https://www.axios.com/2026/04/01/trump-supreme-court-birthright-citizenship-hearing
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LorqVonRay1999 — 5 hours ago(April 02, 2026 01:53 AM)
Do you think it makes sense for a person to come to America, have a baby, and that baby is a citizen?
What other countries would practice something so ridiculously stupid?
It's ridiculous.
No sane person would support such an idea.
You, at some point, have to be able to think for yourself.
You lack this quality.
You are the copy and paster.
Nothing else. -
sheetsadam1 — 5 hours ago(April 02, 2026 01:56 AM)
Stopped reading at "Do you think it makes sense."
What you, I, Donald Trump, or the Supreme Court justices think makes sense has absolutely no bearing whatsoever on what the Constitution says.
Again, pass an amendment or shut the **** up.
Draft Barron Trump -
sheetsadam1 — 5 hours ago(April 02, 2026 02:04 AM)
Facts do not care about your feelings, snowflake.
This isn't a matter that requires an opinion. The Constitution either allows birthright citizenship or it does not.
Again, put forward a new constitutional amendment addressing the issue and I'll weigh in on it.
Draft Barron Trump -
LorqVonRay1999 — 5 hours ago(April 02, 2026 02:09 AM)
Here is a fact.
There are over a million American citizens in China who have all of our rights in America through birthright citizenship.
They flew in pregnant Chinese women and set the up in housing to give birth.
You think that is somehow ok?
Then you are a world class jackass. -
sheetsadam1 — 5 hours ago(April 02, 2026 02:14 AM)
Nope… If we were starting over from scratch, here's what I would propose:
All residents of the United States will, upon reaching the age of 18, be required to take a lengthy written exam on the Constitution, the unique role of the three separate branches of government, and the role of the federal government in relation to state and local governments. Any of them who do not pass will be given a two year grace period where they cannot vote, serve in the military or work for the government. At the end of the two years, they will be given the exam again and if they still fail to pass, they will be deported… even if their ancestors came here on the Mayflower or got here by crossing the Bering Strait.
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Clarence Boddicker — 3 hours ago(April 02, 2026 04:36 AM)
"subject to the jurisdiction thereof," is open to interpretation. I doubt the Founding Fathers ever intended children born of tourists and trespassers to be US citizens. The 14th amendment was ratified with the ex Confederacy states under Northern carpetbagger control.
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sheetsadam1 — 2 hours ago(April 02, 2026 04:55 AM)
If someone is not "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States, that would mean that they cannot be brought before a United States court or punished under US law, rendering the entire subject meaningless.
Is it the administration's assertion that they have no legal authority to arrest or try somebody whose parents were non-citizens?
Draft Barron Trump