Each year between 350,000 and 400,000 children are born in
the United States to illegal immigrants. Since this has been going on for
decades there are now many millions of such birthright citizens. Since these
"anchor babies" immediately qualify as citizens for welfare benefits,
and a few years later are entitled to American public schools, the cost to
American taxpayers is many billions of dollars per year.
Over recent years, numerous unsuccessful protests about this
policy have been voiced, one even made in 1993 by Senator Harry Reid (D-Nev.).
He introduced legislation intended to limit birthright citizenship to children
of U.S. citizens and resident aliens who are in the U.S. legally. Reid no
longer supports his earlier stand.
The entire birthright controversy stems from an incorrect
interpretation of a small portion of the 1868 Fourteenth Amendment. The clause
relied upon for birthright status awarded to anchor babies states: "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." Proponents of rights for anchor babies customarily
ignore or provide a tortured explanation of the phrase "subject to the
jurisdiction thereof."
In 1898, the Supreme Court ruled in Wong Kim Ark that a baby
born in the United States to noncitizen parents who were in the country legally
was indeed a full citizen. Newly born infant Wong Kim Ark was indeed an anchor
baby, but his parents were legal immigrants. If words still have meaning,
proponents of the current granting of citizenship to babies of illegal
immigrants cannot cite this court decision to favor what they desire - yet they
do.
Then in another ruling handed down in 1982, the Supreme
Court stated in Plyler v. Doe that the important distinction regarding legal
and illegal parents of a newborn given 84 years earlier in Wong Kim Ark was
wrong. Justice William Brennan, who frequently outdid the torturous reasoning
of Chief Justice Earl Warren, actually proclaimed that there was no
"plausible distinction between resident aliens whose entry into the United
States was lawful, and resident aliens whose entry was unlawful." It is
this attitude that has prevailed in recent years.
How out-of-control the birthright process has become can be
gauged by awareness that there are now business enterprises run by Chinese
companies that bring expectant mothers to the United States so they can give
birth to their child here and have the baby immediately designated a full U.S.
citizen - another anchor baby.
Competing arguments have arisen to deal with this situation.
Of related interest is that only Canada and the United States grant automatic
citizenship to children born to illegal aliens. Over the past few decades,
Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, Britain, Malta, and the Dominican Republic have
repealed their previous automatic citizenship policy for illegal offspring. And
no European country now grants full citizenship automatically to a newborn
whose parents have entered illegally.
Is an amendment to the Constitution needed to fix the 14th?
No. What's needed instead is a clearly stated explanation of the true meaning
of the "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" portion of the 14th
Amendment that would be a reinforcement of what its authors meant and what the
Supreme Court stated in the 1898 Wong Kim Ark decision. Currently, there are
bills before Congress that agree with this solution. Senator David Vitter
(R-La.) introduced S. 45 in his chamber and Congressman Steve King (R-Iowa)
introduced H.R. 140 in the House. These brief bills are identical and known as
the "Birthright Citizenship Act of 2015." They seek to provide a
definition of the "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" portion of
the 14th Amendment. If enacted, they would establish that birthright
citizenship should rightfully belong only to a child born in the U.S. if at
least one of the parents is 1) already a citizen here, 2) an alien legally
here, or 3) an alien actively serving in the U.S. military.
Please phone your representative (202-225-3121) and senators
(202-224-3121) in support of the Birthright Citizenship Act of 2015 (H.R. 140
in the House and S. 45 in the Senate), which would end automatic citizenship
for babies born in the U.S. to illegal aliens.
Please email your representative and senators and urge them
to cosponsor the Birthright Citizenship Act of 2015.
Source: The John Birch Society
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