XPost: or.politics, ca.politics, fl.politics   
   XPost: rec.aviation.military   
   From: zed@is.dead   
      
   On Sun, 1 Mar 2026 06:19:08 -0000 (UTC)   
   Webbster wrote:   
      
   > "Jim Wilkins" wrote in   
   > news:10nvrr3$3on48$1@dont-email.me:    
   >    
   > > "Mars Sellus" wrote in message news:20260228120208.65d1cb8f@z-z...   
   > >    
   > > On Sat, 28 Feb 2026 05:13:13 -0000 (UTC)   
   > > Webbster wrote:   
   > >    
   > >> The Constitution protects ALL people.    
   > >    
   > > No, it protects ALL citizens and those here lawfully.   
   > > ------------------------   
   > >    
   > > The clause on birthright citizenship was judged too narrow and vague   
   > > to match reality, for instance illegal invaders avoid the   
   > > requirement of being under US jurisdiction, sometimes violently.   
   > > American Samoans have chosen to be US nationals but not US citizens   
   > > to preserve their traditional culture, and legal precedent supports   
   > > them.   
   > >    
   > > https://napelacenter.byuh.edu/00000189-28d9-d30c-a3eb-bafd6d1f0000/01-b   
   > > irthright-pdf    
   > >    
   > > "Despite American Samoan resistance to birthright citizenship in the   
   > > protection of the fa‘amatai and traditional land tenure system,   
   > > federal lawsuits   
   > > supported by the U.S. American continental legal actors rooted in    
   > > ethnocentric   
   > > Western ideals of American nationalism continue to rage on."   
   > >    
   > > Birth citizenship is far from universal, outside the Americas where   
   > > it benefitted immigrants newborns take the citizenship of their   
   > > parents.   
   > > https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/countries-with-birth   
   > > right-citizenship    
   > >    
   > > "In contrast to jus soli, nearly every other country on Earth offers   
   > > jus sanguinis, which grants citizenship as long as one parent (or   
   > > sometimes both parents) are citizens."   
   > >    
   > >    
   > Go ahead quote where the Constitution says "citizen"   
   >    
   > ==============   
   > AI Overview   
   > Yes, the U.S. Constitution applies to non-citizens_including legal    
   > residents and undocumented immigrants_present within the United States   
   > . Key protections, particularly the 5th and 14th Amendment's Due   
   > Process Clauses, apply to "persons" not just citizens, ensuring   
   > rights to fair treatment, free speech, and protection against   
   > unreasonable searches.   
   >    
   > ===========   
      
      
   AI Overview   
   The U.S. Constitution does not extend full protections to foreign enemy   
   invaders, particularly during declared war or armed conflict. While the   
   Constitution guarantees rights to persons within U.S. jurisdiction,   
   enemy combatants are subject to the laws of war, allowing for   
   detention, removal, or, if necessary, killing, largely regulated under   
   the Alien Enemies Act.    
      
   Key Constitutional & Legal Aspects:   
   Alien Enemies Act: Under 50 U.S.C. §§ 21–24, during declared war or   
   threatened invasion, the President may authorize the apprehension,   
   restraint, and removal of citizens of the hostile nation.   
       
   > BTW name the "illegal invaders" the US has had during it's history.   
      
   30 million is to many to list.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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