Monday, January 25, 2010

Could Obama's records have been 'fixed?'

From worldnetdaily:

WND has been on the forefront of investigating claims that Barack Obama may not be a "natural born citizen," as the Constitution requires, and thus ineligible to serve as president of the United States.

Multiple lawsuits have been filed alleging Obama was born in Africa, rather than Hawaii, as Obama insists, and others have been filed claiming that Obama's birth status as a dual citizen because of his father's British citizenship precludes the sitting president from being "a natural born citizen."

In response to the lawsuits, Obama's campaign and administration have posted online images of a document purported to be the president's COLB from the state of Hawaii.

The computer-generated document, however, apparently printed after 2000, is exactly the kind of document WND's investigation has shown could have been produced from a database that had been fraudulently altered.

WND contacted the state of Hawaii to ask how its files are electronically managed, but a state official refused to answer even basic information requests and instead responded to emails by quoting articles from a website that routinely mocks and condemns WND's coverage.

WND then turned to Spafford to ask if Obama's COLB may have been compromised, but he dismissed the idea:

"His election was confirmed by Congress, and federal courts have rejected attempts to have the election invalidated, so … I think the question is moot at this point," he said.

He added, "There seems to be investigators who have scanned a copy of a long-form birth certificate with an official seal from the state of Hawaii, and the U.S. government accepts that."

On the contrary, the scanned copy is merely a COLB. Obama's long-form birth certificate remains among the many documents Obama has not disclosed the public, a list that also includes his Columbia thesis, his kindergarten records, Punahou school records, Occidental College records, Columbia University records, Harvard Law School records, Harvard Law Review articles, scholarly articles from the University of Chicago, passport, medical records, files from his years as an Illinois state senator, his Illinois State Bar Association records and any baptism records and his adoption records.

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