You wonnt read this csue it would make your brain swell but other might
The impact of birthright citizenship
The death of a country.
Layering in birthright citizenship via marriages and subsequent children. Let's revise and expand the model to include:
Original immigrant women bearing children (already covered)
Original immigrant men who eventually marry (or partner) and have children — half of whom do.
All children are US-born, thus automatic citizens via birthright citizenship.
We’ll project this over 20 and 40 years, using conservative and plausible assumptions.
REVISED BASE ASSUMPTIONS
Total Illegal Immigrants: 20 million
PART 1: CHILDREN VIA IMMIGRANT WOMEN
(From original estimate)
PART 2: CHILDREN VIA IMMIGRANT MEN
Assume half of the 10 million men:
So:
GENERATIONAL REPRODUCTION (After 20–40 years)
Let’s now track total population impact by generation:
20-Year Projection
Generation 0 (illegal immigrants):
→ 20 million
Generation 1 (children of women):
→ 20 million
Generation 1 (children via men):
→ 12.5 million
TOTAL Gen 1 birthright citizens:32.5 million
Cumulative Total (G0 + G1):
→ 52.5 million
40-Year Projection
Now let Gen 1 have kids (Gen 2):
32.5 million birthright Gen 1 citizens, assume:
✅ TOTAL AT 40 YEARS:
Gen 0 (illegal immigrants): 20 million
Gen 1 (citizen children): 32.5 million
Gen 2 (grandchildren): 52 million
➡️ Cumulative Total: ~104.5 million
(Note: 84.5 million of these are U.S. citizens via birthright)
SUMMARY TABLE (Revised)
| Year | Generation | Source | Size (millions) | Birthright? |
---|
1 | 0 | Gen 0 | Original immigrants | 20 | No |
---|
2 | 20 | Gen 1a | Children from women | 20 | Yes |
---|
3 | 20 | Gen 1b | Children via men who partnered | 12.5 | Yes |
---|
4 | 40 | Gen 2 | Children of Gen 1 (citizens) | 52 | Yes |
---|
5 |
|
| Total | 104.5 | ~84.5 |
---|
⚠️ Policy and Social Impact Observations
Nearly 85 million citizens could be born from an original pool of 20 million illegal entrants in just two generations.
Most of the growth is lawful, via jus soli (birthright), not chain migration.
Even if immigration stopped, population momentum from reproductive chains would continue.
Immigration policy debates around birthright citizenship and amnesty must account for exponential generational impact.