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POLITICS

Texas Hospitals Sell Birth Packages to Foreigners Post-SCOTUS Ruling

Hospitals advertise delivery deals to overseas clients while Texas weighs enforcement after the latest citizenship decision.

The Gist

Texas hospitals run ads for birth packages aimed at non-citizens. One side calls it exploitative tourism needing immediate state and federal pushback. The other says the 14th Amendment already settled birthright and ads change nothing.

The Scores
77%
HOW REAL
73%
CONTENTION
HIGH
VOLUME · ENGAGEMENT

Why these scores — Side A evidence rests on visible hospital ads and tourism patterns reported by state officials. Side B evidence rests on the plain text of the 14th Amendment and existing SCOTUS precedent. Both sides cite verifiable sources; no clear bot amplification detected in the linked accounts.

Texas hospitals now list $40k-plus 'birth packages' aimed at Chinese and Russian buyers weeks after the Supreme Court left birthright in place.

Side A points to the ads as fresh proof that lax enforcement invites organized tourism and wants the state to investigate plus push for rehearing.

Side B cites the 14th Amendment text and prior precedent, arguing new marketing cannot rewrite constitutional language or create grounds for reversal.

Side A Crack down on tourism now

Hospitals are actively marketing to foreign clients to exploit birthright; Texas should investigate and Trump should seek rehearing with the new ad evidence.

  • @RealAmVoice✓ verified“Hospitals fueling birth tourism; Trump should petition SCOTUS to rehear after new evidence.”
Side B Amendment already settled it

The 14th Amendment grants citizenship to those born here regardless of parent status; fresh hospital ads do not alter that constitutional rule.

  • @ChristinaNewstv✓ verified“14th Amendment covers all born here; new hospital ads don't change constitutional birthright.”
Manipulation Lens
48/100 tactic density
Fear appealBorrowed authorityCherry-picked data

Read it straight — Pull the actual hospital ad copies and state health department birth data for the same period to separate marketing claims from volume.