New Attacks on Birthright Citizenship: "Anchor Babies" and the 14th Amendment
Tuesday 24 August 2010
by: Julia Nissen | Council on Hemispheric Affairs | News Analysis

(Photo: tiafoundation / Flickr)
Recently, the somewhat repugnant term “anchor babies” has entered the immigration debate, as certain conservatives call for a reassessment of the 14th Amendment, claiming it wrongly protects the children of undocumented immigrants. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), in a surprisingly radical move on his part, appeared on Fox News on July 28th explaining a new tactic dubbed “drop and leave,” in which undocumented mothers come to the U.S. explicitly to have a child. As a result of this process, the baby would be granted American citizenship, thus providing an “anchor” with which the parents could later use to gain legal residence themselves.
Sen. Graham, along with former presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), was once a staunch Republican promoter of comprehensive immigration reform who sought to provide undocumented residents with legal pathways towards citizenship. Now both, together with other prominent conservatives such as Sen. John Kyl (R-AZ) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), have taken a leap to the far right in attacking the citizenship clause of the Constitution.
Many anti-immigration activists have claimed that the United States is outdated in providing birthright citizenship. Glenn Beck of Fox News and Bob Dane of FAIR have claimed, respectively, that the U.S. is “the only country in the world” or at least the only “western country” where birthright guarantees citizenship. Neither is true: the U.S. is among 33 other countries—including Canada—that practice jus soli (grant birthright citizenship).
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“Anchor babies” have been mentioned ominously in connection not only to illegal immigrants who cross the U.S.-Mexico border, but also to affluent “birth tourists” and supposed terrorist organizations. The suggestion that the U.S. revise the 14th amendment is merely a ploy by conservatives to further anger the American public regarding immigration that conveniently comes just in time for the midterm elections, and has little chance of being seriously considered. Although undocumented immigrants do have children in the U.S.—which now account for 8% of all births in the U.S.—this idea of “drop and leave” is overt fear-mongering. Furthermore, the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly dealt with the wording of the 14th Amendment that conservatives are questioning, meaning that in order for the U.S. to effect a change in birthright citizenship policy, the amendment must be changed or past Supreme Court decisions must be overturned; both are extremely unlikely. However, this new discussion about “anchor babies” illustrates, as Julia Preston of The New York Times states, a “rightward shift in the immigration debate.”
The 14th Amendment
The 14th Amendment was promulgated in 1868 to ensure the rights of minority groups, specifically those of the thousands of African-Americans that had been freed from slavery during and after the Civil War. The Amendment includes multiple clauses such as the right to equal protection, due process, and the now-debated citizenship clause. This provision states that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” The clause was created shortly after the 1866 Civil Rights Act to ensure that birthright citizenship was constitutionally protected.
Since 1868, the Amendment has been questioned in multiple Supreme Court cases that have clarified doubts regarding the wording of the clause. In the late 1800s, xenophobia toward immigrants of Chinese descent swept through the United States, resulting in the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. This law prohibited any Chinese immigrants from entering the country. Wong Kim Ark, a child of Chinese immigrants, was born in California in 1873. He traveled to China, but upon return to the United States was barred from entering. Ark objected, and the case was taken to the Supreme Court in 1898. In a 6-2 decision, Ark was declared a U.S. citizen by the 14th Amendment, and thus exempt from the Chinese Exclusion Act.
Similar cases such as Perkins v. Elg in 1939, and Afroyim v. Rusk in 1967 have dealt with the specific rights of the citizenship clause, and the Court has consistently declared that any child born within the precincts of the U.S. is a legal citizen. In the recent debate, many conservatives have questioned the intent of the words “within the jurisdiction of,” arguing that this does not apply to the children of undocumented immigrants who have entered the country illegally. But 1982’s Plyer v. Doe stated that the undocumented immigrants who reside in a specific state are “within the jurisdiction” of that state. In addition, the majority opinion stated, “no plausible distinction with respect to the Fourteenth Amendment ‘jurisdiction’ can be drawn between resident aliens whose entry into the United States was lawful, and resident aliens whose entry was unlawful.”
Some conservatives argue that the world today is vastly different from what it was in 1868. They contend that the framers could not have foretold the unprecedented immigration seen in the 21st century, and thus the 14th Amendment is not suited to adequately address contemporary issues. While it is true the United States has greatly changed since the end of the 19th century, at the time the Amendment was passed there was certainly substantial immigration, and the clause was not solely aimed at freed slaves. In “Citizenship Matters,” an article by J.M. Mancini and Graham Finlay that compares the Irish Citizenship Referendum to American birthright citizenship, the authors refer to the work of Gerald Neuman and point out that “before Reconstruction, the U.S. did not have ‘open borders’: state and federal law restricted the immigration of paupers, the physically infirm, convicts, and, after 1808, illegally imported slaves. Nonetheless, the framers of the 14th Amendment did not seek to exclude from citizenship anyone who descended from these ‘illegal’ entrants.”
“Anchor Babies”
Recently, conservatives have criticized the 14th Amendment, claiming that it has been interpreted to give unearned citizenship to the children of undocumented residents, providing an “anchor” for the parents to also earn legal status. But many other scholars have remarked on the difficulty of attaining legal residency for the parents in these situations. Not only does the child have to be over 21 before he or she can pursue citizenship for the parents, but the parents also must return to their home country for at least 10 years before their papers can be processed. Thus, as Roberto Suro, a communications and journalism professor at University of Southern California, has stated, “It is a hell of a lot of deferred gratification at best.” The only short term benefits of giving birth to a child in the U.S. are that in some cases, legal children can help the parents avoid deportation, the children can enroll in Medicaid, and there are some programs that will aid pregnant or nursing mothers regardless of status.
The statistics show that the frequency of immigration is largely a function of the job market, and not contingent upon any ulterior motive of reaping birthright citizenship benefits. Roberto Suro explains, “All the data suggests that people come here to work…especially Mexicans, and especially illegal Mexicans. If people came here because they were looking for work, you would expect to see the flow fluctuate with employment opportunities—and that’s what the data shows. If people came here to have babies, the flows would be pretty constant, and they are not.” As he notes, undocumented immigrants are much more likely to be men. If there were, in fact, this supposed trend of “drop and leave,” statistics would show a higher percentage of women immigrants.
Douglas Massey of the Mexican Migration Project draws the same conclusions. On May 20th, 2009, in a testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Douglas stated, “data clearly indicate[s] that Mexican immigration is not and has never been out of control. It rises and falls with labor demand and if legitimate avenues for entry are available, migrants enter legally.”
On April 14th, 2010, an ABC article raised the issue of “birth tourism,” a trend in which wealthy foreigners come to have children in special American-based resorts so that their children will gain American citizenship. The article questions the legitimacy of the 14th Amendment in light of these trends, but has received criticism due to its misrepresentation of certain facts. Birth tourism made up about two-tenths of 1% of all births in 2006. Furthermore, these affluent non-natives have little in common with the undocumented immigrants primarily targeted by attacks on the 14th Amendment. As a Washington Post article stated in July, “most [parents who come to the U.S. through ‘birth tourism’] say they do not intend to live in the United States themselves.” Rather, they pay vast amounts of money to give their children the opportunity of a future in the United States later in life.
According to some commentators, another threat raised by the 14th Amendment is the potential for terrorism. On June 24th, 2010, Representative Louie Gohmert (R-TX) stated on the House floor that terrorist cells overseas have “figured out how stupid we are being in this country to allow our enemies to get into our system, hurt our economy, get set up in a position to destroy our way of life, and we won’t do anything about it…[and] we’ll sue a state that tries to do anything about it.” He claims that terrorist organizations will send pregnant women to the United States to reap the benefits of birthright citizenship, then train these children as militant extremists who will return to the country thanks to their legal status. No data has been made public to support these claims. When Gohmert said, “we’ll sue a state that tries to do anything about it,” he was referring to the Obama Administration’s recent decision to take the state of Arizona to court over immigration bill SB1070. However, the idea that SB1070 would be able to “do anything about” terrorism is extremely doubtful. As Douglas Massey of the Mexican Migration Project stated in a testimony in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee, “the 1990s War on Immigrants was followed by the post-9/11 War on Terror, which was quickly conflated with immigration and identified with the Mexico-US border, despite the fact that none of the 9/11 hijackers entered from Mexico, that [Mexico] has no Islamic terrorist cells, has no significant Muslim population, and by that point had a declining rate of undocumented migration.”
Therefore, Gohmert’s connection of terrorism with the border and “anchor babies” could be seen as largely a political ploy. Sam Fulwood III of the Center for American Progress stated in an interview with COHA, “In effect, those who advocate for changing the Constitution are throwing the kitchen sink into their arguments, conflating every possible combination of birthright citizenship to raise the ire of American voters to their cause…The facts of the matter in birthright citizenship isn’t what conservatives are using, rather they’re making highly charged emotional cases—with questionable facts and logic—to garner support among the public.”
What This Means for the Immigration Debate
This country needs immigration reform. However, changing the Constitution to reflect the racial tensions of the day is an inappropriate solution and demeans the values that this country was founded on. As Elizabeth Wydra from the Constitutional Accountability Center has stated, the 14th Amendment was meant to “place the conditions of citizenship above the politics and prejudice of the day.” This year, the immigration debate has adopted a racially oriented tone, and this new attack on the Constitution is an example of this trend. The chances of passing any constitutional changes are slim to none. Amendments must be approved by two-thirds of the House and Senate and ratified by three-fourths of the states, an incredibly long and difficult process, especially for something that has so little Republican, much less bipartisan, support. But certain conservatives claim that the issue of birthright citizenship—when applied to the children of undocumented residents—does not need an amendment, simply a clarification. Unfortunately for these conservatives, this has been clarified multiple times through various Supreme Court cases.
The question is how this new debate will affect the coming midterm elections. Republicans are gambling on gaining enough conservative votes over immigration concerns to support them in November. Often, emotions draw voters to the polls, and this new attack on the 14th Amendment may either gather support from upset conservatives or cause victimized Latinos to shun the Republican Party.
What This Means for the Future
Ultimately, this new push is an attempt to garner Republican support in a changing America, as Sam Fulwood III of the Center for American Progress notes:
“Taken at their word, [Conservative Republicans are] concerned that America’s way of life is being threatened as immigrants overwhelm the ability of native citizens to govern and pay for social services. I don’t believe that. I think it’s a fear of the browning of America and a threat to the Republican Party to project itself as a political retreat for conservative, white and male authority over national events. Demographers estimate that by 2050, the nation will no longer have a majority white population with roughly 25 percent of the population Latino, 13 percent African American and another 13-15 percent Asian American. That would leave generously some 45-48 percent of the population defined as non-Hispanic white. Such dramatic demographic change means that politics must change to accommodate the newly emerging voices from people of color. Conservative Republicans seem, as things are going now, likely to lose out on garnering support among these new Americans. My supposition is that by limiting the number of immigrants, the conservative Republicans hope to forestall the browning of America.”
Thus as the demographics of this country change rapidly, political actions become more and more drastic. Politicians aim at catering to those most likely to vote, which helps explain this new strategy based on attacking the 14th Amendment. Immigration is a heated issue, and surprisingly, in a June 2010 poll by Rasmussen Reports, 58% of Americans surveyed stated that a child born to an illegal immigrant should not automatically become a U.S. citizen. Thus, while any follow-up action regarding birthright citizenship is unlikely, conservatives may be able to ride through the polls by eliciting an emotional response from the American public regarding immigration. Julia Preston explains this new trend in right-wing politics by citing Sen. Lindsey Graham’s radical change in agenda, stating, “Graham [is a] conservative from a conservative state.” Thus it seems that as politicians cater to party aims, bipartisanship, especially on issues such as immigration, has a dismal future.
What this country needs is comprehensive immigration reform, not an attack on the Constitution. Furthermore, taking away birthright citizenship will only increase the undocumented population within the United States, not decrease it. The United States was founded upon the principles of equal opportunity, and revoking, amending or reshaping the 14th Amendment will produce even larger schisms within an already fractioned American society.
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Comments
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I live in a state near the
Wed, 08/25/2010 - 16:35 — Anonymous (not verified)I live in a state near the Mexican border. At a social gathering a woman said to me, in regard to an observation of how many babies (Hispanic) one sees in the restaurants, malls, etc. that "Wake up and smell the coffee! Don't you see what's happening? " This woman and myself are both white Americans living where the population is 93% Hispanic.
What is troubling people who make such statements is the knowledge of the changing population and the projections that show a waning number of Caucasions and an increase in brown, black, Asian, populations. They seem to believe that by stopping ALL immigration from Mexico, (alone?) they will be safe. Safe from what, I don't understand.
Wait a minute.Bobby Jindal's
Wed, 08/25/2010 - 17:01 — Anonymous (not verified)Wait a minute.Bobby Jindal's parents were not citizens when he was born were they? Does that make the Gov. of La. an anchor baby? Be careful what you wishh for republicans.
I've heard the argument
Wed, 08/25/2010 - 18:11 — CleverTitania (not verified)I've heard the argument about Caucasians losing the majority spot for a while, and it always makes me wonder; why do they think we have a right to it? Where does it say this country is meant to be predominantly white? In point of fact, when did we stop wanting the US to be a 'melting pot'? Because that used to be one of the things we liked about this country. Suddenly, now that the melting is really getting going, we're hesitant to allow anyone else in the mix.
Even Dr. Laura's tirade is evidence of this (leaving aside her lousy choice of language). It's the 21st century and some people are still arguing against mixed race marriages? I think it's freaking her out how many white people she sees shopping with light skinned - but definitely not white - kids. We should be past the point of even taking much note of such things, much less whining for it to stop.
My family heritage is primarily Irish and Norwegian. My great grandmother's name is on the Ellis Island memorial. I'm about as Caucasian as you can get, and still only 2 generations from an immigrant. I see absolutely no reason to believe I'm entitled to live in a country where people like me are the majority. Particularly when you consider that we aren't even the "native" Americans.
Republicans: The Attack Dog
Wed, 08/25/2010 - 18:23 — Liced-christ (not verified)Republicans: The Attack Dog Party
If they do pass this, can we
Wed, 08/25/2010 - 18:46 — Metcalf (not verified)If they do pass this, can we make it retroactive? Wasn't the mother of once and possibly future Republicant presidential hopeful Bobby Jindal seven months pregnant when she came to the US?
I bet the right would rather we didn't notice this fact.
why do we just not fall back
Wed, 08/25/2010 - 20:31 — Anonymous (not verified)why do we just not fall back to earlier practices of shooting anyone of the wrong colour, native or not
simple, just like the Nazis (paraphrase "who is jewish or not is for me to determine Goeebels)
Anti-immigrant hysteria has
Wed, 08/25/2010 - 20:40 — Scott ffolliott (not verified)Anti-immigrant hysteria has been ginned up to get us ready for the new war on the Americas and regime change ala cold war hegemony and Power-Sunstein neo-liberalism
Executive Branch War expands as the economy sinks.
+1 reason
Wed, 08/25/2010 - 23:50 — Anonarcmous (not verified)+1 reason ->1-payer-healthcare: that immigrants come here illegally & work for nothing under extreme conditions is not the issue here, but the one that when they do need medical care--as a result of these conditions + the fact WE ALL need medical care-- the US taxpayers have to provide it BECAUSE THE INSURANCE COMPANIESWILL NOT allow them to enter the system & contribue ANY portion of the costs of their care! If we had a 1-payer-healthcare system THIS WOULD BE THE QUICKEST & MOST EFFECTIVE WAY TO END ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION BECAUSE ILLEGALS WOULD HAVE AN = CHANCE OF GETTING ON A MILITARY BASE AS THEY WOULD HAVE GETTING MEDICAL CARE-> NO PROPER ID...JUST AS IN OTHER intelligent COUNTRIES!!!!
The color issue is
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 06:03 — Anonymous (not verified)The color issue is disguising a real and valid issue:
Now is not a great time to increase the number of people who wish to be employed in the United States.
Jobs decreasing + population increasing = more unemployment
More unemployment = more crime, dissatisfaction, more money from the government to care for the unemployed.
If the American public wants to do away with racism, how about eliminating the disparity that remains between the opportunities of African-Americans and the population at large. White America owes them a debt not owed to other peoples.
It is interesting to note
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 08:56 — Lionel (not verified)It is interesting to note that the Kickapoo tribe, once located in Michigan, then to the Chicago area, got forced south and west until a band of them now calls Mexico home. They are unusual because they retained their language and culture, unlike many members of other Midwestern tribes that saved their skins by becoming Mission Indians and taking on a Mexican identity. I will bet a DNA testing of remains dating from before the Black Hawk wars and the expulsion of the Native Americans from the Midwest and that of the population of northern Mexico will yield exact matches.
You overwhelm us
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 09:43 — W.K. Morris (not verified)You overwhelm us, Ms. Nissen, with your detailed and comprehensive analysis, just as the millions of border jumpers overwhelm us with their sheer numbers. For me the key to understanding your position is your use of the term “anti-immigration,” which unfairly implies that all of us who oppose continued border jumping also oppose legal immigration. Some of us do, no doubt, but surely not all or even most of us.
I would welcome a change to the 14th Amendment, but I do not believe it would make much difference while our federal government fails to secure our borders or enforce our immigration law. That would require not only an effective border barrier but also a system of monitoring aliens who enter legally, then overstay their visits. The latter accounts for 40 percent of our resident population of illegal aliens.
When our federal government gets on the ball with border security, you will find that many of us who oppose amnesty for illegal aliens here now will gladly reconsider. Then and only then. Bear in mind, it will take some time to regain our trust after decades of failure to enforce the law.
Clever Titania--You mention
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 12:55 — mainsail (not verified)Clever Titania--You mention having Norwegian ancestry. What do you think would happen if you lived in Norway now and began asking the same simpleminded questions you ask here, such as how about Norway becoming a melting pot nation? You could also go to the neighboring countries and ask those same questions. In doing so you might also notice that all of the countries that have not been as ignorant as we seem to be in this country, are the countries that ARE NOT having the social and political upheaval being caused by all of this. Seems to me that there should be a lesson here for those who would see it.
+Big cost of "illegals" that
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 13:02 — Anonarcmous (not verified)+Big cost of "illegals" that creates the complaint is generated by the sign in hospitals which says "we will refuse no medical treatment to anyone, regardless of their income or ability to pay.." Since this is a federal mandate, only a federal a 1-payer heathcare mandate can change this structure & remove the present "loophole". Easy example: no one who is not a US veteran has no access to VA healthcare--no one can sneak by or in the VA system. This standard needs to be applied to ALL healthcare.
It is disturbingly telling
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 13:10 — McCance (not verified)It is disturbingly telling to note that the Republican party is using the age-old tactics of would-be dictators to regain power in the legislative branch of our government.
Step 1 - Find a large population of voters and learn their racial and religious prejudices.
Step 2 - Manipulate (spin?) the language of fear---in this case words such as "illegal aliens" - "anchor babies" to dehumanize a targeted and vulnerable population of people to blame, to bring your voters' fears to the raw surface, and to create a sense of "us" and "them"
Step 3 - Stir up fear of being "taken over" by the "other" --- lie as much as necessary as your target population is unlikely to check the facts having been given the opportunity to justify their prejudices with inaccuracies
Step 4 - Promise to "fix" the "problem" in exchange for support / votes no matter how far-fetched the possibility of doing so may be.
As an educator, I do wish folks would take a lesson from history and not let it repeat itself.
Why does the author not
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 13:50 — wbf1230 (not verified)Why does the author not mention that the amendment violets Article 1 Section 3, Article 1 Section 7 and Article V of the constitution for the United States of America? In fact, why do the Republicans and the Democrats never mention this when talking about the 14th amendment? Why do the citizens either for or against the 14th know nothing about this? The 14th amendment was never properly ratified and should have been considered null and void a very long time ago.
THE WORD UNDOCUMENTED IS A
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 15:47 — cheyennebode (not verified)THE WORD UNDOCUMENTED IS A SPIN...TO SOFTEN THE WORD ILLEGAL...BECAUSE THE PRO ILLEGALS THEN DON'T HAVE TO DEAL WITH THE IMMORALITY OF BEING LAW BREAKERS...THEIR WHOLE RATIONALE IS BASED ON CONVENIENT LIES..AND THESE LIES HAVE CAUSED MORE AMERICAN DEATHS AT THE HANDS OF ILLEGALS..THEN IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN..GO TO ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION.COM FOR STATS..
One thing that is
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 16:06 — Anonymous (not verified)One thing that is interesting about this is that the 14th Amendment was not just about the rights of individuals to vote, to due process and not having their property taken away. It also has two unrelated provisions that are not being discussed at all. However, if the 14th Amendment were overturned or abolished these provisions would also go away. The next section restricts someones ability to hold office in state or federal government based on them having taken part in "insurrection or rebellion" against the US or "given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof." And the section after that refers to debt incurred due to rebellion and states specifically that no reparations will be paid for any claim of loss due to emancipation of slaves.
Though I think conservations should probably be supporting section three - the restriction on holders of office, think what a boon it might be for decendents of former slave owners if they could claim the reparations denigned their ancestors!
OK - I am not suggesting this as a serious secret reason for the talk of abolishing this amendment. I am just saying it is something that should be considered by all who currently support the idea.
Has anyone considered that
Thu, 08/26/2010 - 19:45 — Harry Thomas (not verified)Has anyone considered that if the 14th Amendment is repealed, then our current sitting POTUS, Barack Hussein Obama, could then legally be considered an immigrant and therefore ineligible for the Presidency?
Since their claims that he wasn't born in Hawaii aren't sticking, they're grasping at straws to find other ways of kicking him out. Because you betcher ass they'll find a way to make it retroactive.
While Fulwood's analysis of
Fri, 08/27/2010 - 01:19 — Brian Napoletano (not verified)While Fulwood's analysis of Republican motives makes intuitive sense, it assumes that the majority rules in the US---an assumption that is not borne out by recent legislative decisions. For instance, going as far back as the early 1990s, one can find substantial majority support for a public health care option, yet not even the Democrats were willing to deliver it. Likewise, substantial support exists for cutting carbon dioxide emissions to the levels that climate scientists are calling for (at a minimum, an 80% cut in 2000 emissions levels), even if it means slightly higher prices for energy, yet Congress couldn't even deliver a largely cosmetic "cap and trade" scheme. Issues such as media ownership, foreign policy, and economic policy all exhibit similar trends. In light of the reality that the interests of a minority already rules the country, Republican concerns about a future demographic change in the majority are not particularly likely to be pressing concerns.
A much simpler explanation for calls to alter the Fourteenth Amendment was the one presented by the author early on: they are simply rhetorical devices being used by Republicans trying to scapegoat immigrants for the nation's economic collapse, to keep the public---particularly the working segment---fighting amongst itself, and ride the wave of anti-immigrant hysteria that they've created back into power.
While Fulwood's analysis of
Fri, 08/27/2010 - 01:29 — Brian Napoletano (not verified)While Fulwood's analysis of Republican motives makes intuitive sense, it assumes that the majority rules in the US---an assumption not borne out by legislation. For instance, substantial majority support has existed for a public health care option since at least the 1990s, yet the Democrats were unwilling to deliver it. Likewise, substantial support exists for cutting carbon emissions to the levels that climate scientists are calling for (at least an 80% cut in 2000 emissions levels), even if it means higher energy prices, yet the best Congress could come up with was "cap and trade." Issues like bank bailouts, media ownership, and foreign and economic policy all exhibit similar trends. Given that the interests of a minority already rule the country, Republican concerns about a future demographic change in the majority are not likely to be pressing concerns.
Nissen's article implies a much simpler explanation: attacks on the Constitution are simply rhetorical devices being used by Republicans trying to scapegoat immigrants for the nation's economic collapse, to keep the public---particularly the working segment---fighting amongst itself, and to ride the wave of anti-immigrant hysteria that they've created back into power.
War on Terror is getting old
Fri, 08/27/2010 - 04:15 — Anonymous (not verified)War on Terror is getting old (plus we are getting are arses kicked). New war, war on race. Let's make it a global war. Why not, everyone hates us anyways.
OK, CHEYENNEBODE (still
Wed, 09/01/2010 - 15:34 — Frances in California (not verified)OK, CHEYENNEBODE (still haven't figured out that old Capslock?), let's amend the Constitution so that NO offspring of immigrants, including your antecedents' can be left in America. I'll be glad to hold the door for you.
I totally disagree about the
Thu, 09/02/2010 - 16:18 — Anonymous (not verified)I totally disagree about the 911 reference, at that time is was easier for the terrorists to enter out country through conventional means. It may still be that way, however for forthcoming attacks on US soil one can easily see the path of least resistance into this country through our southern border
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