A pregnant woman from Taiwan hid her 36-week pregnancy and flew to the U.S. to give birth to her baby, her water ruptured during the flight, and she kept seeking ? to U.S. airspace? , and ultimately has been insisting that the plane flew over the United States before giving birth to the child. The child successfully got the U.S. citizenship.
The U.S. law provides that as long as the child is born in the U.S. territory, he or she will have the right of citizenship on the ground, which means that as long as the child is born in the U.S., regardless of the nationality of his or her parents, he or she will have the U.S. citizenship and enjoy all the rights of the U.S. citizens. This is why more and more pregnant women are choosing to give birth in the United States.
The baby born in the U.S., in terms of education, can enjoy the U.S. 13 years of compulsory education, the equivalent of reading to high school, and read the university tuition is only about 10% of students from other countries, but also can apply for scholarships and low-interest student loans; in terms of health care, you can enjoy the U.S. citizenship of the full range of medical insurance; and all aspects of the U.S. citizenship can be enjoyed by the rights.
And the baby born in the United States grows to 21 years old, you can invite the parents to immigrate to the United States, the parents just can go to enjoy the old age to receive the pension, low-cost to stay in the retirement apartment, if you choose to retire in California, to participate in free health care programs.
Relatively compared to the United States social welfare is indeed much better than the domestic, but the United States does have some drawbacks, such as the child was born in the United States, the parents in the United States to raise grown up in the U.S., the cost of living in the U.S. is higher than the domestic, the parents have the ability to withstand; if you go back to your home country to support the school, if you do not enjoy the compulsory education in the country, you need to pay extra loan fees or read an international school; the need to replace the Chinese travel permit every two years, and every five years, you will need to pay a fee. The Chinese traveler's license needs to be replaced every two years, and the passport every five years, making the process of obtaining all kinds of documents more troublesome, and so on.
In my opinion, in fact, there is no absolute good or bad to go to the U.S. to give birth to a child, and there is no need to follow the trend to do so, but mainly depends on whether there is a need to do so.