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To: icwhatudo

Fine.

Here’s the paragraph that I refered to, I went to it from the link I posted to you. It is there.

2. Sen. Lindsay Graham, taking McCain’s side, notes that McCain’s father “was posted [in Panama] on orders from the United States government.” (One might also argue that the Canal Zone was not truly “foreign” as a U.S. possession at the time, but we can leave that out of the analysis.) But this should not be dispositive. Whether U.S. citizens are overseas on military or diplomatic assignment, or on private business, or merely tourists; whether their children are born on embassy or military grounds considered “U.S. soil” for some purposes, or are born unquestionably on foreign soil—these cannot be the considerations that dispose of the question. It is their parentage that matters. The laws of nations differ as to citizenship, and while some countries will recognize children born on their soil of sojourning parents as citizens, others will not. Would we say that the child born of U.S. parents in a country according that child no citizenship is not a U.S. citizen either, and is therefore a citizen of no country at all? That is an absurdity that cannot be imputed to the Constitution. While the framers may not have anticipated significant numbers of American military and naval forces on extended foreign assignments, with whole military families stationed overseas and children being routinely born, it is inconceivable that they could have intended that a) U.S. diplomats’ children be ineligible for the presidency due to the accident of overseas birth, or even that b) the children of private citizens traveling abroad be likewise ineligible.

I agree with the author.


576 posted on 02/28/2008 2:37:07 PM PST by HonestConservative (Obama; Nobody beats the Wiz.)
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To: HonestConservative
Fine.

Here’s the paragraph that I referred to, I went to it from the link I posted to you. It is there.

Not trying to be difficult, but theres nothing there that says the canal zone was US territory. I'm assuming you are referring to this comment:
(One might also argue that the Canal Zone was not truly “foreign” as a U.S. possession at the time, but we can leave that out of the analysis.)

At best the author is saying what someone "might" argue. Do you have anything other than this one authors offhand comment about what someone "might" argue, that can back up your claim that "Panama was AMERICAN TERRITORY at the time."? Not trying to be a pest, lol, I'm just really curious about this issue. Thanks :)

596 posted on 02/28/2008 7:45:07 PM PST by icwhatudo
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