Quote (AiNedeSpelCzech @ Jun 16 2016 05:57pm)
To reasonably share your point of view, turn to 38
Call him a faggot, turn to 73
lmao I loved those books.
Quote (Santara @ Jun 16 2016 04:39pm)
And the words say "the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed" and "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens." Words mean things, and just because you've managed to get a court to agree that words mean things they don't mean doesn't undermine my case. The 2nd specifically protects the right of "the people," and the 14th specifically rules out people whose allegiance lies in a different jurisdiction.
They are subject to the jurisdiction thereof. If they commit crimes they will be prosecuted. Legal decisions can be made about them by the state.
Quote
ju·ris·dic·tion
ˌjo͝orəsˈdikSH(ə)n/
noun
noun: jurisdiction
the official power to make legal decisions and judgments.
"federal courts had no jurisdiction over the case"
synonyms: authority, control, power, dominion, rule, administration, command, sway, leadership, sovereignty, hegemony
"an area under French jurisdiction"
the extent of the power to make legal decisions and judgments.
"the claim will be within the jurisdiction of the industrial tribunal"
a system of law courts; a judicature.
plural noun: jurisdictions
"in some jurisdictions there is a mandatory death sentence for murder"
They are under the authority of the United States when born here.
The Constitution also has a clause against the Corruption of Blood, meaning children can't be punished for crimes of their parents. You're going back to savagery in positive law with punishing children by stripping them citizenship because of an immigration crime committed by somebody else.
Sorry if you think it is inconvenient.
This post was edited by Skinned on Jun 16 2016 05:21pm