Come Into the Light | Bats in a Cave. Supreme Court: Birthright Citizenship | JLP Tue 6/30/26
Come Into the Light | Bats in a Cave. Supreme Court: Birthright Citizenship | JLP Tue 6/30/26
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Bats living in a cave. Supreme Court: Birthright citizenship upheld. Boys & girls in each other's sports. Bible in TX public schools. Caring for the elderly. π¨πΎβ𦲠JLP
Country & Western Tuesday π΄ πͺ π¨πΎβ𦲠JLP 6/30/26
HOUR 1: Bats' dark cave. Mail-in ballots. Conversation skills.
HOUR 2: Co-ed sports. Bible in TX schools. Birthright citizenship.
HOUR 3: Calls: Caregiver drama. Afraid of live-in mama.
π Biblical Question (BQ): Is life physical or spiritual?
β° TIMESTAMPS
(0:00:00) Preshow testing
(0:10:00) JLP intro
(0:15:42) Heard story: Bats in a cave π¦
(0:30:30) Natural ability to be aware
(0:36:30) "Love" just a word. Love the Light.
(0:43:17) Supreme Court rulings: mail-in ballots
(0:50:00) Stephanie: conversations w/ neighbor lady π
(1:14:05) Justin: Catholic religion. π Superchats
(1:22:35) Boys & girls in sports π€ΌββοΈ
(1:27:32) Bible in TX public schools π
(1:34:15) Ricky: division in the West. π July is coming!
(1:47:27) Victoria π
(1:53:33) Birthright citizenship upheld in Supreme Court.
(2:19:36) Alison: Caregiver to quit. What others think π
(2:43:52) Steve: Mama living with him! Love by forgiving π
(2:53:35) Maze: "Speak up" about what? Nobody doin' nothing to nobody. π
(3:02:55) Last Superchats: Go and forgive your mama! Stay with it. π°
ποΈ Men's Forum first Thur, July 2nd, 7pm, BOND, L.A. https://rebuildingtheman.com/events
π CALL JESSE: 888-775-3773 (Mon-Fri 6-9a PT / 8-11a CT / 9-noon ET) https://jlptalk.com
| HAKE NEWS / JLP Tue 6/30/26
Hake News / JLP https://www.thehakereport.com/jlp-news/2026/6/30/jlp-tue-63026
The Hake Report https://www.thehakereport.com/blog/2026/6/30/hake-tue-63026
Sources: CNN email, AP, Morning Brew, the Skimm Tue 6/30/26
Supreme Court birthright citizenship decision expected. Paraguay shocks Germany in World Cup. Alligator attacks rattle Florida. β 5 things to know for June 30: Birthright citizenship, Venezuela aftermath, peace talks, E. Jean Carroll, alligator attacks
In the news today: The Supreme Court lets Trump fire agency heads in a dramatic expansion of presidential power; a look at the trickiest issues in the unresolved conflict between the U.S. and Iran; more than 100 Venezuelans who were deported from the U.S. hours before the earthquakes are missing; and a look at the World Cup sticker frenzy. Also, parts of the world were treated to a stunning βstrawberry moonβ last night β see it here.
Google AI: Supreme Court upholds "birthright citizenship" https://share.google/aimode/6PGjfJFalFFLnvcux
The Supreme Court officially struck down the executive order in a 6-3 ruling, preserving automatic birthright citizenship for children born on U.S. soil. [1]
Here is the quick, easy-to-read breakdown of the official Supreme Court Opinion in Trump v. Barbara:
The Core Ruling
The Decision: The Court blocked President Trump's January 20, 2025 executive order. [1, 2]
The Legal Reason: The majority ruled that under the 14th Amendment's Citizenship Clause, children born in the U.S. to undocumented immigrants or temporary visa holders are "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States and are citizens at birth. [3]
Executive Limits: The Court affirmed that a president cannot use an executive order to overturn a century of constitutional precedent and existing federal law. [1, 2]
The Vote: 6-3
The Majority: Chief Justice Roberts authored the opinion, joined by Justices Kavanaugh, Barrett, Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson.
The Dissent: Justices Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch dissented. [4]
Why the Justices Split
The 6-Justice Majority: Focused heavily on historical practice and institutional stability. Conservative justices like Roberts, Kavanaugh, and Barrett agreed that changing a 125-year-old framework dating back to the 1898 Wong Kim Ark case requires a constitutional amendment or a formal act of Congress, not an executive decree. [2, 5]
The 3-Justice Dissent: Argued that the phrase "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" was meant to imply full political allegiance. They believed the administration's stricter interpretation was a plausible reading of the text and that the executive branch should have the authority to enforce it. [6, 7, 8]
Now that the official text has been released, [AI] can:
Provide specific quotes and excerpts from Chief Justice Roberts' majority opinion.
Break down the legal text of Justice Thomas's dissent.
Share the immediate responses and next steps announced by the White House.
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