how is an amendment added to the constitution
The Dirty "little" Secret Of The Natural Born Citizen Clause Revealed. « Natural Born Citizen
I have emphasized the word "little" because the truth of the law on this issue is very simple, folks. So simple that the mystery is deciphered by application of one of the most clear, concise and undeniable rules of law; the code of statutory construction governs, and therefore, "natural born Citizen" must require something more than being born in the United States.
Let me put it to you in appropriately simple language:
Clause A = "Only a natural born Citizen may be President."
Clause B = "Anyone born in the United States is a Citizen."
(While these two clauses reflect Article 2, Section 1, and the 14th Amendment, I shall refer to them as "Clause A" and "Clause B" for now.)
The code of statutory construction is learned by every student in law school, and every practicing attorney has confronted it. Every judge is required to apply the rule equally to all statutes, and the Constitution. There is no wiggle room at all. The rule states that when a court examines two clauses, unless Congress has made it clear that one clause repeals the other, the court must observe a separate legal effect for each. More specifically, regardless of the chronology of enactment, the general clause can never govern the specific.
Clause B is a general rule of citizenship, which states that all persons born in the country are members of the nation.
Clause A is a specific clause that says only those members of the nation who are "natural born" may be President.
According to the rule of statutory construction, the court must determine that Clause A requires something more than Clause B.
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