When is a citizen not a citizen?
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
Legally, they are, through right of soil, or are they? Are they culturally Merkin? Are they integrated in the country,n or are they a foreign minority given national rights through well meaning but mistaken laws?
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
Not right of soil, right of birth.Svartalf wrote:Legally, they are, through right of soil, or are they?
Yes, to the extent of a common Merkin culture, which is actually a bit different than being, say, culturally English, or culturally Swedish, or culturally Italian. Merkin culture is not as based on race or color. An good example to make the point would be Japan. Very homogeneous. A Somali couple moving to Japan and having children there does not make the kids ethnically Japanese. Japanese nationals, yes, but not ethnically Japanese. Similarly, Japanese "culture" is tied to a good degree with ethnicity. American "culture" however, has traditionally embodied many "cultures." That's why the Amish in Pennsylvania Dutch-land are just as "American" as the denizens of Chinatown or Little Italy or Greenwich Village in Manhattan, or the residents of the Louisiana Bayou.Svartalf wrote: Are they culturally Merkin?
Depends on the individual whether they are integrated.Svartalf wrote: Are they integrated in the country,n or are they a foreign minority given national rights through well meaning but mistaken laws?
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
Right of soil, I'm French through right of birth and Canadian by right of soil
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
There's no such thing as "American Culture". We don't even have a national cuisine. We just steal it from everybody else, after we bomb the fuck out of them.
Yeah well that's just, like, your opinion, man.
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
We don't have a national cuisine, but we have American cuisines that are regional in the US. Creole and Cajun, Kentucky Burgoo, for example. These are American cuisines. The classic Thanksgiving Dinner is uniquely American, too. New England Clam Chowders and Lobster dishes. Southern Barbecue.laklak wrote:There's no such thing as "American Culture". We don't even have a national cuisine. We just steal it from everybody else, after we bomb the fuck out of them.
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
Acknowledging the ethnicity of citizens is a side issue to the main point about the impact of ethnicity on citizenship - which all of us apart from Mr C seem to think counts for nowt.
The 'natural-born' citizenship of presidents and vice-presidential candidates required in the US constitution highlights the core of this issue - in what does citizenship reside; in blood, in soil, or in both?
It seems to me that the constitution is no longer well served by that fuzzy and much argued-over term 'natural-born' which, one presumes, was inserted into the constitution to mitigate against the prospect of the nation falling into the hands of a foreign agent or power - particular during at historical period when the authority of capricious monarchs still held great sway in the domestic and international affairs of nation.
This clause seems quite sensible from that perspective, in democratic terms: the peoples of America should be governed only by people from America. As a freshly-minted, independent nation the writers of the constitution, mindful of the malign machinations of many monarchs, not to mention the corrupting control-freakery of cardinals, didn't want the political system to be subject to the undermining influence of alien gelt or arms. At at time, when the peoples of the rest of the Euro-centric world were mostly subjects of a monarch rather than affirmed citizens of a republic founded in suffrage, and when things like international communication and travel involved physically covering huge distances by sail, horse, and shoe, 'natural-born' mostly likely implied something quite specific: to be a 'natural-born' American was to be bestowed with citizenship of the republic from birth either by being born within the republic's borders or, taking something from the Jewish tradition of indisputable ancestral heritage, by having a mother who was herself a citizen. This makes 'natural-born' a two-fold qualification, and one that still holds today: citizenship is by both blood and by soil.
It seems to me that people like Mr C are not only being disingenuous, but also running contrary to the constitution, when they seek to deny US citizenship by soil on the basis of blood.
In its historical context things no doubt seemed quite clear, but the world is a different place now, particularly in terms of movement, residence, and communication. Perhaps it's time to replace the 'natural-born citizen' requirement for presidential candidates with just 'citizen' and for the US political system be opened to any and every citizen equally, such that any 'natural-born' or 'naturalised' resident can fully participate in democracy and qualify for the highest office -- perhaps with a clause for that latter that they have to have been a citizen of the republic and met all their obligations to the state, like paying their taxes etc, for a certain period of time, say 10 years. After all, being a 'natural-born' citizen does not bestow one with any particular virtues, attributes, or capacities any more than being the first-born son of a monarch does.
The 'natural-born' citizenship of presidents and vice-presidential candidates required in the US constitution highlights the core of this issue - in what does citizenship reside; in blood, in soil, or in both?
It seems to me that the constitution is no longer well served by that fuzzy and much argued-over term 'natural-born' which, one presumes, was inserted into the constitution to mitigate against the prospect of the nation falling into the hands of a foreign agent or power - particular during at historical period when the authority of capricious monarchs still held great sway in the domestic and international affairs of nation.
This clause seems quite sensible from that perspective, in democratic terms: the peoples of America should be governed only by people from America. As a freshly-minted, independent nation the writers of the constitution, mindful of the malign machinations of many monarchs, not to mention the corrupting control-freakery of cardinals, didn't want the political system to be subject to the undermining influence of alien gelt or arms. At at time, when the peoples of the rest of the Euro-centric world were mostly subjects of a monarch rather than affirmed citizens of a republic founded in suffrage, and when things like international communication and travel involved physically covering huge distances by sail, horse, and shoe, 'natural-born' mostly likely implied something quite specific: to be a 'natural-born' American was to be bestowed with citizenship of the republic from birth either by being born within the republic's borders or, taking something from the Jewish tradition of indisputable ancestral heritage, by having a mother who was herself a citizen. This makes 'natural-born' a two-fold qualification, and one that still holds today: citizenship is by both blood and by soil.
It seems to me that people like Mr C are not only being disingenuous, but also running contrary to the constitution, when they seek to deny US citizenship by soil on the basis of blood.
In its historical context things no doubt seemed quite clear, but the world is a different place now, particularly in terms of movement, residence, and communication. Perhaps it's time to replace the 'natural-born citizen' requirement for presidential candidates with just 'citizen' and for the US political system be opened to any and every citizen equally, such that any 'natural-born' or 'naturalised' resident can fully participate in democracy and qualify for the highest office -- perhaps with a clause for that latter that they have to have been a citizen of the republic and met all their obligations to the state, like paying their taxes etc, for a certain period of time, say 10 years. After all, being a 'natural-born' citizen does not bestow one with any particular virtues, attributes, or capacities any more than being the first-born son of a monarch does.
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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
Kentucky Fried Chicken and Taco Bell are as American as apple pie.Forty Two wrote:We don't have a national cuisine, but we have American cuisines that are regional in the US. Creole and Cajun, Kentucky Burgoo, for example. These are American cuisines. The classic Thanksgiving Dinner is uniquely American, too. New England Clam Chowders and Lobster dishes. Southern Barbecue.laklak wrote:There's no such thing as "American Culture". We don't even have a national cuisine. We just steal it from everybody else, after we bomb the fuck out of them.

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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
When they're brown. [/thread]
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
Cuisines to be proud of.Brian Peacock wrote:Kentucky Fried Chicken and Taco Bell are as American as apple pie.Forty Two wrote:We don't have a national cuisine, but we have American cuisines that are regional in the US. Creole and Cajun, Kentucky Burgoo, for example. These are American cuisines. The classic Thanksgiving Dinner is uniquely American, too. New England Clam Chowders and Lobster dishes. Southern Barbecue.laklak wrote:There's no such thing as "American Culture". We don't even have a national cuisine. We just steal it from everybody else, after we bomb the fuck out of them.

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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
In citizenship it's being born in the US, or outside the US to American parent(s) where the person is temporarily outside of the country, or via application for naturalization. Being a "natural born" citizen is a heightened requirement only for President. I.e., not all citizens can be President.Brian Peacock wrote:Acknowledging the ethnicity of citizens is a side issue to the main point about the impact of ethnicity on citizenship - which all of us apart from Mr C seem to think counts for nowt.
The 'natural-born' citizenship of presidents and vice-presidential candidates required in the US constitution highlights the core of this issue - in what does citizenship reside; in blood, in soil, or in both?
It would help if it were clarified.Brian Peacock wrote:
It seems to me that the constitution is no longer well served by that fuzzy and much argued-over term 'natural-born' which, one presumes, was inserted into the constitution to mitigate against the prospect of the nation falling into the hands of a foreign agent or power - particular during at historical period when the authority of capricious monarchs still held great sway in the domestic and international affairs of nation.
It never meant being born abroad with a mother who was herself a citizen. If it did, the birthers would never have had a case. Nobody disputed Obama's mother was a US citizen, so even if he was born in Kenya, he'd be natural born. But, the argument was never "doesn't matter, mom was US citizen" - the argument was that he was born in the US.Brian Peacock wrote:
This clause seems quite sensible from that perspective, in democratic terms: the peoples of America should be governed only by people from America. As a freshly-minted, independent nation the writers of the constitution, mindful of the malign machinations of many monarchs, not to mention the corrupting control-freakery of cardinals, didn't want the political system to be subject to the undermining influence of alien gelt or arms. At at time, when the peoples of the rest of the Euro-centric world were mostly subjects of a monarch rather than affirmed citizens of a republic founded in suffrage, and when things like international communication and travel involved physically covering huge distances by sail, horse, and shoe, 'natural-born' mostly likely implied something quite specific: to be a 'natural-born' American was to be bestowed with citizenship of the republic from birth either by being born within the republic's borders or, taking something from the Jewish tradition of indisputable ancestral heritage, by having a mother who was herself a citizen. This makes 'natural-born' a two-fold qualification, and one that still holds today: citizenship is by both blood and by soil.
The argument was, in past disputes, was that natural born citizenship meant born in the US, plus having parents who were US citizens. Never has it been alleged to mean born outside the country with a US citizen parent.
Well, I think that's more of what goes on in the civilized world. In uncivilized Merka, we have birthright citizenship, without regard for blood. The civilized world often requires more than mere birth on the soil.Brian Peacock wrote:
It seems to me that people like Mr C are not only being disingenuous, but also running contrary to the constitution, when they seek to deny US citizenship by soil on the basis of blood.
Well, I don't doubt a need to constitutionally define, with some clarity, what is meant by a citizen eligible to run for president, but I would not agree with just "citizen." We now live in a world of dual and even multiple citizenships. And, there are ways to be a US citizen without ever having set foot here.Brian Peacock wrote: In its historical context things no doubt seemed quite clear, but the world is a different place now, particularly in terms of movement, residence, and communication. Perhaps it's time to replace the 'natural-born citizen' requirement for presidential candidates with just 'citizen' and for the US political system be opened to any and every citizen equally, such that any 'natural-born' or 'naturalised' resident can fully participate in democracy and qualify for the highest office -- perhaps with a clause for that latter that they have to have been a citizen of the republic and met all their obligations to the state, like paying their taxes etc, for a certain period of time, say 10 years. After all, being a 'natural-born' citizen does not bestow one with any particular virtues, attributes, or capacities any more than being the first-born son of a monarch does.
As long as we have a nation, it's important that the President of the nation be solidly attached to the nation. Ensuring that candidates for President are born in the United States goes a long way to doing that. It might be better to say that to be President you have to be born in the United States and not have been absent from the US for more than X period of time, and/or have two American citizen parents, to provide a close, familial tie to the country. That's just one option. There are probably others.
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
We culturally appropriated BBQ from the Caribe islanders, and the rest of Southern cooking from the slaves. Hard tacos are the worst, because they're unabashedly Tex-Mex and the Texans STOLE Mexico from the Spanish who stole if from the Incas (or Aztecs, I can never keep them straight because they're all brownish and fuck it they're all dead now anyway). Creole was stolen from Africans and Cajun from the French. Burgoo is basically Irish stew. As for New England clam chowder, the "England" bit is a dead giveaway.
No, we have no national cuisine or identity, and everything we do is a pale imitation of the original. We should be ashamed of ourselves and dress in sackcloth and ashes, and pay reparations to everybody.
No, we have no national cuisine or identity, and everything we do is a pale imitation of the original. We should be ashamed of ourselves and dress in sackcloth and ashes, and pay reparations to everybody.
Yeah well that's just, like, your opinion, man.
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
That's funny you can't differentiate between a US citizen and a Minnesotan.Brian Peacock wrote:When their parents are Somali?
For the context to this bollocks see here: http://www.rationalia.com/forum/viewtop ... 5#p1709712Collector1337 wrote:Well, they aren't.Brian Peacock wrote: I think the point you're trying to make is that US children born of Somali stock are not real Minnesota Americans.
So what qualifies a personal as being American, British, French, Dutch, Australian, or even Somali? Clearly, one's nationality is more that a simple matter of being born in a particular geo-social-political region or fulfilling some kind of official nationality test if born beyond the borders of that region.
Is someone who's parents were born in a different country not actually a citizen of the country they themselves were born in? What about the grandchildren of immigrants, are they proper citizens, and if not: how many generations have to be born in a country before the last of them can be considered a proper citizen? Is it like the Bible says; the nationality of the father shall fall upon the backs of their children, yea, unto the seventh generation?
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
Whooosh!
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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Re: When is a citizen not a citizen?
But that is your food culture - a fusion cuisine for a fusion nation. The US is culture-rich: you got that stuff in spades, all over - even in Wisconsin.laklak wrote:We culturally appropriated BBQ from the Caribe islanders, and the rest of Southern cooking from the slaves. Hard tacos are the worst, because they're unabashedly Tex-Mex and the Texans STOLE Mexico from the Spanish who stole if from the Incas (or Aztecs, I can never keep them straight because they're all brownish and fuck it they're all dead now anyway). Creole was stolen from Africans and Cajun from the French. Burgoo is basically Irish stew. As for New England clam chowder, the "England" bit is a dead giveaway.
No, we have no national cuisine or identity, and everything we do is a pale imitation of the original. We should be ashamed of ourselves and dress in sackcloth and ashes, and pay reparations to everybody.

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"This is how humanity ends; bickering over the irrelevant."
Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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