Lennart:
Abbey Anumia:
Aaaaaand that is why the BoR would need amending. Not because technically it has to be but because a citizen without any rights under the BoR distinctly bothers me as an idea. We'd be accepting that someone can be a part of our community as a citizen without offering them any protection under our laws. I surely can't be the only person bothered by this idea?
I am a part of English society but I'm not a British citizen. And I'm OK with it. I could be a cartographer in England if I want to (In fact that makes me wonder why I'm wasting my time working in a kitchen instead) and I'm not sure but maybe I could even be a deputy speaker or whatever the British equivalent is. That's enough protection if you ask me. I don't meet the requirements for citizenship and that's it. I'm not bothered, the English are not bothered, and we're all happy.
The thing is is that the comparison doesn't work. Anybody in the UK is protected at least by the fundamental rights we've inherited from the European Convention on Human Rights. You might not have
all the entitlements and rights of a British Citizen but at a fundamental level you're still protected. You're still entitled to the minimum wage, to not being a slave, to not be attacked or be in fear of your life. Even the "ghosts" comparison doesn't work because they cannot interact with the real world.
This, this would mean that these citizens would have no protective rights at all. They might have the right to participate in government and suchlike (similar to the Minimum Wage in the UK example) but they could have their free speech curtailed, be
forced to participate in government, charged and prosecuted outside of the legal framework. They would have no rights at all and that is why we should not allow anyone to be in that situation but also participating in our community. We'd be asking them to contribute without giving anything back.