Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a large international population at our school (diplomats) and they almost all have a new baby while stationed here.
Children born to foreign diplomats are not eligible for US citizenship unless one parent is American. A case in point: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-59974939
But if that American citizen parent was born overseas, they make them go through all sorts of hoops with regard to years of residency etc. before granting citizenship to the child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a large international population at our school (diplomats) and they almost all have a new baby while stationed here.
Children born to foreign diplomats are not eligible for US citizenship unless one parent is American. A case in point: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-59974939
Anonymous wrote:We have a large international population at our school (diplomats) and they almost all have a new baby while stationed here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not on the list of the top 1000 concerns I have about this administration.
It's one of the things on the list of first things to change when Trump is sworn in. They seem to care a lot about it (although their knowledge of the issue is about on par with OP's).
Good luck with that constitutional amendment.
Unfortunately, we are entering the era of Trumpism, which means the Constitution isn't worth the paper it is written on anymore. Here is the f'ing Heritage Foundations end-run plan for the 14th Amendment: https://www.heritage.org/the-constitution/commentary/does-the-constitution-mandate-universal-birthright-citizenship-heres
To quote: "...the government today needn’t amend the Constitution in order to restrict citizenship for the U.S.-born children of illegal or non-immigrant aliens. It could simply stop abiding by a broad policy never required by the Constitution in the first place." The last sentence is false, but that never stopped them from writing a long paper claiming it's true.
Don't rest on what you think is impossible. To these people, who don't respect this country or the Constitution, everything is possible and everything is up for grabs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a Harris voter. I’d support a hybrid approach; we should maintain birthright citizenship, but only for babies born here to women who were here legally at the time of the birth. No documentation for mom, no citizenship for baby. If mom has a documented case for amnesty pending, baby gets full citizenship as a natural born citizen if/when amnesty is granted. No amnesty for mom, no citizenship for baby.
There are thousands of moms here legally on a tourist visa coming to visit and oops having the baby while they are here. A bunch of Chineses, Russians, Brazilians having babies in Miami, Pakistanis coming, having their babies and going back to their country. I mean…it is not possible people don’t see it as a huge problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a Harris voter. I’d support a hybrid approach; we should maintain birthright citizenship, but only for babies born here to women who were here legally at the time of the birth. No documentation for mom, no citizenship for baby. If mom has a documented case for amnesty pending, baby gets full citizenship as a natural born citizen if/when amnesty is granted. No amnesty for mom, no citizenship for baby.
There are thousands of moms here legally on a tourist visa coming to visit and oops having the baby while they are here. A bunch of Chineses, Russians, Brazilians having babies in Miami, Pakistanis coming, having their babies and going back to their country. I mean…it is not possible people don’t see it as a huge problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a large international population at our school (diplomats) and they almost all have a new baby while stationed here.
Children of actively serving diplomats do not get birthright citizenship.
Anonymous wrote:Just to throw out the relevant fourteenth amendment language:
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.
There are those who believe that the bolded language could be used to disqualify as citizens those born in the US whose parents are not legally in the U.S.
Could be a stretch.
I do know that the EU has raised a fuss about what they call "accidental Americans," those born in the US to European parents who have long left the US and have never claimed citizenship but get caught up in FATCA requirements for foreign bank reporting and taxes because of their US birth.
Anonymous wrote:We have a large international population at our school (diplomats) and they almost all have a new baby while stationed here.
Anonymous wrote:We have a large international population at our school (diplomats) and they almost all have a new baby while stationed here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not on the list of the top 1000 concerns I have about this administration.
It's one of the things on the list of first things to change when Trump is sworn in. They seem to care a lot about it (although their knowledge of the issue is about on par with OP's).
Good luck with that constitutional amendment.