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On Feb 20, 4:07 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Steve" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 20, 12:01 am, "David Eduardo" wrote: "Steve" wrote in message roups.com... Again, a mistake by an industry association in a convention program is hardly an issue Their only mistake was taking you at your word. Very funny. They simply misprinted my title in a program. When a convention has 10,000 attendees and about 300 different speakers and panelists, many errors happen. Nobody int he industry gave it a second thought. Really? You mean it didn't cause the sky to fall? lol Hardly. Since most of the attendees already knew who the presnters were at my session, I doubt most even noticed. At most I suspect there were a few snickers from people who knew who you really are. The "misprinted" your article, eh? Funny how lies can cause "typos", isn't it? I have no idea what the reference you make is... we are talking about a program (also available on the web) for the NAB convention several years ago which had my title truncated... there was no article. "Truncated". Yeah, you weren't lying. You were "truncating". It is perfectly straight. She was born a US citizen, under US law. You're the one who said she wasn't a citizen. Under US law, she may be... you can see from the interesting infromation from Mr. Gallagher that the issue is not balck and white. She was registered as a US citizen at birth, she chose not to ever get either a US passport or to pursue the citizenship otherwise. So, 40-some years later, she is Ecuadorian. Under Ecuadorian law, she was not a citizen until age 18 (many Latin American nations do not consider people citizens until they reach the age of majority... including Mexico, I believe). At age 18, she got an Ecuadorian passport, sufficient in ecuador to be considered ONLY an Ecuadorian national. US law saw her as a dual national. Yes, and as you yourself pointed out, have a right to citizenship and exercising it are not the same. Correct. As Mr Gallagher has pointed out, while another goverment may not consider her a dual national, in many cases the US government does. Correct. So, there's no point in continuing to lie about your daughter's citizenship status. "David Eduardo: ...She has never been a US citizen. " Correct. She had a right to citizenship, but lived in Ecuador where she did not exercise it. She swore citizenship to Ecuador at age 18; one country considers here only a national, and the other considers her a dual national. In other words, there are two answers to this question, depending on whose laws you folow. There are multiple answers to the question all right...depending on what you confabulate on any given occasion. No, actually there are different answers if you are a representative of the US government or the Ecuadorian one... without even going into what the individual considers themselves to be.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No, actually there are different answers depending on whether or not you are a liar, and especially if you're a poor liar. |
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