I wasn't trying to 'slide' on anything.I was under the impression you were asking about the differences.
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I don't want a comment on jus sanguinis. I'm asking only about jus soli.
Fair enough.
NEXT TIME however, you'd like to restrict the subject to a specific part of a specific topic, DO be kind enough to inform the other person instead of just copping an attitude about it, okay?
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You say...'jus soli' is only acquirable by laws. and yet I don't see that in action here.
What do you think the 'naturalization laws' are?
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Aren't I a jus soli Citizen of Texas, since I was born in Texas, and isn't that natural law, not man made law? (I've made it a question this time)
Under my impression of Original Intent, you are not a jus soli citizen of the State of Texas, and it is man made law because it is based on English common law and requires the process of denizenation.
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What "law" made me a jus soli Citizen of Texas"? You have the handle MamaTexan so show me in our Texas statutes which specific law that is.
I don't recall saying there CURRENTLY were any laws to make you a jus soli citizen of Texas, just that Constitutionally, that was the way it was supposed to work.
Someone born in Ireland is of Irish soil. Someone born in France is of French soil. Naturalization laws can't change that.
Jus soli, the "law (or right) of the soil", simply is and needs no law to be "put into effect".
Naturalization laws can't change where a person is born.
Naturalization laws allow someone to voluntarily change not only the place they live, but to whom it is that they pledge their allegiance.
Under my impression of Original Intent, you are not a jus soli citizen of the State of Texas, and it is man made law because it is based on English common law and requires the process of denizenation.
Oh, dear God! This isn't ENGLAND! This is AMERICA!
@DENIZEN, English law.
In the United States there is no such civil condition.