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BORN IN THE USA? By Joe Kovacs
In the ongoing quest to determine the exact birthplace
of Barack Obama, the president's alleged personal effort to put the matter to
rest is raising some interesting new questions.
The latest concerns focus on a letter purportedly sent by Obama to Honolulu's Kapi'olani Medical Center for Women and Children in which the commander in chief outright declares his birth at the facility. (Within an hour of the posting of this story, Kapi'olani removed the image of the letter from its website.)
In the message dated Jan. 24, the freshly inaugurated president is said to
explain that he's "a beneficiary of the excellence of Kapi'olani Medical
Center – the place of my birth ... ."
Abercrombie even posted the information on his congressional website, saying the letter would be "settling the question once and for all."
WND can reveal the text of the letter read by Abercrombie has significant differences from what is touted online as President Obama's letter. In addition, the image online is not a picture of an actual paper letter, but is merely a computer-created likeness of a letter.
Want to turn up the pressure to learn the facts? Get your signs and postcards
asking for the president's birth certificate documentation from the "Where's
the birth certificate?" store
He then proceeds to read the apparent text of the letter directly from a
podium stand to the audience of more than 700 people, including children
wearing T-shirts proclaiming, "Born at Kapi'olani."
"I have no doubt that Neil paraphrased and elaborated and digressed a little," said Abercrombie spokesman Dave Helfert when asked about the large number of differences. He indicated he personally had not seen any letter from the president but presumes the congressman was just reading it on behalf of the hospital. Helfert admits some people have contacted the office "in an insane and nonsensical rage" suggesting Obama "was born somewhere else and snuck into the United States." He says he can't understand why the public is demanding such a level of proof of natural-born citizenship, and when asked why he thought Obama just doesn't end the controversy by releasing his long-form, hospital-generated birth certificate displaying the name of the hospital and doctor, Helfert said he couldn't speak for the president, but "if that were me, I'd tell people to stick it in their ear. It's none of their business. The documents online have been certified to show he was born in the U.S." "If you had a picture of him in the hospital [delivery room] with a hospital sign behind him, there would be a lot of people who wouldn't believe it, [thinking] that it was trick photography or something nefarious," he added. "If the hand of God appeared in the sky to write the birth certificate, they wouldn't believe it." In a local news report covering the Centennial Dinner, KHNL-TV anchor Diane Ako stated, "Even President Barack Obama was helped by the hospital. He was born there." But she did not expound on that point with any evidence. Regarding what is portrayed to be the letter itself, what is displayed
online is not a photo or scanned image of an actual letter sent by regular
mail.
Readers can also view the HTML source code of the page. WND has taken a screenshot of the code where the text of the letter is displayed:
It also does not appear to be showing either a presidential or White House seal at the top. WND contacted both the White House and Kapi'olani Medical Center numerous times to authenticate the existence, authorship and contents of the letter and confirm the true birth hospital of the president, but neither responded. To date, Obama has not revealed his original long-form, hospital-generated
"Certificate of Live Birth" that includes details such as the name of the
medical
facility and the doctor who delivered him.
Here is the "Certification of Live Birth" presented by Obama:
WND has reported on dozens of legal challenges to Obama's status as a "natural born citizen." The Constitution, Article 2, Section 1, states, "No Person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President." Some of the lawsuits question whether he was actually born in Hawaii, as he insists. If he was born out of the country, Obama's American mother, the suits contend, was too young at the time of his birth to confer American citizenship to her son under the law at the time. Other challenges have focused on Obama's citizenship through his father, a Kenyan subject to the jurisdiction of the United Kingdom at the time of his birth, thus making him a dual citizen. The cases contend the framers of the Constitution excluded dual citizens from qualifying as natural born. Complicating the situation is Obama's decision to spend sums estimated in the hundreds of thousands of dollars to avoid releasing a state birth certificate that would put to rest all of the questions. Among the cases have been several from Democrat Philip Berg, who has alleged that not only is Obama ineligible to be president, he was unqualified to be the senator from Illinois and should be prosecuted under the False Claims Act. The key question in the dispute also is being raised on billboards nationwide.
The billboard campaign follows an ongoing petition campaign launched several months ago by WND Editor and Chief Executive Officer Joseph Farah. They are intended to raise public awareness of the fact that Obama has never released the standard "long-form" birth certificate that would show which hospital he was born in, the attending physician and establish that he truly was born in Hawaii, as his autobiography maintains. |
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