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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

German government moves to forbid ‘right-wingers’ from buying property

 by Olivia Murray

Andreas Wailzer at LifeSite News reports that the German government, through the Ministry of Construction, has just proposed a new bill that “would give municipalities the right of first refusal if a potential buyer of property has ‘anti-constitutional aspirations.’”

But those with “anti-constitutional aspirations” aren’t to be confused with the third-world foreigners and hordes of Islamists who have decidedly not integrated and accepted the German constitution and government as authoritative, instead bringing sharia culture, customs, and pseudo-law to Germany and making no pretenses of hiding their intentions—this is specifically in regards to “right-wingers.” Sure, the bill’s language includes a spate of other problematic identities (“left-wing” and “religiously motivated extremist” ideologues), but it singles out the “right-wingers” and elaborates thusly:

The proposed legislation states: ‘They have long been well-documented as a right-wing extremist strategy for gaining a foothold in communities. Prominent examples have been, and continue to be, Dortmund-Dorstfeld and the village of Jamel. Their dominance in these areas is no coincidence, but part of a far-right strategy. Guidelines on preventing far-right extremism consistently emphasize the importance of involving and mobilizing the local population. However, at a certain point, civil society initiatives can no longer provide a sufficient counterbalance, which can further promote the segregation of the resident population.’

(If you didn’t know any better, you’d think they were literally talking about the Islamists currently conquering all of Europe.)

Now, the bill’s campaign is being led by a Verena Hubertz, of the Social Democrat party (SPD)—what’s interesting to note is that the SPD’s very foundation is one of very strict Marxism. At one point, the SPD was “the largest Marxist party” in all of Europe, and “consistently the most popular party in German federal elections” in the modern era. Naturally, one could have guessed as much, based on the fact that this bill treads on the God-given rights of property ownership. Recall that The Communist Manifesto openly admits that their revolutionary upheaval “cannot be effected except by means of despotic inroads on the rights of property….”

It’s a grotesque bit of irony that there is actually a legitimate case for restricting property rights, but that group of people isn’t anyone who’s ethnically German—they’d be the Islamists and other third-world miscreants pouring in from all the darkest corners of the world. But the government is too preoccupied with handing out taxpayer dollars to them, buying them houses! Yes, actually:

KfW loans are available to German citizens and eligible expats, including those with Blue Cards and those with temporary or permanent residency. KfW does not have separate criteria for citizenship….

 

(KfW is the largest state-owned development bank governed by progressive goals and ideology.)

Too bad Germany never had Pat Buchanan:

The seething racial resentment in the Third World against the West — decades after independence and trillions in foreign aid — should cause second thoughts about opening our borders to mass immigration from that world. Not everyone coming here brings in his heart the passionate attachment to America we attribute to the peoples of Ellis Island.

Not that the Germans would have listened—we certainly aren’t!

Hat tip: Bushie from Queensland.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/04/german_government_moves_to_forbid_right_wingers_from_buying_property.html

A joke from Hillary: She says she is worried about a weakened country

 by Jack Hellner

The stupidest thing a Republican ever does is listen to the advice of the media, consultants, and other Democrats when they give advice on what to do, especially when that Democrat is Hillary Clinton:

Hillary Clinton to GOP: Rein in ‘Reckless’ Trump Before He Does Irreparable Damage

Monday on MS NOW’s ‘Morning Joe,’ former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Republicans needed to rein in President Donald Trump before he does ‘irreparable damage to our country.’

In 2008, after Obama won, the media and other political pundits (supposed experts) said Republicans must move left or they would never win another election. Instead, they moved right with the Tea Party movement, and in the next eight years, won over 1,000 seats nationwide and won the presidency.

Democrats are never encouraged to change their radical leftist policies. Instead, they, along with the help of the complicit media, pretend they are moderates until they win, at which point they govern as extreme leftists.

Clinton calls taking out Maduro and going to war with Iran reckless behavior, but in January, Schumer said Trump had failed for not taking out Maduro:

Schumer blasted Trump for failing to oust Maduro — now warns arrest could lead to ‘endless war’

 

Of course he never said a word during Biden’s four years.

Is it really reckless to seek to destroy Iran after 47 years of terrorism, attacks, and “death to America” chants when every president has acknowledged what a threat Iran is?

Here is an abbreviated list of some of the things Trump has done which do not look reckless. Instead, they look like great achievements for the American people:

  • Securing the border.
  • Having policies that have led to a 125-year low in the murder rate.
  • Reining in the cartels.
  • Rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse. Cutting the bloated federal workforce by over 300,000 workers.
  • Abraham peace accords.
  • Settling long term wars around the world.
  • Getting NATO to pay more for their own defense.
  • Pulling out of WHO, which caused so much damage during COVID.
  • Extending and expanding the 2017 tax rate cuts. Letting them expire as Democrats demanded would have caused mass harm to Americans. 
  • Achieving energy independence. 
  • Making sure men didn’t play against women in sports and expose themselves in locker rooms and restrooms.

And here are some things that Obama, Biden, Hillary, and Bill did that were extremely reckless for Americans, yet were never described as such: 

  • Obamacare, which has greatly increased costs for all Americans.
  • Opened the border, which enriched criminal cartels and allowed millions of unvetted people to invade the U.S., including gang members, terrorists, and other dangerous criminals.
  • Had an autopen as president. Basically, we had an incompetent president with a massive number of unelected leftists governing. The media and other Democrats pretended they had no idea how incompetent Biden was.
  • Obama and Biden continually enriched Iran so they could build weapons and spread terrorism around the world. Congress voted against the Iran deal, but Obama and Biden proceeded with it anyway.
  • Forced schools to let men expose themselves and ruin women’s sports.
  • Sought to destroy companies that produced reasonably priced energy.
  • Obama and Biden agreed to the destructive Paris Climate accord without congressional approval.
  • Biden and the Clintons took kickbacks from around the world in pay-for-play arrangements. 
  • Obama and Hillary left people to die in Libya while concocting a lie.
  • Allowed a man who reportedly had an affair with a Chinese spy to stay in Congress. It is a joke when the media and other Democrats pretend they had no idea who he was.
  • Hillary and her staff mishandled classified documents and destroyed evidence.
  • Getting BJs in the Oval Office from a young intern.

Hillary is worried about the Justice Department going after criminals instead of being focused on parents, Catholics, pro-life people, Trump, and his supporters. And the media still pretends that the Biden Justice department was non-political and not weaponized.

And we’re supposed to believe that she cares about “irreparable damage” to the U.S.? It is pathetic that anyone gives Hillary the time of day or cares what she has to say about anything.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/04/a_joke_from_hillary_she_says_she_is_worried_about_a_weakened_country.html

Iran's digital economy battered by prolonged blackout

 More than 1,000 hours of internet shutdown in Iran is crippling small businesses and startups, with officials estimating losses of at least $35 million per day.

The disruption has cut off companies that depend on global connectivity, from e-commerce retailers to freelance service providers.

With access largely limited to domestic platforms, many users cannot reach essential global tools such as search engines, email services and widely used social media networks.

Iran’s digital economy accounts for an estimated 5% to 6% of the country’s gross domestic product, underscoring the scale of the impact.

According to Communications Minister Sattar Hashemi, the shutdown is costing more than $35 million per day—roughly $1.5 billion since the start of the conflict.

Independent estimates suggest the losses may be even higher. Afshin Kolahi, a representative of Iran’s Chamber of Commerce, has said the total daily economic damage, including indirect effects, could reach $80 million.

Officials say the restrictions are necessary to counter cyberattacks targeting government infrastructure. Many Iranians, however, believe the shutdown is also intended to make it harder for protests to spread.

‘Completely bankrupt’

Many small businesses have shut down or are close to collapse, while millions of workers have been partially or entirely pushed out of the economic cycle.

Entrepreneurs who once relied on platforms such as Instagram, Telegram and WhatsApp to reach customers have been cut off for more than six weeks. For many, rebuilding on domestic platforms feels like starting from scratch.

The challenge is particularly severe for businesses whose websites are hosted abroad. With only domestic domains widely accessible, many companies have lost access not only to customers but also to backend systems and data.

The disruption has also hit home-based producers, many of them women, who rely heavily on social media to market their products. Many had already lost customers during the 12-day war in June and the unrest earlier this year.

Some entrepreneurs say the shutdown has wiped out their income.

Amir, a YouTube podcaster, wrote that his income from YouTube, Instagram and other platforms had dropped to zero.

“I am completely bankrupt,” he said. “I can’t pay my loan installments and have to sell my equipment.”

Another user who runs an embroidery workshop said the shutdown forced layoffs.

“Until forty-something days ago, I had 37 employees. Now I’ve only been able to keep five.”

Costly workarounds

In response to mounting pressure, authorities have introduced a limited system known as “professional internet”.

Under the program, business owners can apply for unfiltered internet access via their SIM cards by submitting documentation and paying a higher fee. The access, however, applies only to the individual subscriber and does not extend to customers.

Critics say the measure does little to help businesses whose clients remain offline.

“They still don’t understand that for these businesses to function, their customers also need internet access,” one user wrote.

Some rely on VPNs, satellite services such as Starlink, or roaming through foreign SIM cards. These workarounds often come at a high cost, forcing households to reprioritize spending.

“I cut down on everything else just to stay connected,” one user wrote on social media, describing internet access as essential not only for business but also for staying informed.

Enforcement against attempts to bypass restrictions has intensified. Text messages sent to users warn that unauthorized access to the international internet—through VPNs or proxy services—violates cybercrime laws and could lead to prosecution.

An underground market for VPN services has flourished on domestic platforms, often with high prices tied to data usage. Reports of fraud are also common, with users saying they paid for access that never worked.

Access has been selectively granted through a “whitelist” system covering certain media outlets, companies and universities, creating uneven levels of connectivity across sectors.

Authorities have also stepped up efforts to confiscate satellite equipment used to access services such as Starlink, further narrowing the few remaining pathways to the global internet.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/202604149190

War damage amounts to $3,000 per Iranian, with blockade set to add to losses

 War damage to Iran’s economy has reached $270 billion in 40 days, equivalent to roughly $3,000 per person, according to official figures, with losses expected to grow as trade disruptions deepen under a US blockade of Iranian ports.

Fatemeh Mohajerani, the spokesperson for the Iranian government, said on Tuesday losses from the US-Israeli military campaign are estimated at around $270 billion.

The New York Times, citing three Iranian officials and two economists, reported that early estimates broadly align with that figure, placing the damage at roughly $300 billion or higher.

Preliminary estimates by the US-based think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies also suggest Iran absorbed roughly $150–$300 billion in economic damage.

Using a population of about 92 million, the lower estimate of $150 billion translates to roughly $1,600 per person, rising to nearly $3,250 per person under the higher estimate.

These figures reflect national wealth lost through destruction, halted production and disrupted trade.

Iran’s central bank has warned President Masoud Pezeshkian that rebuilding the country’s war-damaged economy could take more than a decade, sources familiar with internal deliberations told Iran International.

In a stark assessment delivered to the president in recent days, senior economic officials said the damage inflicted during the 40-day war with the United States and Israel—combined with Iran’s already fragile economic situation—could take up to 12 years to repair.

Industrial sectors bear largest losses

Petrochemicals account for the largest share of damage. Iran’s petrochemical sector, with annual sales of $29.1 billion, has seen about 85% of export capacity disrupted following strikes on major hubs including Mahshahr and South Pars. Estimated losses range from $30 billion to $50 billion.

Energy infrastructure has also been heavily affected. Refineries, storage depots and gas facilities have been struck, weakening a sector that generated about $78 billion in exports in 2024. Losses are estimated at $15 billion to $25 billion.

Explosion at Iran's Mahshahr petrochemical complex during US-Israeli strikes

Steel production, which underpins both industrial output and reconstruction, has been severely reduced, with about 70% of capacity disrupted. Losses are estimated at $5 billion to $10 billion.

Beyond physical losses, the war has triggered a sharp contraction in output.

Experts estimated a decline of more than 10% in GDP, equivalent to $34 billion to $44 billion in lost economic activity, affecting an economy that was already under strain before the conflict.

Beyond physical damage, policy-driven disruptions have compounded the losses.

Internet shutdown

A nationwide internet blackout beginning Feb. 28 has imposed additional costs.

Direct losses are estimated at $37 million to $42 million per day, totaling $1.5 billion to $2.5 billion over more than five weeks.

Afshin Kolahi, a member of Iran’s Chamber of Commerce, said Monday indirect losses could raise the daily figure to $70 million to $80 million due to disruption to online businesses.

Online sales fell by about 80% during the shutdown, while the Tehran Stock Exchange lost 450,000 points within four days.

The shutdown is affecting multiple layers of the economy simultaneously, according to economic analyst Masoumeh Taherkhani.

“The Iranian economy is damaged at three levels by internet disruption, starting with the digital core, which employs between four and five million people,” Taherkhani told Iran International. “Then the platform layer collapses, and finally the broader economy is affected in a way that spreads across production and services.”

Taherkhani said the combined effect leads to widespread job losses. “When the economy is fully stagnant, the outcome is unemployment for workers, and that is not something that can easily be reversed,” she said.

Trade disruption and self-inflicted losses

Disruptions linked to the Strait of Hormuz have added further pressure, with estimated losses of $5 billion to $15 billion.

The restrictions have affected imports of essential goods and weakened non-oil exports, contributing to supply chain disruptions across the economy.

A US naval blockade targeting Iran’s maritime trade routes is expected to deepen losses.

Sanctions strategist and former US Treasury official Miad Maleki estimated that cutting off seaborne trade could eliminate about $435 million in daily economic activity, equivalent to roughly $13 billion per month.

Iran relies on the Persian Gulf for more than 90% of its trade, leaving it highly exposed to sustained disruption.

Oil exports of about 1.5 million barrels per day – generating roughly $139 million daily – could be halted almost entirely, removing the country’s main source of foreign currency.

What the losses could have funded

The scale of damage corresponds to investment levels that could have reshaped core sectors of the economy.

A large combined-cycle power plant with capacity of around 1,000 to 1,500 megawatts typically costs between $600 million and $1 billion to build, depending on technology and fuel infrastructure.

At the lower estimate of $150 billion in losses, Iran could have financed roughly 150 to 250 such plants. At the upper estimate of $300 billion, that rises to between 300 and 500 plants, enough to eliminate electricity shortages and significantly expand export capacity.

In housing, average construction costs for a modest apartment unit range between $30,000 and $50,000. With $150 billion, between 3 million and 5 million housing units could have been built. At $300 billion, that increases to roughly 6 million to 10 million units, enough to address shortages across major urban areas.

High-speed rail construction typically costs between $20 million and $40 million per kilometer. The lower estimate of losses could have funded approximately 3,750 to 7,500 kilometers of rail, while the higher estimate could support up to 15,000 kilometers, connecting major cities nationwide.

A modern hospital costs between $200 million and $500 million to construct and equip. The lower-end losses could have built 300 to 750 hospitals, while the higher estimate could fund up to 1,500 facilities, expanding healthcare access across the country.

What it means for individual Iranians

The per capita loss of up to $3,250 represents a substantial share of annual income for many households.

With average monthly earnings between $150 and $200, an individual earns roughly $1,800 to $2,400 per year, meaning a $3,250 equivalent exceeds a full year of income for many citizens.

If such an amount were available, it could cover between 12 and 20 months of living expenses for an average worker. Families could use it toward housing costs, including down payments or completing home purchases in smaller cities.

Small businesses could be launched with startup capital of $2,000 to $5,000, enabling self-employment in sectors such as retail, services or online commerce. Households could also afford private healthcare, education or relocation costs that are otherwise beyond reach.

Even the lower estimate per person represents several months of income, providing a buffer against inflation, job loss or unexpected expenses.

The overall range reflects damage already incurred, with additional losses building as trade, production and financial flows remain disrupted.

At up to $3,250 per person and rising, the economic toll underscores the scale of damage to Iran’s productive capacity, with long-term implications for recovery and growth.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/202603260200

Trump Takes Aim at Passport Tourism

 

“We’re ahead of schedule and landing early,” said the pilot. My wife and I were on a flight from Tokyo, and the aircraft was descending towards SeaTac Airport, south of Seattle.

“There’s something else,” said the voice from the cockpit. “We have two airliners from China behind us. So, when we reach the jetway, please deplane quickly. Get yourselves to customs, or you’ll wind up in a big backlog of passengers.”

Forewarned, we made haste to International Arrivals and joined a fast-growing line. Then, from another hallway, a crowd of passengers emerged, fresh off those other two airliners from the Middle Kingdom, and this new mass of inbound humanity included a group of about 40 very pregnant Chinese women headed towards the non-citizen passport line.

To be perfectly clear: it was beyond obvious that these ladies were pregnant, although I should add that my keen powers of observation were enhanced by a sharp elbow to my ribs, as my spouse said, “What’s with those pregnant gals? They look like they’re at seven months.”

Hey everybody! Your US passport is an airline flight away. Image via ChatGPT.

Definitely, women notice these things. And then, it was our turn with U.S. Immigration and Customs, but hold that thought…

“The Same Constitution”

You may already suspect where this is going; namely, to discuss what’s euphemistically called “birthright citizenship,” although another term for the phenomenon is “passport tourism.”

That is, current U.S. law interprets the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution as conferring citizenship on any person born in the U.S. or territories, aside from limited exceptions such as children of foreign diplomats. Otherwise, it doesn’t matter who is born to whom, or under what circumstances. When a baby pops anywhere inside U.S. territory, the outcome is a brand-new U.S. citizen.

At least, that’s the conventional legal wisdom, now under review by the U.S. Supreme Court in a case called Trump vs. Barbara (S.Ct. Docket 25-365), which was argued two weeks ago on April 1, with no less than President Trump in personal attendance.

People write scholarly books and law-review articles on the 14th Amendment and birthright citizenship. Plus, there’s a large cadre of legal pundits on the topic, who jealously mark this territory like dogs at fire hydrants. And of course, within a few months we’ll have a Supreme Court decision on the matter. Case closed? Well, we’ll see…

Meanwhile, at this point in life I’m just a humble, taxpaying Navy veteran and geologist, not a bigshot Constitutional lawyer. Still, though, I’m intrigued at this quirky feature of American law, the principle that almost anybody can walk in (or fly; see above), deliver a live birth, and presto we have a new citizen, eligible for every sort of private right and public entitlement. So, I listened to the Supreme Court oral arguments.

Frankly, one line of discussion perplexed me. In fact, it troubled me deeply; namely, an exchange between Chief Justice John Roberts – full disclosure; he’s an old Harvard classmate – and U.S. Solicitor General John Sauer.

Undergraduate John Roberts, circa 1973. Courtesy Harvard Crimson.

In opening remarks, Sauer referred to “birth tourism” and stated that “uncounted thousands of foreigners from potentially hostile nations have flocked to give birth in the United States in recent decades, creating a whole generation of American citizens abroad with no meaningful ties to the United States.”

Well, yeah… Sauer’s point rang true to me; see my anecdote above about the pregnant Chinese ladies at SeaTac. Obviously, these women were coming to the U.S. to deliver babies. And one need not be Sherlock Holmes to understand that this was not a one-off thing, because it happens across the country many times, every day. Look around. In essence, there’s an entire travel-birth-citizenship industry at work here.

Then in a follow-up question, Roberts asked Sauer: “Do you have any information about how common that is, or how significant a problem it is?”

Sauer responded that “media reports” estimate over one million people have come from China alone to give birth in the U.S. And he mentioned a Congressional report about “Russian elites” who travel to Miami to have babies, via “birth tourism companies.”

Sauer added that, “Based on Chinese media reports, there are 500 birth tourism companies in the People’s Republic of China whose business is to bring people here to give birth and return to that nation.”

Roberts replied with a rhetorical question: “Having said all that, you do agree that that has no impact on the legal analysis before us?” In other words, Roberts essentially called Sauer’s point irrelevant to the case.

Sauer replied that, “We’re in a new world now, as Justice [Samuel] Alito pointed out, to where eight billion people are one plane ride away from having a child who’s a U.S. citizen.”

And Roberts answered, “Well, it’s a new world. It’s the same Constitution.”

Huh? Hey, wait a minute. That’s a pretty glib, uncurious wave-off of an important fact-set. Indeed, it’s gratuitous, especially coming from the Chief Justice of the United States.

Suicide by Constitution

In other words, it’s not as if the Supreme Court has not interpreted and reinterpreted that so-called “same Constitution” mightily over the centuries to accommodate all manner of human advancements.

And that’s before we get to the relatively modern idea of a “living Constitution,” under which the Court has allowed the federal government to do pretty much anything that the political powers desire. Indeed, the past 90 years of Supreme Court jurisprudence speaks for itself.

The idea of the “same Constitution” should not mean that the nation’s foundational document is some sort of unchangeable fossil record of the world of 1787, from the time when the document was composed.

For example, does the First Amendment, which protects freedom of speech and press, only apply to communication technology of 1787? The question practically answers itself. American free speech is wide open, and per countless Supreme Court cases over many decades, federal, state and local governments restrict it at their legal peril.

Or does the Second Amendment only pertain to muskets of late-1780s vintage? Does it mean that you can own only a flintlock rifle, and even then, only if you are in a “well-regulated Militia?” No, of course not, and the Supreme Court has evolved its views on firearms laws to change with the times.

How about the part of the Constitution that empowers Congress to “raise an Army” and “maintain a Navy.” Does that mean the country cannot have an Air Force? Because obviously, there were no airplanes in 1787 flying over the Philadelphia Constitutional Convention. And again, it may come across as silly to argue the point, except that somehow the so-called “same Constitution” is now a barrier to progress if we follow the Roberts logic to where it seems to be headed.

Last, and not to overwhelm you, there’s Wickard vs Filburn, a 1942 case that empowered the federal government to regulate the smallest details of daily American life – in this case, farming – under the guise of “regulating interstate commerce.” Indeed, the small family farm in America traced its roots literally to Jamestown in 1620. And for over 300 years, farming was a taproot of American freedom. Yet after Wickard, the simple act of planting seeds in the ground fell under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Which brings up a line that popped into my head when Roberts rebuked Sauer, namely that “the Constitution is not a suicide pact.”

The exact historical record is unclear, but President Abraham Lincoln supposedly coined this phrase in response to charges that he was a tyrant for suspending the Writ of Habeas Corpus during the Civil War. Today, we have the luxury of second-guessing the man, but in his day, he had battles to fight, and keeping certain people off the streets served a purpose.

President Lincoln. Courtesy Library of Congress.

More recently, the “suicide pact” phrase was used by Justice Robert Jackson in his dissent in a 1949 case, Terminiello vs. Chicago, a free speech case then before the Supreme Court. And the phrase saw more daylight in 1963 in Kennedy vs. Mendoza-Martinez, in an opinion grounded in due process rights, authored by Justice Arthur Goldberg.

And now, here we are, dealing with new developments in a rapidly changing world, namely birth tourism. Fly in, have a baby, make a so-called “citizen,” and… then go home.

My anecdote above, about the pregnant ladies at SeaTac, is from 2015, or more than a decade ago. But it still resonates. Both the New York Times and New York Post have recently run stories about Chinese women traveling to the mainland U.S. or territories (eg., Mariana Islands) to have babies. They fly in, hang out, deliver a baby, and in due course obtain U.S. citizenship for the child, plus a social security number and passport.

Clearly, per those above-noted Supreme Court discussions, this is a new world. It’s not the olden days of the 1860s, when the 14th Amendment was drafted in the wake of the Civil War. And obviously, coming to America no longer involves a long sea voyage on a sailing ship. Just buy an airline ticket, and voila!

Meanwhile, it’s one thing when foreign visitors come to America to see the sights, do tourist things, and then go home with, say, a T-shirt, coffee mug, or maybe some refrigerator magnets.

But now, there’s also a vast subset of the tourism industry that brings late-term pregnant women to America, to have babies and return home with a child and U.S. passport; or perhaps call it a “refrigerator magnet passport.”

To be fair, these almost-mom arrivals are not sneaking into America. They’re not “illegal,” not in the way the term is commonly used. Nor are they coming here to go to take a job away from an American worker. Although their little anchor baby now dilutes your own citizenship, in the big scheme of life.

Indeed, the pregnant ladies walk through the U.S. entry system, usually with a B-1 visitor’s visa, and get a stamp on their own passports for a six-month stay. And they go home with a nice, new, bundle-of-joy American citizen, to raise in, say, China under Communism.

A Crazy Way to Run a Country

To me, at least, this is all very odd: granting citizenship based on an airline ticket and six-month tourist visa. Is this really what the 14th Amendment authors meant when they were working to clean up the societal mess after the Civil War?

Plus, we have the raw, blood-sport politics of the entire matter, the idea that President Trump wants to end this passport tourism business, which is enough for many people simply to dismiss the idea out of hand. Cuz… Trump, yes?

Then again, all systems have flaws, and the world is filled with people who want to take advantage. But the more curious thing – scandalous, actually – is that this matter has grown to such size that it’s actually a demographic and political issue, now sitting on the bench of the Supreme Court.

It’s in front of the Black Robes, with all of the subtle, but critical, in-group virtue signaling that they must perform to impress their Washington, D.C. career managers. And face it, there’s a certain, leftward-drifting agenda in America, with Washington as Ground Zero. And the Supreme Court is part of it.

At the end of the day, each justice has his/her own future personal and career goals, if not their income and ego. Are they there to serve the nation? Or have they gone native inside the Washington Swamp?

In general, the question is how “birthright citizenship” serves the national good? More specifically, how does “passport tourism” advance the national agenda?

Well, we’ll find out in a couple of months. And that’s all for now.

Byron King is a Senior Geologist at Rickards' Gold Speculator. He is a Harvard-trained geologist who has traveled to every U.S. state and territory and six of the seven continents. He has been interviewed by dozens of major print and broadcast media outlets including The Financial TimesThe GuardianThe Washington PostMSN MoneyMarketWatchFox Business News, and PBS Newshour.

https://dailyreckoning.com/trump-takes-aim-at-passport-tourism/