Making Sense of Leftism – Ep 26-137

Apr 7, 2026

You can learn a lot about a political narrative by what it refuses to remember.

Spend even a modest amount of time researching birthright citizenship, and you’ll quickly notice something peculiar, almost surgical in its omission. The conversation rarely begins where it should. Instead of grounding itself in the brutal, undeniable reality that gave rise to the 14th Amendment, the modern debate skips straight to slogans, as if history were an inconvenient prologue rather than the entire plot.

The amendment did not emerge from a think tank. It was not crafted as an abstract philosophical exercise. Rather, it was forged in the aftermath of slavery, when a nation that had just torn itself apart faced a simple but urgent question: What does freedom actually mean if it can be legally denied the moment it becomes inconvenient?

Former slaves, newly freed and newly vulnerable, were being denied citizenship by states eager to maintain control through technicalities. That is the soil from which the 14th Amendment grew. It was meant to guarantee that those who had been shackled by law would not remain stateless in freedom.

Yet here we are, generations later, watching that same amendment stretched, twisted, and repurposed into something its authors would scarcely recognize.

Because if birthright citizenship, as currently argued, is simply about location, then logic itself begins to unravel like a cheap sweater snagged on a nail.

Consider the absurdity for a moment, not as a rhetorical flourish but as a stress test of the idea. If proximity determines identity, then reality becomes a carnival of accidental transformations.

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