Sure you're one, you believe in that corrupt system don't you?Coito ergo sum wrote:dupe

Sure you're one, you believe in that corrupt system don't you?Coito ergo sum wrote:dupe
Svartalf wrote:Sure you're one, you believe in that corrupt system don't you?Coito ergo sum wrote:dupe
You want to bet on the outcome of the court cases?Seth wrote:Your position is still wrong.Coito ergo sum wrote:Dude - for the love of fucking god damn mother fucking Christ.
Pay the FUCK attention.
This is NOT my position: "...your notion that "natural born citizen" is synonymous with "citizen"..."
Not - NOT
NOT
Fucking NOT!
My fucking position.
Natural born citizen is not the same as "citizen." Got it? Got fucking IT!!!!!?????
Good.
That is not in accord with the plain meaning of the words. If they wanted to include a requirement having to do with the citizenship of the parents, they would have said so. They didn't. You cited the rules of statutory construction, and that's one of them.Seth wrote:Nope. A "citizen" can be either a "citizen by birth" or a "naturalized citizen" and may be a "natural born citizen" if, but only if both of that person's parents are US citizens.A "citizen" can be (a) natural born, or (b) naturalized.
He was never naturalized. Naturalized means that he was naturalized by the Immigration department or rendered a citizen by act of Congress.Seth wrote:
Yup, and therefore he is a "citizen," but he's not a "natural born citizen." He's a naturalized citizen.A Congressman need only be a fucking god damn motherfucking "citizen" because a Congressman can be fucking god damn mother fucking naturalized.
Other than pulling that out of your ass, you have no constitutional provision, no interpretive case law, and no federal statute that supports your cock-a-mamy theory. Without it being a defined term in the Constitution, and without there being any basis for claiming it says anything but its plain meaning, it means what it says - a person was naturally born a citizen. Anyone not naturally born a citizen must be naturalized. That's why it's 'naturalized' instead of natural born.Seth wrote:Right. And neither can a citizen with one parent who is not a US citizen, which is what status as a "natural born citizen" requires.The word "natural born citizen" is used instead of just "citizen" because a "naturalized" citizen can't be fucking President.
There is no conflict.
Citizens that are not natural-ized are natural born. It's as simple as that.Seth wrote:Wrong. That interpretation defies logic because all persons are "natural born persons"When there is no special definition in the law for a term, the term is construed according to its plain meaning. That is one of the primary maxims of legislative drafting and legislative interpretation. The plain meaning of natural born, means that you popped out of chick's vagina - i.e. that you were "existing in or caused by nature; not made or caused by humankind." See - that's different than "naturalized" because a "naturalized" citizen is someone who fucking well became a motherfucking god damn citizen "made or caused by humankind." Born means that you were born.
Dude -- something is fucking wrong with you.Seth wrote:
and no one at the time of the drafting of the Constitution even considered "created by man" as a possibility for a child, so that's a vacuous argument.
Stop saying it has a separate meaning from citizen or naturalized citizen. Of course it fucking does. We have already agreed on that.Seth wrote:
"Natural born" has specific political meaning separate and distinct from "citizen" or from "citizen by birth" or "naturalized citizen."
Oh, you rely on English common law:Seth wrote:
As the Vattel theory points out, the status of a child under English Common Law was highly complex and highly dependent not only on where the child was born physically, but also to whom the child was born, and what the political status of both of the parents were when the child was born.
Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England supports my position. I cited that above. The Vattel Theory has no application in our law or English common law.Seth wrote:
Some children were citizens but not subjects, some were subjects, and which was which is a complex political matter determined by the political affiliations of the parents and the location where the child was born. So, a child could be born to two British subjects anywhere inside a British Empire territory and would be a British subject with duties to the King of England and the English state but could also be a CITIZEN of, say, India and not the United Kingdom. Or, a child could be born to a British subject father and an Indian mother and be a British subject, or born to a British subject mother and an Indian citizen who is not a British subject and NOT be a British subject but still be an Indian citizen because under English law, status as a British subject devolves from the father, not the mother (or did at the time, which is what's important).
You're just wrong about English common law.Seth wrote:
So, the Vattel theory says that in importing the concepts and understandings of British common law regarding citizenship, the Founders first rejected the "subject" classification and transformed it into the "citizen" concept, and then used the notions of national affiliation and loyalty to the United States as considerations in limiting qualification for President to only those citizens who were born of two US citizen parents, in order to reduce the potential for foreign influence upon the President, something that was well known in English history as the English monarchs commonly married off their crown princes and princesses to foreign princes and princesses precisely in order to bind the two nations together through foreign influence of the spouse upon the other.
It's evident that the Founders chose to avoid this potential by restricting the Presidency to natural born citizens, as distinguished from ordinary citizens by birth or naturalized citizens who might have foreign parents who could exercise undue influence.
According to William Blackstone, the meaning and understanding OF THE TIME was precisely as I described. Do you have any actual citation that is part of US law or English common law?Seth wrote:
There is when you view the phrase according to the meanings and understandings OF THE TIME. What you think today is utterly irrelevant. What's important is what the FOUNDERS understood the words "natural born" to mean, and that meaning is not, evidently, what you think it is.Thus, natural born citizen means that you popped out of a woman's vagina as a citizen. Other, manmade, means were not required to make you a citizen.
There is nothing in the plain language of the fucking words that refers to the fucking parents. There is nothing in the word natural, or born, or citizen, that states or implies anything to do with their parents.
You haven't. Every bit of US law you cited and English common law supports my position.Seth wrote:That's what I've been doing.Now, if you feel like claiming that there is a specialized legal meaning to "natural born citizen" that is not in accord with the plain fucking meaning of the words, then please, by all means show it.
That makes my point, since a Citizen can be either (a) natural born, or (b) naturalized. No other terms are used because no other terms are necessary.Seth wrote:No, I said several times that in the Constitution itself only two terms are used: "Citizen" and "Natural born citizen."Note - you claimed that there were two disparate terms int he Constitution -- one was "born citizen" and the other was "natural born citizen." You claimed that. You're fucking wrong about that. Admit it.
Hey -- please check my previous mother fucking post.Seth wrote:
That fact alone proves that the two terms are not synonymous.
Naturalization is. Article 1, Section 8. They naturalize citizens according to Congress' power to do so.Seth wrote:
Note that "naturalized citizen" is NOT used in the Constitution anywhere,
No, you're allegation is spurious, because the Constitution most certainly does use the term naturalization. You only naturalize citizens - there is no other use for the word.Seth wrote: so your reference to that term is spurious.
Obviously - nobody said they were the same.Seth wrote: There are two terms used, and they are, according to the canons of statutory interpretation, different terms.
You can't be this dim.Seth wrote: Since your argument that "natural born" means "not artificially created"
Of course there was -- why the fuck would they put the power to naturalize citizens in Article 1, Section 8, if the "Founders" didn't think that you could make people citizens by naturalization?Seth wrote:
is spurious because there was no such thought in the minds of the Founders,
Not it isn't, because they do mention Naturalization in Article 1 Section 8.Seth wrote:
it means something else. Since the Constitution does not itself define or mention "naturalized citizen" that too is surplusage.
Right - All natural born citizens are citizens, but not all citizens are natural born. Those that aren't are naturalized in accordance with Article 1, Section 8.Seth wrote:
There are citizens and natural born citizens. That's it.
Not relevant -- it's crucial. If you're naturalized in accordance with Article 1 Section 8, you can't be president.Seth wrote:
How one becomes a citizen is not really relevant,
Where the Constitution uses the term Citizen, it includes both natural born and naturalized citizens. There is never a thing that a naturalized citizen can do that a natural born citizen can't. So, of course that's why the Constitution just uses the word citizen when one can be either.Seth wrote:
and I only include it for clarity. Under the Constitution, a naturalized citizen is still just referred to as a citizen, not as a naturalized citizen.
That's because, dummy, a Citizen can be either natural born or naturalized, and either kind of Citizen can be a Senator.Seth wrote: In the qualifications for Senator it says one must be a citizen for nine years prior to taking office. It does not say, but merely implies that a naturalized citizen is eligible, and that is true.
Right - no naturalized citizens. That's the only other kind of citizen.Seth wrote:
But the qualification for President excludes everyone except a natural born citizen from eligibility,
No, the Vattell theory is a Swiss legal scholar writing his opinion on the "Law of Nations" which he based on the Civil Law concept derived from the french and roman law.Seth wrote:
and since the Constitution itself does not define the term, as the Supreme Court said, it's necessary to look elsewhere for the original meaning, understanding and intent of the phrase, and the most compelling evidence in the record contemporaneous with the drafting of the document that points to the understandings of the Founders and ratifiers is the Vattel theory.
But it's the "plain meaning" of the words in 1797, not their plain meaning today. And that is the nut of the Vattel theory argument; that the meaning of "natural born" meant something different from what you claim it means today. And this is precisely why a valid legal controversy exists that makes the case ripe for federal court consideration.Coito ergo sum wrote:
That is not in accord with the plain meaning of the words. If they wanted to include a requirement having to do with the citizenship of the parents, they would have said so. They didn't. You cited the rules of statutory construction, and that's one of them.
So you say. First of all it's not my theory, it's a theory that's been floating around for 230 years. I'm just pointing out the theory involved. Second, your notion of "plain meaning" is not determinative. Only the plain meaning to the people who ratified the Constitution, or who wrote it, is important. And that's why it's important for the courts to determine the legislative intent involved.Other than pulling that out of your ass, you have no constitutional provision, no interpretive case law, and no federal statute that supports your cock-a-mamy theory. Without it being a defined term in the Constitution, and without there being any basis for claiming it says anything but its plain meaning, it means what it says - a person was naturally born a citizen. Anyone not naturally born a citizen must be naturalized. That's why it's 'naturalized' instead of natural born.
Cite your authority for it meaning the same thing. You can't. You have none. There is not a single case or regulation that says that "citizen by birth" and "natural born citizen" are synonymous."Citizen by birth" however is the same thing as natural born. Cite your authority for it meaning something different.
Seth wrote:
As the Vattel theory points out, the status of a child under English Common Law was highly complex and highly dependent not only on where the child was born physically, but also to whom the child was born, and what the political status of both of the parents were when the child was born.
"Subjects" =/= "citizens" under English Common Law, so no, I don't lose. The details of that argument can be found in the previously cited briefs. One can be a citizen of an English protectorate without being a subject of the British crown,Oh, you rely on English common law:
Slam dunk: "Natural-born subjects are such as are born within the dominions of the crown of England" - William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, the definitive recitation of English Common Law at the time of the Revolution. http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders ... hips1.html
You lose on English Common Law.
Seth wrote:
Some children were citizens but not subjects, some were subjects, and which was which is a complex political matter determined by the political affiliations of the parents and the location where the child was born. So, a child could be born to two British subjects anywhere inside a British Empire territory and would be a British subject with duties to the King of England and the English state but could also be a CITIZEN of, say, India and not the United Kingdom. Or, a child could be born to a British subject father and an Indian mother and be a British subject, or born to a British subject mother and an Indian citizen who is not a British subject and NOT be a British subject but still be an Indian citizen because under English law, status as a British subject devolves from the father, not the mother (or did at the time, which is what's important).
Subject =/= citizen. And you're begging the question, which is, as the Supreme Court said, that the meaning of "natural born citizen" cannot be found by recourse to the Constitution itself and we must therefore find it elsewhere, and because the meanings and understandings of the Founders who wrote and ratified the document control what the term means, the contemporary recitation of the Law of Nations by Vattel, which was a common and popular work at the time with which the Founders and Ratifiers were familiar, sheds light on what the original intent of the Founders was. It may be that it's not conclusive, but that's what makes it a controversy ripe for decision by the federal courts.Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England supports my position. I cited that above. The Vattel Theory has no application in our law or English common law.
I have done so previously. Your ill-tempered eruptions do not convince me of the need to do so again. Since you have lost control of yourself and are resorting to personal invective, I'm done discussing the subject with you.If you have a source other than William Blackstone, and other than your anus and colon, please cite it.
[/quote]That's because, dummy, ...
And, what qualified you as a citizen at time of their birth back thenmistermack wrote:Any fool can see what "natural born citizen" was meant to mean.
It meant someone who qualified as a citizen at the time of their birth.
As that clearly applies to Obama, this issue is a dead duck.
The English common law, which you acknowledged applied, a la William Blacksone's Commentaries on the Laws of England.Seth wrote:Cite your authority for it meaning the same thing. You can't. You have none. There is not a single case or regulation that says that "citizen by birth" and "natural born citizen" are synonymous."Citizen by birth" however is the same thing as natural born. Cite your authority for it meaning something different.
Seth wrote:
As the Vattel theory points out, the status of a child under English Common Law was highly complex and highly dependent not only on where the child was born physically, but also to whom the child was born, and what the political status of both of the parents were when the child was born.
"Subjects" =/= "citizens" under English Common Law, so no, I don't lose. The details of that argument can be found in the previously cited briefs. One can be a citizen of an English protectorate without being a subject of the British crown, [/quote]Oh, you rely on English common law:
Slam dunk: "Natural-born subjects are such as are born within the dominions of the crown of England" - William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, the definitive recitation of English Common Law at the time of the Revolution. http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders ... hips1.html
You lose on English Common Law.
Seth wrote:
Some children were citizens but not subjects, some were subjects, and which was which is a complex political matter determined by the political affiliations of the parents and the location where the child was born. So, a child could be born to two British subjects anywhere inside a British Empire territory and would be a British subject with duties to the King of England and the English state but could also be a CITIZEN of, say, India and not the United Kingdom. Or, a child could be born to a British subject father and an Indian mother and be a British subject, or born to a British subject mother and an Indian citizen who is not a British subject and NOT be a British subject but still be an Indian citizen because under English law, status as a British subject devolves from the father, not the mother (or did at the time, which is what's important).
Subject =/= citizen. And you're begging the question, which is, as the Supreme Court said, that the meaning of "natural born citizen" cannot be found by recourse to the Constitution itself and we must therefore find it elsewhere, and because the meanings and understandings of the Founders who wrote and ratified the document control what the term means, the contemporary recitation of the Law of Nations by Vattel, which was a common and popular work at the time with which the Founders and Ratifiers were familiar, sheds light on what the original intent of the Founders was. It may be that it's not conclusive, but that's what makes it a controversy ripe for decision by the federal courts.[/quote]Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England supports my position. I cited that above. The Vattel Theory has no application in our law or English common law.
You haven't done so previously. You obfuscate and prevaricate. You continually falsely proclaim that I've propounded positions I don't propound. I am sick and tired of that. That's not "discussion" -- example - when you constantly tell me that I'm wrong for equating "Citizen" with "Natural Born Citizen." I never did that, and I've clarified it for you not only several times, but in very loud and invective terms because you apparently couldn't be arsed stop telling me I said something I didn't. You're either really not getting it, or you're being completely mendacious. Which is it?Seth wrote:I have done so previously. Your ill-tempered eruptions do not convince me of the need to do so again. Since you have lost control of yourself and are resorting to personal invective, I'm done discussing the subject with you.If you have a source other than William Blackstone, and other than your anus and colon, please cite it.
Shame on you. Reported.[/quote]Seth wrote:That's because, dummy, ...
Did anyone ever tell you that you were cute when you're droppin' the mod hammer?hadespussercats wrote:Coito, this post contains personal attacks.
This is a reminder from the staff to play nice.
There's a complete lack of logic there. That conclusion doesn't follow from the arguments at all.Tyrannical wrote:And, what qualified you as a citizen at time of their birth back thenmistermack wrote:Any fool can see what "natural born citizen" was meant to mean.
It meant someone who qualified as a citizen at the time of their birth.
As that clearly applies to Obama, this issue is a dead duck.![]()
Can Congress through legislation change citizenship requirements that alter the intention of the "natural born citizen" clause? Not without a constitutional amendment.
So under that interpretation, Obama's father being a foreigner grants Kenyan citizenship to Obama. Obama is not a US citizen at all because his father was not.
Then citizenship laws were changed, but it can not change the Constitutional requirement. That makes Obama naturalized at birth, but not a natural born citizen as required.
I think that to generate confusion on this one has to add complexity that isn't there.MrJonno wrote:A law which no one actually can work out what it means until a judge rules on it is actually a pretty moronic law
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