HUGE!! Trump to end birthright citizenship!!!

This is long overdue. The word "jurisdiction" in the 14th amendment obviously means POLITICAL jurisdiction not legal jurisdiction. And kids born to illegals inherit the nationality of the mother and are under the political jurisdiction of her country.

No.. it means LEGAL jurisdiction... No other country's LAWS are followed in the US... Just US law.
 
Correct. And current federal naturalization law says a child born in the U. S. is a citizen (except children of diplomats as listed in the law).
This is the law that is changing.
Every child in the U. S. is a citizen as specified on their birth certificate.
Nope.
On the standard U. S. birth certificate it asks for the place of birth of the mother and father but not if they are U. S. citizens or if they are legal or illegal immigrants.
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/dvs/birth11-03final-ACC.pdf
This form will also be changing.
In 2016 undocumented immigrants had trouble getting a birth certificate for their children born in the U. S. because they needed two pieces of identification. The federal courts sued
Federal courts don't sue.
and Texas had to agree to expand the types of ID accepted.
No, they just decided not to fight that particular battle.
They needed the birth certificates proving their children were citizens to get educational and child care services.
\https://www.texastribune.org/2016/07/25/texas-agrees-to-resolve-birth-certificate-case/
In other words, government welfare.
So, what you say does not exist has been applied to every child born in the U. S. for over 150 years.
[/QUOTE]
No, it hasn't.
 
He just made of the phrase "political jurisdiction" LOLOL

Jurisdiction is the legal authority.. No other country has legal authority in the US.

Nope. Political jurisdiction really exists. It is the nation a foreign national is deported to if a deportation takes place.
 
Political divisions (also referred to as administrative divisions) of the United States are the various recognized governing entities that together form the United States — states, territories, the District of Columbia, and Indian reservations.

The primary first-level political (administrative) division of the United States is the state. There are 50 states, which are bound together in a union with each other. Each state holds governmental jurisdiction over a defined geographic territory, and shares its sovereignty with the United States federal government. According to numerous decisions of the United States Supreme Court, the 50 individual states and the United States as a whole are each sovereign jurisdictions.[1]
 
Into The Night is the biggest asshole in JPP (which is quite a feat!)...and the best thing he ever did for you is to put you on IGNORE.

I read everything he writes. I have a very well-developed sense of humor...and laugh my ass off at the childishness of his tone.
Apparently he didn't actually put me on ignore, since he's still replying to me, according to my notifications (big surprise there). But I've got him on ignore, so I'll just have to do without his meaningless noise.
 
This is the law that is changing.

Nope.

This form will also be changing.

Federal courts don't sue.

No, they just decided not to fight that particular battle.

In other words, government welfare.
So, what you say does not exist has been applied to every child born in the U. S. for over 150 years.
No, it hasn't.[/QUOTE]

Why is federal law changing? Does Congress have legislation revoking birthright citizenship that has some remote change of passage? Could you give us a link to this legislation and whatever legislation is changing the standard birth certificate form? Or, do we find this information the same place as the imaginary JFK executive order.

You are correct, federal courts don't sue. It was a group of parents who sued and the state had to settle.

If the children of those illegal aliens weren't citizens how are they getting that government welfare the state must provide?
 
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