• remon@ani.social
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    10 hours ago

    No need to go overseas, almost all countries with birthright citizenship are in the Americas.

  • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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    11 hours ago

    That isn’t the plan you think it is. The US is an outlier in terms of granting birthright citizenship. Most countries - and particularly, most developed countries - do not do this.

  • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 hours ago

    The better term might be “abroad”, rather than “overseas”. Because Jus Soli is a concept that exists mostly in the Americas. So you’d better not cross over the Atlantic or Pacific sea for this plan.

  • zxqwas@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    We don’t recognize birthright citizenship. You’ll have to fill in the paperwork like everyone else.

  • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    18 hours ago

    Americans posting memes against American Imperialism, while simultaneously having an American-Centric worldview about the world in regards to citizenship.

    Ironic.

    (No offense to OP 😉)

    • Genius@lemmy.zipOP
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      16 hours ago

      tbh I had no idea Europe was so racist. Citizenship based on “blood” sounds like something out of the middle ages.

      • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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        10 hours ago

        Countries that use Jus Soli usually also have Jus Sanguinis. The USA for example. My friend is a US citizen despite not being born there because his mother is a US citizen.

        Not having Jus Sanguinis would be downright horrible. Imagine your mother moves back to her home country and if you want to follow her you have to clear immigration hurdles.

        • Genius@lemmy.zipOP
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          8 hours ago

          Yeah having it as well is good. Using only it is inhumane and barbaric.

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        7 hours ago

        It’s based on paperwork, not blood.

        You can’t just turn up, release your spawn and claim it belongs there. We’re not frogs in a pond.

        • Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          10 hours ago

          What a cringe attitude to have. People born in a country should have citizenship.

          You love your pearly gates and blocking people out in Europe, don’t you?

            • Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              9 hours ago

              Because it assures that people raised there aren’t separated from the country of origin. It blocks issues. It’s better. Why do you think they shouldn’t?

              • Enkrod@feddit.org
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                7 hours ago

                Being the child of a tourist is not the same as being raised somewhere.

                The kind of Ius Soli the US practices gives citizenship to the children of tourists and people being born in a plane flying over the country, without having been raised there.

                Most european nations have special citizenship rights if you grew up in that nation or were born there after one of your parents has resided there at least some time.

                Example Germany:

                Children of non-German parents acquire German citizenship at birth if at least one parent has a permanent residence permit and resided in Germany for at least five years prior to the child’s birth.

                Btw. after residing legally in Germany for 5 years the parent can themselves acquire german citizenship, so can the child upon turning 18, even if they weren’t born in Germany.

                Example France:

                Children born in France to foreign parents may acquire citizenship from age 13 subject to residence conditions. A child born in France to foreign parents becomes a French citizen automatically upon turning 18, provided that they reside in France on their 18th birthday and have had their primary residence in France for a total (but not necessarily continuous) period of at least 5 years since the age of 11. Children born in France to two stateless parents receive French nationality automatically at birth.

                Also you can always go through the normal ways of acquiring citizenship. Upon turning 18 and having been raised in the country you usually fulfill all requirements for it.

                • Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                  6 hours ago

                  That’s crazy that you need to be 13, or 18 to get citizenship in france. That’s some gated communities type shit. Personally, I’m not a fan of nymbys.

        • Genius@lemmy.zipOP
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          2 hours ago

          Yes. People doubling down on proving their own points is a normal thing.

      • agavaa@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        How so? Seems reasonable to me to have the same citizenship as my immediate family. And if you want to change it you can apply for it and get it no problem.

        • Genius@lemmy.zipOP
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          8 hours ago

          You shouldn’t have to apply to be a citizen of somewhere you’ve lived your whole life. If your parents were immigrants and you’re not, you should have dual citizenship from birth.

          Also, citizenship shouldn’t exist, but if it has to, it should be permissive enough that someone could never be refused citizenship of the only country they’ve ever lived in.

  • ZeroOne@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Buddy, trust me you really shouldn’t want Americans to become citizens in your country.

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    21 hours ago

    It’s a good era in which to not have children. Expect a lot of forsaken children.

    Also expect some coerced birthing programs such as the Leibensborn program (which was also an excuse to recruit young women as sex slaves for the Schutzstaffel ) and the offspring were supported by the state and raised by the single mothers.

    This is the program that inspired the Handmaid program in Margaret Atwood’s Gilead, in A Handmaid’s Tale

    And J. D. Vance is super thirsty for it, as is countless other Freedom caucus and MAGA Republican officials.

    ETA That said, it might be a good time to get sterilized and commit to not having kids. (That doesn’t mean you won’t have chances to parent)

    • Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      10 hours ago

      Counterpoint:if all leftists don’t have kids, then conservatives will end up as the entire next generation. Not to like say, definitely have kids, but anti kid propaganda only hurts us

    • Dozzi92@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Literally zero European countries do it. It seems to be in the Americas only, and Chad and Tanzania. The concept that this is some human right apparently only applies to he US.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Yeah that’s because we had a whole thing of people claiming that people born enslaved weren’t citizens or eligible to vote

        • Dozzi92@lemmy.world
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          24 hours ago

          I’m curious what the difference between how America went about giving slaves citizenship versus countries in Europe. There’s the obvious difference of birthright that’s an issue today, just curious why America ended up here and Europe did not.

          • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            10 hours ago

            I think at least some countries in Europe had a similar system as the US but moved to Restricted Birthright in the 80s because of freeloading - i.e. well off people with no connection to a country just flying over and having their kids there to give them citizenship in that country.

            With Restricted Birthright the parents have to have been living in that country for a few years - so de facto being members of that society - to earn that right.

            Personally I think it’s fair that those comitted to participating in a Society all deserve the same rights (including local nationality for their children) independently of themselves having or not the local nationality, whilst those who are not comitted to participating in that Society do not, and “being resident in that country for more than X years” seems to me a pretty neutral and reasonably fair way to determine “comitted to participating in that country’s Society”.

    • Genius@lemmy.zipOP
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      8 hours ago

      I like immigrants. They’re so much more interesting than most people.

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      It’s pretty telling about how much Americans know about other countries that the assumption is that Jus Soli is the norm.

      • neons@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        Green: unlimited birthright citizenship Red: Limited birthright Citizenship Gray: (At least from my own country, Switzerland): No birthright citizenship

          • neons@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 day ago

            recessive? what is recessive about this?

            Your parents can take a citizenship test and you’ll automatically be a citizen as well.

            Just being born here doesn’t make you a citizen. You must at the very least be able to speak the language. Having a citizenship test makes absolute sense.

            Birthright citizenship is an absolutely stupid idea.

            • guldukat@lemmy.world
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              39 minutes ago

              Nice right-wing viewpoint you got there, seems to be working. Fuck the red states. Or if you aren’t American, fuck the right in general.

            • merc@sh.itjust.works
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              Birthright citizenship is an absolutely stupid idea.

              It’s no more stupid than citizenship by descent. Why should someone get citizenship just because of the citizenship of their parents? Shouldn’t they have to live in the country? Shouldn’t they speak the language? Shouldn’t they go through the country’s school system?

              Europe’s combination of freedom of movement and only Jus Sanguinis has resulted in a situation where there are lots of people with citizenship to a place they’ve never lived, and no citizenship to the place they’ve lived their entire lives.

              Really though, how citizenship should be awarded depends on if it’s an obligation or an opportunity. If a country is at war and drafting all citizens of a certain age, citizenship is an obligation the state puts on its citizens. If a country is at peace and provides a social safety net to all citizens, citizenship is an opportunity for its citizens. If the world were fair, people would be able to choose whether or not they wanted citizenship when they reached adulthood. It shouldn’t be something that happened automatically to children based either on who their parents were or on where they were born.

              • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                10 hours ago

                I think that the Restricted Birthright citizenship which is most common in Europe tries to navigate somewhere between those two extremes - in it basically if you’re a Resident in that country for more than X years (from what I’ve seen usually X years is 2 years) then your children born there get citizenship.

                It filters out freeloading - well-off people who have no personal investment in a country and its future and never contributed to it in any way, just flying over and having their kids there to give them citizenship - whilst still extending the same rights as locals have to those who, whilst not having the local nationality, are participating members of that society.

                I think the fairest way is to give equal treatment (including giving the local nationality to their children and making it available to they themselves after a few years living there) to those who are participating members of a society but not to those who are not members of that society, and that would also mean that the fairest treatment would be that the children of local nationals who have long ago left (and the children themselves never in fact lived there) do not get that nationality automatically for merely their parents having it.

                Ultimately I think nationality should be earned by living as part of a Society and when they’re born children, having not have had a chance to “earn” it, would inherited that from the or parents.

                That said some level of obtaining nationality based on the nationality of one’s parents makes sense to cover the time gaps of people who moved abroad and had children there before they could qualify for the nationality of the country they were born with, since otherwise those children would be stateless.

                As for the decision mechanism being “years legally living in a country” it’s just the simplest and most equal for all (passing no judgment for things like what people do for a living) way of judging “participating in that Society” whilst only excluding people who were neither invited in nor taken in because they’ve truly need help (i.e. it’s only for legal immigrants and refugees).

            • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              Just being born here doesn’t make you a citizen. You must at the very least be able to speak the language.

              Ummmm are you expecting 2 weeks old infant to speak German?

    • Lumiluz@slrpnk.net
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      1 day ago

      Chile would be good. It has a fairly strong passport, which I believe is stronger than the USA one in 2025 (before Trump), since it can still travel to the EU visa free.

          • x4740N@lemm.ee
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            5 hours ago

            Just like people on the Internet get all their experience about Japan

            I don’t live there but do have an interest in the Country and I don’t like when people spread bullshit about countries I like

            It’s also why I like watching Sora The Troll on YouTube because they point out a lot of the bullshit on the Internet about Japan

    • taiyang@lemmy.world
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      Might I suggest a second good reason for South American countries— when nuclear war hits the US, and it will, the southern hemisphere has a shot of surviving a nuclear winter. Billions will die but mostly in the northern hemisphere, even after accounting for fallout spread.

    • Ofiuco@lemmy.cafe
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      México is on it’s way to fascism so… Might want to check somewhere else

        • Ofiuco@lemmy.cafe
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          Is being antivaxxer liberal?
          Is it liberal to give the milita full control of some goverment things and business (even if it’s unconstitutional)?
          Is it liberal to destroy natural resources even if the court says it’s illegal and to stop it?
          Is it liberal to cut funds from science, arts, school, medicine and public transportation?
          Is it liberal to threaten people to vote for you or they lose that social support (we have a lot of bribes going)?
          Is it liberal to claim being a feminist just because she is a woman, while she keeps protecting rapists and misogynists (making such comments herself)?
          Is it liberal to destroy the previously independent organisms by filling them with your own people, defund them and then say they should close because they aren’t doing their job?

          If so, then yes, she is extremely liberal because that’s just the tip of the iceberg…

        • merc@sh.itjust.works
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          They just elected Claudia Sheinbaum, who is seen as being extremely close to the outgoing president AMLO. Some people were suggesting that she was so close to him that it was really his way of getting another term as president, similar to how Putin stepped down as president of Russia to become PM while Dmitry Medvedev became president in name only.

          How true is that? It’s hard to say. My guess is that a lot of it is sexism, thinking that a woman can’t think for herself and a woman president will turn to someone else for the important decisions.

          But, it’s true that under AMLO, there was a lot of democratic backsliding in Mexico. OTOH, Mexico has been dominated by PAN and PRI for decades. In fact, PRI won 14 elections in a row between 1928 and 1994. It wasn’t until Vincente Fox in 2000 that PAN was even a factor. So, there’s a lot of the power structures in Mexico geared towards supporting PRI and PAN.
          They were probably undermining a lot of the things AMLO wanted to accomplish. If he had followed all the rules and norms he might not have been able to accomplish anything because the establishment would have blocked everything he tried to do. That doesn’t excuse his rule and law breaking, but it does contextualize it.

          We’ll see what happens with Sheinbaum. I, for one, am fucking thrilled that Mexico’s president has a PhD in energy engineering. The fact she’s a woman is also historical, but to me the doctorate is more important.

          • Ofiuco@lemmy.cafe
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            6 hours ago

            Thanks for proving my point, you have no idea what is going on inside my country, yet already stepped in to parrot the propaganda going all over Reddit and Lemmy.

            They just elected Claudia Sheinbaum, who is seen as being extremely close to the outgoing president AMLO. Some people were suggesting that she was so close to him that it was really his way of getting another term as president, similar to how Putin stepped down as president of Russia to become PM while Dmitry Medvedev became president in name only.

            How true is that? It’s hard to say.

            Oh let me give you the missing piece, the Kks (aka. AMLO) is still living inside Palacio Nacional and forced Shitbaum to live there too (she said during her campaign she was analysing not living there and just going back to what previous presidents did), from there he’s still giving her instructions and telling her what to do and say.
            Hence why we mexicans call her the presirvienta (like a presidential maid), as the expresident Kks is still calling the shots and telling her what to do and say, most of the picks for goverment positions were his picks, not hers, and she’s still working to make the expresident’s sons richer (example: they were ordered to give the vapes back to the black market because his son wanted that control and money, they passed it under the excuse of health reasons, but those same reasons could apply to tobacco and alcohol, but they feigned ignorance so by summer, any kind of electrical smoking device will be banned, yet they have caught the expresident’s son vaping multiple times).

            My guess is that a lot of it is sexism, thinking that a woman can’t think for herself and a woman president will turn to someone else for the important decisions.

            Please don’t swallow the Kool-Aid that deep, most people don’t give 2 shits if it’s a man or woman as president, but we care when the expresident Kks said she was gonna be doing what he started and she said it was right, she was gonna do what was already in movement, no analysis or question about it, just as she’s told to do (wish I was joking but that was her electoral platform).
            She’s called a puppet or presirvienta because she acts like one, she doesn’t dare to stand up for herself (not even to apply the nepotism she wished to) because Morena and allies are a fucking cult.

            They were probably undermining a lot of the things AMLO wanted to accomplish. If he had followed all the rules and norms he might not have been able to accomplish anything because the establishment would have blocked everything he tried to do. That doesn’t excuse his rule and law breaking, but it does contextualize it.

            This is true, the destruction of the mangle, burning fuel oil to stop the green energies, berating of the air space, worsening the educational curriculum, giving almost full control to the military and the electoral fraud, all those were things that the Kks wouldn’t have done if he followed the law, hence why his crussade agains the magistery has been consumated under the rule of Shitbaum (as she was ordered to do), now we will have people who have no idea about laws (some didn’t even knew they were nominated) voted in next summer, all so they can do as they please without being contested (and Lemmy users were celebrating this).
            I mean, people criticize US for giving Trump full power by filling congress and such with Republicans and placing conspirationists in places of power, here is the same, everything is filled with Morena’s cultists, yet I don’t see them being criticized for passing everything without even reading it just because the Kks ordered to.

            We’ll see what happens with Sheinbaum. I, for one, am fucking thrilled that Mexico’s president has a PhD in energy engineering.

            Oh yes, a PhD she cheated to get, sadly the UNAM didn’t have the balls to act on it (if they had, she wouldn’t have been able to run for president) even when they had all the proof on their plate, they just waited until she was elected and buried it deep.
            Even if it was a real PhD, what good is it? She already gutted the funds for science, art, medicine (vaccines for the newborns? medicine for the people with cancer? COVID vaccines? fuck them all, amirite?), schools, public transportation, general maintenance for public services, the organisms that are meant to keep goverment in check (CNDH, INAI, INE, IFT and such); she supports her boss’ antivaxx position, won’t be taking back power illegally given to the military and experimented with Ivermectin during covid on patients without their consent during her time as governor.

            The fact she’s a woman is also historical,

            And she already shitted all over that, during her time as governor she speciallized on throwing the special forces on the feminist protests to protect the image of the expresident.
            During her election proccess she was the one making mysoginist remarks.
            She refuses to meet with feminist movements or the mothers looking for their missing families and (as I said before) she’s keeping the CNDH (the organism that is supposed to keep the human rights for the citizens) defunded and paralized.
            Everyone who isn’t licking their boots, is a traitor, a misogynist, a racist, ungrateful, fascist and many other insults she keeps slinging every day from her misinformation platform (again, something the Kks forced her to keep doing).
            Just because she is a woman who claims to be feminist doesn’t mean she is one (just like when a populist claims to be from the left)… at least, her acts speak louder and against her.

            but to me the doctorate is more important.

            See my previous point on why it’s pointless wether she has one or not.


            All in all, thanks for showing everyone why I can’t recommend my people to move to Lemmy, most of us complain about mexican reddit mods being in cahoots or too permisive when it comes to propagandists from our goverment, their comments might get buried and they might flail insults everywhere, but they aren’t even warned.
            Here we have a lot of normal(?) users giving their uninformed opinion about our country and (as you can see) anyone who gets angry (with good reason) about it just gets downvoted to hell and just go source? source? source?, but guess what? the fucking sources are there but they are all in spanish (because mexican, lol) so it’s fucking pointless (also most of those claims aren’t hard to find, but, again, you have to speak spanish).
            This is heaven for the propagandists.

            I’ve talked with other mexican Reddit users and they don’t dare to create a community here for the same reason, we knew what happened to Mujico (again, they federate with grad so not a great example) and we fear to get overwhelmed by people who have no idea what’s actually happening in México, but they just have to parrot the propaganda.

            Just for the lols, let me drop some decent (maybe decent is a strong word, but you get the idea) critics of this goverment just in case someone actually understand spanish:
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqKDHbrcN8Q
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vtJWGZW7Wtg

    • Geodad@lemm.ee
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      US citizenship comes from the mother, if born abroad. The baby would automatically be a US citizen, possibly have dual citizenship.

        • Geodad@lemm.ee
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          Yes, I’m just saying that the baby of a US woman would not be a stateless person if born in a country that doesn’t have it.

        • WoodScientist@sh.itjust.works
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          That is technically true, while missing a key fact. Birthright citizenship is the norm for countries in the Western Hemisphere. The vast majority of countries in the Americas have birthright citizenship. The USA is not some rare outlier here.

            • WoodScientist@sh.itjust.works
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              Most European countries actually do in a limited fashion. Countries that have signed the Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness grant automatic citizenship at birth to people that would otherwise be born stateless.

              More countries should adopt birthright citizenship. It has a lot of utility to it. It prevents the formation of a multigenerational undocumented underclass and greatly assists in the assimilation of immigrants into the broader culture. It’s simply a fact of life that some immigrants will enter a country illegally. And while it is bad enough that they may live the rest of their lives in hiding, it’s even worse when people are born into that condition. You can end up with generation after generation, people with little to no ties to their “homeland,” living as a permanent underclass because they lack citizenship.

              It’s also a protection against some forms of tyranny and oppression. A favorite tool of tyrants is to strip citizenship from their victims. They’ll sometimes go back generations and declare decades-old immigration cases as fraudulent or invalid. Look at the Rohingya genocide, where the Myanmar government declared an entire minority group to be illegal immigrants. Having a hard rule that says, “if you were born here, you have citizenship,” prevents these tactics from being used on anyone except actual immigrants. Tyrants can still target immigrants, but their children are protected.

              • Dozzi92@lemmy.world
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                Jus soli is conditional, and doesn’t include hopping on a plane and just visiting a country, the birthing parents have to have established residence in the country. There’s also citizenship granted to children born to parents who are from whichever country it is.

                None of these represent what we see in the US. No country in Europe grants automatic citizenship to children born of foreign parents.

      • LyD@lemmy.ca
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        The mother or the father, and it depends on circumstances. The rules are more strict when the father is the US citizen.

        • Geodad@lemm.ee
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          If the father is a citizen, the mother is not, and the baby is born outside the US, citizenship does not transfer from father to child.

          If the status of the parents is reversed, citizenship does transfer to the child.

          • LyD@lemmy.ca
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            Not to be rude, but where did you get that info? It isn’t correct. Doesn’t it sound a little too oversimplified for something like birthright citizenship laws in the US?

            • Geodad@lemm.ee
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              I looked into it when people were talking about Ted Cruz being born in Canada. His mother is a US citizen, so he’s actually a birthright citizen.

              • LyD@lemmy.ca
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                Here’s the law if you’re interested in learning about it: https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-12-part-h-chapter-3

                It’s pretty easy to understand. It depends on a few different things - you can be born to a US mother and not be a citizen, or to a US father and get citizenship through him. It depends on marriage status and there are different residency requirements for different situations. Those requirements are different depending on which parent is the US citizen too.

      • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Name a non-US country in the Americas that is not

        1. Are already closer to fascism than the US
        2. Currently threatened by the US
        3. Poverty stricken and lacking basic infrastructure (electricity, plumbing, internet) to a majority of the country.
    • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      As much as people are criticizing the proposed changes to this concept in the US, yes, this is true. In many countries that are arguably more free and democratic than the US even, this is not the way citizenship works and the post comes off as uninformed.

    • jaybone@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      And weren’t they talking about getting rid of “birth right” citizenship in the US? So that might not even be how it works in the US anymore.

      • 4am@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        They can’t without a constitutional amendment. They might still try to argue that the current constitution says something it doesn’t; they might just extrajudicially say “fuck you” to it.

        But the only ones talking about it are assholes and - to be clear - not a majority of Americans.