It is out of date (it was originally written in 1868), and subsequent junk has patched up that sort of stuff. Mostly, at the absolute least.
That said, fixed, yes, ignored, no. Pretty sure the 14th was a fairly notable step up from the situation at the time. Most folks I've noticed suggesting abolishing or ignoring it are pretty incredibly shitty people.
Pretty much. I pointed out that the precise part that was complained about was fixed a mere...oh, 94 years ago, now. Heck, it was even conveniently on the very next line trimmed from the quote in the complaint. ^_^
Indeed, since it was my post that apparently triggered this outburst, I can probably go into a bit of detail. Because it *has* already been fixed, abolishing or replacing the 14th amendment typically boils down to shutting down representation based on population, with the most common replacement to my knowledge being to replace it with representation based on citizenship instead. The reason Native Americans were so contentious, or perhaps more accurately the fig-leaf for this particular facet of the citizenship argument of that day (it's an old argument), was because Native Americans weren't "just" US citizens, even if they renounced their tribes (according to federal courts in McKay v. Campbell and, nationally, Elk v. Wilkins); they're citizens of their tribes, semi-sovereign entities or "domestic dependent nations" that enter into treaty compacts with the United States government. The contradictions herein in the US simultaneously treating with native tribes as both sovereign states and non-sovereign territories subject to American rule based on which was more convenient were rather elided over because of the views of the day, and extending the rights of citizenship took until 1924 legally, with the provisions not fully enforced until the courts came down hard in 1948. However, they did, and they did so without the rigorous requirements of a constitutional amendment. That's obviously not to say that native tribes live a charmed life today, but the problems therein don't have much to do with the 14th Amendment.