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Time to turn to the real issue, 'Does Obama qualify as ‘natural-born'?
4/27/11 | Joe Lynch

Posted on 04/27/2011 7:25:39 PM PDT by westcoastwillieg

Time to turn to the real issue, 'Does Obama qualify as ‘natural-born'?

The issue with Obama’s eligibility not only involves his place of birth but also whether he qualifies as a 'natural-born-citizen'.

After Obama played his 'Trump' card his supporters are trying to divert voters away from the 'natural-born' issue and obfuscate the definition of 'natural-born'.

It is generally believed the Founders considered 'natural-born' to mean born in country to parents who were citizens at the time of the person's birth.

As Holmes said to Watson, "The game is afoot." Attempts have already been made to use 'native-born' interchangeably with 'natural-born' and, as yet, there is no Supreme Court decision nor does the constitution define 'natural-born'.

While Obama has shown his birth certificate it proves that his father was not a citizen but the jury hasn't decided if he qualifies as 'natural-born'.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: birthcertificate; certifigate; citizen; naturalborn; naturalborncitizen; obama
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To: Captain Kirk
A "natural born subject" is not the same thing as a "natural born citizen," as I have irrefutably demonstrated. So you have failed to disprove the fact that the Wong Kim Ark decision did not define "natural born citizen" as "anyone born in the US."

It would have been improper and legally invalid for the Justices in that case to make any such ruling, because the definition of "natural born citizen" was not at issue in the case, and courts are not supposed to make rulings on issues not presented to them by the litigants. That alone proves you utterly wrong.

As for the Chester Arthur issue, you have presented no evidence to prove your case whatsoever. No references. No quotes. Nothing. Just historically incorrect assertions, with no evidence.

You either don't know, or don't have the intellectual honesty to mention, that Chester Arthur was not elected President. He was elected Vice President, and succeeded to the Presidency when President Garfield was assassinated. That fact could be enough by itself to explain why Arthur was not more thoroughly investigated.

However, the fact is that Arthur's eligibility was questioned based on the "natural born citizen" requirement, not based on his father's citizenship, but instead over the suspicion that he might have been born in Canada, or perhaps even Ireland. The charge was made, but no one was able to prove it.

But the ruckus raised over Arthur's place of birth served to deflect any scrutiny over other issues. That should sound familiar. The same thing has happened today, with so much focus on whether or not Obama was born in Hawaii, it has been extremely difficult to get any widespread or mainstream focus on the fact that Obama's father was not a US citizen.

Chester Arthur was born in 1829, although he falsely claimed to have been born in 1830. Arthur's father had become a naturalized US citizen in 1843, decades before Chester was elected Vice President, but 14 years after Chester was born.

The definitive biography on Chester Arthur is “Gentleman Boss” by Thomas Reeves. It’s an exhaustive reference. Many of the blanks in Chester Arthur’s legend were filled in by this book which utilized interviews with family members and authentic documents like the Arthur family Bible. It was a necessary work since old Chester Arthur was a very wily protector of his strange history. He burned all of his papers. (See page 2365.)

From “Gentleman Boss”, page 202 and 203: “…Hinman was hired, apparently by democrats, to explore rumors that Arthur had been born in a foreign country, was not a natural-born citizen of the United States, and was thus, by the Constitution, ineligible for the vice-presidency. By mid-August, Hinman was claiming that Arthur was born in Ireland and had been brought to the United States by his father when he was fourteen. Arthur denied the charge and said that his mother was a New Englander who had never left her native country — a statement every member of the Arthur family knew was untrue.”

Arthur’s mother had lived in Canada with her husband and even had her first child there.

In the Brooklyn Eagle newspaper, an article interviewing Chester Arthur about Hinman’s accusations was published on August 13, 1880. In that article, Chester Arthur defended himself as follows:

“My father, the late Rev. William Arthur, D.D., was of Scotch blood, and was a native of the North of Ireland. He came to this country when he was eighteen years of age, and resided here several years before he was married.”

This was another blatant lie. His father emigrated from Ireland to Canada at the age of 22 or 23. William Arthur didn’t come to the United States until sometime between March 1822 – when his first child was born in Dunham, Canada – and March 1824 – when his second child was born in Burlington, Vermont. The youngest he could have been when he came to Vermont was 26.

On August 16, 1880 Chester Arthur told the Brooklyn Eagle newspaper that at the time of his birth, his father was forty years old. Another blatant lie. His father would have been only thirty-three years old when Chester was born.

In that same article he lied that his father settled in Vermont and reiterated the lie that William came here at the age of eighteen. This age discrepancy was exposed in the August 19, 1880 edition of the Brooklyn Eagle in an article written by Hinman.

It was very convenient for Arthur that Hinman kept the focus on the extraordinary and false claim – that Arthur was born abroad – while the more subtle and true eligibility issue stayed hidden in plain site.

Chester Arthur had something to hide, and his lies prove he knew it, and knew what it was. It was not the location of his birth, because he had been truthful about that. That alone proves you wrong, but let's continue.

He had all of his papers burned which was very odd for a President.

Arthur lied about his mother’s time in Canada. He lied about his father’s time in Canada. He lied about his father’s age plus where and when he got off the boat from Ireland. By obscuring his parents’ personal history he curtailed the possibility that anybody might discover he was born many years before his father had naturalized.

When Chester runs for VP, Hinman comes along essentially demanding to see Chester’s birth certificate to prove he was born in the United States. This causes a minor scandal easily thwarted by Chester, because Chester was born in Vermont…but at the same time, the fake scandal provides cover for the real scandal.

William Arthur was not a naturalized citizen at the time of Chester Arthur’s birth, and therefore Chester Arthur was a British subject at birth and not eligible to be Vice President or President.

Chester Arthur lied about his father’s emigration to Canada and the time his mother spent there married to William. Some sixty years later, Chester lied about all of this and kept his candidacy on track. Back then it would have been virtually impossible to see through this, especially since Arthur’s father had died in 1875 and had been a United States citizen for thirty-two years.

And without knowledge of his father’s time in Canada, or the proper timeline of events, potential researchers in 1880 would have been hard pressed to even know where to start.

And that refutes so utterly and comprehensively, that I am done with this conversation.

101 posted on 04/29/2011 11:56:04 AM PDT by sourcery (If true=false, then there would be no constraints on what is possible. Hence, the world exists.)
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To: jda
So, can anchor babies become POTUS?

Yes. I really, really wish people would not only read the Constitution, but comprehend the very clear and simple language. The 14th Amendment clearly defines who is a citizen.

Section 1. 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.

Notice it doesn't say born in the United States of both a mother and father also born here. It simply says "all persons born...in the United States."

To repeat...the Father of the Constitution, James Madison, said that place of birth is what defines "natural born" in the United States.

Oh, and before you go off on a tangent accusing me of whatever, please understand. I DO NOT -- repeat, do not -- like the situation regarding anchor babies. I would love to see Congress do something to change it. BUT it is what it is at this time. Understanding the Constitution and current law does not mean agreeing with it.

Urging fellow conservatives to stop wasting valuable energy, time and resources on a total loser issue is not the same as agreeing with Obama or the Democrats on anything whatsoever. Got it?

102 posted on 04/29/2011 12:08:08 PM PDT by Wolfstar ("If you would win a man to your cause, first convince him that you are his friend." Abraham Lincoln)
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To: westcoastwillieg

When Obama was very young, he was adopted and his name changed to Barry Soetero. Apparently some time after he came back from Indonesia, his name was changed back to Barack Obama. Also, it appears that his citizenship was changed while in Indonesia and, I guess, changed back.

Would it mke sense to find out how all of this transpired and if has any relevance to the eligibility issue?


103 posted on 04/29/2011 12:15:50 PM PDT by PDGearhead (Obama's lack of citizenship)
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To: Wolfstar

The myopia is incredible!

Not all US citizens are natural born citizens.
Not all children born in the US are natural born citizens.
Not all children born of US citizen parents are natural born citizens.
Only children born in the US of US citizen parents are natural born citizens.

None of this contradicts the 14th Amendment (it doesn’t even use the term NBC) - read it carefully. You’re trying to make it say what it simply does not say.


104 posted on 04/29/2011 12:25:50 PM PDT by jda ("Righteousness exalts a nation . . .")
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To: celtic gal

according to the absolutist view, not this new found nonsense, your husband is a eligible to be president.

consider that Michael Dukakis rand for president with two Greek born parents and not one iota of an issue was there because he was born inside the USA.

This issue is a bigger bs distraction than declaring obama is ineligible because he wears the wrong color shirt.


105 posted on 04/29/2011 1:00:23 PM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: Wolfstar

Please don’t ping me, I have had my say.

Take a look here and thats all I have left to say:

http://naturalborncitizen.wordpress.com/2011/03/29/justice-hugo-black-in-duncan-v-louisiana-indicates-obama-would-not-be-eligible-ineligibility-echoed-by-former-attorney-general-jeremiah-black/


106 posted on 04/29/2011 1:29:18 PM PDT by Danae (Anailnathrach ortha bhais beatha do cheal deanaimha)
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To: sourcery
If Arthur was trying to throw the voters in 1880 off the trail about his father's citizenship status, he wasn't very good at it. He said that his father immigrated in 1818 or 1819 (versus the actual date of 1814). He also said that his father was 40 at the time of his birth (he was actually 33). Big friggin deal!!!

Assuming Americans had relied solely on the information provided by Arthur it wouldn't have lessoned the motivation of Americans to scrutinize his father's citizenship. Again, assuming they had accepted Arthur's version, his father would have had a minimum of ten years to be naturalized before Chester's birth. That's plenty of time to get naturalized and provides plenty of reason for Americans (had they agreed with you) to at least raise the issue!

If Americans accepted your theory, they had to be the most clueless idiots who ever lived for not asking Arthur about it or even raising the issue! Assuming you are right, they were also incredibly reckless since they knew from recent experience (1865) that the VP was a heartbeart from the presidency. I assert that the voters of 1880 were much smarter and less trusting of politicians than you give them credit for.

107 posted on 04/29/2011 2:01:42 PM PDT by Captain Kirk
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To: sourcery
Please also note that you failed to quote the highlighted portion which deals with citizens not subjects. Why?

"is yet, in the words of Lord Coke in Calvin’s Case, 7 Coke, 6a, ’strong enough to make a natural subject, for, if he hath issue here, that issue is a natural-born subject’; and his child, as said by Mr. Binney in his essay before quoted, ‘If born in the country, is as much a citizen as the natural-born child of a citizen, and by operation of the same principle.’"

108 posted on 04/30/2011 10:49:51 AM PDT by Captain Kirk
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To: Captain Kirk
Because "natural-born child" is not at all the same concept as "natural born citizen." The phrase "natural-born child" is used to distinguish persons who are biological children from those who are adopted, that's all.

The text you quote is simply the court quoting other documents in support of the idea that, in English common law, being a natural born subject is based on the facts of one's birth, based on either the place of birth, or based on the parentage. That is absolutely the correct understanding of the legal meaning of "natural born subject" in English common law. That point is not in dispute.

Note that the 14th Amendment, unlike English common law as clearly expressed in the quotes, does not require or establish citizenship based on parentage (although it does not prohibit it, either.) Nor did the court rule that parentage establishes citizenship—which clearly shows that the quoted text was not a legal ruling, but was merely "dicta" in support of the ruling the court actually did make.

So that proves that the US court decision you're quoting is using those quotes it makes from other documents solely to elucidate its reasons and justifications for interpreting the 14th Amendment as meaning that being born in the US, regardless of parentage, makes one a citizen. It was not attempting to define, or make any ruling on, whether or not being born of US-citizen parents makes one a US citizen. More importantly, it was not attempting to define, or make any ruling on, the meaning of "natural born citizen," nor did it use that phrase.

Neither the question of whether being born to US-citizen parents makes one a citizen, nor the definition of "natural born citizen" was at issue in the case. Courts do not rule on matters not at issue in the cases before them, and whatever they happen to say on such matters is dicta, is said only to justify the legally-binding (and perhaps precedent-setting) decisions they are making, and sets no precedents.

The sole issue before court was whether nor not Mr. Wong was a US citizen because he had been born on US soil, in spite of the fact that his parents were not US citizens, and in spite of the fact that the US Code (statutes passed by Congress) explicitly forbade the acquisition of US citizenship to persons born in the US to parents both of whom were Chinese nationals. Since that was the sole issue before the court, that was the sole issue the ruling legally could have decided, and the sole decision the court could make in the case that would establish any legal precedent.

109 posted on 04/30/2011 12:07:49 PM PDT by sourcery (If true=false, then there would be no constraints on what is possible. Hence, the world exists.)
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To: sourcery
Because "natural-born child" is not at all the same concept as "natural born citizen."

I give up. You are the ultimate true believer oblivious to all facts. The context of the paragraph is clearly arguing that Mr. Wong was a citizen no different that any other natural born citizen. Otherwise the use of the words "natural born" are meaningless.

110 posted on 05/02/2011 2:22:35 PM PDT by Captain Kirk
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