17 comments

  • codingdave 18 hours ago

    Not likely to actually go anywhere. It hasn't even gone to committee.

    https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/119/s3283

    Still, good to be aware of what is out there. Call your representatives on anything you see that sounds like a bad idea.

    • stockresearcher 15 hours ago

      So far in the 119th congress there have been 3688 bills filed in the Senate. A fraction of a percent of them will ever get talked about, voted on, or passed an sent to the House. It’s performative theatre for the constituents back home.

      And especially, if you’ve noticed, lately the Senate has taken to gaveling into session for the sole purpose of declaring a recess until the next day - being in session for less than 30 seconds a day! Today, they were in session for 11 seconds…

  • barbazoo 18 hours ago

    The language reminds me of how Germany handled dual citizenships until very recently, taking away the German citizenship unless a years long opaque retention certificate application process wasn't followed.

    • MarkusWandel 16 hours ago

      Until recently? Honest question, what is the rule now? Source?

      • barbazoo 10 hours ago

        You don’t need a Beibehaltungsgenehmigung anymore before taking on another citizenship.

  • LostMyLogin 18 hours ago

    Full title: To establish that citizens of the United States shall owe sole and exclusive allegiance to the United States, and for other purposes.

  • ungreased0675 17 hours ago

    What problem is this intended to solve?

    • bediger4000 16 hours ago

      This is going to sound frivolous on first reading, but I don't mean it that way. Proles having dual citizenship might be able to escape Trump's vengeance by having their other country intervene.

      Of course sufficiently wealthy people will always be able to buy their way out of trouble.

  • hn_acker 18 hours ago

    An allegience bill introduced by Bernie Moreno, huh. In my opinion, any federal government official who denies the 2020 election has violated their allegiance to the United States. As early as 2021 [1]:

    > After the 2020 presidential election, Moreno criticized those denying the results of the election, but in 2021 expressed his belief that the election had been "stolen".

    And as late as 2024 [2]:

    > In paid advertising before the primary, Moreno had embraced Trump’s lies about the 2020 election he lost to Democrat Joe Biden.

    > “President Trump says the election was stolen and he’s right,” Moreno said in one digital ad.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernie_Moreno#Political_positi...

    [2] https://apnews.com/article/republicans-ohio-moreno-trump-she...

    • mikeaskew4 16 hours ago

      Moreno is Santos with zero panache.

  • jjgreen 18 hours ago

    Feels a bit ... needy?

  • Jtsummers 18 hours ago

    It'll be interesting to see how far this gets. A lot of wealthy people in the US have multiple citizenship. Elon Musk, for instance, holds citizenship status in three countries. Thiel in the US and New Zealand.

  • uncommoncents 15 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • yellowapple 15 hours ago

      Putting “people” in scare-quotes while spewing inhuman and downright unpatriotic rhetoric is certainly a choice.

      No, dual-citizenships do not cause people to be “foreign agents and dissidents”, and further, to be a “dissident” is a human right that this country was founded specifically to preserve and defend. Welcome to America, where dissent is our Constitutional right; if you don't like that, you can leave, instead of trying to invoke “wartime laws” to impose your anti-American viewpoints on the rest of us.

    • clipsy 14 hours ago

      Have you ever considered getting a second citizenship yourself? I can think of quite a few dictatorships where your attitude would be lauded.