Tuesday, February 23, 2010

NEVER-ENDING COVER-UP CONTINUES

Obama's 'birth hospital' in astonishing cover-up

Originally posted by DefendUSx July 10, 2009 23:19

Kapi'olani Medical Center for Women and Children in Honolulu, Hawaii

By Joe Kovacs
© 2009 WorldNetDaily

The Honolulu hospital which for nearly six months proudly declared President Obama was born at its facility and used that claim as a major fund-raising tool is now engaged in an active cover-up, hiding a White House letter announcing his alleged birth there and refusing to confirm such a letter even exists.

The Kapi'olani Medical Center for Women and Children is electronically cloaking what it had touted as a Jan. 24 letter from the president, in which the commander in chief, just four days after his inauguration, supposedly wrote, "As a beneficiary of the excellence of Kapi'olani Medical Center – the place of my birth – I am pleased to add my voice to your chorus of supporters."

WND was first to question the authenticity of the letter by revealing the image displayed on the hospital's website was not the image of an actual paper letter, but merely a computer-created likeness of a letter using HTML code, the building blocks of websites.


Barack Obama states in this purported letter from him on what appears to be White House stationery that he was born at the Kapi'olani Medical Center for Women and Children in Honolulu. The letter was posted by the medical center for nearly six months on its website before electronically hidden once WND publicized it.

Within an hour of WND's report, the image, which also featured no presidential or White House seal, vanished from view on the hospital's page celebrating its 100th anniversary.

WND can now reveal the hospital did not completely remove the image of the letter. It actually covered it up electronically using a special "hiding code" that prevents readers from seeing it.

Join the petition campaign to make President Obama reveal his long-form, hospital-generated birth certificate!

WND took a screen shot of the source code, which is now showing up in green as it's being hidden from viewing on the regular, visible page.


This source code screen shot taken July 10, 200, demonstrates that a "remark" has been inserted in the HTML code to prevent the display of what Kapi'olani Medical Center in Honolulu had been proudly proclaiming to be a White House letter from President Obama announcing he was born at the facility. The cloaking change took place approximately an hour after WND revealed the alleged White House letter was merely a computer-generated likeness of a letter.
To the reader ..HTML stands for the "Hypertext Mark-up Language". The purpose of HTML is to format text in your Web browser with specific tags. For example, to bold text in your browser - there are tags for Bold, Italic, Underline and tables. HTML is a specification set by the World Wide Web Consortium or (W3C). All browser's support this evolving standard.

In this attempt to hide the text from the user in the browser's view - the HTML comment tags were used. Comment tags are used by web page creators to put comments in their HTML to let them know various sections. The Comment tags (see the tags around the Green text in picture above) can also be used to hide text - as in this instance.

"That was purposeful coding in of well-known HTML code that basically removes code from showing up in the display of a Web page, but maintains it in the actual source code of the page," an Internet consultant told WND. "It's just a quick way to stop things from showing up in the browser. It's typically done so that coders can hide or bring something back quickly."

Here is WND's original screenshot of the letter's source code before it was "remarked" to conceal the letter:


This July 9, 2009, screenshot of the source code, revealed what was touted as a White House letter from President Obama is not an image of any actual letter, but merely a computer-generated likeness of a letter.Within approximately an hour of WND's exposing that fact, the hospital "remarked" its HTML code to conceal the letter from view.

Kapi'olani spokeswoman Kristy Watanabe today refused to even confirm the existence of an actual letter from the White House, only parroting her previous statement to WND: "Federal law does not permit us to provide any more details concerning information [about Obama's birth] without authorization from Mr. Obama."

WND asked again since they have been celebrating Obama's own supposed written admission that he was born at the facility, isn't that authorization?

"No comment," Watanabe said.

WND can also reveal the hospital not only proclaimed itself as Obama's birth location online, it used the Oval Office disclosure as a major fund-raising tool, giving it massive play on page six in its spring edition of its own Inspire Magazine.

A screen shot of the alleged presidential letter and accompanying article is displayed here:


Kapi'olani used a letter, allegedly written by President Obama in which he declares his birthplace to be at the facility, to solicit donations in its spring 2009 edition of its own Inspire Magazine. The hospital is now refusing to confirm if such a letter even exists.

When one compares the version of the letter in the magazine to the one Kapi'olani had online, there are some obvious differences which can be spotted immediately, including a different font for the text, and the fact that Obama's purported signature swoops down over his typewritten name, though it's completely separate from it in the online version.

"As the hospital celebrates 100 years of pediatric care in Hawaii, we've begun a capital campaign to position the hospital for the next century of care," wrote Chuck Sted, president and CEO of Hawaii Pacific Health which runs Kapi'olani, in his published plea for donations in the edition featuring the Obama letter.


Chuck Sted, CEO of Hawaii Pacific Health

"Our donors recognize the need is urgent; Hawaii's children and families cannot wait. Your support matters. As today's economic realities force all of us to re-think our priorities, we hope you agree that top-quality healthcare is not a 'nice to have.' It is a priority; it is vital."

The hospital acknowledged it did publish the "Obama birth letter" image in the magazine, but spokeswoman Watanabe refused to answer any questions about it.

"Right now we have no comment. Thank you very much," she said, abruptly ending the conversation by hanging up the phone.

WND has continuously contacted the White House this week to authenticate the existence, authorship and contents of the letter and confirm the true birth hospital of the president.

Staff members there have acknowledged seeing the image of the letter originally published online, but have still not provided any comment.

Suspicions about the letter's authenticity were raised when WND discovered the image posted online was created in HTML computer code, and was not a true image of a document. Various screen shots of the hospitals website before the letter's removal demonstrate that.

To the reader. Because the letter is not a single image, but a composite of images detailed by the HTML code, the letter cannot be authentic. The signature image can be easily screen captured from the Federal Register site and saved as an image (one of the Presidental documents) and placed in the HTML code comprising the letter. The same holds true for the White House header. No seal is present because you cannot watermark that into the HTML code. A skilled coder could do so, but we are obviously dealing with rudamentary forgers. HTML is very basic, so many people know HTML who are not programmers.


Dragging a cursor over the White House letterhead reveals the .jpg image


Dragging a cursor over Barack Obama's purported signature reveals the .jpg image

The process of creating a letter in HTML code is not difficult. To demonstrate just how simple it is, WND used code to put together a likeness of what Kapi'olani has been alleging to be a letter from the president.

Below is the WND re-creation using a different font, and it is stressed that this is not an actual letter sent by the White House:

http://www.wnd.com/images/thewhitehouse.jpg

January 24, 2009

Kapi`olani Medical Center

Dear Friends,

I am writing to share congratulations on the centennial celebration of the Kapi`olani Medical Center for Women & Children.

Kapi`olani was one of Hawai`i's earliest hospitals, and it has served many generations of Hawai`i's people with distinction. The Medical Center reaches out to children of all backgrounds, and treats more than 62,000 children per year. As a beneficiary of the excellence of Kapi`olani Medical Center - the place of my birth - I am pleased to add my voice to your chorus of supporters.

Hawai`i has always been a home to me, and I'm pleased to take part in your celebration. Thank you for your hard work, and I wish you all the best for the next one hundred years.

Sincerely,

images/barackobama_signature.jpg

Barack Obama

Another issue is U.S. Rep. Neil Abercrombie's reading of the letter to the audience of more than 700 at the hospital's Centennial Dinner, who cheered when the portion was read mentioning Obama's "birth" at Kapi'olani.

At times, Abercrombie did not read the letter verbatim, as he added some words and deleted others. Ironically, though Kapi'olani scrubbed the alleged Obama birth letter from its site, as of the posting of this article, it retained the video of Abercrombie reading the text, found at the 2:11 mark of the three-minute video.

Like the hospital, Abercrombie has also been personally publicizing the claim Obama was born at Kapi'olani, for months trumpeting on his congressional website the question of Obama's origin is now settled "once and for all," excerpting from Obama's letter that Kapi'olani "is the place of my birth. Hawaii has always been home to me."

Unlike the hospital, Abercrombie's declaration is still viewable as of the posting of this article.


U.S. Rep. Neil Abercrombie, D-Hawaii, posted this message on his website explaining President Obama settled the question of his actual birthplace "once and for all" merely by declaring it in a letter he read to the Kapi'olani Medical Center's Centennial Dinner in Honolulu Jan. 24, 2009.

As soon as WND posted questions about the letter – including a story investigating conflicting news reports stating he was born at more than one Honolulu hospital – within hours a number of info sites, such as UP Intl andhoax-spinner Snopes.com, swapped their long-published location of Obama's birth from Honolulu's Queen's Medical Center to Kapi'olani.

One WND reader in Beaver Dam, Wis., contacted UPI for an explanation, and received this response from the news agency's Marcy Kreiter, who stated: "The writer made an error. When an error is pointed out to us, we fix it. There's no scrubbing of archives."

WND is also reporting today that an African news site and an MSNBC broadcaster have delivered new references to President Obama's birthplace as being outside of the United States

Read more at WND

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