right wing birther schooled on national tv.

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Free Thinker, Apr 20, 2011.

  1. Pekelo

    Pekelo

    No you stupid bitch, you don't need to take his word, because you have just seen the evidence...

    Sheeesh.......
     
    #11     Apr 20, 2011
  2. Yep! Georgie boy has it. It's true, it's true!!!!!!
     
    #12     Apr 20, 2011
  3. Tim Adams, a former senior elections clerk for the city and county of Honolulu in 2008, has maintained that there is no long-form, hospital-generated birth certificate on file with the Hawaii Department of Health and that neither Honolulu hospital – Queens Medical Center or Kapiolani Medical Center – has any record that Obama was born there.

    Look, the debate is ovah! Georgie boy pulled it out his ass.

    He's so clever and intellectual, that one.
     
    #13     Apr 20, 2011
  4. [​IMG]
     
    #14     Apr 20, 2011
  5. #15     Apr 20, 2011



  6. Desperation: WND touts birther claim made on "pro-white" program at "white supremacist" conference

    June 14, 2010 11:31 am ET by Media Matters staff

    WorldNetDaily, one of the loudest voices pushing the bogus story that Barack Obama does not have a legitimate birth certificate, is now touting a birther claim first made on a "pro-white" radio program at a conference of "white supremacist."

    In a June 10 article headlined, "Hawaii elections clerk: Obama not born here," WND's Joe Kovacs wrote that Tim Adams, "who worked as a senior elections clerk for the city and county of Honolulu in 2008 is making the stunning claim Barack Obama was definitely not born in Hawaii as the White House maintains, and that a long-form, hospital-generated birth certificate for Obama does not even exist in the Aloha State." WND added that "People started to pay attention this week after he was briefly interviewed by James Edwards, host of a weekly radio show on WLRM Radio in Memphis, Tenn." Kovacs wrote a follow-up article on Adams, touting how "WND's original report about Adams' claims has already been made into a YouTube video, getting thousands of hits."

    WND, however, makes no mention that Adams made the claim while appearing on a "pro-white" radio program hosted by white nationalist James Edwards at a conference of "white supremacist."

    James Edwards says that on June 5, he broadcasted his radio program The Political Cesspool "at the 2010 Council of Conservative Citizens National Conference." The CofCC similarly states that Edwards broadcasted live from its event, and includes links to a recording of the show. According to Edwards, "in attendance" was Tim Adams, who made his birther claim on-air.

    The Council of Conservative Citizens is described by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as a "white supremacist" "hate group," and by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) as having a "white supremacy, white separatism" ideology. The Council states on its website that they "oppose all efforts to mix the races of mankind, to promote non-white races over the European-American people through so-called 'affirmative action' and similar measures, to destroy or denigrate the European-American heritage, including the heritage of the Southern people, and to force the integration of the races."

    The Political Cesspool website states: "We represent a philosophy that is pro-White ... We wish to revive the White birthrate above replacement level fertility and beyond to grow the percentage of Whites in the world relative to other races." The ADL and SPLC have both criticized Edwards and The Political Cesspool. The SPLC writes that Edwards "has probably done more than any of his contemporaries on the American radical right to publicly promote neo-Nazis, Holocaust deniers, raging anti-Semites and other extremists."

    Other guests that appeared on the show with Adams included "white supremacist" Sam Dickson; "white supremacist" Paul Fromm; and Derek Black, the son of former Klan leader Don Black and host of "weekly shows on the Stormfront Internet radio site, where he also was a webmaster." Stormfront, which has streamed Political Cesspool, describes itself as a "community of White Nationalists."
     
    #16     Apr 20, 2011
  7. What does the word "anything" mean to you?
     
    #17     Apr 20, 2011
  8. http://voices.washingtonpost.com/right-now/2010/06/there_are_some_people_who.html



    Honolulu city clerk debunks new 'birther' theory



    Over the past few weeks, a Kentucky resident and teacher named Timothy Adams has made the rounds online and on talk radio with an extraordinary claim -- he was the "senior elections clerk" for Honolulu in 2008, where it was an open secret that the city and state had no proof of Barack Obama's citizenship. As he told WorldNetDaily, the racing form for birtherism:

    I had direct access to the Social Security database, the national crime computer, state driver's license information, international passport information, basically just about anything you can imagine to get someone's identity. I could look up what bank your home mortgage was in. I was informed by my boss that we did not have a birth record [for Barack Obama].

    I checked with Glen Takahashi, the administrator of the Honolulu City Clerk's office, and while he verified that Adams worked there, he explained – gently making it clear he did not want to "call anyone a liar" -- that Adams never actually had access to information about Barack Obama.

    "Our office does not have access to birth records," Takahashi said. "That's handled by the state of Hawaii Department of Health. Where he's getting that, I don't know. Put it this way: Barack Obama was not trying to register to vote in Hawaii. He is, as far as I know, not a registered voter here. So no one was looking that up."

    Takahashi explained that the "senior elections clerk" job that Adams held was a low-level data entry position dealing with voter registration and absentee ballots -- Adams was one of dozens of temporary employees who staffed the pre-election rush. And he contradicted Adams's claims that Obama's lack of a birth certificate was an "open secret" or that voters contacted the office to ask about it.

    "To be honest, I fielded no questions about that," Takahashi said. "Why would anyone ask us? We don't have those records."

    The internal contradictions of Adams's story haven't stopped him from expanding his media presence this week, most recently with a local TV interview in which he repeated his claims (some of them based on popular "birther" rumors from the Web) while, confusingly, stating that he didn't think Obama's eligibility was an issue.
     
    #18     Apr 20, 2011

  9. The Hawaiian state health official who personally reviewed Barack Obama's original birth certificate has affirmed again that the document is "real" and denounced "conspiracy theorists" in the so-called "birther" movement for continuing to spread bogus claims about the issue.

    As the top Hawaiian official in charge of state health records in 2008, when the issue of Obama's birth first arose, Fukino said she thought she had put the matter to rest. Contacted by NBC, Fukino expanded on previous public statements and made two key points when asked about Trump's recent comments.

    The first is that the original so-called "long form" birth certificate — described by Hawaiian officials as a "record of live birth" — absolutely exists, located in a bound volume in a file cabinet on the first floor of the state Department of Health. Fukimo said she has personally inspected it — twice. The first time was in late October 2008, during the closing days of the presidential campaign, when the communications director for the state's then Republican governor, Linda Lingle (who appointed Fukino) asked if she could make a public statement in response to claims then circulating on the Internet that Obama was actually born in Kenya.
    Before she would do so, Fukino said, she wanted to inspect the files — and did so, taking with her the state official in charge of vital records. She found the original birth record, properly numbered, half typed and half handwritten, and signed by the doctor who delivered Obama, located in the files. She then put out a public statement asserting to the document's validity. She later put out another public statement in July 2009 — after reviewing the original birth record a second time.
     
    #19     Apr 20, 2011
  10. Wallet

    Wallet

    The media wants the birther issue over the birth certificate to continue as it will never be resolved due to the legal loophole Hawaii created. What it does is pull away attention from college transcripts, where dual or foreign citizenship may be at stake.

    President Obama could have been born in Hawaii, but still be constitutionally ineligible if he gave up his citizenship while living in Indonesia taking the name Barry Sorento.

    Someone here a while back briught out the birther issue just isn't about birth records, but that's the only thing the left anti-birther zealots on this forum want to discuss.
     
    #20     Apr 20, 2011