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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 2:32 pm 
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Thank you NBC for answering my questions. I appreciate it.

Now from the viewpoint of a military brat, allow me to respectfully disagree.

I believe in the Constitution. I also believe it was intended to be a document that was allowed to grow with the future.

When the Constitution was written, or even with the 14th Amendment was adopted, the thought of US Military personnel being stationed in foreign countries in a non-combatant role would not have been considered. I think there have been "official" military installations that have not been part of annexation since the early part of the 20th century (military historians please correct me if I am wrong). A majority of which sprang up after World War II and the Europeon Reconstruction.

Do we, as Americans, hold such a restrictive view of those three little words that we are going to penalize these children of service members because their parents happened to have been stationed overseas when they were born? Is this something the Framers of our Constitution could ever have envisioned? At the time, there were Ambassadors overseas serving their country. Other than the 1790 Act, is there any other literature or writings on how the children of these Ambassadors were seen in regards to their citizenship?

Is being a Natural Born Citizen restricted to only being born on US Soil, or "subject to the Jurisdiction of the United States"? Or do we need to take a more expansive, common-sense approach and understand the meaning to be "obtaining citizenship at birth".

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 2:41 pm 
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nbc wrote:
Was there a president or presidential candidate who may have been inelligible?


M'CLELLAN NOT ELIGIBLE?; Cornell Professor Questions Whether He Is a Natural Born Citizen. Special to The New York Times. January 14, 1904,

MClellan was born in Dresden to US citizen parents...

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 2:43 pm 
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Jez - It's galling to believe that the "natural born Citizen" clause would deprive the offspring of the most patriotic in our country (those who are sacrificing by serving overseas) to be POTUS. But apparently under an "originalist" view that is the case. If so, while difficult to believe that is the law.,

On the other hand, judges, at least common law judges, exercised common sense and were able to avoid absurd results. The problem arises when people disagree on what "absurd results" are. Justice Thomas, for example, believes that nothing is absurd and that the letter of the constitution has to be honored even if it would lead to another Civil War.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 2:50 pm 
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Jez wrote:
Thank you NBC for answering my questions. I appreciate it.

Now from the viewpoint of a military brat, allow me to respectfully disagree.

I believe in the Constitution. I also believe it was intended to be a document that was allowed to grow with the future.

When the Constitution was written, or even with the 14th Amendment was adopted, the thought of US Military personnel being stationed in foreign countries in a non-combatant role would not have been considered. I think there have been "official" military installations that have not been part of annexation since the early part of the 20th century (military historians please correct me if I am wrong). A majority of which sprang up after World War II and the Europeon Reconstruction.

Do we, as Americans, hold such a restrictive view of those three little words that we are going to penalize these children of service members because their parents happened to have been stationed overseas when they were born? Is this something the Framers of our Constitution could ever have envisioned? At the time, there were Ambassadors overseas serving their country. Other than the 1790 Act, is there any other literature or writings on how the children of these Ambassadors were seen in regards to their citizenship?

Is being a Natural Born Citizen restricted to only being born on US Soil, or "subject to the Jurisdiction of the United States"? Or do we need to take a more expansive, common-sense approach and understand the meaning to be "obtaining citizenship at birth".


You raise some good points and point out the weakness of a strick originalist interpretation of the Constitution. In 1787, the concept of military bases in foreign nations was pretty much unheard of. I think the court might very well conclude that such situation is analogous to Ambassadors serving their country oversees as such persons would also be understood not to owe allegiance to the country of their birth, but the country they are serving. In addition, even under the English common law in 1787, children born on land occupied by the British army, born of British parents, were natural born subjects under the common law. The analogy is close enough that it would not suprise me if a court took such a position. Finally, as NBC and I have argued about in the past, in 1787 in England, children of subjects born oversees were generally referred to as "natural born subjects." We do not have evidence that the framers intended to limit the definition of the term to the common law meaning.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 2:52 pm 
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Sterngard Friegen wrote:
Jez - It's galling to believe that the "natural born Citizen" clause would deprive the offspring of the most patriotic in our country (those who are sacrificing by serving overseas) to be POTUS. But apparently under an "originalist" view that is the case. If so, while difficult to believe that is the law.,



I see serving overseas as nothing particularly patriotic unless they serve as combattants, in which case, the status of children born to such military would likely be different.

The ability to see the world on Uncle Sam's dime hardly makes one necessarily a patriot...

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 2:56 pm 
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Jez wrote:
Thank you NBC for answering my questions. I appreciate it.

Now from the viewpoint of a military brat, allow me to respectfully disagree. ...

I strongly recommend that NBC's position on the ineligibility to become President of children born to the military who are stationed on foreign soil be made part of the final consensus definition of "natural born citizen" among Birfers (and other kinds of deniers of President Obama's eligibility to serve as POTUS). Certainly there are Americans who will be gobsmacked by this definition, but with proper Originalist direction, they will come to see why the children of those who have fought and died for our country are not eligible to its highest office. A large promotional campaign would be very helpful in getting this point across. This could do for Birfistan what 70+ lost law suits have failed to do: it will let them feenish.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 3:02 pm 
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Tolland, that's a great idea...

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 3:03 pm 
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nbc wrote:
Sterngard Friegen wrote:
Jez - It's galling to believe that the "natural born Citizen" clause would deprive the offspring of the most patriotic in our country (those who are sacrificing by serving overseas) to be POTUS. But apparently under an "originalist" view that is the case. If so, while difficult to believe that is the law.,



I see serving overseas as nothing particularly patriotic unless they serve as combattants, in which case, the status of children born to such military would likely be different.

The ability to see the world on Uncle Sam's dime hardly makes one necessarily a patriot...


No, serving in the military does not necessarily make one a patriot. But at the same time, they are serving their country in a way that many cannot or do not. My father was one of those that served this country for 23-1/2 years, and I believe he would take exception that he was "see(ing) the world on Uncle Sam's dime" for that time.

Does it make a difference that my father was in Vietnam? Or that we were in West Germany during the Cold War? Or that we were stationed in North Dakota at a time when the number of nuclear missles in silos made it a target? Or that it was a time of peace?

I disagree that the children of military personnel that are born overseas should be excluded from being able to dream of being President, or even persue that dream, all because of where they were born to their American citizen parents.

Edit: to make it clear, cause my head ain't working

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 3:52 pm 
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TollandRCR wrote:
Jez wrote:
Thank you NBC for answering my questions. I appreciate it.

Now from the viewpoint of a military brat, allow me to respectfully disagree. ...

I strongly recommend that NBC's position on the ineligibility to become President of children born to the military who are stationed on foreign soil be made part of the final consensus definition of "natural born citizen" among Birfers (and other kinds of deniers of President Obama's eligibility to serve as POTUS). Certainly there are Americans who will be gobsmacked by this definition, but with proper Originalist direction, they will come to see why the children of those who have fought and died for our country are not eligible to its highest office. A large promotional campaign would be very helpful in getting this point across. This could do for Birfistan what 70+ lost law suits have failed to do: it will let them feenish.

Indeed most hard core birfers contend that McCain was not eligible (nor is Bobby Jindal). It is the deal with the devil that the Republicans and Democrats made -- to nominate two wholly unqualified candidates -- that led to no one quesioning President Obama's eligibility. At least, that is what the nutcase birfers already assert.

In 2012 unless Jindal runs (for VPOTUS maybe?) the birfer nutcases will howl about President Obama's eligibility but not [chose one] Sarah Palin's = Mittens Romney's = Mike Huckabee's = Newt Gingrich's. Of course, we all know that Palin was born in Canada when her parents got themselves some good Canadian health care. (Irony and hypocrisy alerts!)

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 4:18 pm 
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Sterngard Friegen wrote:
In 2012 unless Jindal runs (for VPOTUS maybe?) the birfer nutcases will howl about President Obama's eligibility but not [chose one] Sarah Palin's = Mittens Romney's = Mike Huckabee's = Newt Gingrich's. Of course, we all know that Palin was born in Canada when her parents got themselves some good Canadian health care. (Irony and hypocrisy alerts!)


No, no. Mitt Romney cannot be eligible. His father George Romney, Republican primary candidate for President of the United States in 1968, was born in Mexico.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 4:23 pm 
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Jez wrote:
Is being a Natural Born Citizen restricted to only being born on US Soil, or "subject to the Jurisdiction of the United States"? Or do we need to take a more expansive, common-sense approach and understand the meaning to be "obtaining citizenship at birth".


The latter, but I also believe that this may need something more than the Supreme Court to achieve this. Their rulings in Wong Kim Ark, their position of Jus Soli and their position as expressed in Rogers v Bellei make it hard to revise the interpretation without such an amendment.

Remember that anytime we argue for a more common sense approach, this is a two-edged sword, where one may argue that children born on US soil to immigrants (legal and illegal) should not be eligible for the presidency either, or citizenship as some are arguing for 'anchor babies'.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 4:35 pm 
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ballantine wrote:
Finally, as NBC and I have argued about in the past, in 1787 in England, children of subjects born oversees were generally referred to as "natural born subjects." We do not have evidence that the framers intended to limit the definition of the term to the common law meaning.


But that may be irrelevant when following the reasoning of Wong Kim Ark, where it was argued that absent a definition, the meaning of the term is to be found in Common Law and Common Law did not include the provision of children born abroad. As such, WKA would be significant precedent to such an interpretation.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 5:14 pm 
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nbc wrote:
ballantine wrote:
Finally, as NBC and I have argued about in the past, in 1787 in England, children of subjects born oversees were generally referred to as "natural born subjects." We do not have evidence that the framers intended to limit the definition of the term to the common law meaning.


But that may be irrelevant when following the reasoning of Wong Kim Ark, where it was argued that absent a definition, the meaning of the term is to be found in Common Law and Common Law did not include the provision of children born abroad. As such, WKA would be significant precedent to such an interpretation.


But Wong Kim Ark looked to the common law not becuase we adopted common law in the Constitution (we did not) but because of the assumption that the common law represented what the framers would have understood such term to mean in 1787. The test is what such term was understood to mean at the time, not what if meant under the common law. If it can be shown that the term was understood to have a commonly accepted meaning at the time broader than the common law, I am aware of no authority that says such meaning should be limited to the common law. While the meaning of English terms in 1787 would be the common law in most instances, such was not necessarily the case. No one argued to the Wong Kim Ark court that such term had a broader meaning under English law and hence it did not address such issue, such issue being irrelevant to the case. What is clear, as Wong Kim Ark says, is that "natural born" included birth within the realm under the common law. According to Justice Scalia, we should look to English law, not just the common law, for the meaning the framers would have placed on terms at such time. For example, what if a term was only defined in an English statute? Would you still cite Wong Kim Ark for the proposition that we need to look only to the common law?


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 5:52 pm 
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ballantine wrote:
nbc wrote:
ballantine wrote:
Finally, as NBC and I have argued about in the past, in 1787 in England, children of subjects born oversees were generally referred to as "natural born subjects." We do not have evidence that the framers intended to limit the definition of the term to the common law meaning.


But that may be irrelevant when following the reasoning of Wong Kim Ark, where it was argued that absent a definition, the meaning of the term is to be found in Common Law and Common Law did not include the provision of children born abroad. As such, WKA would be significant precedent to such an interpretation.


But Wong Kim Ark looked to the common law not becuase we adopted common law in the Constitution (we did not) but because of the assumption that the common law represented what the framers would have understood such term to mean in 1787. The test is what such term was understood to mean at the time, not what if meant under the common law.


That's not what the Court stated based on references to other examples of how terms not defined in the Constitution should be interpreted.

Let me quote

Quote:
The Constitution nowhere defines the meaning of these words, either by way of inclusion or of exclusion, except insofar as this is done by the affirmative declaration that "all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States." In this as in other respects, it must be interpreted in the light of the common law, the principles and history of which were familiarly known to the framers of the Constitution. 88 U. S. 422; Boyd v. United States, 116 U. S. 616, 116 U. S. 624, 116 U. S. 625; Smith v. Alabama, 124 U. S. 465. The language of the Constitution, as has been well said, could not be understood without reference to the common law. Kent Com. 336; Bradley, J., in Moore v. United States,@ 91 U. S. 270, 91 U. S. 274.


Smith v Alabam

Quote:
There is, however, one clear exception to the statement that there is no national common law. The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history. The code of constitutional and statutory construction which therefore is gradually formed by the judgments of this Court, in the application of the Constitution and the laws and treaties made in pursuance thereof, has for its basis so much of the common law as may be implied in the subject, and constitutes a common law resting on national authority. Moore v. United States, 91 U. S. 270.


The Founders, familiar with the principle of Common Law, which limits natural born status to those born on soil, owing allegiance, would not have chosen the term and then decide that they have to take care of children born abroad to US citizens, if they believed that the Constitution already took care of that.

As such, the intent of the Founders when they used the term natural born is clear. That they attempted to extend it through statute is unfortunate but hardly relevant to how the term should be interpreted.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 5:54 pm 
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ballantine wrote:
For example, what if a term was only defined in an English statute? Would you still cite Wong Kim Ark for the proposition that we need to look only to the common law?


You should ask the Supreme Court that question as they suggest that the meaning of terms not defined in the Constitution are to be found in Common Law.

Wong Kim Ark is clear in its ruling

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 5:57 pm 
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ballantine wrote:
No one argued to the Wong Kim Ark court that such term had a broader meaning under English law and hence it did not address such issue, such issue being irrelevant to the case.


Actually Wong Kim Ark did address that issue

Quote:
It thus clearly appears that, during the half century intervening between 1802 and 1855, there was no legislation whatever for the citizenship of children born abroad, during that period, of American parents who had not become citizens of the United States before the act of 1802, and that the act of 1855, like every other act of Congress upon the subject, has, by express proviso, restricted the right of citizenship, thereby conferred upon foreign-born children of American citizens, to those children themselves, unless they became residents of the United States. Here is nothing to countenance the theory that a general rule of citizenship by blood or descent has displaced in this country the fundamental rule of citizenship by birth within its sovereignty.


If the concept was that natural born included children born abroad, then it is clear that such children could not lose their citizenship status because of contrary statutory law. Thus again showing that such children were not covered under the constitutional provision. In fact, in Bellei it is explained that such children are not even 14th Amendment citizens.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 6:16 pm 
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nbc wrote:
ballantine wrote:
nbc wrote:
ballantine wrote:
Finally, as NBC and I have argued about in the past, in 1787 in England, children of subjects born oversees were generally referred to as "natural born subjects." We do not have evidence that the framers intended to limit the definition of the term to the common law meaning.


But that may be irrelevant when following the reasoning of Wong Kim Ark, where it was argued that absent a definition, the meaning of the term is to be found in Common Law and Common Law did not include the provision of children born abroad. As such, WKA would be significant precedent to such an interpretation.


But Wong Kim Ark looked to the common law not becuase we adopted common law in the Constitution (we did not) but because of the assumption that the common law represented what the framers would have understood such term to mean in 1787. The test is what such term was understood to mean at the time, not what if meant under the common law.


That's not what the Court stated based on references to other examples of how terms not defined in the Constitution should be interpreted.


But you are missing that point in why the court has looked to the common law. It looks to the common law to define common law terms that are defined no where else as such is best guess understanding of what such terms meant at the time. Again, the test is what the term was understood in 1787, not what the common law defined such term to mean. For most English terms in the Constitution, the common law provides the only definition the framers would have looked to and hence the common law is left to define the term. Clearly, the evidence was overwelming that "natural born" was understood to include the common law meaning. However, Wong Kim Ark did not address the argument that it was understood to have a broader meaning to the framers. The court addressed in dicta the issue of whether the common law included children of subjects born oversees and indicated it did not and hence such children needed to be naturalized. No one argued that the common understanding of the term included a meaning outside of the common law as such was not the issue of the case and the court never said a naturalized citizen could not be natural born as was the understanding under English law.

You still do not answer my question. What if a term was in the constitutiom was only defined in statute and not the common law? Would you still cite Wong Kim Ark for the proposition that we must define it by the common law. Obviously not. What if a common law term of art was altered by statute and expressly understood by the framers and everyone else in 1787 to be defined by its amended meanings? Would you still look solely to the common law. Again, no court would. You are taking the court's statements about the common law too literally.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 6:30 pm 
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ballantine wrote:
But you are missing that point in why the court has looked to the common law. It looks to the common law to define common law terms that are defined no where else as such is best guess understanding of what such terms meant at the time. Again, the test is what the term was understood in 1787, not what the common law defined such term to mean. For most English terms in the Constitution, the common law provides the only definition the framers would have looked to and hence the common law is left to define the term. Clearly, the evidence was overwelming that "natural born" was understood to include the common law meaning. However, Wong Kim Ark did not address the argument that it was understood to have a broader meaning to the framers. The court addressed in dicta the issue of whether the common law included children of subjects born oversees and indicated it did not and hence such children needed to be naturalized


I showed you why I believe you are wrong about what Wong Kim Ark did and did not address. However, we can go further and look at one of the first naturalization acts which extended citizenship to children born abroad, followed by a law in 1802 which inadvertently denied citizenship to said children. If the term natural born were to have included, as you claim, English statutory law, then you are faced with a problem. How can a mere statute overrule our Constitution.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 6:33 pm 
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ballantine wrote:
You still do not answer my question. What if a term was in the constitutiom was only defined in statute and not the common law? Would you still cite Wong Kim Ark for the proposition that we must define it by the common law. Obviously not. What if a common law term of art was altered by statute and expressly understood by the framers and everyone else in 1787 to be defined by its amended meanings? Would you still look solely to the common law. Again, no court would. You are taking the court's statements about the common law too literally.


You appear to be missing the point here. You are somehow trying to argue that the US should look as to how English statutory law defines terms, rather than look at the common law adopted by the United States.

So, even accepting your 'argument' that the court may look elsewhere if the term is not defined in common law (a position which would clearly benefit from some actual relevant cases), this is a case where common law clearly defined the meaning and thus, under WKA, Smith v Alabama and other rulings of the courts, this is where the meaning of the terms is to be found. Not in statutory law of England.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 6:41 pm 
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Now, considering IANAL, I may be totally reading this wrong and pulling a "birfer" by quote-picking, but I am looking at the Blackstone Commentaries.

part of it reads:
Quote:
When I say, that an alien is one who is born out of the king's dominions, or allegiance, this almost must be understood with some restrictions. The common law indeed stood absolutely so; with only a very few exceptions: so that a particular act of parliment became necessary after the restoration, for the naturalization of children of his majesty's English subject, born in foreign countries during the late troubles. And this maxim of the law proceeded upon a general pinciple, that every mna ownes natural allegiance where he is born, and connot owe two such allegiances, or serve two masters, at once. Yet the children of the king's ambassadors born were always held to be natural subjects; for as the father, though in a foreign country, owes not even a local allegiance to the prince to whom he is sent; so with regard to the son also, he was held (by a kind of postliminium [a restoration of rights upon return to one's country]) to be born under the king of England's allegiance, represented by his father, the ambassador. To encourage also foreign commerce, it was enacted by statute 25 Edw. III. St. 2. that all children born abroad, provided both of their parents wer at the time of the birth in allegiance to the king, and the mother had passed the seas by her husband's consent, might inherit as if born in England; and accordingly it has been so adjudged in behalf of merchants. But by several more modern statutes these restrictions are still farther taken off; so that all children, born out of the king's ligeance, whose fathers were natural-born subject, are now natural-born subjects themselves, to all intents and purposes, without any exception; unless their said fathers were attainted, or banished beyond sea, for high treason; or were then in the service of a prince at enmity with Great Britain.


The statutes in question above were all before 1700. So, by my reading (and again IANAL), wouldn't this mean that being a "natural-born subject" by blood would have become part of the commonly known meaning at the time of the writing of the Constitution?

My understanding of this passage is that there was a natural progression in the understanding of what a natural-born subject was in England. That is began as one born on the soil, progressed to allow for the children of Ambassadors in Service to the King, then to include the children of merchants*, then to any child of a natural born subject as long as the parent was not considered an "enemy of the state" so to speak.

*in modern parlance, this could be seen as those that are on "temporary sojourn" in another country when the child is born.

Since the statues Blackstone discusses were from a time prior to 1700, is it not likely that by the time the Framers had trained in the law and it's application, that natural born would have included the children of subjects (citizens) born overseas? The jus sanguinis principle?

Again everyhing above is my own interpretation and reading, and please forgive my layman's interpretation.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 7:05 pm 
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The statutes in question above were all before 1700. So, by my reading (and again IANAL), wouldn't this mean that being a "natural-born subject" by blood would have become part of the commonly known meaning at the time of the writing of the Constitution?


Note how Blackstone describes how the Common Law was 'absolute' and that explicit statutes were needed?

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 7:12 pm 
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nbc wrote:
Quote:
The statutes in question above were all before 1700. So, by my reading (and again IANAL), wouldn't this mean that being a "natural-born subject" by blood would have become part of the commonly known meaning at the time of the writing of the Constitution?


Note how Blackstone describes how the Common Law was 'absolute' and that explicit statutes were needed?


Yes, he did note that. But is common law so absolute that it never changed from the time of Edward III when the first statute was enacted? Is it not probable that the understood meaning evolved over time as those statues were added and were practiced and become part of the common law itself?

The meaning of words and phrases change over time as usage and a certain understanding of that word and phrase becomes more commonly used.

So between the time of Edward III (1327-77) and the education of those that wrote the Constitution (c. 1700's) it is possible those statutes that were enacted became the Common Law, as they had been in effect for so many generations.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 7:19 pm 
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nbc wrote:
Indeed, it has the power to provide for uniform rules of naturalization but not the power to extend a Constitutional term to people naturalized. Let's not confuse the right to grant citizenship with the right to declare them to be natural born.


Let's not confuse expert opinion with novice opinion.

nbc wrote:
While there are some legal scholars who have attempted to argue that children born abroad to US citizens should be natural born, contemporaneous resources, including the ruling by the dissenting Judge in US v Wong Kim Ark, show that such children, under the findings of WKA would be ineligible to run for president.


I cited legal scholars arguing it in the peer reviewed literature of the field and explaining in an invited essay for a lay audience, plus a judge accepting the argument in it a ruling on a motion for preliminary injunction. I cited a paper by Gabriel Chin arguing McCain is not eligible because:

Although he is now a U.S. citizen, the law in effect in 1936 did not grant him citizenship at birth. Because he was not born a citizen, he is not eligible to the office of president.
http://www.michiganlawreview.org/articl ... itizenship

When legal scholars were debating McCain's eligibility, did any argue that Chin did not go far enough and that McCain would be ineligible even if a citizen at birth? I'm not aware of any, and I've asked that before and no one cited any. So why is that? Was it conspiracy to repress the more persuasive analysis? Is it because no one who publishes in the literature of field understands the issue as well as our friend NBC?

I think it's because NBC is making the same underlying mistake as the birthers. Birthers stand on their own naive readings and refuse to take correction from the experts in the field. They see that the 14'th Amendment says "citizen" and not "natural born citizen" and that the majority opinion in U.S. v. Wong Kim Ark said Wong was a citizen and did not say he was a "natural born citizen". They read the primary sources as affirming their side, and in their minds that trumps anything they hear from scholars who specialize in the subject.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 7:27 pm 
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brygenon wrote:
nbc wrote:
Indeed, it has the power to provide for uniform rules of naturalization but not the power to extend a Constitutional term to people naturalized. Let's not confuse the right to grant citizenship with the right to declare them to be natural born.


Let's not confuse expert opinion with novice opinion.


Which is why the court's rulings are so important and which make the claims by these experts to be so unfortunate. But some may rather accept the words of others without taking the time or effort to validate them. Why does Brygenon insist on looking at the 'experts' when we have the primary sources?

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 7:30 pm 
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brygenon wrote:
I think it's because NBC is making the same underlying mistake as the birthers. Birthers stand on their own naive readings and refuse to take correction from the experts in the field. They see that the 14'th Amendment says "citizen" and not "natural born citizen" and that the majority opinion in U.S. v. Wong Kim Ark said Wong was a citizen and did not say he was a "natural born citizen". They read the primary sources as affirming their side, and in their minds that trumps anything they hear from scholars who specialize in the subject.


If the issue was a naive reading you would not resort to arguments from authority but rather you would spend some time on addressing my arguments.

Until you can show me some arguments, I have to reject your appeal to authority in light of the known arguments raised in Wong Kim Ark and Rogers v Bellei.

But if you need scholars, contemporary ones, then why look to recent researchers rather than those who looked at these issues during the early days of the republic?

Shocking especially when these so called 'experts' appear to be somewhat unfamiliar with the rulings of the court?

So when will Brygenon address what the Court found in US v Wong Kim Ark, or how Blackstone points out that under Common Law tradition, Natural born applied only to those born on soil, or how Binney finds the same, or why Congress felt it necessary to pass a law for something Brygenon believes was already settled by the Constitution?

These are issues that are perhaps to inconvenient to be addressed and it is simpler to rely on 'experts'?

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