the same conclusion on the
campaign trail, once stating, “We’re the only ones dumb enough, stupid enough
to have it.”
Sobieski reminds his readers that it
is the “misinterpretation of the 14th amendment” that brought about “the
guarantee of birthright citizenship.” A mother simply needs to sneak across the
border or come into the nation on vacation and have a baby. The baby
automatically becomes a U.S. citizen with power to keep its parents in the U.S.
and to bring extended family also.
The thing in this article that
brings me hope is the statement that Trump agrees with me on birthright citizenship.
He also believes that this misinterpretation is the “biggest magnet” for
illegal immigration. He apparently said that he wanted to end it and to reunify
families on the “other side of the U.S.-Mexico border.”
Trump said he would end birthright citizenship.
Critics have said the task, even if justified, is well nigh impossible,
requiring amending the U.S. Constitution. In reality, it may not require altering the 14th Amendment – only correctly
interpreting it, perhaps through clarifying legislation. [My emphasis]
Since Trump has a record of
following through on his campaign promises, I have hope that he will find a way
to stop birthright citizenship. IF we can elect enough conservatives to
Congress, he may be able to convince our representatives to clarify the 14th
Amendment through legislative action. Any such law would probably end up in the
Supreme Court, but we are getting enough constitutionalists there that the
justices might sustain such a law as constitutional. It is on this idea that I
have hope that birthright citizenship will end sooner rather than later. So, it
is imperative that we elect conservatives as our representatives in Congress!
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