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Friday, April 3, 2026

Birthright citizenship opposition puts the lie to 'illegal'

Haters pretend they have no problem with legal immigrants, when of course they do.

     Thursday morning, when I was having coffee in the kitchen and talking with my sons and daughters-in-law, with regular pauses to make sputtering noises at the baby, I was really, really glad I took the day off. Good for me, bad for you: no column in the Sun-Times today. Though I do have thoughts on one of the nine big stories of the week.   

     Bullies are cowards. They rarely are willing to face consequences for holding and expressing their stunted souls. They rarely come out, anymore, and say, "I need to hurt people to feel good about myself,: or "I have to hate ..." and then add whatever group has stuck in their craw.
     So they speak in code.
     For example, D.E.I., the effort to break the lock on society that white culture had, by including marginalized groups, was turned into a negative buzzword, almost a slur. You aren't against Blacks, or women, or gay people. Oh no! You are anti-DEI — against Blacks, women or gay people being admitted into universities, or included in histories, or partaking in society in almost any way other than subservience. The same trick that turned fighting fascists such as our president  into the scary imaginary group "antifa."
     Consider "illegal." People who hate immigrants often take pains to explain they are against illegal immigration. Ignoring a) their concern for illegality stops at immigrants. It certainly doesn't extend to our president and his administration of corruption and crime.
     And second, that they're really against all immigrants, illegal or not, as illustrated by ICE yanking law-abiding immigrants off the street, people who came here legally and were, in some cases, attending their hearings in courts of law, or trying to. "Illegal" is a figleaf, like calling Jews Communists and international cosmopoles. Ya hate 'em anyway, yer just fishing around for reasons, as a dumb show of rationality. 
     The easiest way to illustrate the lie of waving illegality is birthright citizenship. Children born in this country are citizens, thanks for the 14th amendment, put in place to make sure that children of freed slaves would became citizens, just as their parents were. That's both the law and good social policy. Among the many good effects of birthright citizenships is it prevents the legal limbo that immigrants find themselves in from being extended into perpetuity, as it is in other countries.
     So while the children of non-citizens became citizens, legally, for 160 years by being born in this country, the Donald Trump tried to scrap it anyway by declaring, basically, the law is wrong, he's right. It's been misinterpreted by everybody, he suggests. Good thing he came along...
     Opening arguments were heard Wednesday in the Supreme Court, and shockingly — a word worn down to a nubbin at this point —Trump showed up, in person. The first president ever to do so. I was reminded of when he hovered menacingly behind Hilary Clinton during a presidential debate in 2016. (If only she had spun around and snarled, "Back off creep!" The election might have turned out very differently. Alas, she wasn't the sort. That eight second delay of hers).
      Anyway, Trump's presence did not have its desired effect. The justices picked apart the government's argument that what worked for the children of slaves somehow doesn't work for the children of immigrants. Another what I consider "ruby slipper moment" with Trump. So many people submit to him, out of a mix of misguided self-promotion, fear, star-struck wonder, whatever. Only later do they find the advantage momentary, the harm permanent, as they are chewed up and spat out, the Attorney General, Pam Bondi, being the latest to take the Walk of Shame. They could have refused. The power was in their hands all along. 
     Expect the ruling in June. But every legal mind worthy of the term is certain Trump will lose because the notion is ludicrous, the Constitution, clear. Trump is losing a lot in courts of law, lately. Which is good and bad. Good because every ounce of power taken from him is returned to the American people, where it belongs. And bad because a beast is most dangerous when it is wounded.


13 comments:

  1. Good points and you enjoy that baby and take those days off when needed.

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  2. Love this part of the Botanic Garden!

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  3. Tremendous analysis. Thank you. Maybe TACO will be ground down to a 'nubbin' soon.

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  4. Howie Mogil-LakeviewApril 3, 2026 at 9:07 AM

    This sycophant lives off of keeping his name in the face of his cult. We have to fight him off on every front. We have to flip the House and regain control of the budget to some degree and reset the balance of power. And if we can’t flip the Senate, we need to make the margin small enough that a few defectors will make the difference. Then onto 2028. We can do this.

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  5. If it's not DEI or birthright citizenship, it's something else. Haters gonna hate.

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  6. Today as I'm sure you know is Good Friday.

    A day recognized and observed by hundreds of millions of Christians as that of the crucifixion of Christ.

    One of the holiest days on the Christian calendar.

    Christ accepted his death so that all of humanity could be forgiven for the original sin of Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden for which they were cast out of paradise.

    This little fairy tale is the foundation of Christianity coupled with the resurrection of Christ 3 days later.

    It's coincidence this year with Passover give me the expectation that many of Earth's people would spend this time in a contemplative and meditative frame of mind.

    But no we need to hate the haters today.

    Miss me with that shit



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    1. Actually, I didn't. One of the perks of being in the whiphand class is you can assume everybody is keenly aware of your shit. We aren't. Before I saw "Jesus Christ Superstar" I had no idea what the Easter story was. Why would I? And nobody is hating you, snowflake. You're being described. Don't cry to me if you don't like the description.

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    2. Today's a good Friday because it's my kid sister's 75th birthday.
      Don't buy into that Sky Daddy stuff anymore...or the son rise, either.

      And it's not what I come to EGD for. Don't want it. Don't need it.
      As they say in Jamaica, Hoppy Eastah, mon...

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    3. I'm still smiling about James' comment. "Today is our special day, so it's mean of you to call out hatred which, after all, is underpinning all our pious BS."

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    4. "Miss me with that shit[.]" Very contemplative.

      I rather think Jesus would be in favor of protecting the less fortunate.

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    5. The role of self-absorption among haters doesn't get explored enough. They're weaponizing their discomfort — the idea that they need to tolerate people, even those of whom they don't approve, is just too large for their minds. James never imagines this is not intended for him, nor is he a consideration. He is, as I like to say, like someone who crashes a wedding reception then complains about the food.

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  7. I echo the previous comments. Your piece is an excellent depiction of this Trumpian effort to demean the country and some of its most positive attributes. I hope you are correct on how the court will rule. (One fantasy I had was Trump, being unable to control himself, began shouting at the court. But alas)

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  8. (1) Trump's whole argument re birthright citizenship is insane because, if enforced the way HE wants it, all his children except Tiffany would be illegal aliens. Of course, maybe that's the idea...
    (2) If the 14th Amendment and birthright citizenship is invalidated, then there will have to be a new Constitutional Amendment figuring out how to define citizenship, which is also insane. And will throw all births, no matter what color, into chaos. Question 1 would obviously be, so when does citizenship start? At 7? at 9? At the age of consent?
    What a load of crap.

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