To: EnderWiggins; All
> According to the US Supreme court I am both. If you were president, how can you be loyal to both countries? How could the American public be sure who you'd place first? As the State Department clearly said in 1990:
At the same time, it is assumed that a person with dual citizenship are equally loyal to the United States and another State. They are required to obey the laws of both countries and each country has the right to enforce its national laws there are.
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989 posted on
02/17/2010 12:01:33 PM PST by
BP2
(I think, therefore I'm a conservative)
To: BP2
just like wiggie - demented and insane at the same time.
wiggie - told his doc that he was hearing voices,
doc told wiggie - turn doen the volume. MD by ObamaCare
994 posted on
02/17/2010 12:11:13 PM PST by
syc1959
To: BP2
"If you were president, how can you be loyal to both countries?"
I would not be. I am not now.
"How could the American public be sure who you'd place first?"
That's entirely up to them. If they were not sure, I hope that they would withhold their vote.
" As the State Department clearly said in 1990:
At the same time, it is assumed that a person with dual citizenship are equally loyal to the United States and another State. They are required to obey the laws of both countries and each country has the right to enforce its national laws there are."
Yes they did. Now if you can find anywhere in the Constitution or any Statute where that impacts the definition of natural born citizen, then I'd suggest you get around to doing so.
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