To: Yashcheritsiy
One is NATURALLY a US citizen when one cannot be anything else.
Born here of citizen parents.
Natural born citizen.
3 posted on
02/07/2016 10:13:26 AM PST by
Lurkinanloomin
(Know Islam, No peace - No Islam, Know Peace)
To: Lurkinanloomin
6 posted on
02/07/2016 10:16:06 AM PST by
Aria
(2016: The gravy train v Donald Trump)
To: Lurkinanloomin
7 posted on
02/07/2016 10:17:01 AM PST by
freedomjusticeruleoflaw
(Western Civilization- whisper the words, and it will disappear. So let us talk now about rebirth.)
To: Lurkinanloomin
and as bobby blake usta say...and dat’s the name o’ dat tune!!!!!
Yeah!
*****
18 posted on
02/07/2016 10:30:09 AM PST by
gunnyg
("A Constitution changed from Freedom, can never be restored; Liberty, once lost, is lost forever...)
To: Lurkinanloomin
One is NATURALLY a US citizen when one cannot be anything else.
Born here of citizen parents.
Natural born citizen. Well said. I've read the references to the Federalist Papers, English common law, etc., etc. But the first sentence of your post simply makes the most sense of all.
So if a person, by reason of birth, can be both a US and a Canadian citizen, he - by my thinking - is not natural born. But I am not I constitutional lawyer, just a citizen who prefers plain thinking. So I freely admit that I might be wrong.
40 posted on
02/07/2016 10:48:17 AM PST by
Leaning Right
(Why am I holding this lantern? I am looking for the next Reagan.)
To: Lurkinanloomin
One is NATURALLY a US citizen when one cannot be anything else. Born here of citizen parents. Natural born citizen.
Correcto Mungo.
You must 'naturally' be a citizen of only one country.
When you are born, you are either a 'Dual Citizen' or an NBC.
It's one or the other. You cannot be both. However, I really don't care anymore since the media has allowed Obama to get away with it.
To: Lurkinanloomin
One is NATURALLY a US citizen when one cannot be anything else. Born here of citizen parents. Natural born citizen. How about children born to US military stationed overseas? Most are covered by Status of Forces Agreements that don't allow citizenship in the host country (unless one of the parents is a citizen.) I'm not agreeing with your definition, just curious about your interpretation of a specific case.
89 posted on
02/07/2016 12:33:20 PM PST by
Gil4
(And the trees are all kept equal by hatchet, ax and saw)
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