That shows how much you know which is absolutely Nothing
Both our son and daughter were born in Germany seven years apart (1963 and 1970) in the same American hospital when he was stationed there. I did not become a US Citizen until June 12, 1977 when we were stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas. My husband Registered our son and daughter when they were six weeks old with the American Consulate in Munich, Germany. They both received a birth certificate and American passport from the American Consulate in Munich. They would have never gotten them had the consulate not considered them natural born citizen. You really need to get better informed before you are making a bigger fool of yourself than you already are.
“had the consulate not considered them natural born citizen. You really need to get better informed before you are making a bigger fool of yourself than you already are. “
Don’t get mad, but you are incorrect. This is a very confusing and difficult issue to understand.
Because of your circumstances, you were born a “NATIVE” citizen. Not needing to be “naturalized”. In other words a “citizen at birth”. That is NOT a “natural” born citizen. The distinction is only an issue if you want to become president or vice president. It isn’t a “lesser citizenship, as a naturalized citizenship is not a lesser citizenship. It is a specific “constitutional” requirement to those offices.
If you were not born “in the country” by “citizen parentS” (plural) you CAN NOT BE a natural born citizen eligible to the office of president (Article II, Section 1, clause 5) or vice president (Article XII, the last sentence).
“My husband Registered our son and daughter when they were six weeks old with the American Consulate in Munich, Germany.”
OK, I have to admit. All this time I have known you on FR, I thought you were a man! It sure is easy to make incorrect assumptions on the interwebs!