Did you read the paragraph I cited? It refers to the point at issue (being born of U.S. citizens). A lot of people have the misunderstanding that someone born outside of U.S. territory cannot be a U.S. citizen, even though one or both parents are U.S. citizens. My cousin was born in France of a U.S. mother and a French father, but she is a U.S. citizen as well as a French citizen.
I did. Ambiguous wording has made it confusing, which is why I read the entirety of the article to gather more context clues. It specifically illustrates cases of people being born outside the US and still being qualified as natural born citizens
The article seems specifically for people like your cousin
Did you read the entire article you linked? I did. It exclusively continues to refer to situations where citizens are born outside the US borders.
Did you read the paragraph I cited? It refers to the point at issue (being born of U.S. citizens). A lot of people have the misunderstanding that someone born outside of U.S. territory cannot be a U.S. citizen, even though one or both parents are U.S. citizens. My cousin was born in France of a U.S. mother and a French father, but she is a U.S. citizen as well as a French citizen.
I did. Ambiguous wording has made it confusing, which is why I read the entirety of the article to gather more context clues. It specifically illustrates cases of people being born outside the US and still being qualified as natural born citizens
The article seems specifically for people like your cousin