No she did not.
The Kenyan ambassador to the US said so (on an American radio show).
No he did not.
An Israeli blogger pundit said so.
Whoopie.
Philip Berg claimed so in court papers and even named the specific hospital in the city of Mombasa where the birth is believed to have occurred.
No he has not, not in any court papers I've seen.
On the other hand, we have no documentation to support the theory nor any eyewitnesses to a birth in Hawaii.
Other than the COLB, the birth announcements in the newspapers, the statements from Hawaiian officials that the birth certificate exists, and the total lack of evidence he was born in Kenya.
I know there are many Americans who have problems with the idea that the biggest fraud in American history recently occurred, but the large predominance of the evidence indicates that it did.
No it does not.
Judge for yourself.
Thank you. I have.
The computer-generated COLB has been proven to be a fraud by FReeper Polarik and others. Polarik, a PhD professional in computer science, did a lengthy paper analyzing the COLB which was posted on the 'Net. In fact, one of Obama's supporters admitted that he perpetrated that very fraud.
Assuming (arguendo) that the birth announcements in the Hawaiian papers are real, they do not state the place of birth. As we have gone over many times here, it was possible, under the applicable HI statutes at the time, to register a foreign birth with the HI Health Dept., from which the birth announcement was supposedly derived.
The statements from Hawaii officials that the birth certificate exists do not specify the place of birth. As already indicated, it was possible to register a foreign birth with the HI Health Dept. in 1961, which could have generated that Hawaii birth certificate.
Total lack of evidence he was born in Kenya? There's way more substantial evidence suggesting he was born in Kenya than evidence demonstrating he was born in Hawaii.
You being paid, troll girl?