Sunday, May 19, 2013

Barack Obama built this fake -- he now owns it. His campaign peddled it on mugs and T-shirts. The evidence of forgery can be clearly seen to the naked eye -- on the internet, in newspaper and magazine stories, on merchandise -- and even on my bumper sticker! -- by anybody.

May 19, 2013

Obama Built This Forgery

Nick Chase
I don't normally display lawn signs or bumper stickers during political campaigns; I usually keep my voting preferences to myself.  (That's the point of secret ballots, right?)  But the November 2012 elections got me charged up to the point where I felt the urge to do something public, and since my friends already knew how I felt, I didn't think I would be divulging any secrets by doing so.

But I didn't like the bumper stickers offered by the campaigns, or any of the clever ones being sold over the internet, because I was really against certain candidates rather than for the opposition.  So I designed and ordered my own, shown below in Figure OB:


Figure OB.  "Obama Built This Forgery" bumper sticker.

(The "Obama Built" is a reference to Obama's "You didn't build that!" statement on the campaign trail, because he did build this fake "birth certificate," or had it built for him.)

Because I live in a very blue state, when I was out in my car, I would occasionally be stopped and asked about my sticker, usually by an ill-informed progressive. I would tell this person that the Obama "birth certificate" released by the White House in April 2011 is clearly a fake, and you can plainly see the proof...right on this bumper sticker!  In the minute or two before I would be dismissed as a raving lunatic, I would be able to explain:

The public was essentially told that Hawaii Department of Health officials took a bound volume of original paper 1961 birth certificates, turned to Obama's, placed it on the copier, copied it onto green security paper, stamped and embossed-sealed it, and then delivered it to Obama's lawyer to be flown back to Washington.  In which case, the image on my bumper sticker, a copy of the digital PDF "birth certificate" released on April 27, 2011 by the White House, and which the president declared to be his long-form birth certificate, must be fake -- because near the left margin, especially at the top of the document, the text and lines of the form bend downward (to simulate the bending of the page near the binding).  It's impossible for a copier to do that bending.
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