So, back at the start of this second Trump term, I expressed support for ending birthright citizenship for the children of two illegal immigrants. Given Trump's authoritarian attempts to strip people of citizenship, has my opinion on this matter changed? This comes up for me because David Pakman cited that Trump is trying to strip naturalized citizens of citizenship, and also, strip children of illegal immigrants of citizenship.
I'm going to say no, but obviously, I have to explain WHY. I never supported exactly how Trump is going about doing this. Obviously, stripping people of citizenship directly sets a really bad precedent as we're seeing with this administration. We should not do that. The reasons should be obvious. It just leads to a petty dictator stripping rights from anyone they don't like. If you have US citizenship, you should have it. I support amending the constitution to deny citizenship specifically to the children of two illegal immigrants who are born in the future. Those who have it legally, should keep it. And obviously, we shouldnt allow the stripping of citizenship from anyone current leader doesn't like. That's scary and dangerous, as we are seeing now.
The two qualifying differences are basically that I support changing the law, not acting lawlessly, and I support the change affecting people in the future, not people who currently have it retroactively.
One might wonder why I have such a strong position on this issue. After all, I'm otherwise a liberal and I otherwise typically have a rather progressive stance on immigration. Yes, but I'm also fairly moderate. I was mostly fine with the likes of Clinton, Obama, and Biden on the matter, and they deported lots of illegal immigrants. I just aint pro cruelty.
And the fact is, I tend to be a bit more nationalist in this regard because of my economic stances. I support a UBI, universal healthcare, etc. The political viability of these programs practically requires a harder stance on immigration. If we have a loophole to allow anyone to just come in and get citizenship, and then we give free money based on citizenship, then we're giving people who come here illegally free money. This will erode support for UBI, and possibly, in the long term, the sustainability of such programs. A more lax immigration approach works better for those with more pro work ideologies, as the argument is that immigrants contribute to the country more than they take away, given how restrictive existing programs are, but again, that stance tends to align more with a neoliberal economic stance of open borders, free markets, and of course, a more pro work pro capitalist political ideology. Given my own ideology is counter to that, a compromise is that I do support a more restrictive approach to immigration and the border in order to make my own economic ideology more viable.
Just wanna make that clear, since many oppose immigration for more racist or xenophobic reasons. While I would expect anyone coming in to have ideas and ideals compatible with liberal democracy and not be some radical illiberal extremist or a threat to society, I mostly dont care a ton otherwise. Again, it's more a consequence of my specific economic ideology rather than some weird great replacement theory type crap.
But yeah, I just wanted to clarify my stance on this a bit.