Supremes Save The Biggest For Last
It’s the end of June and you know what that means: The U.S. Supreme Court will drop a couple of landmark decisions in the next few days and then sprint out of town.
There are two decisions I’m eagerly anticipating.
The first regards boys in girls’ sports. There are two cases, one out of Idaho and one from West Virginia that challenge sensible state laws that bar biological boys from girls’ sports. Those who listened to arguments before the court believe that the Supremes will issue a definitive decision supporting those laws and clearing the way to keep boys who pretend to be girls off of teams and out of locker rooms.
It’s the common-sense decision, which means that the three justices lacking common sense: Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown-Jackson (who can’t define the word “woman”) will dissent.
Let them.
Almost everyone expects the majority to put an end to “trans” kids knocking girls out of sports.
Next stop: Women’s restrooms!
The other important decision the justices have been mulling is whether President Trump’s executive order banning birthright citizenship can stand.
Pray that it does.
That case is styled Trump v. Barbara. Court observers are doubtful that the majority will rule to abolish birthright citizenship despite the fact that the U.S. is just one of 35 countries that allows any child who exits the birth canal on its soil to claim citizenship, even if his parents are here illegally.
No European countries allow such lunacy.
If the court does uphold birthright citizenship we should take drastic measures to end birth tourism.
One way would be to demand that all female visitors to the United States take a pregnancy test before being allowed to enter. Yep, women of child-bearing years should pee on a stick in front of a female TSA agent before being allowed in the country. Especially if she is from China, Russia or Nigeria, the main purveyors of birth tourism.
If a woman is pregnant, she should be sent home.
Any man here on a work permit should not be permitted to bring his wife.
If the courts won’t recognize the insanity of birthright citizenship, we have to find other ways to end it.
