Saturday, February 12, 2011

Media Confusion Over Birthright Citizenship

By Jeremy Beck, Monday, February 7, 2011, 11:46 AM EST

On the first day of the 112th Congress, Rep. Steve King (R-IA) of the House Immigration Subcommittee introduced the Birthright Citizenship Act of 2011, H.R. 140, which would amend "the Immigration and Nationality Act to consider a person born in the United States 'subject to the jurisdiction' of the United States for citizenship at birth purposes if the person is born in the United States of parents, one of whom is: (1) a U.S. citizen or national; (2) a lawful permanent resident alien whose residence is in the United States; or (3) an alien performing active service in the U.S. Armed Forces." With the Congressional balance of power now in the hands of those who favor tighter immigration controls, the Birthright Citizenship Act (introduced in previous years by former Congressman, and current Governor of Georgia, Nathan Deal) is a front page national immigration story...and the source of great misunderstanding for journalists who cover it.

Reporters confuse their readers when they state something as a fact in one sentence, then call it an "interpretation" in the next. But such is the failure of media to grasp the birthright citizenship and the Fourteenth Amendment issues that the Atlanta Journal-Constitution wrote that legislators "are targeting the 14th Amendment, which automatically grants U.S. citizenship to babies born on U.S. soil even if their parents are here illegally. The lawmakers disagree with that interpretation, and they are attempting to force the issue into the courts for a decision.”

A blog in The Hill, a Washington, D.C. paper, reported that Rep. King "thinks he'll be able to pass a bill out of the House to end the Constitution's birthright citizenship for U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants" in one sentence, then quoted Rep. King stating the exact opposite: "'It's not a constitutional provision. It doesn't require a constitutional amendment. We can fix it by statute,' he said." Rep. King's bill clearly states that it "amends the Immigration and Nationality Act," and makes no mention of changing the Constitution.

The Immigration and Nationality Act is the federal statute that grants automatic citizenship to anyone born in the United States. It uses similar language to the 14th Amendment regarding persons born in the United States and "subject to the jurisdiction thereof." A serious and scholarly debate over the meaning of "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" is ongoing and by no means settled. Some scholars insist that the phrase has no real meaning of its own, but rather is essentially another way of saying "born in the United States." Other scholars conclude that the authors of the Fourteenth Amendment did NOT want to grant citizenship to every person who happened to be born on U.S. soil. Both sides have evidence to support their claims, but the only opinion that matters is that of the Supreme Court, which has yet to rule on this specific question.

Sen. Lindsay Graham (R-SC) may have thrown reporters off the scent when he ignited a media firestorm last summer summer by telling Fox News that he favored a Constitutional amendment to end automatic birthright citizenship. But Sen. Graham isn't leading this effort. The primary vehicle for ending automatic birthright citizenship is Rep. King's H.R. 140, which would only change the federal statute.

Reporters have a hard enough job to do these days without handing down Supreme Court decisions. If Rep. King is successful in passing H.R. 140, it will likely force a Supreme Court decision. Until that decision is handed down, journalists can relieve themselves of the burden of judgment by attributing any opinion on the question of the constitutionality of H.R. 140 to its source. Reporters can further clarify the issue for their readers by noting that only a ruling from the Supreme Court can put an end to the debate.

JEREMY BECK is the Director of Media Standards Project for NumbersUSA

NumbersUSA's blogs are copyrighted and may be republished or reposted only if they are copied in their entirety, including this paragraph, and provide proper credit to NumbersUSA. NumbersUSA bears no responsibility for where our blogs may be republished or reposted.

Comment:

The media isn't confused about anything. The wealthy, AKA Judeo-Capitalists do not want to stop the flow of their slave-labour workforce. The media is 95% Jewish owned. All anyone has to do is check who the CEO's of the major media outlets are to prove this. ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, et al are all Jewish owned/controlled. That includes the newspapers like the Jew York Times, the LA Times, the Chicago Tribune, the Baltimore Herald, the Wall Street Journal, and most other big papers. The reporters are reporting what they're told to report in the way they are told to.

Then there are the bleeding hearts. They are accusing the anti-immigration people of trying to usurp the Fourteenth Amendment. But as I've said before, they Fourteenth Amendment was never, never intended as a backdoor to citizenship for illegals. It was to protect the children of LEGAL immigrants, freed slaves, and Native Americans who had become citizens for having to go through the naturalisation process like their parents.

Dan Schruender 88!


2 comments:

  1. it is my opinion that they want more than a slave labor force here in America! one political party or the other is going to grant them amnesty and which ever party does is going to get their VOTES! so that party can stay in power which i guess basically means so much for the people by the people as that really seems to have been thrown out the window as it is now days

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  2. Damn right! The illegals will join whatever party that makes them citizens. That's one of the reasons we have to get rid of them now!

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