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1776, Not 1608: What the Supreme Court Got Wrong on Birthright Citizenship
American Mind ^ | 06.30.2026 | John C. Eastman

Posted on 06/30/2026 12:56:15 PM PDT by Heartlander

1776, Not 1608: What the Supreme Court Got Wrong on Birthright Citizenship

Chief Justice Roberts forgot the Declaration of Independence.

Chief Justice John Roberts begins the Supreme Court’s birthright citizenship opinion in Westminster in 1608 with Calvin’s Case and the English law of royal subjectship.

I would begin in Philadelphia in 1776.

Between those two places—and those two moments—lies the American Revolution. And the Revolution changed more than who governed America. It changed the very foundation of political membership.

That is the central problem with the Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. Barbara. The Court’s opinion is learned, careful, and historically rich. Chief Justice Roberts traces the English doctrine of jus soli through Calvin’s Case, Blackstone, a substantial body of antebellum American authorities, and finally United States v. Wong Kim Ark. It may well become the definitive defense of the conventional understanding of the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause.

But it answers the wrong question.

The issue is not whether America inherited English legal language. It plainly did. The issue is whether America also inherited England’s understanding of political membership.

The majority assumes that the American Revolution left the English understanding of political membership largely intact. The dissents argue that the Revolution rejected that understanding and replaced it with an American conception of citizenship grounded in the consent of the governed. That is the real disagreement in this case.

A New Creed

Under English common law, nearly everyone born within the king’s dominions became a natural-born subject. Birth within the sovereign’s territory created permanent allegiance to the Crown because the child was born under the king’s protection. That doctrine made sense in a monarchy. It reflected a world of subjects, sovereigns, dominions, and perpetual allegiance.

But the United States is not a monarchy.

The Declaration of Independence did more than announce separation from Great Britain. It rejected the political philosophy upon which English subjectship rested. Jefferson’s words—that governments derive “their just powers from the consent of the governed”—were not mere rhetorical flourishes. They announced a new theory of political legitimacy. And the Declaration’s closing words made the rejection of perpetual allegiance explicit: the new states were “absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown.”

English law rested upon allegiance to the Crown. The American Republic would rest upon the consent of a self-governing people.

That revolutionary transformation should have been central to the Court’s interpretation of the 14th Amendment.

Instead, the majority largely assumes that English subjectship and American citizenship belong to the same constitutional lineage. Roberts proves an important proposition: England recognized birthright subjectship. But he does not prove the decisive one: that Americans who had repudiated monarchy intended, less than a century later, to constitutionalize the English law of royal subjectship as the definition of citizenship in a republic.

Justice Joseph Story helps explain why that distinction matters. Story was steeped in English law, but he was not merely Blackstone with an American accent. His great constitutional project was to explain how inherited English legal concepts had been adapted to the institutions and principles of an American republic. He stands as a bridge between the common-law inheritance and American constitutionalism.

That is the bridge missing from the majority’s account. Roberts reads the inherited legal tradition largely as a line of continuity from Calvin’s Case to Wong Kim Ark. But the American constitutional genealogy runs along a different path: the Declaration of Independence, Story’s adaptation of inherited law to republican constitutionalism, Lincoln’s reaffirmation of the Declaration as the nation’s first principle, the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and the 14th Amendment.

Abraham Lincoln understood this better than anyone. He did not treat the Declaration as a mere political manifesto. Lincoln treated it as the nation’s statement of principle. In his famous meditation on the Constitution and the Union, Lincoln described the Declaration’s principle of liberty as the “apple of gold,” with the Constitution as the “picture of silver” framed around it. The frame was made not to conceal or destroy the apple, but to preserve it.

That is precisely the point here. The Constitution must be read as law. But it is American law, not English law. And the 14th Amendment must be read as part of the Constitution’s effort to vindicate the principles of the Declaration after the catastrophe of slavery and Dred Scott.

Preserving the Cornerstone

The Reconstruction Congress was not attempting to preserve English constitutionalism. It was completing the work begun in 1776.

The Declaration proclaimed that “all men are created equal.” Dred Scott denied that promise, holding that an entire class of Americans could never become members of the political community. The 14th Amendment repudiated that decision. But it did so by restoring the principles of the American Founding, not by reviving the legal doctrines of the British Crown.

This is why the majority’s repeated description of the Citizenship Clause as “declaratory” does not resolve the question. Declaratory of what? The common law of royal subjectship inherited from England? Or the constitutional law of citizenship that Americans had transformed through the Declaration, the Revolution, and nearly a century of republican self-government?

The 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868, not 1768. It should therefore be interpreted through the constitutional understandings of the American Republic, not simply those of the British Empire.

The Citizenship Clause provides: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof” are citizens. The clause does not simply require birth in the United States. It adds a second requirement: the person must be “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States.

Those words must do real work.

The majority effectively equates “subject to the jurisdiction” with “subject to American law.” Anyone physically present in the country, except diplomats and members of sovereign Indian tribes, must obey American law. From that premise, the majority concludes that virtually everyone born here becomes a citizen.

But the Reconstruction Congress was speaking of something more profound than traffic laws and criminal jurisdiction. It was defining membership in the American political community.

The debates surrounding the Civil Rights Act of 1866 and the 14th Amendment repeatedly invoked the ideas of complete jurisdiction, complete allegiance, and undivided political obligation. Senator Lyman Trumbull, the principal author of the Civil Rights Act, explained that citizenship extended to those who were subject to the complete jurisdiction of the United States—not merely to those temporarily answerable to its laws.

Every foreign visitor is obliged to obey American law while here. So is every foreign student, every tourist, every diplomat’s driver, and every person who crosses the border unlawfully. But mere obedience to law is not the same thing as complete political allegiance. If it were, the jurisdictional language would add almost nothing to the constitutional text.

The Civil Rights Act of 1866 used slightly different language, extending citizenship to persons born in the United States and “not subject to any foreign power.” The 14th Amendment altered the phrasing, but not the underlying concept of complete political jurisdiction. The point was not mere geography. It was political membership.

That is why the dissents have the stronger originalist argument.

Citizenship in America

Justice Thomas begins with a question the majority never fully confronts: What did Americans understand citizenship to mean after they had rejected English subjectship? That is the proper originalist inquiry. It is not enough to ask how English courts defined the king’s subjects. The constitutional question is how Americans defined members of a self-governing republic.

The majority’s treatment of United States v. Wong Kim Ark illustrates the same methodological difficulty. Roberts portrays today’s decision as little more than the faithful application of settled precedent. That gives Wong Kim Ark much broader force than it actually possessed.

The case involved a child born in San Francisco to parents who had been lawfully admitted and permanently domiciled in the United States. That holding was sufficient to resolve the controversy before the Court. Whether the Constitution mandates citizenship for children born to temporary visitors or to those unlawfully present was not presented.

To be sure, Justice Horace Gray’s opinion draws heavily on the English tradition of jus soli. But the opinion’s reasoning extended well beyond the facts before it. Its discussion of temporary visitors and the full scope of the Citizenship Clause should be evaluated on the strength of its historical reasoning, not treated as though every observation carried the force of the Court’s holding.

That is especially important because Wong Kim Ark itself looked backward through the English common-law tradition. Today’s Court repeats that move. But whether Justice Gray correctly understood the original meaning of the 14th Amendment remains the very question under debate.

Over the past two decades, Edward Erler, Michael Anton, and I, along with several other prominent legal scholars, have argued that the Citizenship Clause must be understood against the backdrop of the American Revolution rather than the English common law of perpetual allegiance. That argument does not deny England’s commitment to jus soli. It asks whether the American Revolution rejected the premise on which English jus soli rested.

Chief Justice Roberts presents an intellectually serious account of the conventional view. The majority opinion deserves respect for its scholarship and for its careful engagement with difficult historical sources.

But scholarship is only as persuasive as the question it seeks to answer.

Roberts proves that England followed jus soli. He proves that English subjects acquired allegiance by birth within the king’s dominions. He proves that Wong Kim Ark embraced that historical tradition.

What he never quite proves is why the American people, after repudiating monarchy and proclaiming government by consent, should be presumed to have constitutionalized that English doctrine rather than adapting inherited legal language to their own revolutionary understanding of citizenship.

The disagreement between the majority and the dissent is therefore not ultimately about Blackstone, Calvin’s Case, or even Wong Kim Ark. It is about what the American Revolution accomplished. Did it merely transfer sovereignty from the king to the people while leaving the English understanding of political membership intact? Or did it reject that understanding and replace it with citizenship grounded in consent, allegiance, and membership in the American political community?

Justice Thomas places that question at the center of the inquiry. For an originalist, that is exactly where it belongs.

The Declaration of Independence eloquently and definitively answered that question in favor of the doctrine of consent rather than the feudal doctrine of jus soli. In this, its 250th anniversary, it should not have been overlooked.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: 14a; 14thamendment; anchorbabies; birthright; citizenship; eastman; fourteenthamendment

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1 posted on 06/30/2026 12:56:15 PM PDT by Heartlander
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To: Heartlander

So we can ignore the ruling then? 🤔


2 posted on 06/30/2026 1:06:02 PM PDT by rktman (Patriotism not 'hateriotism' !. Enlisted USN 1967 proudly. 🇺🇸)
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To: Heartlander

Take it easy on Roberts, he only had a year to dream up his “historical references” to anchor baby citizenship. Reminds me of when Arlen Specter quoted Scottish law to defend clinton during impeachment.


3 posted on 06/30/2026 1:09:14 PM PDT by Arkady
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To: Heartlander

F’n Roberts, Barrett, Kavanaugh !!
Conservatives went TO THE MAT for them, and this is their payback to the Country. F’n traitors. Untrustworthy f’s!!

Let the azzholes be doxxed by the left.
I won’t defend these gutless wonders.
Maybe they’ll pack the court and make them
Obsolete, cause we all know that’s the Rats plans.
They just flushed the Country down the shitter. God knows how many illegals will now birth here!!
F them.


4 posted on 06/30/2026 1:09:46 PM PDT by bantam
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To: bantam

I can just spit nails!!!!!


5 posted on 06/30/2026 1:10:06 PM PDT by bantam
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To: Heartlander

Roberts and Coney, 2 people with foreign-born children.


6 posted on 06/30/2026 1:17:24 PM PDT by combat_boots
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To: Heartlander
Since around 1900, (SC) rulings have become less and less valid because SC has gradually moved away from basing their decisions on the Constitution as written and originally understood and intended. But their ruling on NBC appear to be based on sound application of the Constitution.

In Perkins v. Elg, 99 F. 2d 408, Court of Appeals, Dist. of Columbia Circuit 1938, the Court of Appeals noted as part of the basis for their decision that...

In United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. 649, 18 S. Ct. 456, 42 L. Ed. 890, 1898 [the Court found that] [W]hen the Constitution was adopted, the people of the United States were the citizens of the several States for whom and for whose posterity the government was established. Each of them was a citizen of the United States at the adoption of the Constitution, and all free persons thereafter born within one of the several States became by birth citizens of the State and of the United States.

It appears the Court of Appeals in Elg (1939) agrees with Ark (1898) decison.

(Both Marie Elizabeth Elg and Wong Kim Ark were born on U.S. soil to parents who were here legally but not U.S. citizens. )

Again, the Constitution is properly applied as written and ORIGINALLY UNDERSTOOD and intended. What matters is what the ratifiers of the Constitution considered an NBC was. The Supreme Court decisions based on the good-faith and sound finding of original understanding of NBC in the Constitution is, therefore, legal precedent concerning NBC.

Some argue that the term "NBC" is not specifically used in Ark or Elg, but these cases revolve around citizenship based on birth on U.S. soil, which is exactly what NBC is. An NBC is a citizen automatically because he was born on U.S. soil. He is “naturally” and automatically a citizen needing no further processing to become a U.S. citizen. He becomes a citizen under “natural” (birth) circumstances, exactly as Elg, Ark.

That is mandatory authority on the subject. The current decison of the Supreme Court is bad, invalid, and should be nullified. Ignore it.

7 posted on 06/30/2026 1:18:37 PM PDT by Jim W N (MAGA "by restoring the Gospel of the Grace of Christ (Jude 3) and our Free Constitutional Republic!)
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To: Jim W N

“It appears the Court of Appeals in Elg (1939) agrees with Ark (1898) decison.

(Both Marie Elizabeth Elg and Wong Kim Ark were born on U.S. soil to parents who were here legally but not U.S. citizens. )

Again, the Constitution is properly applied as written and ORIGINALLY UNDERSTOOD and intended. What matters is what the ratifiers of the Constitution considered an NBC was. The Supreme Court decisions based on the good-faith and sound finding of original understanding of NBC in the Constitution is, therefore, legal precedent concerning NBC.

Some argue that the term “NBC” is not specifically used in Ark or Elg, but these cases revolve around citizenship based on birth on U.S. soil, which is exactly what NBC is. An NBC is a citizen automatically because he was born on U.S. soil. He is “naturally” and automatically a citizen needing no further processing to become a U.S. citizen. He becomes a citizen under “natural” (birth) circumstances, exactly as Elg, Ark.

That is mandatory authority on the subject. The current decison of the Supreme Court is bad, invalid, and should be nullified. Ignore it.”
__________________________________________________________

The language in both Wong Kim Ark and Elg reflects the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and the language of the 14th Amendment comes directly from that legislation insofar as it defines what a citizen is. There is also language in the Slaughterhouse series of cases defining citizenship the same way.


8 posted on 06/30/2026 1:32:12 PM PDT by Bob Wills is still the king
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To: Heartlander; All
Roberts and Company are elitists. They want the elite, headed by SCOTUS, to reinterpret laws as they see fit, not subject to historical context, etc. It is also why they embrace "qualified immunity" of government employees over common sense. The elite are entitled to whatever they want free from consequences.

Another salient point rejects the majority's premise. When Congress enacted The Rules of Decision Act of 1789, it required federal courts hearing cases based upon diversity of citizenship to employ, "state law" when deciding them. This cause much controversy, and ultimately resulted in SCOTUS rejecting the idea of "federal common law" in such cases in Erie v. Thompkins, but the Erie court got it right, but for the wrong reason. Since no U.S. state had a supreme court "declaring the law" in written opinion, as would later come, the Congress in enacting The Rules of Decision Act of 1789 was requiring federal courts to apply the common law of the U.S., as opposed to English common law to such cases. By interpreting the post-Civil War Fourteenth Amendment based upon much older English law and not the actual debates in Congress on the amendment, the majority couldn't have gotten its premise more wrong. They likely knew they got it wrong, but this is how they are "selling" their opinion. It what modern judges do. They do whatever they want, and then justify it based on arguments lacking a sound premise.
9 posted on 06/30/2026 1:34:11 PM PDT by Dr. Franklin ("A republic, if you can keep it." )
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To: Jim W N

“It appears the Court of Appeals in Elg (1939) agrees with Ark (1898) decison.

(Both Marie Elizabeth Elg and Wong Kim Ark were born on U.S. soil to parents who were here legally but not U.S. citizens. )

Again, the Constitution is properly applied as written and ORIGINALLY UNDERSTOOD and intended. What matters is what the ratifiers of the Constitution considered an NBC was. The Supreme Court decisions based on the good-faith and sound finding of original understanding of NBC in the Constitution is, therefore, legal precedent concerning NBC.

Some argue that the term “NBC” is not specifically used in Ark or Elg, but these cases revolve around citizenship based on birth on U.S. soil, which is exactly what NBC is. An NBC is a citizen automatically because he was born on U.S. soil. He is “naturally” and automatically a citizen needing no further processing to become a U.S. citizen. He becomes a citizen under “natural” (birth) circumstances, exactly as Elg, Ark.

That is mandatory authority on the subject. The current decison of the Supreme Court is bad, invalid, and should be nullified. Ignore it.”
__________________________________________________________

The language in both Wong Kim Ark and Elg reflects the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and the language of the 14th Amendment comes directly from that legislation insofar as it defines what a citizen is. There is also language in the Slaughterhouse series of cases defining citizenship the same way.

From John Eastman’s “argument” -

“Under English common law, nearly everyone born within the king’s dominions became a natural-born subject. Birth within the sovereign’s territory created permanent allegiance to the Crown because the child was born under the king’s protection. That doctrine made sense in a monarchy. It reflected a world of subjects, sovereigns, dominions, and perpetual allegiance.

But the United States is not a monarchy.

The Declaration of Independence did more than announce separation from Great Britain. It rejected the political philosophy upon which English subjectship rested. Jefferson’s words—that governments derive “their just powers from the consent of the governed”—were not mere rhetorical flourishes. They announced a new theory of political legitimacy. And the Declaration’s closing words made the rejection of perpetual allegiance explicit: the new states were “absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown.”

English law rested upon allegiance to the Crown. The American Republic would rest upon the consent of a self-governing people.

That revolutionary transformation should have been central to the Court’s interpretation of the 14th Amendment.”

The United States may have rejected Monarchy, but it didn’t reject centuries of English Common Law, which still forms the foundations of our legal system.


10 posted on 06/30/2026 1:35:18 PM PDT by Bob Wills is still the king
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To: Heartlander
Re: "United States v. Wong Kim Ark"

"The case involved a child born in San Francisco to parents who had been lawfully admitted and permanently domiciled in the United States. That holding was sufficient to resolve the controversy before the Court. Whether the Constitution mandates citizenship for children born to temporary visitors or to those unlawfully present was not presented."

11 posted on 06/30/2026 1:36:26 PM PDT by zeestephen (2024 Trump Landslide - Kamala Harris Lost By 230,000 Votes In WI, MI, and PA.)
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To: Heartlander

FJohnRoberts!


12 posted on 06/30/2026 1:41:34 PM PDT by A strike (fvckMI6. Drool Britannia. & No more Dots)
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To: combat_boots
Re: "Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney - two people with foreign-born children."

Thanks, combat_boots.

I completely missed that fact.

Does that make them Natural Born Citizens of foreign countries?

13 posted on 06/30/2026 1:52:37 PM PDT by zeestephen (2024 Trump Landslide - Kamala Harris Lost By 230,000 Votes In WI, MI, and PA.)
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To: Heartlander
This is just the opening salvo in the birthright citizenship fight.

Regardless of anything else, there is an explicit exception to the 14th Amendment for invaders of the United States.

There is a very strong case that the US has been under a carefully planned, funded and executed foreign invasion starting in the Obama Administration.

There is an overwhelming case that the Biden engineered and funded invasion of 20 million illegal aliens was an explicit , willfully executed invasion of the US.

So much so, that the Trump Administration has been building the foundation of that argument and has been waiting to go public with it until after the Supreme Court predictably ruled against his EO.

Trump's next move, is an emergency order making that declaration at the time and place of his choosing.

Also, Brett Kavenaugh’s fairly brilliant concurring opinion provides a road map on how congress can pass simple majority statutory language to kill birth tourism and illegal alien anchor baby scams.

This is also an ideal wedge issue that the Republicans can exploit. the 14th Amendmendment was about providing citizenship rights to freed slaves by Republicans . We just celebrated a national holiday memorializing that event. Black voters are very resentful about illegal aliens (who they really dislike, especially Chinese , Indian and Hispanic ) co opting their issue.

Blacks especially do not like illegals stealing their welfare funding

This is not over by a darn sight and no plays the blame game better than Donald J Trump

14 posted on 06/30/2026 1:56:04 PM PDT by rdcbn1 (..when poets buy guns, tourist season is over................Walter R. Mead)
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To: rktman

Right, it’s moot now isn’t it. So now Cruise ships filled with pregnant women from every hellhole can stop here for two hours and drop a kid and get on the dole. Thanks to two the nation killing Traitors Roberts and Amy.


15 posted on 06/30/2026 1:56:32 PM PDT by gibsonguy
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To: Dr. Franklin

Roberts unconstitutionally shoved the ACA (Obamacare) down our throats from the bench.


16 posted on 06/30/2026 2:01:53 PM PDT by Fledermaus (It's abundantly clear the GOP is feckless, useless and no better than commies. )
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To: zeestephen

I don’t know. Good question.


17 posted on 06/30/2026 2:06:51 PM PDT by combat_boots
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To: Dr. Franklin; woodpusher
It what modern judges do. They do whatever they want, and then justify it based on arguments lacking a sound premise.

This is exactly correct.

18 posted on 06/30/2026 2:07:19 PM PDT by DiogenesLamp ("of parents owing allegiance to no other sovereignty.")
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To: Heartlander

Bookmark.


19 posted on 06/30/2026 2:07:54 PM PDT by Inyo-Mono
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To: Bob Wills is still the king

“The United States may have rejected Monarchy, but it didn’t reject centuries of English Common Law, which still forms the foundations of our legal system.”

That is of course the bullScheiff infecting the “minds” of Roberts. Barrett and Kavanaugh.
English Common Law may illuminate the history and philosophy undelying US law, but NO WAY IN HELL does it have any real legal bearing on US law !


20 posted on 06/30/2026 2:10:48 PM PDT by A strike (fvckMI6. Drool Britannia. & No more Dots)
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