Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like the solution is pretty simple. Follow the law and you'll be fine.
This "follow the law" stuff all quite ironic coming from a guy who was convicted of 34 felonies.
If you’re with the President and benefit him, you have nothing to worry about.
People forget that citizenship is a privilege, just like voting. If you don’t watch what you say and what you do, it can be disappeared and you wind up in El Salvador or Haiti.
So if you’re smart enough to stay away from Democrats and support our President, you have nothing to worry about.
Anonymous wrote:Is this going to be the First Lady’s special pet project?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like the solution is pretty simple. Follow the law and you'll be fine.
This "follow the law" stuff all quite ironic coming from a guy who was convicted of 34 felonies.
If you’re with the President and benefit him, you have nothing to worry about.
People forget that citizenship is a privilege, just like voting. If you don’t watch what you say and what you do, it can be disappeared and you wind up in El Salvador or Haiti.
So if you’re smart enough to stay away from Democrats and support our President, you have nothing to worry about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like the solution is pretty simple. Follow the law and you'll be fine.
This "follow the law" stuff all quite ironic coming from a guy who was convicted of 34 felonies.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like the solution is pretty simple. Follow the law and you'll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prior to the election, there was an article about Stephen Miller talking about turbocharging denaturalization. This is another thing I can’t bring myself to care about. People who voted for Trump will get deported. People who voted for Trump will have family deported. It will be bad press. It’s about time voters face the consequences for their choices.
Not saying don’t think it will start the way you say, but eventually it will be used to quiet opposition. Naturalized and "home grown" Americans will be a target.
In a country where having a meme of Vance looking like a baby will get you denied entry, everything is possible
People were warned, and they voted for him anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like the solution is pretty simple. Follow the law and you'll be fine.
Exactly. Democrats hate law and order. They seem to prefer riots and arson. Why?
Anonymous wrote:Convicted criminals need to go home.
Why should struggling taxpayer Americans be forced to pay for the upkeep of foreign criminals?
Anyone who wants them to stay, should right now volunteer to pay for Alligator Alley living expenses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like the solution is pretty simple. Follow the law and you'll be fine.
The Constitution is supposed to be the ultimate law of the land. The Presidential oath requires him to say he will, to the best of his ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution (not the US legal code, although that is probably a general expectation).
According to my non-expert understanding of the law, the Constitution lists two ways of being a citizen - birthright citizenship (being born in the US) and naturalization. I think it is commonly assumed that if a parent is a citizen, then the child is, as well, but to my knowledge that is not stated in the Constitution.
We have already lost birthright citizenship. Now, naturalized citizens are at risk of having their citizenship revoked over unspecified “crimes” (which is not addressed under the Constitution), by a President who seems to view any opposition as a crime. Frankly, as a US citizen who was born on a US military base abroad (both parents are citizens, and have been for generations) who intends to protest publicly against Trump, if it might not be decided at some point that since I wasn’t born in the US and never was formally naturalized (I don’t know if there might have been some administrative process, but I certainly never took a citizenship test), that opposing the President means I’m not a loyal citizen and should be deported.
The Constitution is the bedrock for all laws and freedoms for the citizens of the US. If we allow any person’s citizenship to be revoked, it can happen to me, and if it can happen to me, it can happen to anyone. If we allow citizenship to be compromised, it comprises the Constitution, and if that’s compromised, everything else is lost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prior to the election, there was an article about Stephen Miller talking about turbocharging denaturalization. This is another thing I can’t bring myself to care about. People who voted for Trump will get deported. People who voted for Trump will have family deported. It will be bad press. It’s about time voters face the consequences for their choices.
Not saying don’t think it will start the way you say, but eventually it will be used to quiet opposition. Naturalized and "home grown" Americans will be a target.
In a country where having a meme of Vance looking like a baby will get you denied entry, everything is possible
Anonymous wrote:Seems like the solution is pretty simple. Follow the law and you'll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:"Show me the man and I'll show you the crime"
- Jack Smith and Lisa Monaco raise their hands![]()