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There's simply no risk of children of legal immigrants being sent back to where they "came from" and they don't fall under the foreign born population you mention in the next sentence, so the claim of self interested motivation on their part rings hollow. Your personal belief that people who live in the US their whole lives and assimilate to its culture are not Americans is, to put it lightly, a minority view in no danger of being advanced by any serious legal scholars.
I never said foreign born. I said foreigner.I did use the phrase foreign born, mea culpa. The Japanese would use the word gaijin.I don't care where he was born, he's not American. I don't care what passport he has, he's not American.
He might be able to have American children, if he outmarries, but I won't hold my breath.
I don't care about legal scholars, I care about Americans, and it's pretty popular among Americans who are tired of seeing themselves replaced in their own homeland.
I don't care what the Japanese say, I'm an American, not Japanese. I have no interest in becoming Japanese.
Way to miss the point.
The japanese have a word that means foreigner, and it doesn't distinguish between citizen or not, or care where you were born.
You're using foreign concepts from foreign languages to try to tell me about America. There's a reason that there is no equivalent American word, because there is no equivalent American concept, because that is a fundamentally foreign belief system.
More like I'm using foreign language to break free of the propaganda that is relentlessly imposed upon us all.
No more illegal this, alien that, hyphenated American the next one. Foreigner. They're just foreigners, no other description necessary.
You're using a foreign language to try to import a foreign concept from a foreign culture. Akhil Reed Amar is not a foreigner, you'd know this if you knew anything about him, or his work.
"Foreigner" as a word in American English does not describe a person born in Michigan, raised in California, living in Connecticut. If you used it in conversation it would confuse people. You're reaching for the Japanese concept because you want to make my country more like Japan, I don't.
I wouldn't call him a foreigner, but my WW2 vet grandfather absolutely would have (and did within my hearing for other similarly-situated individuals of Indian heritage).
Past tense being used here to indicate death I assume? My condolences, though at this point even a soldier who enlisted at 17 in '45 would be 97 or something.
In the fifties and sixties this might have been accurate to a reasonable degree, there were zero Indian Americans born in Michigan who went on to become important scholars. One could ignore them or wish them away. That isn't the case now, one must deal with Kash Patel and Akhil Reed Amar whether one likes it or not.
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