It was clearly meant to confer citizenship to slaves born here, NOT to any pregnant woman from any and every country whatever who makes it to our shores in time to give birth! Usually on our dime! Then the "anchor baby" brings dozens more family, and THEY bring dozens of MORE family! . . .
The U.S. is a blood country, not a land country. If you were born on the King’s land, then you were his subject and owned by the King. The founders intentionally broke from that system and became a blood country. It matters who your parents are, not where you were born.
”…subject to jurisdiction of…”. Not a USA citizen spawning and dropping them here?? Then the spawn is subject to jurisdiction of the shithole from whence you came.
This is the same law as here in the USA. 14th amendment. These politically appointed black robe clowns keep interpreting the constitution and BOR making up definitions for words when it’s clearly stated in plain English.
In February, US District Judge for the District of Massachusetts Leo Sorokin, and Obama appointee, blocked Trump’s order and said in a 31-page ruling that loss of birthright citizenship, even if temporary, and later restored can likely leave ‘permanent scars.’
The Russian surname Sorokin (Сорокин)
originates from the word soroka (сорока), meaning "magpie," a common bird known for being chatty or mischievous, with the "-in" suffix signifying "descendant of". It was a patronymic/nickname surname, given to someone talkative, thieving, or perhaps with a distinctive black-and-white appearance, evolving from a personal trait into a hereditary family name.
Key aspects of its origin:
Root Word: Soroka (сорока) - Russian for "magpie".
Meaning: "Descendant of the Magpie" or "Son of Soroka".
Nickname Basis: Applied to individuals perceived as garrulous (talkative), thieving, or having black and white hair.
Suffix: The Slavic possessive suffix "-in" denotes lineage or belonging.
Variants: Related names include Soroka, Sorochenko, Sorochkin, and the feminine Sorokina.
Usage:
It's a common Russian surname, also found in Jewish (Belarusian) contexts, often as an artificial name.
Notable figures include sociologist Pitirim Sorokin and writer Vladimir Sorokin, highlighting its prevalence in Russian and Russian-American history.
The issue is the court needs to decide the meaning of the phrase "the United States".
Are any of you old enough to remember a Reader's Digest section called "Life in These United States"?
If UNITED STATES is singular, the definite article is THE.
If UNITED STATES is plural, the definite article is THESE.
People born in the 50 states can apply for a USA passport with a sworn, notarized statement explaining that they have citizenship from the state where they were born and NOT from THE UNITED STATES.
Even an immigrant who takes the oath becomes a citizen of the United States of America (and not citizen of the United States). If "United States" and "United States of America" were identical, they would not have to mention them separately:
8 USC §1449. Certificate of naturalization; contents
A person admitted to citizenship in conformity with the provisions of this subchapter shall be entitled upon such admission to receive from the Attorney General a certificate of naturalization, which shall contain substantially the following information: Number of application for naturalization; number of certificate of naturalization; date of naturalization; name, signature, place of residence, autographed photograph, and personal description of the naturalized person, including age, sex, marital status, and country of former nationality; location of the district office of the Service in which the application was filed and the title, authority, and location of the official or court administering the oath of allegiance; statement that the Attorney General, having found that the applicant had complied in all respects with all of the applicable provisions of the naturalization laws of the United States, and was entitled to be admitted a citizen of the United States of America, thereupon ordered that the applicant be admitted as a citizen of the United States of America; attestation of an immigration officer; and the seal of the Department of Justice.
I voted for him ending that nonsense 👍🏻
He "Has it All" so the Supreme Court voted to do their job. Robert's is being a GOOD BOY.🐑
It was clearly meant to confer citizenship to slaves born here, NOT to any pregnant woman from any and every country whatever who makes it to our shores in time to give birth! Usually on our dime! Then the "anchor baby" brings dozens more family, and THEY bring dozens of MORE family! . . .
The U.S. is a blood country, not a land country. If you were born on the King’s land, then you were his subject and owned by the King. The founders intentionally broke from that system and became a blood country. It matters who your parents are, not where you were born.
They really really need to stop birthright citizenship. Too many women somehow step over the border and birth a baby for all the bennies.
There is no other country in the world that has birthright citizenship for people illegally in that country.
That’s exactly correct only in USA
Please make it retroactive to 1865.
”…subject to jurisdiction of…”. Not a USA citizen spawning and dropping them here?? Then the spawn is subject to jurisdiction of the shithole from whence you came.
So very simple. Even makes sense.
If you work in the Arab Gulf countries and have a kid, the kid is a citizen of the parent's countries and does not get local citizenship.
This is the same law as here in the USA. 14th amendment. These politically appointed black robe clowns keep interpreting the constitution and BOR making up definitions for words when it’s clearly stated in plain English.
This is gonna get spicy!!
The Russian surname Sorokin (Сорокин) originates from the word soroka (сорока), meaning "magpie," a common bird known for being chatty or mischievous, with the "-in" suffix signifying "descendant of". It was a patronymic/nickname surname, given to someone talkative, thieving, or perhaps with a distinctive black-and-white appearance, evolving from a personal trait into a hereditary family name. Key aspects of its origin:
Meaning: "Descendant of the Magpie" or "Son of Soroka".
Nickname Basis: Applied to individuals perceived as garrulous (talkative), thieving, or having black and white hair.
Suffix: The Slavic possessive suffix "-in" denotes lineage or belonging.
Variants: Related names include Soroka, Sorochenko, Sorochkin, and the feminine Sorokina.
Usage:
It's a common Russian surname, also found in Jewish (Belarusian) contexts, often as an artificial name.
Notable figures include sociologist Pitirim Sorokin and writer Vladimir Sorokin, highlighting its prevalence in Russian and Russian-American history.
The issue is the court needs to decide the meaning of the phrase "the United States".
Are any of you old enough to remember a Reader's Digest section called "Life in These United States"?
If UNITED STATES is singular, the definite article is THE.
If UNITED STATES is plural, the definite article is THESE.
People born in the 50 states can apply for a USA passport with a sworn, notarized statement explaining that they have citizenship from the state where they were born and NOT from THE UNITED STATES.
Even an immigrant who takes the oath becomes a citizen of the United States of America (and not citizen of the United States). If "United States" and "United States of America" were identical, they would not have to mention them separately:
8 USC §1449. Certificate of naturalization; contents
A person admitted to citizenship in conformity with the provisions of this subchapter shall be entitled upon such admission to receive from the Attorney General a certificate of naturalization, which shall contain substantially the following information: Number of application for naturalization; number of certificate of naturalization; date of naturalization; name, signature, place of residence, autographed photograph, and personal description of the naturalized person, including age, sex, marital status, and country of former nationality; location of the district office of the Service in which the application was filed and the title, authority, and location of the official or court administering the oath of allegiance; statement that the Attorney General, having found that the applicant had complied in all respects with all of the applicable provisions of the naturalization laws of the United States, and was entitled to be admitted a citizen of the United States of America, thereupon ordered that the applicant be admitted as a citizen of the United States of America; attestation of an immigration officer; and the seal of the Department of Justice.