With one glaring exception. It makes no reference to the citizenship of children actually born in the U.S. itself. Now I suppose you can try and make the case that the citizenship requirement of the father is implied in cases of children born in the U.S., but then that implied requirement is negated by the 14th Amendment which contains no such restriction. Or so the Supreme Court has found.
Clear and without the sort of legalese we see bantered about by lawyers trying to hide what is in plain view. Remarkably I might even suggest that Obama borrowed from this act its very essence when writing the McCain resolution.
Claire McCaskill wrote it, Obama just signed on for the ride. But regardless, a non-binding Senate resolution has no standing in law.
Any children of such persons so naturalized (meaning those that became citizens at the birth of this country) dwelling within the United States, being under the age of twenty-one years at the time of such naturalization shall be considered citizens of the United States.....
It does define that the children of the first naturalized citizens of the United States are citizens and defines children as those below the age of Majority or twenty-one years old..
It is very clear.