No I’m asking you, it’s your post all about being naturalized, I already know he wasn’t because he was born to a American Citizen Abroad, just like my two children were. They did not have to take any oath, they were automatically citizens (Natural Born)
How do you know he wasn't?
It is an understandable and all-too-common error to view "naturalization" as synonymous with and referring only to a process that a person voluntarily undertakes, when naturalization (making a non-citizen into a citizen) can be granted without that process.
The SCOTUS precedents are so clear on this point, that to hold they say otherwise after looking at the law is willful ignorance or deliberate misrepresentation.
The case of Rogers v. Bellei (1971) involves a person in the same circumstance as Cruz. Born abroad to a US citizen mother and an alien father. Bellei obtained his citizenship, at birth, with no naturalization process. The common view, and the one perpetrated by Cruz, is that Bellei is therefore an NBC.
But Bellei's citizenship was stripped from him by an act of Congress. Nothing personal, he is just a member of the class of people covered by this act of Congress. He sued to get his citizenship back. If Bellei had been a natural born citizen, Congress could not have stripped him of his citizenship. The case would not exist, at all. But the case exists. As I said, Bellei sued to get his citizenship back. He lost.
The dissent, which wanted to have Bellei continue to be a US citizen, said this ...
Bellei, as a naturalized American, is entitled to all the rights and privileges of American citizenship, including the right to keep his citizenship until he voluntarily renounces or relinquishes it.
There was a separate dissent by Brennan and Douglas. It says ...
In the light of the complete lack of rational basis for distinguishing among citizens whose naturalization was carried out within the physical bounds of the United States, and those, like Bellei, who may be naturalized overseas, the conclusion is compelled that the reference in the Fourteenth Amendment to persons "born or naturalized in the United States" includes those naturalized through operation of an Act of Congress, wherever they may be at the time.