Let’s walk this down honestly, from the very birth of this country.
The first English settlers in the colonies were not “immigrants” in the modern sense. They were subjects of the King, moving within the British realm. They lived under the concept of jus soli — birth on the soil made one a natural-born subject owing perpetual allegiance to the Crown. But even then, allegiance mattered.
After the Revolutionary War, the colonies became states. The Articles of Confederation gave way to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and ratification in 1788. This Constitution became the supreme governing document of the United States — our very first official framework. Notably, it said nothing about how citizenship was defined or granted. It used the word “citizen” but left the details to Congress.
In 1790, the very first Congress passed the Naturalization Act of 1790. It allowed free white males of good character, at least 21 years old, to apply for citizenship after two years of residence and an oath of allegiance to the Constitution. Women and minor children derived citizenship through the husband or father. That was the law.
People today scream “racist and sexist” at this. They are wrong.
This made complete sense at the time. The young republic had just fought a revolution to secure a nation rooted in English common law, Judeo-Christian values, individual liberty, and self-government. The “original stock” — those who declared independence, wrote the Constitution, and won the war — shared the same language, legal traditions, culture, and allegiance. Congress was acting as prudent stewards of a fragile new experiment. They restricted naturalization to those who could be trusted to assimilate quickly and uphold the system without importing divided loyalties or incompatible customs.
Adult males would vote, serve in the militia, own property, and bear the full responsibilities of citizenship. That was the universal norm across every sovereign nation on earth. Women and children followed the head of household — not some American invention. “Free white persons” reflected the civilizational reality: Europe was the source of the ideas that made America possible. Large-scale immigration from vastly different civilizations at that moment would have risked permanent enclaves and destroyed the mutual trust a constitutional republic requires.
It was never about hate. It was about preservation. It was about the three pillars: Accountability, Assimilation, and Allegiance.
Importantly, there has never been one single author of any word in the Constitution, any federal statute, any amendment, or any treaty who EVER justified pure jus soli — birth on the soil alone automatically granting citizenship — or bastardized the meaning of “domiciled” and “full jurisdiction.” None. The revolutionaries explicitly rejected the old British common-law version.
The exclusion of slaves proved the point beyond doubt. If pure jus soli had been the rule, children of slaves born on American soil would have been citizens. They were not. They were considered property. Birth alone was never enough. Full jurisdiction — owing no allegiance to any foreign power — was required.
The 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868, did not change this framework for immigrants. It was written for one clear purpose: to grant citizenship to the freed slaves and their children who were born in the United States and owed no allegiance elsewhere. The Naturalization Acts remained limited to free whites for decades afterward, preserving the original intent that only the “original stock” and the specifically wronged freed slaves were to enjoy the full rights of citizenship by birth or naturalization.
Even when Congress later opened naturalization to non-whites — Chinese in 1943 (Magnuson Act), Filipinos and Indians in 1946 (Luce-Celler Act), and all races in 1952 (McCarran-Walter Act / Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952) — the host nation still set every term: quotas, good moral character, self-sufficiency, residency, and the oath of allegiance. It remained a two-party act: the host sets the rules, the immigrant follows them.
One could not simply show up, declare domicile on their own terms, claim full jurisdiction, and demand citizenship for themselves or their children. That has never been the law or the intent.
Yet today, we are told that illegal entrants can do exactly that. They cross without the host’s consent, claim sovereignty and allegiance, demand all the rights and benefits earned by those who followed the rules, and then pass those rights to their children. This directly contradicts everything in our founding history.
Following the logic of our actual genesis — colonial practice, the Founding, the Naturalization Acts, the 14th Amendment’s original intent, and every statute up to 1952 — such a claim has no constitutional or historical backing. None.
In 2024, Donald Trump won both the popular and electoral vote largely on the issue of immigration. He campaigned on this. The people have spoken. Enforce the law and the intent of the people on who can come in and who becomes one of them. The stemming of the tide has been long overdue. This is the will of the people through the free electoral process. Potential immigrants and illegals do not “trump” that will. Pardon the pun.
Immigration is not for the immigrant. Immigration exists for the benefit of the American citizen. The unchecked practice of illegal immigration has eroded our pillars of Accountability (net burdens instead of contributors), Assimilation (parallel societies and refusal to embrace our culture), and Allegiance (divided loyalties and rejection of American sovereignty). This is of existential importance to the future of this country and the sovereignty of its citizens.
We must right this wrong. The host — the American people — must once again set the terms without apology. Strength first. Freedom follows.
LIVE GRATEFUL. It’s Spine, NOT Knees. 🇺🇸
April 11, 2026