A look back at how U.S. territories were once viewed as a temporary step toward statehood and how that expectation quietly changed in the early 1900s. The discussion traces how court rulings known as the Insular Cases created a system where the Constitution applies only partially in U.S. territories, shaping the modern status of places like Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. It then turns to a recent Alaska voter fraud appeal involving an American Samoan woman to show how these century-old legal distinctions continue to affect voting rights, citizenship status, and representation today, raising broader questions about who is considered fully American and why taxation without representation still exists in practice.
#USTerritories #VotingRights #AmericanSamoa #NoTaxationWithoutRepresentation #Constitution #CivilRights #Democracy #Representation