Friday, November 21, 2008

RADIO CALL "APPARENTLY" ELICITS OBAMA'S BIRTH PLACE WAS IN KENYA

A Denver radio station allegedly calls Kenya and claims to speak to someone who represents himself as the "Kenyan Ambassador". While this call has some interesting aspects, what anyone with diplomatic experience would ask is why call Kenya to talk to the Kenyan Ambassador - presumably to the USA - unless he was on home leave from the Kenyan Embassy in Washington D.C. CLICK HERE TO GO TO AUDIO (comment on birth place around the 12th minute of the 15 minute audio) What brings on this kind of audio, real or otherwise and a dozen lawsuits throughout America, including to the Supreme court, rests with Obama's absolute refusal to provide anyone with his also alleged birth certificate, which more likely will prove to be a COLB (Certificate of Live Birth) not a BC (Birth Certificate) which lists a ton of information on it. Interestingly one of the two Hawaii hospitals claimed as his birthplace was not built until TWO YEARS after his again alleged birth date. Hopefully the Supreme Court, now deciding whether to look into the matter on December 5th, will help settle this once and for all. So far lawsuits have been rejected on the status/standing of those bringing them rather than the ACTUAL merits of the complaint or suit, which have yet to be formally addressed. Another mystifying clue to Obama's mother trying to manipulate the system comes from his younger Indonesian half-sister (Indonesian father), born in Indonesia, which until a year or two ago refused to accept dual citizenshi, nor allow non-Indonesian students in their schools, appears to have a Hawaiian "brith certificate", more probably a COLB not a CB. Her apparent false registration of Obama in Hawaii was repeated with his VERY definitely NOT Hawaiian born half-sister. Q.E.D. (quod erat demonstrandum)

2 comments:

  1. Re: Which will likely be a “COLB (Certificate of Live Birth) not a BC (Birth Certificate) which lists a ton of information on it.”

    Obama has posted and provided to journalists who asked to see it his COLB, and the officials in Hawaii have said that they looked into the files and found evidence confirming the COLB. The COLB says on it (three times under location of birth, county of birth and island of birth) that he was born in Hawaii, so if what they saw in the files was a Kenyan birth certificate, they would be intentionally misleading – and why should they?

    Re: Interestingly one of the two Hawaii hospitals claimed as his birthplace was not built until TWO YEARS after his again alleged birth date.

    So obviously it was the other one, the one that had been built. Yes, the sister said at one time that it was hospital A and then later that it was hospital B. Big deal. She got mixed up. She didn’t know which hospital in Hawaii. But not knowing which of two hospitals in Hawaii it was is NOT proof that he was born in Kenya.

    Re: Hopefully the Supreme Court, now deciding whether to look into the matter on December 5th, will help settle this once and for all.

    You can hope. But I’ll bet that the SC will take no action.

    Re: appears to have a Hawaiian "brith certificate", more probably a COLB not a CB. I have heard that Hawaii grants COLBs on application, but NOT COLBs that say that you are born in Hawaii. In other words, the sister has a Hawaii COLB (or may have) but it does not say “she was born in Hawaii.” Otherwise, of course, the state would either be lying about her place of birth, or it would be creating a document that she could use to mislead the US government into issuing a passport. In any case, what I read was that Hawaii only issues a COLB saying that someone is born in Hawaii when they have evidence that someone was born in Hawaii.

    The theory that Obama was born in Kenya requires that his mother traveled to Kenya in the ninth month of pregnancy, in 1961 – when there were no direct flights to Africa from Hawaii, and when you had to get a Yellow Fever shot – and yet somehow rushed back to Hawaii right after the birth when witnesses saw her about 10 days after the birth with her infant. (In those days hospitals usually required about three or four days hospital stay after giving birth, and it would probably take a day or two to get a passport for a newborn child in Kenya.)

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