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ShowApril 02, 2026
Watch: Trump vs. KJP on the Birthright Citizenship LIE
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The left wants you to believe that if you are born here, despite the immigration status of your parents, you have a right to citizenship. This is, in fact, not true. Today’s show breaks it down.
“To be clear, for the sake of the country, we have to stop anchor babies,” Crowder said. “If someone is born here, that automatically makes them a citizen and gives their parents a pathway. That has never been the norm historically; it still is not in any European nation, but you just think that because you have been told that.”
According to the left, if you are born here, you have a right to citizenship, so much so that it is enshrined in our founding documents.
The 14th Amendment reads clearly: That it was never meant to give citizenship to everyone born on American soil.
SCOTUS mulled a birthright citizenship case. Ketanji Brown Jackson made the most bizarre claim to defend this so-called “right,” by claiming something to do with Japan and stealing a wallet.
“I was thinking, I, a U.S. citizen, am visiting Japan. And what it means is that if I steal someone’s wallet in Japan, the Japanese authorities can arrest me and prosecute me,” Jackson said. “It’s allegiance meaning can they control you as a matter of law. I can rely on them if my wallet is stolen to, under Japanese law, go and prosecute that person who had stolen it. So there’s this relationship, even though I’m just a temporary traveler, I’m just on vacation in Japan, I’m still locally owing allegiance in that sense.”
“Is that the right way to think about it? And if so, doesn’t that explain why both temporary residents and undocumented people would have that kind of allegiance just by virtue of being in the United States?” Jackson continued.
In other words, “since there are laws, and you are visiting, and you are subject to those laws, that means allegiance,” Crowder said.
There are three key things you need to understand about birthright citizenship.
According to proponents, the 14th Amendment allows for this, as it reads "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States.”
However, many argue, including Trump, that this is more about the children of freed slaves, and not about illegal immigrants.
“We just kind of stumbled into this system. They just started issuing birth certificates to everyone born here in the 20th century,” Crowder said. “Birth certificates were used as proof of citizenship.”
The second key detail is birth tourism with anchor babies.
“The real problem here is birth tourism with anchor babies. Did you know that about nine percent of annual births in the U.S. can be attributed to anchor babies?” Crowder said. “It is a way of gaming the system. It is a way of reaping the benefits of a system that exists without actually contributing.”
The left wants you to believe it has always been this way, but that could not be further from the truth.
“The law has to be clear; that is what we are attempting to do right now,” Crowder said.
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