Yep, and I got the papers to prove it.
Seems like there must be a "rest of the story" here, or a paperpusher making an error? This is very confusing!
The rest of the story:
My brother was a member of the young republicans. He joined up to serve during the Vietnam war. He fell in love with a Thai girl and married her, according to their customs. He came home without her to honor my fathers wishes that he live without her for 6 months and if he still wanted her, then he'd marry her. When my brother started the paperwork to bring her here, our government told him he wasn't an American citizen as he was born in Japan. Didn't matter that he'd served in our military, was born on an American military base to a career Air Force officer and an American civil servant, didn't matter that he'd been voting...no, he wasn't an American citizen and until he became one, he could not bring his bride here. So, because I was also not born in this country and had just turned 18, we treked down to immigration to fill out the paperwork and become citizens. They wanted us to take a test, one I was all for as I was pretty sure I'd flunk and then I'd call the papers and our government would be shown for the sham it was and still is. My father thought otherwise. He went up one side of the clerk and down the other and 5 minutes later a lawyer came in and swore me in as an American citizen, a different lawyer swore in my brother.
We both have naturalization papers. Neither one of us is a "natual born american" and can therefore never become president. Yet this last election we had two people who didn't qualify running for office and our government, sham that it is, not only allowed it but encouraged it.