If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
版主: 牛河梁
#2 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
一泡尿进了下水道,移民全都躺平了,不生孩子
川总这么一闹,看看人口会不会减少啊
川总这么一闹,看看人口会不会减少啊
#3 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
The first line is exactly what they want. 极右就是要移民只奉献不拿福利,富豪和他们自己使劲生,因为这样的下一代对他们更可靠
+2.00 积分 [版主 牛河梁 发放的奖励]
#4 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
富豪才不多生孩子呢,多个孩子多分一份家产的,
大学学费越来越贵,同事女儿去莱斯,学费一年9万多,
公司几个H1B的都不生孩子,说不行回去,中产现在
也不生啦,米国完啦
大学学费越来越贵,同事女儿去莱斯,学费一年9万多,
公司几个H1B的都不生孩子,说不行回去,中产现在
也不生啦,米国完啦
#6 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
说实话,移民来了多数都是年轻人,放宽政策放松管理,他们活得
舒心了无压力,就会生孩子,一般家庭都生俩,现在这个德行
拿签证的都做好逃跑的准备,生孩子的心情肯定是没有的。
现在生了孩子也可能拿不到公民,更没人生了,养个孩子花那么多钱
身份还可能被剥夺,谁生?
舒心了无压力,就会生孩子,一般家庭都生俩,现在这个德行
拿签证的都做好逃跑的准备,生孩子的心情肯定是没有的。
现在生了孩子也可能拿不到公民,更没人生了,养个孩子花那么多钱
身份还可能被剥夺,谁生?
#8 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
有的顶级富豪孩子成群laomei9 写了: 昨天 20:40 富豪才不多生孩子呢,多个孩子多分一份家产的,
大学学费越来越贵,同事女儿去莱斯,学费一年9万多,
公司几个H1B的都不生孩子,说不行回去,中产现在
也不生啦,米国完啦
#12 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
Why you want your baby to be a US citizen at the first place if the parents are not?!
#13 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
世界上,除了美國,還有哪些國家的非法移民的小孩自動獲得出生地國籍的?中國可以嗎?
#14 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
歐亞非除了巴基斯坦和一兩個小國,其他都不是。美國不能再做冤大頭了,想拿公民的請去社會主義加拿大或販毒集團墨西哥,不要來美國。
Below is the current (July 2025) inventory of countries that still practice “unrestricted jus soli”—that is, any child born on the territory (other than to foreign diplomats or hostile occupying troops) is automatically a citizen even if the parents are in the country without legal status. The list is compiled from the CIA World Factbook citizenship field and cross-checked against recent press summaries (CBS News, Al Jazeera, NBC, PolitiFact) as well as specialist legal notes for Pakistan and Guinea-Bissau. Counting tiny island states, there are about three dozen such countries left worldwide, and almost all are in the Western Hemisphere.
---
1. Americas — 30 countries
(the region where the rule remains the norm)
Sub-region Countries (alphabetical)
North America Canada, Mexico, United States
Central America & Caribbean Antigua & Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Saint Kitts & Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent & the Grenadines, Trinidad & Tobago
Meso-America El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama
South America Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
---
2. Africa — 3 countries
Lesotho
Guinea-Bissau ^(see 1973 Nationality Law)
The Gambia is often listed in media round-ups, but a closer reading of its 1997 Constitution shows jus sanguinis (one parent must be Gambian), so it does not qualify under the “unrestricted” standard
---
3. Asia — 1 country
Pakistan – Section 3 of the 1951 Citizenship Act makes every child born on Pakistani soil a citizen, except children of foreign diplomats or enemy aliens
---
4. Oceania — 1 country
Tuvalu
---
Countries sometimes (mistakenly) included but have only conditional or delayed birthright
Bahamas – children of non-citizen parents must apply at age 18
Nepal, Mauritius, Chad – citizenship is by descent unless additional criteria are met or the child would be stateless ● Ireland ended true jus soli in 2005 ● Australia and New Zealand require at least one parent to be a citizen/permanent-resident or a 10-year residency test
---
Key Take-aways
Unrestricted birthright citizenship survives in only ~34 states worldwide, and 30 of them are in the Americas. Europe, East Asia and most of Africa have abandoned or never adopted the rule.
The global trend is toward restricting jus soli—either requiring a parent to be a citizen/permanent-resident or making citizenship conditional on the child’s later choice. Recent moves in Ireland (2005) and the United States (ongoing litigation over the 2025 executive order) illustrate this drift.
Below is the current (July 2025) inventory of countries that still practice “unrestricted jus soli”—that is, any child born on the territory (other than to foreign diplomats or hostile occupying troops) is automatically a citizen even if the parents are in the country without legal status. The list is compiled from the CIA World Factbook citizenship field and cross-checked against recent press summaries (CBS News, Al Jazeera, NBC, PolitiFact) as well as specialist legal notes for Pakistan and Guinea-Bissau. Counting tiny island states, there are about three dozen such countries left worldwide, and almost all are in the Western Hemisphere.
---
1. Americas — 30 countries
(the region where the rule remains the norm)
Sub-region Countries (alphabetical)
North America Canada, Mexico, United States
Central America & Caribbean Antigua & Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Saint Kitts & Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent & the Grenadines, Trinidad & Tobago
Meso-America El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama
South America Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
---
2. Africa — 3 countries
Lesotho
Guinea-Bissau ^(see 1973 Nationality Law)
The Gambia is often listed in media round-ups, but a closer reading of its 1997 Constitution shows jus sanguinis (one parent must be Gambian), so it does not qualify under the “unrestricted” standard
---
3. Asia — 1 country
Pakistan – Section 3 of the 1951 Citizenship Act makes every child born on Pakistani soil a citizen, except children of foreign diplomats or enemy aliens
---
4. Oceania — 1 country
Tuvalu
---
Countries sometimes (mistakenly) included but have only conditional or delayed birthright
Bahamas – children of non-citizen parents must apply at age 18
Nepal, Mauritius, Chad – citizenship is by descent unless additional criteria are met or the child would be stateless ● Ireland ended true jus soli in 2005 ● Australia and New Zealand require at least one parent to be a citizen/permanent-resident or a 10-year residency test
---
Key Take-aways
Unrestricted birthright citizenship survives in only ~34 states worldwide, and 30 of them are in the Americas. Europe, East Asia and most of Africa have abandoned or never adopted the rule.
The global trend is toward restricting jus soli—either requiring a parent to be a citizen/permanent-resident or making citizenship conditional on the child’s later choice. Recent moves in Ireland (2005) and the United States (ongoing litigation over the 2025 executive order) illustrate this drift.
#16 Re: If you're not US citizen but want your baby to be,...
中西部白皮爱生,我同事一般3-4个,都是上中产laomei9 写了: 昨天 20:40 富豪才不多生孩子呢,多个孩子多分一份家产的,
大学学费越来越贵,同事女儿去莱斯,学费一年9万多,
公司几个H1B的都不生孩子,说不行回去,中产现在
也不生啦,米国完啦