https://www.weeklystandard.com/allen...8-and-all-that
history of the 14th amendment and its meaning.
Footnote: The Constitution and all of the amendments are interpreted against the social, economic, and/or physical changes in the country, and a good example is the interpretation of the 14th Amendment that applied the first eight of the Amendments to the States after years of SCOTUS opinions that held the first eight ONLY applied to the Federal government.
What post-reconstruction appeasement did is allow the States to create their own Constitutional provisions that set the tone for their governments, and most particularly how they were elected. As a consequence many Southern states provided that their Judges would be elected rather than appointed, which was a "backlash" from carpet bagging Northerners running Southern governments after the War.
LBJ et al had the same issue in getting the Civil Act passed (which JFK was afraid to support for fear the South would turn against him in his second term election), by inserting a provision in the Act that gave concurrent jurisdiction to State courts for the purpose of enforcing "civil rights"!
BTW: The article reads more like an "argument" than a scholarly, legal discussion, and seems to have anecdotal bits and pieces of opinion.
The "interpretation" of the 14th as to citizenship should be based on THE FACTS at the time of passage and the "evil" it was attempting to address at that time. It was focusing on people being kidnapped, forced to come to this country, and compelled to work and live at the whim of people who BOUGHT and OWNED them. It was not passed to apply to those who willingly came to this country and remained illegally and/or snuck into this country illegally. Originally Posted by LexusLover
had they had a bit of hindsight, creators should have made 2 separate provisions. one for former slaves to make clear of their status as american citizens; 2nd one to address who is a citizen of america.If one reads the Congressional record as they debated the 14th Amendment, it's very clear they were making allowances for former slaves and not for every Tom, Dick and Harry that decides to head this way.
oh btw, I think confederate debt should be paid by the former confederate states. Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
t...Except the "electoral college" was a part of the Constitution and the 14th amendment is not. It's just that an "amendment" that corrects nothing in the constitution!
this ties in to the electoral college thread (the one that favored republicans).... Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm