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Rethinking Birthright Citizenship
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
A recent article
in the Houston Chronicle discusses the problem of so-called
anchor babies, children born in U.S. hospitals to illegal immigrant
parents. These children automatically become citizens, and thus
serve as an anchor for their parents to remain in the country. Our
immigration authorities understandably are reluctant to break up
families by deporting parents of young babies. But birthright citizenship,
originating in the 14th amendment, has become a serious cultural
and economic dilemma for our nation.
In some Houston
hospitals, administrators estimate that 70 or 80% of the babies
born have parents who are in the country illegally. As an obstetrician
in south Texas for several decades, I can attest to the severity
of the problem. Its the same story in California, Arizona,
and New Mexico. And the truth is most illegal immigrants who have
babies in U.S. hospitals do not have health insurance and do not
pay their hospital bills.
This obviously
cannot be sustained, either by the hospitals involved or the taxpayers
who end up paying the bills.
No other wealthy,
western nations grant automatic citizenship to those who simply
happen to be born within their borders to non-citizens. These nations
recognize that citizenship involves more than the physical location
of ones birth; it also involves some measure of cultural connection
and allegiance. In most cases this means the parents must be citizens
of a nation in order for their newborn children to receive automatic
citizenship.
Make no mistake,
Americans are happy to welcome immigrants who follow our immigration
laws and seek a better life here. America is far more welcoming
and tolerant of newcomers than virtually any nation on earth. But
our modern welfare state creates perverse incentives for immigrants,
incentives that cloud the issue of why people choose to come here.
The real problem is not immigration, but rather the welfare state
magnet.
Hospitals bear
the costs when illegal immigrants enter the country for the express
purpose of giving birth. But illegal immigrants also use emergency
rooms, public roads, and public schools. In many cases they are
able to obtain Medicaid, food stamps, public housing, and even unemployment
benefits. Some have fraudulently collected Social Security benefits.
Of course many
American citizens also use or abuse the welfare system. But we cannot
afford to open our pocketbooks to the rest of the world. We must
end the perverse incentives that encourage immigrants to come here
illegally, including the anchor baby incentive.
Ive introduced
legislation that would amend the Constitution and end automatic
birthright citizenship. The 14th amendment was ratified in 1868,
on the heels of the Civil War. The country, especially the western
territories, was wide open and ripe for homesteading. There was
no welfare state to exploit, and the modern problems associated
with immigration could not have been imagined.
Our
founders knew that unforeseen problems with our system of government
would arise, and thats precisely why they gave us a method
for amending the Constitution. Its time to rethink birthright
citizenship by amending the 14th amendment.
October
3, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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