The Fourteenth Amendment’s citizenship provision
The Fourteenth Amendment’s citizenship provision means to provide citizenship to anyone born in the territory of the United States. The United States should continue this policy in order to imply a municipal vision of the core country, in which national membership is contingent on the adoption of state institution allegiance and acceptance of a collective political culture through socialization which is a principle of jus soli.
The constitution’s text clearly defines what it means to be a US citizen, as well as the privileges that should be provided to not only US citizens, but also anyone who finds themselves on US soil. Taking away one’s right to be a citizen of the United States serves no purpose other than to spread hate and further divide individuals who live in the country, whether they are citizens or not.
It singles out specific immigrants and reinforces prejudices about immigrants and their intentions for coming to the United States. Birthright citizenship is a right granted to all people born within the United States’ jurisdiction, according to the Fourteenth Amendment. This legal principle should not be up to argument because it has already been interpreted and decided.
Birthright citizenship devoids discrimination and creates equality because citizenship is not granted based on socioeconomic status, and every citizen has the same opportunity to exercise their rights. While birth tourism raises certain concerns, its occurrences are infrequent enough to overturn a long-standing legal theory in the United States. Rather, the government must continue to take steps to protect birthright citizenship.
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