bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Dec 16, 2022 6:01 pm
Raphael wrote: ↑Fri Dec 16, 2022 1:27 pm
Unrelated, a question for doctor shark: does your current avatar mean anything in particular? It sure looks neat.
Looks like one of his liquid crystal experiments to me, seen under a microscope (cf.
viewtopic.php?p=62932#p62932).
[insert bell noises indicating a correct response] Indeed, these are different kinds of LC droplets made from different LC materials.
keenir wrote: ↑Fri Dec 16, 2022 11:54 pm
zompist wrote: ↑Fri Dec 16, 2022 11:27 pmRounin Ryuuji wrote: ↑Fri Dec 16, 2022 10:48 pmMight be non-human status is disqualifying?
No, but non-citizen status is.
I thought citizenship was automatic for anyone either born in a US state or territory, or born in what would become a US state or territory.
I mean, that applies equally well to "the space which became Earth" as "island in Pacific ocean."
Fun fact: this isn't the case for territories, just for the states (and DC). People born in American Samoa are not, by default, US citizens (but US nationals). In the case of Puerto Rico, this was granted by the
Jones-Shafroth Act in 1917, and separate acts apply for each of the other territories.
keenir wrote: ↑Sat Dec 17, 2022 1:37 am
The examples I usually hear involve either the Presidents who were born before the US existed, and thus were born into foreign nations, or how Obama was born in Hawaii before its statehood.
There have been cases also where, for example, John McCain was not born within the territory of the US, and yet was still eligible to run for president (or didn't have that challenged, at least). The big thing is that, at the time of independence, British nationality law, as complex as it is, differentiated between
natural-born subjects, those who were born with allegiance to the crown, and
naturalized subjects, who acquired the status later (as well as other statuses), and a lot of British law was semi-automatically transposed to US law. In even crazier cases, there's Ted Cruz, who was born in Canada, but with US citizenship from birth due to his US citizen mother.
While Cthulhu, however, transcends the concepts of nationality and more invites an "inverse" nationality where all pledge allegiance to Cthulhu, where exactly Ry'leh is located would maybe have a bearing on that status. And we distinguish based on territorial waters, for example, when planes fly overhead (and kids that pop out on flights over Canada and the US automatically get the respective country's nationality).