So where are his college records?
At the college he attended. Bush refused to release his, but I am sure your were fine with that.
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So where are his college records?
It's known he got a 3.7 at Columbia and was Magna Cum Laude at Harvard Law school.
How is it known, troll?
What we do know.... he did not graduate with honors at Colombia... so his GPA could not have been over 3.3. How does one go from a max GPA of 3.3 to get into Harvard Law on merit? His grades don't hold up to scrutiny. Frankly, I'm more interested in whether he attended as a foreign student.
How is it known, troll?
What we do know.... he did not graduate with honors at Colombia... so his GPA could not have been over 3.3. How does one go from a max GPA of 3.3 to get into Harvard Law on merit? His grades don't hold up to scrutiny. Frankly, I'm more interested in whether he attended as a foreign student.
I am sure you are, but, it really is none of your business.
So where are his college records?
At the college he attended. Bush refused to release his, but I am sure your were fine with that.
It's known he got a 3.7 at Columbia and was Magna Cum Laude at Harvard Law school.
How is it known, troll?
What we do know.... he did not graduate with honors at Colombia... so his GPA could not have been over 3.3. How does one go from a max GPA of 3.3 to get into Harvard Law on merit? His grades don't hold up to scrutiny. Frankly, I'm more interested in whether he attended as a foreign student.
How is it known, troll?
What we do know.... he did not graduate with honors at Colombia... so his GPA could not have been over 3.3. How does one go from a max GPA of 3.3 to get into Harvard Law on merit? His grades don't hold up to scrutiny. Frankly, I'm more interested in whether he attended as a foreign student.
I am sure you are, but, it really is none of your business.
So where are his college records?
At the college he attended. Bush refused to release his, but I am sure your were fine with that.
Until then....it plays into the not so subtle narrative that 'he is not one of us'."
Until then....it plays into the not so subtle narrative that 'he is not one of us'."
He isn't one of us if his parents renounced his US Citizen when he emmigrated to Indonsesia as a youngster.
Until then....it plays into the not so subtle narrative that 'he is not one of us'."
He isn't one of us if his parents renounced his US Citizen when he emmigrated to Indonsesia as a youngster.
I am not sure about that. Even IF they did or attempted to do that, it may not have any legal impact on his Natural Born Citizen status.
He isn't one of us if his parents renounced his US Citizen when he emmigrated to Indonsesia as a youngster.
I am not sure about that. Even IF they did or attempted to do that, it may not have any legal impact on his Natural Born Citizen status.
You could not attend school without Indonesian citizenship.
No dual Indo-US citizenship exists.
I am not sure about that. Even IF they did or attempted to do that, it may not have any legal impact on his Natural Born Citizen status.
You could not attend school without Indonesian citizenship.
No dual Indo-US citizenship exists.
I am not sure the first sentence is correct. Source?
And it doesn't matter if the second is correct or not.
The point is that I believe (and I have not looked at this in a while now) that the acts of the parent as to a child's citizenship may not be recognized as depriving a U.S. citizen child OF his U.S. citizenship unless he ratifies that action in some way or another after his age of majority.
You could not attend school without Indonesian citizenship.
No dual Indo-US citizenship exists.
I am not sure the first sentence is correct. Source?
And it doesn't matter if the second is correct or not.
The point is that I believe (and I have not looked at this in a while now) that the acts of the parent as to a child's citizenship may not be recognized as depriving a U.S. citizen child OF his U.S. citizenship unless he ratifies that action in some way or another after his age of majority.
Like listing himself as Indonesian on college applications for the purposes of foreign educational advantage in the US ?
I am not sure about that. Even IF they did or attempted to do that, it may not have any legal impact on his Natural Born Citizen status.
You could not attend school without Indonesian citizenship.
No dual Indo-US citizenship exists.
I am not sure the first sentence is correct. Source?
Berg is not necessarily a compelling authority. His pleadings say "NO FOREIGN STUDENTS MAY ATTEND SCHOOL in INDONESIA in the 60's and 70's" but his "support" for that contention is the Indonesian Constitution which says only that all Indonesian "citizens have a right to education."You could not attend school without Indonesian citizenship.
No dual Indo-US citizenship exists.
I am not sure the first sentence is correct. Source?
Hollister v Soetoro
27 "Indonesia did not allow foreign students to attend their public schools in the late 1960’s or 1970’s, and any time a child was registered for a public school, their name and citizenship status was verified through the Indonesian Government. See Constitution of Republic of Indonesia (Undang-Undang Dasar Republik Indonesia 1945), Chapter 13, Law No. 62 of 1958 (all citizens of Indonesia have a right to education)."
How is it known, troll?
What we do know.... he did not graduate with honors at Colombia... so his GPA could not have been over 3.3. How does one go from a max GPA of 3.3 to get into Harvard Law on merit? His grades don't hold up to scrutiny. Frankly, I'm more interested in whether he attended as a foreign student.
I am sure you are, but, it really is none of your business.
So, what we have is some evidence that somebody CLAIMED that young Barry was a Muslim. But NO evidence that he was ever granted status as a citizen of Indonesia.