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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 3, 2025

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Why can't the whole anchor baby issue just be solved by saying that the existence of citizen children will not be considered as a factor in immigration enforcement against the parents? If the children are US citizens but do not have a guardian who can legally exercise their role in the US, they should just be treated the same way that the underage children of someone who is sent to prison would be, i.e. placed in a foster home. This seems way more legally watertight.

Because this leads to photos of children being separated from their parents by law enforcement, which makes a majority of voters sufficiently sad/uncomfortable to vote against it.

We need to start recognizing dual citizenship so that we can safely deport the children together with their parents. Maybe deportation isn't the right word, but if some tourists forgot their kid in the US, helping the kid get back to their parents would just be the right thing to do. We can call it "family reunification through repatriation assistance" or something like that.

I didn't check them all but it seems like hondurans, haitians, and venezeulans should pass down their citizenship, so the kids can safely be sent back to be with their family.

Don't we recognize dual citizenship? I've got two passports and nobody's ever said anything about it.

You do, and you help people with dual citizenship circumvent countries that don't (I remember reading some official entry from the US Embassy in Dubai (I think) that went something like "Dubai doesn't recognize dual citizenship, here's what to do when they confiscate your American passport").

Causing the rather odd situation that almost everyone perjures themselves in the citizenship oath. The oath still includes "I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state, or sovereignty" but the law no longer requires new citizens to actually do that, and most don't.