It's revealed in the replies that she isn't a nurse, but in fact does "medical massage" at a "holistic health center". The Woo-Woo Alt-Right pipeline strikes again.
1. This is indisputably accurate. I claimed the administration does not want people like Balogun to gain citizenship. The law as written would explicitly prevent that from happening. They may indeed want to end Birth Tourism, but the fact that Balogun and people with his circumstances would not become citizens under this law is not disputable, nor is it disputable that this is a desirable outcome for the administration.
2. Sotomayor questioned D. John Sauer directly on the possibility of retroactive application should his case prevail. Sauer did not deny that possibility. Were Trump to win this lawsuit, Balogun and people like him will not be safe from a future denaturalization push.
3. My claim did not state that X number of citizens had been denaturalized and deported. It stated that the efforts to do so have ramped up at unprecedented levels. That is indisputable, widely reported, and openly acknowledged (promoted, even) by the administration itself (see below). With a victory on birthright citizenship, this effort will expand as the law leaves room for retroactive removal of citizens en masse.
https://t.co/DHJk1NJQxj
this quote is awesome by cape verde coach-
"This is something we owe to other smaller national teams, teams that struggled to qualify for a world tournament. We're also here to show that a country may be small, may struggle financially, but if they are resilient, if they can endure struggle, they can also stand shoulder to shoulder with other major teams and with players who are on another level."
Let's see how people defend this one. No slurs. No insults. I want to know what part of making medicine more expensive for the world at large does in benefiting anyone that isn't in the 1%
@crowley_gavin@F1torobravo@BurakYngn That may be mostly true (a bit exaggerated), but nobody is contending that American football will surpass soccer in other countries.
All of the theories of why Americans don't like soccer like other sports such as not enough constant action, they need commercial breaks, too low scoring, etc. are all wrong. There's one reason that explains it all. America just developed its sporting culture around other sports.
65 players in the WC were born in the Netherlands. 25 play for the country, 25 Curacao, 6 Cape Verde, 3 Morocco and Turkey, and 1 each Ghana, New Zealand and the US (Sergino Dest).
Netherlands is just 0.2% of world population but birthplace of 5.2% of WC players.