@freedomrideblog Your piece could have given similar examples as to how one Supreme Court ruling leads to "them" changing things "anyway they want." As of now, the birthright citizenship question is confined to defining "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" and whether an EO can clarify that.
@freedomrideblog@PoonTangClub If you are correct, then your appeal to the Supreme Court is moot. Only in a system that cares about me and my rights would an appeal to protect them have any merit. Your assertion that they don't care about my rights undermines your appeal that they protect them.
@freedomrideblog Your piece misses the excellent an opportunity to question how authorities will parse who does and does not deserve citizenship if the EO were to be adopted. What documents do you need? Who decides? Are there appeals? But instead it's just "Some can't get IDs."
@PoonTangClub@freedomrideblog It's not. I read her piece and there was nothing concrete in it. Basically boils down to "some people can't even get an ID."
The Supreme Court is going to hear the birthright citizenship challenge. Prediction: The Court will rule that children born to at least 1 parent who is in US on visa/residency, even if overstayed, are citizens. Those born to 2 undocumented parents will not.