There is no birthright citizenship in the Constitution.
None.
If you say there is, then why were Indians denied the right to vote until at least 1924 when the Indian Citizenship act passed and much later as each state granted Indians the right to vote?
Could that be because of the fact that Indian Nations are considered not a State of the US but rather sovereign states dependent on and outside of the US?
We are talking the corporation here.
I guess this will be settled when, what Douglas Macgregor indicates, a new republic will/must be established with the bill of Rights as the cornerstone. After all, the Corporation is a thing of the past. And the compact was broken long ago. And the Declaration establishes the right of the people to institute new safeguards .... Not just as amendments to THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES but a Constitution for the united States.
There is no birthright citizenship in the Constitution.
None.
If you say there is, then why were Indians denied the right to vote until at least 1924 when the Indian Citizenship act passed and much later as each state granted Indians the right to vote?
Could that be because of the fact that Indian Nations are considered not a State of the US but rather sovereign states dependent on and outside of the US?
We are talking the corporation here.
I guess this will be settled when, what Douglas Macgregor indicates, a new republic will/must be established with the bill of Rights as the cornerstone. After all, the Corporation is a thing of the past. And the compact was broken long ago. And the Declaration establishes the right of the people to institute new safeguards .... Not just as amendments to THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES but a Constitution for the united States.