Discussion about this post

User's avatar
SunnySideUp's avatar

I certainly agree with you. Thank you for being so positive about the USA, and congratulations on your citizenship; it was just in time. I've attended a citizenship ceremony, and I wish more people would. I'm a citizen, but I've always been kind of apologetic about it. My sense is that a country is not like a football team, but more like a house—it needs a fresh coat of paint every once in a while. Right now, it's covered with mierda IMO. What I remember is how awful it was before we got in a bunch of industrious, talented immigrants after 1968. It was super boring before that; the food was awful, and it was getting even dumber. With the current exodus from our country, we will all be cousins at the rate we are going now.

My siblings and I were born abroad to US citizens. I have a birth certificate from a US embassy in a foreign country. I learned English from the kid next door after arriving in the US, and didn't like it much, even though we lived in a rich, leafy suburb. My sister, who was born while our parents were POWs, didn't have a birth certificate at all and had to go through naturalization in the 1950s. English is her second language, too, although neither of us is proficient in our original language anymore. From my point of view, I am shocked at the stupidity and venality of the anti-immigration, and now, Malthusian, movement. The 14th Amendment is a blessing, and I pray the Supreme Court doesn't cave to racist, jingoistic, chauvinistic solipsism.

No posts

Ready for more?