The Supreme Court has upheld birthright citizenship, and the usual suspects are, predictably, at each other’s throats. One half hollers about the sanctity of the 14th Amendment, the other about the erosion of national sovereignty. Both are missing the forest for the trees. This is not a legal dispute. It is a symptom of a civilisation so exhausted by its own contradictions that it no longer knows who it wishes to be.
Consider the historical parallels. The late Roman Empire extended citizenship to all free inhabitants within its borders, a move that diluted the very concept of Romanitas and accelerated the empire’s transformation into a bureaucratic husk. Likewise, Victorian Britain’s reluctant embrace of universal suffrage and colonial self-rule was less a triumph of liberal values than a capitulation to the demographic and political forces that would eventually dismantle the empire. Birthright citizenship, in its purest form, is a philosophical commitment to a nation defined not by blood or culture but by geography and accident of birth. It is an invitation to perpetual redefinition, a national identity that shifts with every new arrival.
The Americans who cheer this ruling imagine they are defending a great liberal tradition. They are, in part, correct: the 14th Amendment was a noble attempt to cement the rights of freed slaves. But the context has changed. In 1868, the United States was a young nation with a vast frontier and a relatively homogeneous population of European descent. Today, it is a vast, post-industrial state with a fertility rate below replacement and a growing reliance on immigration to sustain its economy. The question is no longer whether to have birthright citizenship, but whether a society that refuses to define itself can survive the centrifugal forces of hyper-diversity.
The critics, meanwhile, bluster about “anchor babies” and “chain migration,” but they offer no coherent alternative. They dream of a nation that never was: a white, Protestant republic that existed only in the nostalgic haze of mid-century television. They fail to grasp that birthright citizenship is merely the legal expression of a deeper cultural vacuum. A nation that cannot articulate what it stands for beyond a set of procedural rights will inevitably be hollowed out. The Romans did not fall because they granted citizenship too broadly; they fell because they ceased to believe in anything worth preserving. The Victorians did not lose their empire because of suffrage; they lost it because they lost the will to rule.
The ruling itself is legally sound. The 14th Amendment is unambiguous, and the Court’s conservative majority, for all its originalist posturing, could hardly overturn a century of precedent without triggering a constitutional crisis. But the real crisis is intellectual. The American elite, from both parties, has for decades treated national identity as an embarrassment, a vestige of a benighted past. They have championed globalism, multiculturalism, and open borders with the fervour of a cargo cult, hoping that the rituals of liberalism would produce prosperity and harmony without the mess of shared culture. They have been proved wrong. The result is a nation riven by tribal loyalties, where the left demands ever more inclusion and the right demands ever more exclusion, and neither can agree on the basic question of who should be allowed in the door.
The Supreme Court’s decision will not settle this. It cannot. Birthright citizenship is a legal technicality, not a solution to the crisis of belonging that afflicts the West. The Romans, in their final decades, debated citizenship and barbarians with equal futility. The real question, which no court can answer, is this: can a people who no longer share a common story, a common faith, or a common identity continue to call themselves a nation? Or are we merely waiting for the next barbarian wave, whether demographic or ideological, to sweep away the ruins? The hour is later than you think, and the arguments grow ever more shrill.








