Posted on 05/09/2013 7:44:25 PM PDT by Nachum
Famed Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz ranks Sen. Ted Cruz among the schools smartest students, adding that the Canada-born Texan can run for president in 2016.
Cruz was a terrific student, Dershowitz told The Daily Caller. He was always very active in class, presenting a libertarian point of view. He didnt strike me as a social conservative, more of a libertarian.
He had brilliant insights and he was clearly among the top students, as revealed by his class responses, Dershowitz added.
Dershowitz also gave a high estimate of Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren who has decidedly different political views than Cruz.
Dershowitz says he and Cruz would often debate issues presented in Dershowitzs criminal law class. Cruzs views were always thoughtful and his responses were interesting, the law professor explained. I obviously disagreed with them and we had good arguments in class. I would challenge him and he would come up with very good responses.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...
You are either extraordinarily obtuse, or deliberately misleading. The act says "Shall be considered as" it does not say "is."
That is the FIRST point upon which you are absolutely wrong.
The Second point upon which you are absolutely wrong is the intentional omission of the fact that a resident American Father was required to make it work. A foreign Father was an absolute deal killer.
The Third point upon which you are absolutely wrong, is the failure of you to note that those specific words were repealed five years later, as if congress explicitly acknowledged that the earlier act was a mistake.
Three strikes and YOU'RE OUT!
And by a genuine authority, I mean someone who clearly had the authority to speak for the Founders or Framers, who wasn't absolutely contradicted by them, or who was one of our top NATIONAL legal experts, at any time prior to 1850.
We’re talking about the meaning of “natural born citizen” in the Constitution.
Clearly the Signers of the Constitution didn’t believe it means your load of BS. That the Act was changed later is completely irrelevant.
There is no inherent servitude in the principle that those born in a country are citizens of that country.
Obviously posting intelligent and scholarly links for you to increase your understanding was a mistake. You toss off some dismissive language having learned nothing.
Your claim is bull****. There is no inherent servitude in the principle that those born in a country are citizens of that country.
This should be obvious in the first place. It is further illustrated by the fact that there are plenty of countries that use the jus soli rule, that have no king of any kind.
I've pointed out several, you just ignored them. That's your usual tactic. Ignore and obfuscate.
In fact, 40% of the Signers of the Constitution approved a measure that said people who DIDN'T fit that definition were eligible to be President.
And yet again you post this lie. What on earth is the matter with you? Again, it said "considered as", not "is", again, foreign fathers disqualified the child, again, those specific words were repealed five years later.
Jeff, thy middle name is "obfuscateadnauseum."
Already posted Bushrod Washington and Chief Justice John Marshall. Again, my two Supremes beat your English Lawyer. Posted Secretary of state James Monroe, Posted James Madison. Posted James Wilson, Posted Benjamin Franklin, and so on...
Not my fault that you have the attention span of a humming bird. (And brains to match.)
AND a MAROOO?...let’s get behind TED..he’s the wave of the future!
You betcha!!!
Clearly the Signers of the Constitution didnt believe it means your load of BS. That the Act was changed later is completely irrelevant.
Oh, the act wasn't so much changed as those specific words were retracted. It explicitly changed the language from "be considered as natural born citizens" to "be considered as citizens".
You are the goofball that thinks subsequent law can change the meaning of a constitutional term, so deal with the fact that they ripped out that terminology to describe citizens which they naturalized by this act.
Again, if your theory LIVES by statutory citizenship then your theory DIES by statutory citizenship.
Mine, on the other hand, is still consistent and unaffected by any and all acts of congress.
This should be obvious in the first place. It is further illustrated by the fact that there are plenty of countries that use the jus soli rule, that have no king of any kind.
Christmas trees and Easter Bunnys have nothing to do with Christianity. Sometimes the legal inertia keeps going long after people have forgotten what started it in the first place. Perhaps if you had read the links, you might have had a better understanding of how Jus Soli was originally linked to Feudal Land-Bondage, but of course you would rather remain ignorant, because it is that darkness in which your theory can survive.
Oh, and I forgot to add: "Not any more." All of them did previously.
It is clear that they intended the children born US citizens abroad to be eligible to be President, except for those whose fathers have never, ever been resident in the US.
The Wong holding stands until and unless it is overturned. Obviously it continues to make good sense to contemporary era Triers of Fact, without exception. Republicans and Democrats have cited Wong as binding precedent; like the Republican Attorney General of Indiana in Ankeny v. Daniels or Obama’s Democrat attorney in Georgia who cited Wong in his brief but then nearly blew his case by getting indignant like a two year old and refusing to show up for trial.
You sure do like your non-sequiturs, Galileo, Roe and Wong Kim Ark, huh?
Wow.
Bull****. Neither said a thing about the meaning of natural born citizen in The Venus.
John Marshall also said there was ONE error in Bayard's book, and "natural born citizen" wasn't it. So Marshall agreed with Bayard on what it took for a person to be eligible to be President. Marshall contradicts you.
Posted Secretary of state James Monroe
Bull****. Monroe's administration affirmed James McClure was a United States citizen, and the sole reason given was that he was born in Charleston, SC. So James Monroe contradicts you.
Actually, I need to add him and Marshall to the list of early authorities.
Posted James Madison.
Bull****.Madison said that both parentage and place of birth were criteria that made for citizenship, but that place of birth was "the most certain," and it was "what applies in the United States."
James Madison, Father of the Constitution, contradicts you.
Posted James Wilson
Bull****. Wilson also said in order to be a "citizen" of that particular State (in the sense in which he used the word) you had to have paid your taxes in the past 2 years. Obviously he was talking oranges, not apples.
Posted Benjamin Franklin
Bull****. Franklin thanked somebody for a copy of Vattel. BFD. Franklin NEVER said it took birth on US soil plus citizen parents for Presidential eligibility or natural born citizenship. And his one close associate (Rawle) ABSOLUTELY contradicts you, and his other close associate (the Duc de la Rochefoucauld) certainly says nothing about parentage.
Franklin doesn't contradict you (since he never seems to have spoken on the matter) but his close associates do.
As does Thomas Jefferson's very close lifelong friend Phllip Mazzei, and so, so many other authorities.
, and so on...
Yes, and so on. The fact is, there doesn't seem to be any end to the amount of bull**** you'll spin in order to try and prop up your failed, BS Constitutional claims.
I said it before, and I'll say it again: You're a complete fraud.
So did virtually every country in the world, including just about all that have a jus sanguinis rule.
So your point is?
No Jeff. "Considered As" does not equal "Is".
And Jeff, they REPEALED it. If your theory Lives by Congressional Whim, it Dies by Congressional whim.
A Simple lie is often desired above a complex truth. Newton was much easier to understand than was Einstein.
Republicans and Democrats have cited Wong as binding precedent; like the Republican Attorney General of Indiana in Ankeny v. Daniels
Citing Ankeny is an automatic slap across the nose with a rolled up newspaper. I would be EMBARRASSED to go near that piece of crap. You lose competency points in my mind from stooping to that.
or Obamas Democrat attorney in Georgia who cited Wong in his brief but then nearly blew his case by getting indignant like a two year old and refusing to show up for trial.
Yet magically, it didn't matter. What ought to have been a slam dunk automatic finding for plaintiff became the victim of an Advocate Judge.
And you wonder why we should respect a system that ignores any rule when it feels like it?
The Courts disgust me. They are vile, and need to be ripped out of the Ground and replanted. They worship sophistry, and are ugly to people who value truth and logic.
And you think citing them will play a role in convincing me of something?
You sure do like your non-sequiturs, Galileo, Roe and Wong Kim Ark, huh? Wow.
Analogies. A distinction of which you are apparently unfamiliar.
A "non Sequitur" is more along the lines of "I can't drive because Germans eat ice cream. " Just look at any one of Jeff's arguments for other examples.
Just keep telling yourself that Jeffy Baby.
Never mind. I've concluded you can't understand points. Just spout "talking" ones.
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