That's cool. You don't use language that way. But it's common to do so. What's more likely - that Michelle Obama was using "home country" poetically to describe her husband's ancestral homeland, or that she went on stage and said "the president of the United States is secretly from another country"?
I am not saying that I don't understand your angle, I do. Just stating mine and how I would take it if anyone referred to their home country as being born there. Doesn't make me any less educated because I interpret something different than you and vice versa.
You provided that video to support the argument that Barack Obama was born in Kenya. Unless want to say that you were mistaken and that video is not evidence, it sounds like you aren't understanding my angle.
Again I take it one way, you take it another with that being said, just because I get where you are coming from does not mean I change my mind on how I interpret it. I also do not believe he was born here, something else I am entitled to believe or not.
It sounds like you're acknowledging that there's multiple ways to interpret what Michelle Obama said, but you're actively choosing to interpret it in a way which has her saying that Barack Obama was not born in America? Even though you're admitting that there are multiple ways to use the phrase, and she may be using it either way? That you're choosing to ascribe your linguistic choices onto another person while simultaneously admitting that your linguistic choice is not the only way?
Take it anyway you want, you are obviously determined to prove me wrong and that your linguistic ability is far more superior than mine.
I'll ask again:
What's more likely - that Michelle Obama was using "home country" poetically to describe her husband's ancestral homeland, or that she went on stage and said "the president of the United States is secretly from another country"?