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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBirthers want proof that Mitt Romney was born in America!
What goes around, comes around. BBI
Birthers want proof that Mitt Romney was born in America
March 23, 2012
No, you read that right. You might think birthers are crazy conspiracy theorists, but you can't say they're inconsistent. The fringe group of politicians and concerned voters who have long dogged President Obama for "proof" that he is a natural born citizen are now targeting Mitt Romney. They demand that the California Secretary of State produce evidence that Mitt is eligible to run for president. One birther explains that Romney's citizenship is up for debate because his dad was born in Mexico. Thats right, Mitt Romney's father was born in the Mexican colony that Mitt's great-grandfather founded after fleeing the United States so he could stay married to Romney's four great-grandmothers. Let's all just let that sink in for a moment.
http://now.msn.com/now/0322-romney-vs-birthers.aspx
freshwest
(53,661 posts)Not at the birthers, but at Mitt's grand dad and all that implies for their beliefs. No wonder Mittens isn't into disclosure...
snooper2
(30,151 posts)freshwest
(53,661 posts)xtraxritical
(3,576 posts)freshwest
(53,661 posts)SamG
(535 posts)after he loses to Obama.
Johonny
(20,888 posts)Ship of Fools
(1,453 posts)It looks like this will be very complicated story for their little minds.
appleannie1
(5,068 posts)LeftinOH
(5,358 posts)freshwest
(53,661 posts)[IMG][/IMG]
Old and In the Way
(37,540 posts)I'm betting that the average Republican voter doesn't know the Rmoney family history and aren't going to be happy to know why great-gramps fled the country.
mwb970
(11,366 posts)His history, his money, his wife and her Cadillacs. The only thing he's talked about that ordinary Americans can relate to is the Etch-A-Sketch! And trees, I guess.
LisaL
(44,974 posts)of not being born in America.
kestrel91316
(51,666 posts)to realize or admit that a certified copy of a birth record constitutes prima facie evidence of that birth and location that is ironclad in any court in the land.
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)He was seriously trying to figure out a way to be eligible for the WH...
harmonicon
(12,008 posts)I think it's a terrible rule. How does where someone was born or who their parents are influence what they can do for the country?
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)including history of foreign countries ruling other countries thru wealthy aristocratic lineage.
check into the history, you may find it interesting.
as for part of your question:
"How does where someone was born or who their parents are influence what they can do for the country?"
think about that in terms of recent Presidents.
harmonicon
(12,008 posts)thinking about recent presidents, I conclude that what we have in the US is - despite any efforts made by those who wrote the constitution - often ruled by wealthy aristocratic lineages.
I could understand requiring that the president renounce any other citizenship they may have, but that doesn't change the fact that some citizens have more rights than others.
unc70
(6,119 posts)1. Natural born (born in), eligible for Pres
2. Naturalized in
3. Naturalized, but not in USA. Strange Supreme Court interpretation of 14th amendment wording in Rogers v Bellei (1971). Naturalized at foreign birth to citizen by statue.
I personally think that 3 was a bad decision.
harmonicon
(12,008 posts)It means that someone was born as a citizen. Someone born to US parents in Japan is a US citizen, not a Japanese citizen. That's just one example - in some countries they'd be both, but in all cases, a person born to US parents is a natural born citizen, regardless of where they were born.
In any case, these are three types of citizenship, not three different classes in terms of rights. In that case, there are only two, and eligibility to run for president is the only thing that I can think of which distinguishes them.
How is it a good rule? Please, do tell me why one citizen should have fewer rights than another.
unc70
(6,119 posts)A child born in Japan to US Citizen parents is under current law a citizen at birth. Those laws are part of the uniform rules for naturalization. Not born IN the US, then naturalized.
Rogers v Bellei is only decision currently distinguishing between citizen types except regarding qualifications for President. It makes distinction against your example of child born abroad.
Here is some background reading. Be glad to discuss further on the finer points.
http://law.justia.com/constitution/us/article-1/35-naturalization-and-citizenship.html
harmonicon
(12,008 posts)Some opinions seem to state that naturalized citizens have all of the same rights as natural born citizens, but at other times presidency is specifically addressed.
You still haven't answered to me why you think this discrimination is a good idea. It seems like an equal protection case to me.
Of course this likely would never come before the court until someone was elected president and had their right to be so questioned. This wasn't an issue when George Romney ran for president (born in Mexico to - possibly, but possibly not - US citizen parents).
I guess the definition - as you illustrate, it's changed over time - really is only dependent on what the courts determine.
Regardless, I see no reason to have second class citizens in any respect.
unc70
(6,119 posts)As you noted, the courts have slowly moved towards removing the last distinctions between types of citizens except for the requirement that the President be natural born, the only Constitutionally mandated distinction.
There remains one exception allowing revoking citizenship for fraud when alien applied to become citizens. I would prefer to eliminate that exception, too. As you saw in the case law, most of what everyone "knows" on this subject is wrong.
I think the original reason for the natural born clause was valid then and now. The easiest justification for me now is to consider what the alternative scenario would look like. Now, all that must be proved is that the candidate was born in the USA. Period. No matter what some birthers might believe.
You saw at the link some of the strange questions in the case law. Consider having those technical discussions reexamining whether the chain of citizenship is intact through several generations. For a congressman, we might not care that much. For President, for C in C, we care.
harmonicon
(12,008 posts)however, you - to simplify it - seem to arguing in favour of convenience, and I don't think anyone should be denied rights due to convenience.
I don't have problems with laws stating that the president must have lived in the US for x number (I think it's 13 in the constitution) of years before becoming president, as this would apply to any citizen. Of course some exceptions would have to be made for diplomatic trips, education, etc. (and they obviously have, or else I don't think John Adams could have been president).
unc70
(6,119 posts)My support for the natural born clause is more than for any possible convenience. It requires that our only nationally elected leader must be truly of the nation, its soil, from birth.
The rules regarding foreign born children of citizens have become increasingly more relaxed. This has reached the point that under the assumption that natural born would apply to those so born, then someone was born, raised, and lived 2/3 of their life in another country could qualify for the presidency.
BTW did you read my other posts elsewhere in this thread?
(Thanks for the reasonable discussion. It is complicated in non-obvious ways that appear when reading the links I have noted.)
harmonicon
(12,008 posts)It just comes down to this: do citizens have equal rights? I think that we all have (or should have) equal rights. As soon as one right exists for any person which is denied to another, we have two tiers of citizenship, and I think that's wrong.
Would you deny these citizens the right to vote? If they're denied participation in the democratic process in one way, to me they're denied it all in principle.
None of us choose where we're born, and I don't think that should ever be held against us. As adults, however, we can find ourselves in circumstances where we can choose where to be a citizen. If someone makes a choice to be an American, I think their ties to the US are as strong, if not more strong, than someone who is a citizen by accident of birth.
unc70
(6,119 posts)For example, there probably is nothing in the Constitution that would prevent a State from allowing non-citizens from voting in elections for President and Congress.
frogmarch
(12,158 posts)an American citizen, and even though my mother was not, I was considered a natural born American citizen. The father of my India-born half-sister was British. She was considered a British citizen and had to be naturalized to become an American citizen when we came to the U.S. Our younger adoptive sister, born in Japan, had to become naturalized too, when we came to America from Tokyo. Her mother was Japanese, but although her father was an American Army colonel, she was not considered a natural born American citizen at birth. Strange.
EDIT: I suppose that because my younger sister was born out of wedlock, the fact that her father was an American didn't count.
unc70
(6,119 posts)No question about being a citizen at birth, possibly with requirement for further actions. Considerable debate whether that would qualify you as natural born. I believe not, others posting here believe it would.
The issue of citizen father, unmarried parents gets really messy. Easier now than it was. Mixed all up with inheritance laws, too.
frogmarch
(12,158 posts)naturalized and was therefore "natural born." I have never heard of the category "foreign born citizen at birth." Maybe there is such a category, but I have never, ever heard of it. I don't interpret "natural born" to mean "born in the country that one was born a citizen of."
unc70
(6,119 posts)The Constitution provides only two methods to become a citizen: to be born in the USA, or to be naturalized. Naturalized covers every method of becoming a citizen except being born on the soil of the country.
That means foreign born children of citizen parents are naturalized citizens at birth. That has always been the case, but it was restated in the 14th amendment.
Children born abroad when only one parent is a citizen have a much more complicated route to secure their citizenship.
http://www.uscitizenship.info/citizenship-library-children.html
Whether you would qualify as a natural born citizen is an even more complicated matter. It is nowhere near settled law in either direction. My personal opinion is that you are not natural born, but until the Supreme Court rules on you candidacy for President, it can only be speculation on anyone's part.
frogmarch
(12,158 posts)"naturalized citizens at birth" interpretation.
from a well-sourced Wiki article on the topic: (I lost the link.)
The Constitution does not define the phrase natural-born citizen, and various opinions have been offered over time regarding its precise meaning. The Congressional Research Service has stated that the weight of scholarly legal and historical opinion indicates that the term means one who is entitled under the Constitution or laws of the United States to U.S. citizenship "at birth" or "by birth," including any child born "in" the United States, even to alien parents (other than to foreign diplomats serving their country), the children of United States citizens born abroad, and those born abroad of one citizen parent who has met U.S. residency requirements.[1]
bold and italics mine.
unc70
(6,119 posts)The CRO report is a political document with "bipartisan" support, in part because that line of thought was supportive of both Obama, McCain, and others as qualified as natural born.
It is slightly better than John Yoo's arguments and certainly better than those of several University of Chicago "scholars" who have argued for jus sanguinis as being required in addition to jus soli to qualify as natural born. Some of these socalled scholars even claim that McCain is natural born while Obama is not.
The Wiki articles regarding these topics have been a battleground for the past five years.
frogmarch
(12,158 posts)consider people like me foreign-born naturalized American citizens. It's really pointless to argue about it. I'm 68 and set in my ways, so I'll keep on calling myself a natural born American, despite having been born in the boonies of India.
Thanks for the information, though. Not life-altering in my case, but interesting just the same.
unc70
(6,119 posts)Given your age, you would have been subject to roughly the same laws and rulings as Bellei.
I assume you probably moved to the US before you were 18.
I would just claim you as a fellow citizen, period. Once a citizen, not to be taken from you.
This is all some really murky corners of US law. Almost as strange as having 1/3 of US citizens qualifying as Italian citizens, many able to vote in Italian elections even though neither they nor their parents have ever set foot in Italy!
unc70
(6,119 posts)Don't know your age, but did you have to take any action following your birth to ensure your citizenship? With only one parent a citizen, I suspect that further actions were required by statute.
unc70
(6,119 posts)She probably ran into special cases particularly this one from State Dept summary of current law.
The child was the parent's legitimate child or was legitimated by the parent before the child's 16th birthday (children born out of wedlock who were not legitimated before their 16th birthday do not derive United States citizenship through their father); and
newspeak
(4,847 posts)Of course, it was the repugs wanting to get rid of that silly rule.
I think some of the clueless either think hawaii isn't part of the united states or they're still clinging to their talking heads that obama was born in africa; even though, his legal BC states otherwise. Of course, you've got the bigots who think he can't be president because he's a mulatto.
Crazy is what crazy says.
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)There's no reason to accommodate crazy people. It's not as if it is a controversial part of the Constitution.
MADem
(135,425 posts)I've no desire for someone along the lines of President Ahhhhhhnuld...and we could have ended up with him, had the rule not been in place.
People who don't have the birth credentials do very well in the Cabinet, if they have any skills at all.
SemperEadem
(8,053 posts)doesn't matter where he's from--if you asked most of the birthers to produce documents about their great grand parents, considering the age of a lot of them, they'd find that a lot of them weren't born here either. That brings us back to the statement "so? His great grandfather isn't running for president.. he's not running for much of anything, seeing that he's quite dead and has been dead for some time."
Tx4obama
(36,974 posts)Mitt's 'FATHER' was born in Mexico.
Obama's 'father' was born in Kenya and not a US citizen. This what the birthers are filing ballot challenges on President Obama on - they are saying that Obama is not illegible to run for president because they believe that he is not a 'natural born citizen' due to his father being born in Kenya and not being a US citizen.
So, this has nothing really to do with Mitt's grandfather - just Mitt's 'father'.
Ter
(4,281 posts)Both his parents were born in Cuba.
freshwest
(53,661 posts)This is indeed bigotry and stupidity, which aren't really two separate things.
SemperEadem
(8,053 posts)Last edited Sun Mar 25, 2012, 07:22 PM - Edit history (2)
in fact, the man has served in public office, having been born in Mexico. So, the point is moot as to his country of birth.
it makes no difference where their parents were born--if Romney was born in the US, then he's US citizen.
fishwax
(29,149 posts)Unless McCain and Obama have been the only ones running for president these last five years
Ter
(4,281 posts)n/t
fishwax
(29,149 posts)Ter
(4,281 posts)Santorum will be mentioned if he gets the nomination, if I had to guess.
unc70
(6,119 posts)Only two choices for anyone born after 1787 -- be born IN the United States or to be naturalized under uniform rules. McCain falls in that later category. Neither Canal Zone nor Navy base qualify as "IN".
All those Constitutional scholars were mostly responding to Huckabee's birther questions about McCain.
BTW The Act of 1790 is not relevant.
fishwax
(29,149 posts)Children of citizens (in some cases subject to specific conditions) are citizens by birth. I don't think the case against McCain is ultimately convincing, but as you imply the fact that the birthers focused all their attention on Obama again demonstrates their lack of consistency.
unc70
(6,119 posts)If not born in the US ("by birth), then a children born to citizens are citizens "at birth", but they are "naturalized" citizens under current laws defining the uniform rules.
There was a fair amount of discussion regarding McCain initially from Huckabee supporters including controversy regarding his birth certificate and whether he was born on base, in the Canal Zone, or in a hospital yards outside the CZ. I posted some here and a salon.com at the time.
I agree the most fanatical birther efforts have been regarding Obama. It is fueled in part because of various groups since 1787 trying to redefine natural born from it's clear and simple meaning in the Constitution. Even here on DU.
Of course, race provides a lot of the energy to the birthers.
fishwax
(29,149 posts)jus soli citizenship and jus sanguinis.
Even the most detailed attempt to establish that McCain is ineligible doesn't make that distinction, but rather relies on a gap in the law that covered children born outside of the United States to citizen parents at the time.
At the time of Mr. McCains birth, the relevant law granted citizenship to any child born to an American parent out of the limits and jurisdiction of the United States. Professor Chin said the term limits and jurisdiction left a crucial gap. The Canal Zone was beyond the limits of the United States but not beyond its jurisdiction, and thus the law did not apply to Mr. McCain.
unc70
(6,119 posts)Jus sanguinis citizenship is not a Constitutional concept or term, and never has been.
Jus soli (by birth IN the United States, same as natural born), existing citizen of a State when Constitution was ratified, or naturalized under uniform rules. Those uniform rules are the only way to enact jus sanguinis as one type of naturalization. Naturalized citizens are the only group excluded from the presidency.
There is a very strong legal argument that the CZ was never part of the US and remained part of Panama leased to the US.
fishwax
(29,149 posts)That was my point. There is no specification that natural born citizen refers only to jus soli.
unc70
(6,119 posts)Constitution bestows citizenship by being born in US, jus soli by another name -- natural born.
The discussions at the time about the natural born qualification were not confused about who was being excluded.
The citizenship accorded under statutes regarding children of citizens is the same as that granted to others under related statutes.
fishwax
(29,149 posts)That's not specified in the constitution, it has never been established by legislation or the courts, and it is hardly clear that it was the intent of the framers (and, indeed, there is considerable evidence to suggest that the framers felt "natural born" to include jus sanguinis).
There are some interesting and challenging arguments that can be made that "natural born citizen" refers only to jus soli, but they are not ultimately convincing (imo -- ianal), nor are they apparently accepted by the majority of scholars. Quoting from a Congressional Research Report (warning: pdf) that came out last year:
I suppose one can also make arguments--and some still do--that natural born actually means born in the U.S. to citizen parents, but these are yet more suspect.
unc70
(6,119 posts)I agree it is not settled in the Supreme Court, but this CRO report reads little better than the one by John Yoo and requires the addition of concepts outside the Constitution.
Many of these arguments are by those trying to either justify jus sanguinis as natural born or to require jus singuinis in addition to jus soli in order to qualify as natural born.
unc70
(6,119 posts)What argument do you find that's supports in the Constitution that natural born means anything other than jus soli? Or that natural born includes jus sanguinis?
ETA How do you reconcile jus sanguinis being part of natural born in light of Rogers v Bellei?
fishwax
(29,149 posts)Under English law, people born to a father who was the king's subject was a "natural born" subject even if he was born outside the king's realm. That had been true for centuries by the drafting of the constitution. I think the act of 1790 also illuminates the framer's intent, since many of the framers were in that first congress and since the term natural born citizen had never been explicitly defined in U.S. law prior to that. I don't see any distinction in "natural born" between that which is bestowed by blood or by geography. I don't buy the arguments that the distinction holds weight wrt "natural born." Naturalization is a process which by definition confers citizenship to someone who was not a citizen at birth.
"Minority of framers wanted jus sanguinis, outvoted"
I'm not sure that's accurate, and at any rate it still doesn't specify jus soli in the finished document. But Congress had the authority to determine citizenship, and in the very first congress they defined natural born citizen to include jus sanguinis.
unc70
(6,119 posts)The acts of 1790 and 1795 together make a strong statement against jus sanguinis being part of natural born.
The Act of 1790 is the only use of the term "natural born" in legislation. It is often cited to support framers intent to include jus sanguinis in their definition of natural born. What that argument fails to account for is the impact of the Act of 1795 which explicitly repeals the one of 1790 and uses only the term citizen, not natural born citizen.
If one finds intent by the use of natural born in 1790, one must also find intent in 1795. Then, they repealed the earlier act with its use of "natural born". They could easily have granted natural born to some but not all cases covered under the new replacement act. But at this first opportunity to make such distinction, they chose not. If one believes that natural born status can be acquired by legislation, then the only time such legislation was in force was from 1790 to 1795.
If one believes as I do that natural born is acquired only by birth in the US and that the act if 1790 was ill formed, whether deliberately or by accident, then such error was corrected at the earliest opportunity in 1795 and not repeated since.
So it flows that in neither case is there support for the argument that natural born can mean anything except jus soli and only that.
fishwax
(29,149 posts)The argument that "natural born" must not include jus sanguinis because the clause doesn't mention jus sanguinis would carry more weight if it weren't also equally true that the clause also doesn't mention jus soli. The established understanding of "natural born (subject)" at the time and place the constitution was drafted included both jus sanguinis and jus soli. Nothing in the constitution or in any law passed since suggests that the natural born clause intends something different from that. So absent any evidence to the contrary, I think the argument that "natural born citizen" obviously excludes jus sanguinis is not compelling.
If one believes as I do that natural born is acquired only by birth in the US and that the act if 1790 was ill formed, whether deliberately or by accident, then such error was corrected at the earliest opportunity in 1795 and not repeated since.
The act of 1795 revokes the act of 1790 because it makes significant changes to the naturalization process. (Again, by definition, naturalization confers citizenship to those who did not have citizenship at birth.) It does not specifically address the issue of natural born citizenship. Affirming that they are citizens does not suggest that they cannot also be natural born citizens. If they had wanted to correct that, it would have been very simple to do so. (And could have been done before 1795.) They didn't then, and never have since. Not when the act of 1795 was revoked in 1798 or when the 1798 act was revoked in 1802.
unc70
(6,119 posts)Last edited Tue Mar 27, 2012, 03:04 PM - Edit history (3)
Since you seem to be arguing that by birth and at birth bestow the same natural born citizenship, the how do you deal with Rogers v Bellei (1971)?
How do you deal with the fact that citizenship at birth statutes have nearly always required further actions to complete the naturalization process?
ETA Link to discussion of Bellei and its implications.
http://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/llr/vol5/iss3/4
fishwax
(29,149 posts)The Bellei case involves the first sentence of the 14th amendment, which the court ruled did not apply to Bellei. The sentence in question reads: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside." The amendment was designed to protect the citizenship of African Americans and makes no attempt to address the definition of "natural born citizen." It should be clear that saying All A are C ("A are citizens" does not in any way imply that Not A is not C ("not A are not citizens" much less that "Not A are Not X" ("not A are not natural born citizens" . The Bellei case doesn't address the definition of natural born citizen (though there is a dissenting opinion which suggests children born abroad may not qualify).
"How do you deal with the fact that citizenship at birth statutes have nearly always required further actions to complete the naturalization process?"
It isn't a naturalization process, because those citizens are citizens at birth. The extra actions (such as reporting the birth to the state department or registering the birth certificate with an embassy) provide proof of that citizenship.
unc70
(6,119 posts)JBoy
(8,021 posts)Better Believe It
(18,630 posts)LongTomH
(8,636 posts)bluedigger
(17,087 posts)as in "not White Christians/true Americans".
etherealtruth
(22,165 posts)I can't even laugh about this because it is simply based on non-white-non-christian prejudice.
Idiots
cindyperry2010
(846 posts)ehrnst
(32,640 posts)freshwest
(53,661 posts)If that happens, they'll find out we're all like Obama said he is, a 'Heinz 57.'
Who will decide what's Amurikan then?
I think native Americans might weigh in on this timely subject.
Okay, just putting it out there. Good OP.
Better Believe It
(18,630 posts)whistler162
(11,155 posts)Is he jumping up and down yelling "HEY my father was born in Italy and grew up there for a few years."
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)Rozlee
(2,529 posts)Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Woodrow Wilson, and Herbert Hoover. Their parents were from England, Ireland or Canada. But, oh! Those aren't "brown" or "black" countries.
SmileyRose
(4,854 posts)I admit it.
Since Santorum declared I've been waiting for a post where we could all put "Santorum" and "Oily Taint" in the same subject line in 712 different threads.
obxhead
(8,434 posts)If he was a "normal" Christian I doubt they would be asking.
BattyDem
(11,075 posts)It doesn't matter where your father was born. If YOU were born the US (as both Mittens and Obama were), you are a citizen. The Fourteenth Amendment is very clear: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."
WHAT PART OF THAT DON'T THEY UNDERSTAND?!?
juajen
(8,515 posts)This is due to a statement his African grandmother made, probably in error because of language difficulties or translation. The explanation is rather convoluted.
RZM
(8,556 posts)His father was born a citizen. Both of Mitt's grandparents were US citizens, so when George was born in Mexico, they had to immediately designate whether they wanted him considered a Mexican or American citizen. They chose American citizenship for him.
So even though George wasn't born in the US, he was born a citizen to citizen parents. Same as Tim Tebow (Philippines) and Mike Judge (Ecuador). You still get to be a citizen from birth if your citizen parents have you while they are living/working abroad.
BattyDem
(11,075 posts)When you tell them Obama's mother was a citizen and it doesn't matter where he was born because her citizenship means he was also a citizen at birth, they go on and on about the whole "US soil" thing. The funny thing is ... the Romney family had their lawyers investigate the citizenship question years ago when George Romney ran for President.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/danielfreedman/2011/04/12/romney-to-trump-obama-doesnt-need-a-birth-certificate/
Of course, facts don't matter to birthers. It's funny how they never minded the fact that John McCain wasn't born in the US!
RZM
(8,556 posts)BattyDem
(11,075 posts)My point was that they were willing to accept that explanation of the law without question. Yet when other, equally valid explanations of the law prove the citizenship of people who are a different race or religion, they refuse to accept the facts.
RZM
(8,556 posts)It's naive to expect consistency and logic.
BattyDem
(11,075 posts)gejohnston
(17,502 posts)As long as your parents are they register you with the State Department, you are a natural born citizen. The only difference is that instead of a US birth certificate, you will have a "US citizen born abroad." Depending on the country, you may be a dual citizen. The kids of some of my former co workers have those. My niece was born on Okinawa. If the navy base McCain was born at was in the Canal Zone, it would be the same as being born in the US.
http://travel.state.gov/law/family_issues/birth/birth_593.html
RZM
(8,556 posts)At the time, it was one or the other - no dual citizenship. They had to decide whether George Romney would be a US citizen or a Mexican citizen. They chose US citizenship for him. His citizenship is as legally ironclad as mine. And I was born in Ohio so there's not much question there
unc70
(6,119 posts)The exact meaning of natural born has never been settled by Supreme Court.
What that link describes is citizen at birth base on rules for naturalization (citizen parents in this case). It does not touch the issue of natural born.
Rogers v Bellei actually denies protections under the 14th to someone born abroad.
Navy base is not part of US regarding citizenship by birth location.
Doc Holliday
(719 posts)I too was born in the Canal Zone-- Coco Solo NAS, in fact. The only time the question of my citizenship ever came up was years later when I was in the service, trying to get a Top Secret security clearance. My birthplace came up in the background check, but since I hadn't lived in the CZ past the age of 18 months, it was a non-issue.
unc70
(6,119 posts)No question about citizenship if born later, but not natural born citizen. Sorry you can't be President.
bleever
(20,616 posts)Don't they mean "assembled"?
Enrique
(27,461 posts)Liberalynn
(7,549 posts)never ceases to astound me.
Better Believe It
(18,630 posts)Liberalynn
(7,549 posts)progressoid
(49,999 posts)Mitt Romney has decried what he has called the awful practice of polygamy and has never visited the colony, even though several dozen of his cousins continue to live there.
http://articles.boston.com/2012-01-31/news/31009233_1_mitt-romney-george-romney-romney-story
Crowman1979
(3,844 posts)Motown_Johnny
(22,308 posts)does the same thing Hawaii does. If Rmoney has to ask for a birth certificate he will get that same green certificate of live birth that Pres. Obama first presented but was not good enough.
NICO9000
(970 posts)Now THOSE would be interesting!
Better Believe It
(18,630 posts)PatrynXX
(5,668 posts)o_O lol. too funny.
so if John McCain who was born in Panama, I'd assume they'd be up doing the same thing.
PatrynXX
(5,668 posts)Will boggle the mind if any of the actual Christian RIght will show up at the polls in November. If Ron's running it's gonna be huge...
Now if this was on Dem site, it wouldn't matter quite as much...
MADem
(135,425 posts)He wasn't--he was a big guy, but he was born in Mexico!
fightforfreedom123
(87 posts)Before Eisenhower became president, birthers went after him because they thought he was jewish.
Ron Paul is the only Republican candidate, under birther rules that is a Natural Born Citizen.
underpants
(182,879 posts)35 years old - check
Born in the US - check
Lived in the US for 14 years ----mmm not really. He was in Europe as late as 1945, there are pictures. I guess they considered any place he lived a "military base" but it always struck me as odd. Anyone who would have brought this up was probably met with "Shut up! This is IKE!"
Actually Ike's parents were JEhovah's Witnesses. Ike was baptized while in office - in a Presbyterian church
34.Dwight D. Eisenhower Presbyterian[84] Eisenhower's religious upbringing is the subject of some controversy, due to the conversion of his parents to the "Bible Student" movement, the forerunner of the Jehovah's Witnesses, in the late 1890s. Originally, the family belonged to the River Brethren, a Mennonite sect.[84] According to the Eisenhower Presidential Library, there is no evidence that Eisenhower participated in either the Bible Student group or the Jehovah Witnesses, and there are records that show he attended Sunday school at a River Brethren church.[84]
Until he became president, Eisenhower had no formal church affiliation, a circumstance he attributed to the frequent moves demanded of an Army officer. He was baptized, confirmed, and became a communicant in the Presbyterian church in a single ceremony February 1, 1953, just 12 days after his first inauguration, the only president to undergo any of these rites while in office.[84]
Eisenhower was instrumental in the addition of the words "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance in 1954 (an act highly promoted by the Knights of Columbus), and the 1956 adoption of "In God We Trust" as the motto of the USA, and its 1957 introduction on paper currency. He composed a prayer for his first inauguration, began his Cabinet meetings with silent prayer, and met frequently with a wide range of religious leaders while in office.[84]
His presidential library includes an inter-denominational chapel in which he, his wife Mamie, and his firstborn son (who died in childhood) are buried.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_affiliations_of_Presidents_of_the_United_States
RZM
(8,556 posts)lonestarnot
(77,097 posts)tanyev
(42,613 posts)Bucky
(54,065 posts)There's only one thing more American than Mitt Romney... and that's us kicking his ass in November. I mean, just because he's manifestly unqualified to be president doesn't mean he's actually unqualified to be president.
nadinbrzezinski
(154,021 posts)They are bipartisan!
AndyTiedye
(23,500 posts)If the factory in Stepford did guys, they'd look like Mittens.
Redneck Democrat
(58 posts)kwassa
(23,340 posts)trying to pass as an American, indeed!
caseymoz
(5,763 posts)Last edited Sun Mar 25, 2012, 06:20 PM - Edit history (1)
I bet the Mitt Romney birther movement is forgotten within two weeks.
Javaman
(62,534 posts)I know, it was a US base.
But that doesn't matter or should matter to the insane.
unc70
(6,119 posts)They chased McCain's birth certificate, too.
Cleita
(75,480 posts)He actually was born in a foreign country.
Also, don't those nut cases do any research? It doesn't matter where Mitt's parents were born as long as he was born here. Now there is a load of grumbling about undocumented aliens having kids here, so let's just say if his dad was born in Mexico and entered this country legally, it still doesn't matter and if his mother was born here, it wouldn't matter if his father wasn't legally here. I mean they are truly idiots.