The 14th Amendment was created after Republicans recognized that Southern Democrats were freeing slaves but denying them citizenship based on race. This amendment redefined citizenship, making it about more than bloodlines or tribal affiliations—it became a shared commitment to ideals and opportunities. It stands as one of the most fascinating experiments in the broader sweep of American innovation, defining the nation as something profoundly different from what had come before. Here was identity rooted in shared ideals, not shared ancestry—a nation striving for equal opportunity, despite its diverse histories and conditions.
The 13th Amendment ended slavery. The 14th Amendment completed the transformation by granting citizenship, guaranteeing it through the simple fact of being born in this country. To ignore the 14th Amendment and deny citizenship to those born here is to abandon the principle that defines America. It reduces citizenship to ancestry rather than potential, binding people to their parents’ past rather than opening the door to their own future.
Unsurprisingly, Trump and the MAGA boys who are fascinated by race, heritage and genes find the 14th amendment an obstacle to his policy. We fought a civil war to put up that obstacle. He thinks he can remove it with an executive order.
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