Posted on 08/13/2020 11:41:45 PM PDT by Its All Over Except ...
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Series question: Do Jamaicans call themselves African-Americans?
They were residents and subject to USA laws. As per the 14th amendment she was born an American citizen. Remember, it was Wong Kim Ark, in 1898, that considered the question directly, and expressly concluded that the children of foreign citizens (there, citizens of China) were American citizens. And though the parents there were permanent residentsalbeit ones who returned to China when Wong Kim Ark was 17rather than students, the logic of the case would apply to people living here on student visas, as well
the minimum criteria set forth by the Constitution are solely that the person be “a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution,” “have attained to the Age of thirty five Years,” and have “been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.”
I wouldn’t vote for Kamala Harris for Vice-President (or for President); but she is indubitably constitutionally eligible to the office.
Is Kamala Harris be considered to be Black based on her DNA?? - In 2018 she claimed to be an Indian-American.
Could it be that in 2020 that it is “just convenient” for Senator Harris to CLAIM to be a Black female, just as Elizabeth Warren & Ward Churchill CLAIM to be Native American, despite that NEITHER of them have ANY Amer-Indian ancestry whatever??
Yours, TMN78247
I knew two Carribean origin first generation immigrants. Neither of them married other Carribean origin people.
The first generation - both men, one came to the US to study and then stayed on working, the other was hired and came to work.
Both were highly educated, both were top class professionals in white-collar jobs that required/require a lot of intelligence and creativity.
Neither of them call themselves Africa-Americans. They called themselves Americans, or if pushed, from the Carribean.
They married mixed up Americans. Only one had teen kids and those kids had Biblical origin English names (not shqwanda etc), didn’t have any traces of what the media show as A-A culture and never referred to themselves as anything but Americans when I knew them.
I would guess that none of them want to be associated with the stereotypical A-A culture —> note: the stereotypical racist MSM portrayal of what “black” people are supposed to be.
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