

since every cell in a person’s body dies in less than 7 years, by the time of the next term, no cell will have been alive having served the first term and therefore, it’s allowed.
There are a couple tablespoons of cells that live our entire lives in our brain so that argument should be rejected too. I would expect the GOP rebuttable is that GOP candidates have no brains and therefore their original argument should be valid, which I admit on its surface would be tough to refute given the large body of past behavior of GOP Presidents.
I would then have to argue that the the Qualifications Clause set forth in Article II, Section 1, Clause 5 of the US Constitution requires Presidential candidates to be at least 35 years, and they’ve just admitted their brainless candidates are 7 years old or less so they would not be be eligible to run for President of the USA.
I’m not in the cohort you’re asking, but Adam Savage (of Mythbusters fame) had an interesting talk on one of his “Tested” Q&A shows about a myth they were testing that dealt with electric shocks to human. I think this is key the nature of your question:
There is no absolute scientific agreed upon “moment of death”.
Sure, if your body is finally burned up in a crematorium there’s no question you are dead, but when did you actually die? Was it from the moment you take your last breath? When your heart stopped? When your brain activity reaches zero? Something else entirely? There is no universal criteria that the entire scientific community agrees upon for the “moment of death”. So with that, this goes to the root of your question about “near death experiences”. How near are they? No one actually knows. So how can any of the reported experiences even be called “near death” to become accepted as legitimate?