Author Topic: All things "Birther" Thread  (Read 337351 times)

Soul Crusher

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #425 on: April 06, 2011, 03:06:52 PM »
does every single US citizen have this long form?    ::)


What you are asking is a stupid fucking question, because i don't have access to those records. 

The Hawaiian government does.

You should be asking them, (them who are obviously part of your CT), not me.

People who were allegedly born the same day as him do.    

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #426 on: April 06, 2011, 03:07:36 PM »

Yeah classic 33333 technique on the boards:

-  Don't directly respond to the post, instead deflect towards another issue or argument that has little to do with the post he was responding too.

-  Cut and paste some article.



bump

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #427 on: April 06, 2011, 03:08:23 PM »
People who were allegedly born the same day as him do.    

every person born on the same day and year as Obama has a long form?


Prove it.

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #428 on: April 06, 2011, 03:11:18 PM »
every person born on the same day and year as Obama has a long form?


Prove it.

In Hawaii - FOR FUCKS SAKE I POSTED THE LONG FORM BC OF PEOPLE BORN THE SAME FUCKING DAY AS HE CLAIMS TO HAVE!   

Of course that is not enough for you.   Fucking joke.   

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #429 on: April 06, 2011, 03:11:51 PM »
every person born on the same day and year as Obama has a long form?


Prove it.

Here's the thing.  Apparently the State of Hawaii is committing fraud anyway because the COLB is created using the records they have detailing the birth of Obama.  Those, according to 333, are fake.  So why would a LFBC from the same STATE be legit?  If one is fake, the other must be fake too.  Right 333?  Yes or no?

He won't answer this.  
Abandon every hope...

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #430 on: April 06, 2011, 03:12:49 PM »
In Hawaii - FOR FUCKS SAKE I POSTED THE LONG FORM BC OF PEOPLE BORN THE SAME FUCKING DAY AS HE CLAIMS TO HAVE!   

Of course that is not enough for you.   Fucking joke.   

Does every one born in Hawaii on that day have a long form????????????


prove it.

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #431 on: April 06, 2011, 03:13:21 PM »
More diversion?  pot, kettle.


and then you do your typical shit:


WHAT THE FUCK DOES THAT HAVE TO DO WITH MY POST ABOUT TRUMP?


Additionally:
:


WHERE THE FUCK DO I APPLAUD OBAMA IN MY POST????????????






Answer my questions!

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #432 on: April 06, 2011, 03:14:25 PM »
Here's the thing.  Apparently the State of Hawaii is committing fraud anyway because the COLB is created using the records they have detailing the birth of Obama.  Those, according to 333, are fake.  So why would a LFBC from the same STATE be legit?  If one is fake, the other must be fake too.  Right 333?  Yes or no?

He won't answer this.  

No he won't answer it, what he'll do is this:


Yeah classic 33333 technique on the boards:

-  Don't directly respond to the post, instead deflect towards another issue or argument that has little to do with the post he was responding too.

-  Cut and paste some article.







Soul Crusher

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #433 on: April 06, 2011, 03:18:08 PM »
Yeah ok Ozmo - whatever.  I only posted the long form BC  of the people born on the same day as Obama with the signed doc report naming the hospital etc, that are in almost next to exact sequence as his claimed number - yet he does not have a long form BC.   ::)  ::)

Hawaii claims they never lost any records, so where the fuck is it and why wont barry release it?   

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #434 on: April 06, 2011, 03:19:53 PM »
there were 4 formats of that document.  they came in from diff places.  so it's understandable they wouldn't look the same.

this isn't a winning point - and i'm a birther too lol.......

focus on the SS, and the african newspaper articles saying he was kenyan born.  Surely he did an interview with them at some point?

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #435 on: April 06, 2011, 03:20:14 PM »
yeah, just doing my 3333 imitation
  

Where's the long form, why can't he spend $10?

http://mises.org/daily/5189/Rebecca-Blacks-Friday-A-Libertarian-Allegory

The astonishing popularity of Rebecca Black's "Friday" video — which became the YouTube meme of all memes in the course of a wild six weeks — has mystified many critics.

Was it shared and watched so wildly because it was so bad? Certainly the overwhelming judgement on the part of viewers is that it is atrocious — and yet it is hard to know what that means, since 85 million people not only watched the video but also downloaded the song, bought the ring tone, and devoured every available bit of news about the singer and the song.

Using the principle of "demonstrated preference," this music video ranks as the most popular in human history.

Perhaps it is the digital-age version of Mel Brooks's smash Broadway play The Producers, a story about an attempt to write a play so bad that it flops on the first night. But, in Brooks's hilarious telling, the results were the opposite: the play was so bad that it was brilliant, and it became a smash success, however inadvertently.

Lovers of liberty are often drawn to such scenarios because they highlight the unknowability of the future, the unpredictability of human choice, and the way in which the intentions of the planners (in this case, the producers and writers) are easily upended by consumer choice, which is the driving force of economic progress.

The Producers-like irony is deepened in the case of Black's "Friday" video because it was not intended as a parody or an attempt to create a flop. That makes it all the more brilliant as a a piece of viral art. It somehow captured an archetype of bubblegum pop but with innocence and the absence of an edge.

Kids say it is awful and they hate it. They do not, despite what they say. Teens often claim to hate what they really love — as only a passing familiarity with teen romance patterns illustrates. The girl who can't stop talking about the guy she hates is surely protesting too much.

Musically, the song wouldn't seem to offer that much, but I would point out that its word play is not entirely conventional. The repeated placement of a three-syllable word "partying" into a duple metric creates some off-accent downbeats that are not entirely intuitive.

Far more significant is the underlying celebration of liberation that the day Friday represents. The kids featured in the video are of junior-high age, a time when adulthood is beginning to dawn and, with it, the realization of the captive state that the public school represents.

From the time that children are first institutionalized in these tax-funded cement structures, they are told the rules. Show up, obey the rules, accept the grades your are given, and never even think of escaping until you hear the bell. If you do escape, even peacefully of your own choice, you will be declared "truant," which is the intentional and unauthorized absence from compulsory school.

This prison-like environment runs from Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to late afternoon, for at least ten years of every child's life. It's been called the "twelve-year sentence" for good reason. At some point, every kid in public school gains consciousness of the strange reality. You can acquiesce as the civic order demands, or you can protest and be declared a bum and a loser by society.

"Friday" beautifully illustrates the sheer banality of a life spent in this prison-like system, and the prospect of liberation that the weekend means. Partying, in this case, is just another word for freedom from state authority.
"Partying, in this case, is just another word for freedom from state authority."

The largest segment of the video then deals with what this window of liberty, the weekend, means in the life of someone otherwise ensnared in a thicket of statism. Keep in mind here that the celebration of Friday in this context means more than it would for a worker in a factory, for example: for the worker is free to come and go, to apply for a job or quit, to negotiate terms of a contract, or whatever. All of this is denied to the kid in public school.

In the video, the rush to comply and conform with the system begins with the main character in the morning, when the drill begins with waking up and preparing to go. She eats cereal for breakfast — a bit of trivia that one would hardly expect in a pop song but a first sign that the topic is reality-based and not idyllic or romanticized.

And where is she headed? To catch the official, tax-funded school bus, which, though it is not shown, we know is painted yellow today just as it has been from time immemorial since there is never realy progress or change in the state-run system. The tax-fueled machine comes to your door to snatch you away from home, where you are loved and valued, in order to transport you to the cement structure that teaches you about the glory of fitting in and believing what you are supposed to believe.

But then the protagonist experiences a foreshadowing of the liberation at hand. Arriving before the school bus is a car with "my friends." They are smiling and inviting her to join them on the ride. And it is in this context that she confronts that glorious institution that is otherwise denied to her and every student in government school: human choice.

It might as first seem like a trivial choice: whether to sit in the front seat or the back seat. But the point is not the choice set; the point is the opportunity to exercise some degree of human volition, to use one's own brain to control one's own body ("gotta make my mind up") and live with the consequences of that choice. It is a similar situation to anyone who has found himself let out of prison. These people will report the sense of elation that they feel in even the smallest opportunity to make a choice on their own.

At this moment of choice, note that the melody departs from its single-note, drill-like recitation to suddenly rise up a fifth, musical interval that has traditionally be used as a trumpet-like announcement. And once surrounded by friends of her own choosing, the imaginings of Friday's end become more real, and thus does the melody become more complex and celebratory, exploring a great range of musical colors and rhythms.

The protagonist returns, again and again, to the profound meaning behind the seemingly trivial choice to sit in one seat or another. Again, it is not the choice set that matters here but the reality of choice itself that is otherwise denied to her and all her friends in the state-run system.

The remainder of the video features scenes of "partying," which turns out not to be about drugs or drinking but merely hanging around in yards and milling about with friends. There is no attempt here to manufacture a predetermined order, no standing in lines or obeying some central plan. Rather, the beauty is seen in the pure fact of voluntary human association, with kids milling around and joining this group or that, wearing clothes of their own choosing and talking with friends of their own choosing.

Even the recitation of the days of week — a portion of the video that has been most subjected to ridicule — underscores the theme of captivity and liberation. What is there to do in prison but count the days? In story and legend, the prisoner watches the light outside and make tick marks on the wall to mark the passage of time. So it is with this protagonist, who uses calendar pages to do the same.

When she finally announces, elatedly, that "I don't want the weekend to end," she is expressing more than just the desire to be permanently relieved of educational tasks; it is a cry for the civic order to recognize the human right of liberty itself. The video ends with that hope that there will be no return to the twelve-year sentence but rather that "partying" could become a permanent state of being, not just for her but for everyone.

$20 $18

To be sure, I'm not arguing that all of this was overtly intended by the songwriter or the singer. The point, rather, is that the plight, the hopes, and the dreams that are reflected in this video, however inadvertently, tap into a sensibility and a longing of a generation for a certain kind of freedom from a system that has ensnared them against their will. This might be the driving force of its popularity — and precisely why something that people claim not to like is evidently so loved.

A child-like dream of Friday and what it represents for kids trapped in public school, kids who are transported around on tax-funded buses and ordered around by tax-funded propagandists for the state, is a plausible allegory for the plight of all people imprisoned in state-controlled environments.

kcballer

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #436 on: April 06, 2011, 03:21:44 PM »
Yeah ok Ozmo - whatever.  I only posted the long form BC  of the people born on the same day as Obama with the signed doc report naming the hospital etc, that are in almost next to exact sequence as his claimed number - yet he does not have a long form BC.   ::)  ::)

Hawaii claims they never lost any records, so where the fuck is it and why wont barry release it?   

in his file under 'notes'   ;)

he released what the state of hawaii releases as a birth ceritificate.  Have you not been keeping up?  Any hawaiian gets a COLB and has done since 2001.  The reason it has changed from 1961 LFBC's is simple.  “The birth certificate form has been modified over the years and decades to conform to national standards and models,” she said.

So it's the same for EVERYONE not just Obama.  Wow mass conspiracy by the whole state!

So answer the questions...
Abandon every hope...

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #437 on: April 06, 2011, 03:22:25 PM »
Where is the long form BC signed by a doc showing thehispotal and date of birth like those in the exact sequene at to his COLB who have released a long form BC?  


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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #438 on: April 06, 2011, 03:23:04 PM »
yeah, just doing my 3333 imitation
  

Where's the long form, why can't he spend $10?

http://mises.org/daily/5189/Rebecca-Blacks-Friday-A-Libertarian-Allegory

The astonishing popularity of Rebecca Black's "Friday" video — which became the YouTube meme of all memes in the course of a wild six weeks — has mystified many critics.

Was it shared and watched so wildly because it was so bad? Certainly the overwhelming judgement on the part of viewers is that it is atrocious — and yet it is hard to know what that means, since 85 million people not only watched the video but also downloaded the song, bought the ring tone, and devoured every available bit of news about the singer and the song.

Using the principle of "demonstrated preference," this music video ranks as the most popular in human history.

Perhaps it is the digital-age version of Mel Brooks's smash Broadway play The Producers, a story about an attempt to write a play so bad that it flops on the first night. But, in Brooks's hilarious telling, the results were the opposite: the play was so bad that it was brilliant, and it became a smash success, however inadvertently.

Lovers of liberty are often drawn to such scenarios because they highlight the unknowability of the future, the unpredictability of human choice, and the way in which the intentions of the planners (in this case, the producers and writers) are easily upended by consumer choice, which is the driving force of economic progress.

The Producers-like irony is deepened in the case of Black's "Friday" video because it was not intended as a parody or an attempt to create a flop. That makes it all the more brilliant as a a piece of viral art. It somehow captured an archetype of bubblegum pop but with innocence and the absence of an edge.

Kids say it is awful and they hate it. They do not, despite what they say. Teens often claim to hate what they really love — as only a passing familiarity with teen romance patterns illustrates. The girl who can't stop talking about the guy she hates is surely protesting too much.

Musically, the song wouldn't seem to offer that much, but I would point out that its word play is not entirely conventional. The repeated placement of a three-syllable word "partying" into a duple metric creates some off-accent downbeats that are not entirely intuitive.

Far more significant is the underlying celebration of liberation that the day Friday represents. The kids featured in the video are of junior-high age, a time when adulthood is beginning to dawn and, with it, the realization of the captive state that the public school represents.

From the time that children are first institutionalized in these tax-funded cement structures, they are told the rules. Show up, obey the rules, accept the grades your are given, and never even think of escaping until you hear the bell. If you do escape, even peacefully of your own choice, you will be declared "truant," which is the intentional and unauthorized absence from compulsory school.

This prison-like environment runs from Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to late afternoon, for at least ten years of every child's life. It's been called the "twelve-year sentence" for good reason. At some point, every kid in public school gains consciousness of the strange reality. You can acquiesce as the civic order demands, or you can protest and be declared a bum and a loser by society.

"Friday" beautifully illustrates the sheer banality of a life spent in this prison-like system, and the prospect of liberation that the weekend means. Partying, in this case, is just another word for freedom from state authority.
"Partying, in this case, is just another word for freedom from state authority."

The largest segment of the video then deals with what this window of liberty, the weekend, means in the life of someone otherwise ensnared in a thicket of statism. Keep in mind here that the celebration of Friday in this context means more than it would for a worker in a factory, for example: for the worker is free to come and go, to apply for a job or quit, to negotiate terms of a contract, or whatever. All of this is denied to the kid in public school.

In the video, the rush to comply and conform with the system begins with the main character in the morning, when the drill begins with waking up and preparing to go. She eats cereal for breakfast — a bit of trivia that one would hardly expect in a pop song but a first sign that the topic is reality-based and not idyllic or romanticized.

And where is she headed? To catch the official, tax-funded school bus, which, though it is not shown, we know is painted yellow today just as it has been from time immemorial since there is never realy progress or change in the state-run system. The tax-fueled machine comes to your door to snatch you away from home, where you are loved and valued, in order to transport you to the cement structure that teaches you about the glory of fitting in and believing what you are supposed to believe.

But then the protagonist experiences a foreshadowing of the liberation at hand. Arriving before the school bus is a car with "my friends." They are smiling and inviting her to join them on the ride. And it is in this context that she confronts that glorious institution that is otherwise denied to her and every student in government school: human choice.

It might as first seem like a trivial choice: whether to sit in the front seat or the back seat. But the point is not the choice set; the point is the opportunity to exercise some degree of human volition, to use one's own brain to control one's own body ("gotta make my mind up") and live with the consequences of that choice. It is a similar situation to anyone who has found himself let out of prison. These people will report the sense of elation that they feel in even the smallest opportunity to make a choice on their own.

At this moment of choice, note that the melody departs from its single-note, drill-like recitation to suddenly rise up a fifth, musical interval that has traditionally be used as a trumpet-like announcement. And once surrounded by friends of her own choosing, the imaginings of Friday's end become more real, and thus does the melody become more complex and celebratory, exploring a great range of musical colors and rhythms.

The protagonist returns, again and again, to the profound meaning behind the seemingly trivial choice to sit in one seat or another. Again, it is not the choice set that matters here but the reality of choice itself that is otherwise denied to her and all her friends in the state-run system.

The remainder of the video features scenes of "partying," which turns out not to be about drugs or drinking but merely hanging around in yards and milling about with friends. There is no attempt here to manufacture a predetermined order, no standing in lines or obeying some central plan. Rather, the beauty is seen in the pure fact of voluntary human association, with kids milling around and joining this group or that, wearing clothes of their own choosing and talking with friends of their own choosing.

Even the recitation of the days of week — a portion of the video that has been most subjected to ridicule — underscores the theme of captivity and liberation. What is there to do in prison but count the days? In story and legend, the prisoner watches the light outside and make tick marks on the wall to mark the passage of time. So it is with this protagonist, who uses calendar pages to do the same.

When she finally announces, elatedly, that "I don't want the weekend to end," she is expressing more than just the desire to be permanently relieved of educational tasks; it is a cry for the civic order to recognize the human right of liberty itself. The video ends with that hope that there will be no return to the twelve-year sentence but rather that "partying" could become a permanent state of being, not just for her but for everyone.

$20 $18

To be sure, I'm not arguing that all of this was overtly intended by the songwriter or the singer. The point, rather, is that the plight, the hopes, and the dreams that are reflected in this video, however inadvertently, tap into a sensibility and a longing of a generation for a certain kind of freedom from a system that has ensnared them against their will. This might be the driving force of its popularity — and precisely why something that people claim not to like is evidently so loved.

A child-like dream of Friday and what it represents for kids trapped in public school, kids who are transported around on tax-funded buses and ordered around by tax-funded propagandists for the state, is a plausible allegory for the plight of all people imprisoned in state-controlled environments.

I would buy the latest song by maddoff/vandersloot over rebecca blacks she wasn't even born here!
Abandon every hope...

OzmO

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #439 on: April 06, 2011, 03:23:52 PM »
Yeah ok Ozmo - whatever.  I only posted the long form BC  of the people born on the same day as Obama with the signed doc report naming the hospital etc, that are in almost next to exact sequence as his claimed number - yet he does not have a long form BC.   ::)  ::)

Hawaii claims they never lost any records, so where the fuck is it and why wont barry release it?   


doing more 3333, imitations......


Where is everyone's long form born in 1961???


Why are you applauding these people?


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-sigman/in-wacky-gop-presidential_b_845492.html

In Wacky GOP Presidential Field, the Donald Trumps the Shark

Donald Trump's transparently idiotic statements about President Obama's birth certificate and other matters haven't made Rupert Murdoch's New York Post shy about touting the billionaire's "suddenly surging presidential chances."

Others in the media are also taking Trump's presidential candidacy seriously, and the man whose contribution to the national discourse begins and ends with the words "You're fired" just finished second behind home-court fave Mitt Romney in a new New Hampshire poll. So it's worth asking if the presence of a knucklehead is simply necessary to the political process -- not because Americans are stupid, but because the media can't tolerate the gravitas of politics -- all that talk of foreign policy and budgets and the Constitution unleavened by pure insanity or the possibility of an upset.

Until recently, Sarah Palin was clearly the 2012 designated knucklehead. Despite her lack of even minimal qualifications, Chris Matthews was among the many Palin-watchers hyping her purported "path to the nomination."

Palin was hardly the first empty pantsuit to get up close and dangerous with the most powerful job in the world -- the 2000 Republican primary field included loopy magazine publisher Steve Forbes, activist/certifiable lunatic Alan Keyes and Dan "I deserve respect for the things I didn't do" Quayle, the proto-Palin.

As Palin's bonehead statements sent her numbers tumbling faster than her champion Bill Kristol could walk back his praise, commentators focused on Newt Gingrich. He's been working overtime contradicting himself on Libya and other issues with the skill of an unprepared high school debater.

No matter how lame Gingrich gets, commentators continue to praise him with faint blame. Newt is an "idea man," they say, without giving specific examples, leaving us on our own to mine the depths of such Gingrich-isms as, "The underlying thematics are beginning to be universalizable in a way that has taken years of work."

Michele Bachmann -- whose grasp of the rudiments of American history is tenuous at best -- may be as far as one can get from presidential timber, but the New Republic's Ed Kilgore, the Telegraph's Alex Spillius and MSNBC's Cenk Uygur are among the pundits talking up her chances in the Republican race.

And then there's Trump. Towering over the field in terms of pure self-aggrandizement, he's inevitably introduced as a "genius businessman" or a "brilliant negotiator." It came as no surprise, then, that in the first in a series of regular spots on Fox and Friends, the mogul praised his own three-night Trump-fest on last week's Fox show The O'Reilly Factor. Leaving content in the dust, meta-media website Mediaite -- which also found it newsworthy to feature the "story" that Bill Clinton has rejected "birther claims" -- noted that even Fox's own Gretchen Carlson "couldn't help but let out a chuckle at Trump's unabashed [self]-promotion."

The spectacle of Donald "Trumping the shark" is so post-ironic that mere irony doesn't stand a chance. When Bill Ayers joked that he, not Obama, wrote the actually brilliant book Dreams of My Father, Trump displayed the audacity of dope: he took the joke seriously.

"They say Dreams of My Father was genius and they give Obama full credit," he told conservative talk show host Laura Ingraham, "and now it's coming out that Bill Ayers wrote it -- that's what started him on his road where he became president."

With geniuses like Trump, who needs idiots?

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #440 on: April 06, 2011, 03:24:05 PM »
in his file under 'notes'   ;)

he released what the state of hawaii releases as a birth ceritificate.  Have you not been keeping up?  Any hawaiian gets a COLB and has done since 2001.  The reason it has changed from 1961 LFBC's is simple.  “The birth certificate form has been modified over the years and decades to conform to national standards and models,” she said.

So it's the same for EVERYONE not just Obama.  Wow mass conspiracy by the whole state!

So answer the questions...

Funny - the people in direct sequence to him somehow released their long form BC.  

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #441 on: April 06, 2011, 03:25:20 PM »
I want to see every persons long form born in 1961 or they should deported!

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #442 on: April 06, 2011, 03:25:55 PM »
Obama allegedly wrote Dreams in 1995 and in that book he caimed he had a BC.   Which was it?   Couldnt be the 2007 nonsense they created corect?  

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #443 on: April 06, 2011, 03:26:28 PM »
I want to see every persons long form born in 1961 or they should deported!

Perhaps 333 should post his to prove he is American.  For all we know he's an illegal.
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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #444 on: April 06, 2011, 03:26:45 PM »
I would buy the latest song by maddoff/vandersloot over rebecca blacks she wasn't even born here!

lol

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #445 on: April 06, 2011, 03:27:34 PM »
Obama allegedly wrote Dreams in 1995 and in that book he caimed he had a BC.   Which was it?   Couldnt be the 2007 nonsense they created corect?  

He probably does have a LFBC doesn't mean he has to show you it.  The state has it on file, they used it to create a COLB for him to prove his place of birth.  

Can you prove they don't have the LFBC in the file?  
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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #446 on: April 06, 2011, 03:28:43 PM »
Obama allegedly wrote Dreams in 1995 and in that book he caimed he had a BC.   Which was it?   Couldnt be the 2007 nonsense they created corect?  

Why are you applauding the beheading of 8 UN workers?


Cut and paste article here.   ::)

OzmO

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #447 on: April 06, 2011, 03:29:40 PM »
He probably does have a LFBC doesn't mean he has to show you it.  The state has it on file, they used it to create a COLB for him to prove his place of birth.  

Can you prove they don't have the LFBC in the file?  


why doesn't he just spend 10 dollars for 3333 satisfaction?

kcballer

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #448 on: April 06, 2011, 03:31:05 PM »

why doesn't he just spend 10 dollars for 3333 satisfaction?

Because he lurks here and enjoys the meltdown.  ;D
Abandon every hope...

Soul Crusher

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Re: All things "Birther" Thread
« Reply #449 on: April 06, 2011, 03:32:40 PM »
Perhaps 333 should post his to prove he is American.  For all we know he's an illegal.

I can release a long form BC, prove only using one SS my whole life, release my assport, myLSAT, my records, client client, school transcripts, etc within afew hours if need be.  Funny Obama cant. 


Obama could not get a job with mall security with his record.