M
mary_bobo
Guest
I understand the Constitution. I prefer the second option. I understand what the founding fathers were saying, but I happen to think they had no idea how far this would be taken. I don’t blame the poor immigrants, I blame our spineless politicians who see what it happening and refuse to ignore it for a few votes.I don’t want it recinded. I want it applied as intended.
The word citizen is important. The word person and phrase “equal protection” are also important, but in no way does the 14th indicate that the founding fathers intended it to be used as it is today. It was intended for those within the border prior to it’s passage who were not considered citizens (slaves), and assuming those that came after (immigrants) did so in accordance with the laws that regulate the border and immigration.
It is being abused now and such abuse shows in the dilema of splitting apart families because a non-citizen mother has a child in the US, the child is given citizenship, but not the mother or father. The 14th was not intended to be a lottery for the poor in other countries. If you think it is, please cite law or reason why you think that.
Look at the Catholic perspective. A law that splits apart families is not a good law. Enforcing the 14th as it is today is immoral because it does not take into account the parents, and by supporting the current view of the law, one supports the breakup of the family.
Now, one can try and ammend the law to make the parents automatic citizens if the baby is born in the US by non-US citizens to alliviate the problem, or one can ammend the law to state a child born in the US by non-US citizen, non-leagal resident parents are a citizen of the country the parents are from, and not the US.
If those are the two extremes of the argument- which so you think is closest to the original intent?
:console: