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To: sometime lurker
And this is where we'll never agree. Firstly, because many phrases in the Constitution were taken from Common Law, and “natural born” was one of them.

Until you understand what common law is in order to define what common law actually is, your responses are nothing but ignorance. You can capitalize “C”ommon “L”aw all you want, but it will not help your pleading. Every nation has common law that is common to that nation. Every locality in a nation has common law that is common only to that locality within the nation. In each instance there is type of jurisdiction.

A citizen of one state is not under the citizenship jurisdiction of another state in the sense that one can not legally cross a border and vote in an election in a state in which they are not a citizen of just because they are a US citizen. However, all who are in the state, whether permanent or temporary, are subject to jurisdiction of the laws of peace & discord. Citizenship is a politically narrow jurisdiction. And that is where you fail in your pleading.

500 posted on 02/08/2012 6:09:53 PM PST by patlin ("Knowledge is a powerful source that is 2nd to none but God" ConstitutionallySpeaking 2011)
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To: patlin
A citizen of one state is not under the citizenship jurisdiction of another state in the sense that one can not legally cross a border and vote in an election in a state in which they are not a citizen of just because they are a US citizen.

Nice, and totally besides the point. You claim you understand common law because "it's in your blood." I'll stake my claim more on reading and understanding. And when you wander too far outside the point, I'll no longer answer.

506 posted on 02/08/2012 6:46:37 PM PST by sometime lurker
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