Harris is a natural born citizen. She was born in Oakland, CA.
"In 2007 the Senate passed Senate Resolution 511 that stated John McCain was a NBC because he was ‘born of American citizen parents on a US Military base’."
A non-binding resolution, passed because that military base was in a foreign country and people were causing doubts. Parentage matters for births in a foreign country, not in the US.
"Harris is an unnatural born native born of parents from different foreign jurisdictions who they were subject to by the act of issuing their passports to visit here."
Harris was born in Oakland. When she was born her parents were in the US too, and being in the country were subject to the laws of the country and therefore "under the jurisdiction". Harris is a natural born citizen.
It was not intended that those born to tourists or visitors be granted citizenship by birth.
Your take is incorrect.
Parentage matters for births in a foreign country, not in the US.
Are you talking about US children born overseas, or foreigners born here? Because US children born overseas can be NBC if both parents are American, like McCain. But the topic is Harris, a native born Indian and Jamaican subject to the countries of origin of her foreign parents who issued her parents' passports.
"... Additionally, Trumbull argued Indians could not be subject to the jurisdiction for the reason the United States deals with them through treaties. This is also exactly how the United States deals with aliens from other nations as well; they enter into treaties with other countries to define legal rights of their citizens while within the limits of the United States and vice versa. Example: A treaty with China prohibited the United States from naturalizing Chinese citizens." (Ark Kim Wong)
What did Harris do to reject her foreign citizenship from India, who also states that the citizenship of Indians born overseas is based on the parents' citizenship? Being a citizen of two countries would seem to contradict the whole point of a Natural Born Citizen, that of allegiance to one's country of allegiance.
therefore "under the jurisdiction".
The proper wording is 'and subject to the jurisdiction' in terms of citizenship / allegiance. It would have been much clearer if the word 'sole' had been inserted before 'jurisdiction'.