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Started by nickie, November 05, 2008, 08:35:42 AM

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daisybelle

#20
Excuse me,  Bush had his issues too before coming to office.  And I knew Clinton was not telling the truth when Barbara Walters interviewed him when he initially started campaigning concerning his possible infidelities....

But the American people voted and put these men into office.

All I am saying that to blindly accept what has been put forth and not seek the truth, make a lemming( Yes I know the lemming thing is a myth but it fits).     
When asked McCain provided all necessary documentation to ascertain his citizenship.  Obama sought dismissal of the the case --- why?   The case in question was not filed by a republican but a Pennsylvania Democrat Lawyer Phillip Berg...
See Link --- http://noiri.blogspot.com/2008/10/born-in-coast-provincial-general.html
This is not over see http://news.justia.com/cases/featured/pennsylvania/paedce/2:2008cv04083/281573/

A normal person would provide what is asked for.... why should he be so different?

I hope for the sake of this nation he did not defraud us.   The implications are mind-boggling.


Daisy

Posted on: November 07, 2008, 01:45:51 am
Quote from: Nichole on November 06, 2008, 08:00:59 PM
Ya know, Daisy, I started a reply to your first post that pointed out some few meager facts to distort your opinions: facts about when American citizens give birth in either this country or another their children are American citizens. In fact, when two illegal immigrants' children are born in this country they (the children) are American citizens. Period.


In order to be president you must :

Only native-born U.S. citizens (or those born abroad, but only to parents who were both citizens of the U.S.) may be president of the United States, though from time to time that requirement is called into question, most recently after Arnold Schwarzenegger, born in Austria, was elected governor of California, in 2003. The Constitution originally provided a small loophole to this provision: One needn't have been born in the United States but had to be a citizen at the time the Constitution was adopted. But, since that occurred in 1789, that ship has sailed.


Also note his father was not a US Citizen.  Sure he can be a citizen -- But is he Native born... there may be evidence to prove otherwise.  If true where do you stand?


==============================================================================================

So Congratualtions.  I hope we can work to together to see this country through a better place for all.  Your opinion may never match mine... so what? 

Maybe if I start drinking enough the next four years will go by fast.... or at least be blurry.

Please expect that I do want this country to be successful.  I do expect you to hold the new President and the Congress to the same standards you scrutinized the current administration..... 

Daisy 

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NicholeW.

You should click on the links more often from the places you cite as evidence. Looks to me that both suits were dimissed for exactly the same grounds and the BCs would not have required the parties to submit them themselves. The courts could have ordered the BCs for both Obama and McCain.


QuoteSunday, October 26, 2008


Federal judge dismisses Obama citizenship lawsuit
Devin Montgomery at 2:55 PM ET

   
[JURIST] Judge R. Barclay Surrick of the US District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania [official website] on Friday dismissed [case materials] a lawsuit challenging the citizenship status and eligibility of Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) to become US president. The lawsuit [complaint, PDF], filed by Pennsylvania attorney Philip Berg, had alleged that Obama did not meet the constitutional requirement [liI backgrounder] of being a "natural born" US citizen, arguing that Obama had lost his citizenship as a child when his mother married an Indonesian man, and had failed to reclaim it upon becoming an adult. Berg also alleged that there was insufficient evidence that Obama had been born in the US, and challenged the veracity of his Hawaiian birth certificate [certificate image]. Surrick dismissed the case, finding that Berg lacked standing to bring the suit because he did not face direct harm even if the allegations were true. Berg has said that he plans to appeal [press release] the suit's dismissal. AP has more.

A similar court challenge was previously made to the citizenship of Obama's presidential rival, Senator John McCain (R-AZ), arguing [NYT report] that McCain did not qualify as a "natural born" US citizen because he was born at Coco Solo Naval Air Station in the Panama Canal Zone, a military installation outside of US territory. US District Judge William Alsup dismissed that lawsuit [order, PDF] in September for lack of standing.
© JURIST

Next, point?

Nichole

Where do I stand? He was elected President and the garbage you're citing is simply that. I believe I'll just stand about right there, thanks. The fluff from the Conspiracy-Theory Gazette notwithstanding.


Nichole

btw, go read the Constitution, it requires a "natural-born Citizen of the United States." That my dear would mean anyone born to an American citizen, not particularly two American citizens since the law says one suffices.



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daisybelle

Quote from: Nichole on November 07, 2008, 12:53:03 AM
You should click on the links more often from the places you cite as evidence. Looks to me that both suits were dimissed for exactly the same grounds and the BCs would not have required the parties to submit them themselves. The courts could have ordered the BCs for both Obama and McCain.


Next, point?

Nichole

Where do I stand? He was elected President and the garbage you're citing is simply that. I believe I'll just stand about right there, thanks. The fluff from the Conspiracy-Theory Gazette notwithstanding.


Nichole

btw, go read the Constitution, it requires a "natural-born Citizen of the United States." That my dear would mean anyone born to an American citizen, not particularly two American citizens since the law says one suffices.


QuoteThe terms of citizenship are interpreted very strictly. A President must be a natural born citizen, meaning that immigrants are not eligible to run for President, no matter how long they have lived in the United States. If a child of American citizens is born abroad, he or she is technically considered a natural born citizen, and can therefore hold Presidential office. In addition, a Presidential candidate must have actually lived in the United States for at least 14 years, presumably so that he or she is aware of general issues which impact the American populace.   Cited from http://www.wisegeek.com/what-are-the-requirements-to-run-for-president-in-the-united-states.htm

No you are wrong yet again.  I do not deny his mother was a US citizen, but if he was born in Kenya as alleged then he is not Natural born.   And that is just the tip of the iceberg.

As to the garbage --- if this is found to be false then I bow to you.   But I did not ask you where you stood now, but where would you stand having found out if true he was born in Kenya?  Lastly I did check the link and I said this is not over because of just that Berg has filed an appeal.




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NicholeW.

Daisy,

Please read the quote you made yourself from wisegeek. It doesn't matter if he was born in Kenya, Timbuktu, the former USSR or The Panama Canal Zone. If Mom was an American citizen, "technically" so is he. Berg can appeal to the judgement of Heaven and that won't change a single fact.

So, like I said, that's where I stand right now and where I'll stand if it's determined he was born anywhere, including Hawaii. The implication of what you are saying is that our President is going to be an "illegal" alien we have raised to the Presidency, and that is just so much garbage, even by your own quoted citation.

So, shall we stop wasting Susan's bandwidth? You know and I know we are not going to agree on this. And that's the last word I have. You're allowed to believe what you believe or wish to believe. O, no need to bow, I find it uncomfortable when folks do that! :)

Thanks,

Nichole
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goingdown

Still we are waiting unpatiently that the new president changes quickly immigration politics! I wait nothing less than unconditional amnesty for all illegal immigrants.
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lisagurl

QuoteNot much of an inbetween.

They have some very good book stores. ;)
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tekla

Yeah, and all the girls have their own cars too.


But the Sec of State for Hawaii has said the cert is legal, valid and the rest.  I have no way to challenge a Sec of State.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
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daisybelle

Quote from: Nichole on November 07, 2008, 08:00:13 AM
Daisy,

Please read the quote you made yourself from wisegeek. It doesn't matter if he was born in Kenya, Timbuktu, the former USSR or The Panama Canal Zone. If Mom was an American citizen, "technically" so is he. Berg can appeal to the judgement of Heaven and that won't change a single fact.

So, like I said, that's where I stand right now and where I'll stand if it's determined he was born anywhere, including Hawaii. The implication of what you are saying is that our President is going to be an "illegal" alien we have raised to the Presidency, and that is just so much garbage, even by your own quoted citation.

So, shall we stop wasting Susan's bandwidth? You know and I know we are not going to agree on this. And that's the last word I have. You're allowed to believe what you believe or wish to believe. O, no need to bow, I find it uncomfortable when folks do that! :)

Thanks,

Nichole

Quotea child of American citizens

LAST POINT --- I promise.   If you are going to try to use my sitings against me please read it completely.  The quote from wisegeeks states it has to be both parents be US citizens to be naturalized if born abroad.  I am not calling him an illegal alien, just potentially an non-naturalized American Citizen.   

I hope this does not come to pass for the sake of our country.  Should if come though well I will support Biden then. 

Daisy
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Alyssa M.

Even in the highly unlikely event that Obama is not "natural born" who cares? You want to restrict the right of voters to elect whom they wish to be president?

Arnold Schwarzenegger, God bless him, when asked whether he'd support an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to ban same-sex marriage replied by asking whether it might be a better idea to have an amendment to allow any U.S. Citizen (over the minimum age) to be President.

I support Arnold fully on that matter. The natural-born requirement is an out-dated restriction on my rights to elect whomever I (and some large number of my fellow citizens) choose to elect. It made sense in 1789. It makes no sense today. Why on earth should Arnie not be allowed to run?

Like I said -- get over it. We win, you lose. That's called democracy. I got over it in 2000, and wished Bush a successful administration. I got over it again in 2004. Both elections were marred by illegal restrictionsion voting that might have tipped the outcome. But I got over it when the losing candidates accepted the outcome. You can get over it today.
All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter another.

   - Anatole France
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daisybelle

Quote from: Alyssa M. on November 07, 2008, 01:24:34 PM
Even in the highly unlikely event that Obama is not "natural born" who cares? You want to restrict the right of voters to elect whom they wish to be president?


The law is not about what it could be --- it is about what it is. This is the Constitution we are talking about.  If you want to change it, do the ground work to get an amendment to change it.... but to say and allow it to be broken makes the paper it was written on worth about as much as the TP used by millions.  I wholy support Mr. Arnold having his chance, but only if it is a legal election.

As far as restricting the right of the voters to elect whom they wish to be president.... That was what the founding fathers had in mind.  From your point of view anyone worldwide should have that chance.... or would you limit this?



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Annwyn

Quite worse than texas actually.  Try the only state in the union that didn't officially resign from the confederacy and the region of said state that still throws possys.  Gotta love us South Carolinians... the true southerners of America.

My hopes and best wishes are for Obama.  ALl this BS about his promises of change are just that, BS.  But he might be one of the first to bring America back to her older glory.  Although looking historically, glory was always returned to nations that conquested... Egypt's greatest age was in her conquest, some with Greece, same with Rome, same with Syria, same with China, same with the UK... so, why not the US?  I can't completely agree that the war in Iraq is being fought for oil.  The soldiers aren't fighting for oil, maybe the people sending them are, but the marines and sailors over there are fighting for justice and freedom for those people, not for oil.  Even if it is for oil though, I don't ->-bleeped-<-ing get what the problem is.  We've got bigger guns, better trained military, and better standards of living.  The Iraqi people have everything to gain from being conquered and absorbed into America.

If Obama can make federal health care work, then hell yeah.  No other nation has been able to, but perhaps we're something special.  After all, the government owes the people right?  It's not like those of us who work every day and do our best to be our best and eat healthy and live an active lifestyle should get treated any better than unemployed slobs who load up on fried chicken every day and expect the government to pay for their $2000 of medication a MONTH for their Humira and their Lipitor and their Nexium and Crestor... all those other medicines that they wouldn't have to take if they'd ->-bleeped-<-in stop being SLOBS.  Not to mention that the average generic percocet script runs over $100 and oxycontin will shoot up to over $800, and it's common for those to get run through medicaid just so some unemployed filth of society can sell it on the street.  And yeah, I work in a pharmacy and know all about this.

If Obama can work with Arny and get this nation to quit being oil-dependent then the economy would DEFINATELY go up.  Everyone would need engine adjustments, hydrogen stations would have to be set up, etc.  But, funding to terrorist organizations in the middle east would stop.  Pollution would drastically decrease.  Dependency on foreign nations for energy would drop significantly.  Technology would improve to the betterment of our daily lives.

Maybe Obama could even standardize immigration issues in such a way that Mexico could bond with the US(as it's basically doing on its own anyways) and can use the high about of laborers readily available to increase her own industry.

There's always the possibility that Obama could find a way to deter heavy murder rates without use of the death penalty.  I think it's pretty much impossible, but perhaps it could happen.

Obama might do this and he might do that.  The fact is, he's got a ton of crap to go through to get ANYTHING done.  So unless he changes the balance of powers in this country, ->-bleeped-<- aint gonna happen.
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daisybelle

Annwyn --- stand tall and proud for voicing your opinion ( might want to don your flak jacket ).

I am right here beside you.

Daisy
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NicholeW.

Quote from: Annwyn on November 08, 2008, 12:10:27 AMAlthough looking historically, glory was always returned to nations that conquested... Egypt's greatest age was in her conquest, some with Greece, same with Rome, same with Syria, same with China, same with the UK... so, why not the US? 

That's an interesting thought, but is it borne-out by fact? Not necessarily. One might note the six following examples I can think of off the spur to say instead: perhaps such a pov becomes an investment of the way history is written and by whom.

Political historians until Braudel, tended to focus on wars and politico-economic hegemony. They looked/look at imperial governments and decided that a certain period was a particular place's "golden age" or "greatest age." Often enough that has to do with an empire's "greatest extent" through conquest.

But, when one looks at "Old Europe" in the Danube Basin 5000 or more years ago, Minoan Crete, Heian Japan, Renaissance Italy and Languedoc (Provence/the Toulousaine/Bordeaux/Perigord during the 12th and 13th centuries) one doesn't find huge outer-directed enterprises other than economic ones going on. Yet all of those civilzations were "advanced" for their periods.

In the case of Old Europe the one thing not found yet in what seems to have been a highly-evolved and dynamic culture that ran roughly from Budapest to Ploesti and down into northern Greece (as it is today) is the absence of any fortifications of any kind. Much smaller (area-extent) and less-vibrant cultures in Anatolia, Mesopotamia and the Nile Valley of roughly the same time show evidence of fortifications. The presumption is that in the fortified cultures there were wars and conquests, thus the fortifications for protection.

Old Europe didn't have those, yet from other finds of artifacts one discovers that goods (non-organic goods) from all four of those other cultures made their way to Central Europe by means, no doubt, of trade.

Heian Japan formed a delicate and beautiful civilization where, although fights amongst clans did occur, there was no imperialistic expansion to speak of. Again the impetus was economic not martial as the evidence of trade with China, Korea and the Phillipines is in evidence from that period.

Minoan Crete, again, although a vibrant and strong civilization shows no major evidence of fortifications until very late in it's existence as the Dorians began to raid it. Yet, again, it's merchant trade was huge with the Hittites, Babylonians, Egyptians and even the Harappan civilization of the Indus Valley. Not through the means of warfare were the Minoans imperial; they used economic-strength and a de facto dominance of sea-faring.

Harappan civilization shows a wide-spread culture that included the Indus Valley, what was then the Sarasvati Valley (Now mostly the Thar desert probably due to the river changes in the Sarasvati due to seismic activity) and the Central Ganges Valley. Again trade routes to the north, east and west had to have existed as Mesopotamian, Egyptian, and artifacts from the Yangtze Valley are numerous. What isn't numerous are evidence of fortifications.

Both Renaissance Italy and the "troubador" civilization of Provence showed tremendous internecine struggles but no "projected" warfare. Yet each culture is generally regarded as light-years ahead of the other European cultures of their times. Since there are written historical records from those cultures we are aware that they were warlike inside the parameters of their own lands, but used trade and economic influence to establish and maintain flourishing cultures.

QuoteEven if it is for oil though, I don't ->-bleeped-<-ing get what the problem is.  We've got bigger guns, better trained military, and better standards of living.  The Iraqi people have everything to gain from being conquered and absorbed into America.

Atlantic seaboard cities in the 1760s and 1770s had much to commend a continuing relationship with the British Empire. In doing so they had military protection, huge economic advantages through British imperial trade networks that spanned into the Far East, the Near East and Europe.

Yet a desire to propogate their own trade without the restrictions "for the good of the Empire" and what they found to be regressive taxation: until the 1760s the Brits had operated military and economic networks without taxation to any degree of the colonials, stirred a desire to have a separate political state from what was obviously in the best-interest of all the colonial lands: to remain in the British Empire.

Yet, as we know, they revolted to make their own self-government.

Economically and even socially Cuba and the Phillipines had many advantages in being part of the USA-empire. Yet, again, they decided instead to run-liberation movements instead and strive for their own political and economic independence. Why?

I think the desire of folks to run their own show often trumps any perceived economic or social advantages of being amalgamated into a "higher" civilization.

I imagine German peoples living east of the Rhine and north of the Danube could literally see material advantages in the Pax Romana across the rivers. Yet, they made tremendous struggles in warfare to avoid being absorbed, and succeeded, although one could imagine a high cost culturally and economically to them. They still longed to "do it their own way."

Nichole

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Annwyn

I think Nichy's got more education than me on that stupid history crap.  So.  I'll b a hypocrite and continue to disagree but I won't embarrass myself by trying to debate with her on that topic.
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Alyssa M.

Quote from: daisybelle on November 07, 2008, 05:58:25 PMAs far as restricting the right of the voters to elect whom they wish to be president.... That was what the founding fathers had in mind.  From your point of view anyone worldwide should have that chance.... or would you limit this?

Yes, anyone. We're all grown up now. If we want to elect Cesar Chavez or Vladimir Putin or Kim Jong Il to be president, then that should be our right. If we're stupid enough to do it, then we deserve what we get.

In 1789 we had serious reason to be concerned about the possibility of some British loyalist somehow seizing power and destroying America. That hasn't been a remote possibility in at least 100 years.

To the extent that the Constitution is a document that limits rights and enshrines oppression, you can burn it for all I care. "It's in the Constitution" is no more valid an ethical argument for anything than "It's in the Bible."
All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter another.

   - Anatole France
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sarahb

Quote from: Alyssa M. on November 10, 2008, 02:25:46 PM
To the extent that the Constitution is a document that limits rights and enshrines oppression, you can burn it for all I care. "It's in the Constitution" is no more valid an ethical argument for anything than "It's in the Bible."

I disagree with this statement. I recently had a debate with my dad, who doesn't agree with Prop 8 but who thinks that the law should stand just because the majority voted on it. My arguments to that was that just because the majority thinks something is right doesn't mean it should be law, because the constitution overrules the majority. I don't think people should ever have the right to vote on civil rights issues, because there should be no restrictions on anyone's rights no matter how many people think there should be. He kept going back to the argument that as a democracy we are allowed to vote and whatever the majority votes for should stand, as a true democracy should be.

My final argument to that was that he believes in a democracy without the constitution, whereas I believe in a democracy with the constitution. He believes that anything, no matter what, could potentially be voted on and the majority wins. I say that yes, everything can be voted on and the majority wins, except when it comes to civil rights and human rights or issues explicitly in the constitution. That's where the constitution comes in and overrules the majority. Isn't the constitution what this country was founded on? So why should we disregard it?
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Alyssa M.

Quote from: SarahR on November 10, 2008, 02:56:10 PMThat's where the constitution comes in and overrules the majority. Isn't the constitution what this country was founded on? So why should we disregard it?

I think we agree more that we disagree. I'm just a bit more extreme than you, if I understand you correctly.

I disagree slightly with the notion that our country was founded on the Constitution -- it was founded on the Declaration of Independence, which states that "all men are created equal; that they are Endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." To me, those are the words that define what America ought to stand for.

The Constitution is a document set up to enforce these principles. It has failed in many instances, but the genius of the framers was to allow it to be amended -- in order to form a "more perfect Union."

I am not willing to wait for the majority of people in 3/4 of the states -- plus supermajorities in both houses of Congress -- to acknowledge that certain rights are fundamental. When the Constitution (U.S. or California) limits rights, it's not functioning properly.

So I agree with you, except I think that those civil rights and human rights that ought to transcend democratic comment should not be limited to those enumerated in the Constitution. For example, any violation of the E.R.A. is immoral, in my opinion, even without it being in the Constitution. Ownership of slaves was immoral even when the Constitution implicitly endorsed it. And in the unlikely case that Obama is not a "natural-born" citizen, the problem lies with the Constitution, not the election.
All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter another.

   - Anatole France
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daisybelle

The law is the law --- holding an election by making your own rules is to suit your views is wrong.   No matter how potentially good the man may be as a President, if he was born in Kenya, he has defrauded the system.   Is it the goal of the Democrat party to lie and cheat to win elections?   What was the Chicago democrats motto -- vote early and vote often!  That party needs to lose the stigma of this anything goes attitude.

If you do not like what the constitution says -- CHANGE IT!   I am not opposed to redefining the criteria for our presidents to abide by, but everyone has to play by the rules.  It is unacceptable to make concessions which violates the constitution as it is currently written.

This country has not had a perfect history, but I believe the ideals  now are available to all to "all men are created equal; that they are Endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."    We all start with the same potential... the roads life throws at us might not always be the same, but the more diverse the circumstances the better we have lived our life.

Daisy

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Alyssa M.

Quote from: daisybelle on November 11, 2008, 10:53:11 AMeveryone has to play by the rules.

I don't do "rules." I do "right" and "wrong."

I generally defer to rules out of humility that tells me my sense of "right" and "wrong" might not be correct. But sometimes my feeling that the rules are unjust wins out. Making appeals to "following the rules" will get you nowhere with me.

--

Also, this is about Arnie, not Barry. Barry's from Hawaii. If you think he's not, then I've got an illegitimate black McCain daughter to introduce to you. It's the worst of scurrilous conspiracy-mongering. So please drop it.

~Alyssa
All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter another.

   - Anatole France
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daisybelle

#39
Arnie played by the rules as he did not run for the presidency...  sorry, Arnie had the sense of RIGHT not to run.

If you are closed minded - don't even bother clicking


Berg makes a good case...
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