Of course he dropped this. Because no NH law requires the candidate whose name appears on the ballot to be qualified for the job. When my work was stolen, the thieves joined together to apply my concept of election fraud to NH. Only, this was not an applicable state for the complaints of election fraud to the AG, filed in applicable states like HI, GA, MD, TX, SC, and VA. Plus, they took it to the SoS, a state constitutional officer with no jurisdiction into criminal matters but whose authority only extends to ruling on the validity of the ballot in NH according to NH law. Their charge? BO committed fraud when he signed the application to get his name printed on the Presidential primary ballot. Big mistake. Because charging him with fraud meant proving he lied. What I mean is, he knows whether he is a NBC. So, in order to go after him, you would have to prove, he lied. That’s why I went after anyone else who Certified he was a NBC, like Nancy Pelosi, or Boyd Richie. How did THEY know he was a NBC before Certifying he was, and sending that Certification to state election officials? By forging ahead with the concept they stole from me, these thieves almost blew our legitimate causes of action. What do you suppose would have happened if the NH SoS had ruled, there was no ballot fraud? (And there wasn’t, in NH.) The AG in TX, where there WAS fraud, could have said, ‘Well, the SoS in NH has determined there was no ballot fraud and so, as far as I am concerned, the case is closed.’ Thank goodness, all the NH SoS did was refer the complaint ostensibly lodged by the NH state Rep. - did you know he was a named Plaintiff in one of Orly’s cases? - to the AG, who would not touch it.
Stealing my work is not only wrong on its face; it is also subverting the mission of that work. My readers are (or are becoming) educated voters. They have read the articles on my blog and asked questions. They sent in their complaints understanding what they were signing their names to. There is no shortcut here. You have to put in the time to become an informed voter. At least, you have to know as much about the system as those who would use their superior knowledge to have power over your lives.
My email exchange with the SOS of NH back in January. Notice she claims that Sal Mohamed was not a NBC but I wonder if she read BHO book would she have disqualified him... No we did not. Candidates sign a declaration of candidacy and we accept that. Mr. Mohamed; however, submitted a biography of himself stating that he was born in Egypt..Original Message From: Greg Goss [mailto:Gwg1955@comcast.net] Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 9:46 AM To: Elections Subject: Re: Presidential Ballot Rules
So you are telling me that you verified all candidates documentation for eligibility under US Constitution Article II?
Original Message From: Elections To: Greg Goss Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 9:32 AM Subject: RE: Presidential Ballot Rules
Mr. Mohamed was disqualified because he was born in Egypt; therefore he is not a natural born United States Citizen.
Original Message From: Greg Goss [mailto:Gwg1955@comcast.net] Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 9:22 AM To: Elections Subject: Re: Presidential Ballot Rules
Thank you very much for the reply. I have one question. On your website it list the candidates that filed http://www.sos.nh.gov:80/presprim2008/candidatesfiled.htm. One candidate, Sal Mohamed is listed as Disqualified. What was the disqualification for? Greg Goss
Original Message From: Elections To: Greg Goss Sent: Wednesday, January 14, 2009 8:23 AM Subject: RE: Presidential Ballot Rules
I can tell you what the law currently says regarding your questions (subject to change between now and next presidential election).
To be a candidate on the NH PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY ballot, a candidate must file a declaration of candidacy and pay a $1,000 filing fee during the filing period which usually occurs in late October or November of the year preceding the presidential primary election.
To be a third party (independent, libertarian, etc) candidate on the NH GENERAL ELECTION ballot as a candidate for president, the candidate must file a declaration of intent during the June filing period and pay a $250. filing fee. THEN, the candidate must obtain 3,000 individual signatures on nomination papers signed by registered voters in NH have those signatures certified by the supervisors of the checklist where the voter lives, and then file those papers with the Secretary of States Office. There are deadlines for all of the above, but since that next election isnt until the year 2012, I dont have the exact dates.
I hope this helps answer your questions.
Karen Ladd
Assistant Secretary of State
Original Message From: Greg Goss [mailto:Gwg1955@comcast.net] Sent: Tuesday, January 13, 2009 5:46 PM To: Elections Subject: Presidential Ballot Rules
This will mark the third attempt at obtaining information concerning the election of federal offices that appear on NH ballots. I have two questions.
1.) What is required for a candidate for President to appear on the NH ballot?
2.) What is the process for meeting or verifying those requirements?
Your attention is required and much appreciated.
Greg Goss
Hudson NH
My email exchange with the SOS of NH back in January. Notice she claims that Sal Mohamed was not a NBC but I wonder if she read BHO's book would she have disqualified him...No we did not. Candidates sign a declaration of candidacy and we accept that. Mr. Mohamed; however, submitted a biography of himself stating that he was born in Egypt..
Original Message From: Greg Goss [mailto:Gwg1955@XXX] Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 9:46 AM To: Elections Subject: Re: Presidential Ballot Rules
So you are telling me that you verified all candidates documentation for eligibility under US Constitution Article II?
Original Message From: Elections To: Greg Goss Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 9:32 AM Subject: RE: Presidential Ballot Rules
Mr. Mohamed was disqualified because he was born in Egypt; therefore he is not a natural born United States Citizen.
Original Message From: Greg Goss [mailto:Gwg1955@XXX] Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 9:22 AM To: Elections Subject: Re: Presidential Ballot Rules
Thank you very much for the reply. I have one question. On your website it list the candidates that filed http://www.sos.nh.gov:80/presprim2008/candidatesfiled.htm. One candidate, Sal Mohamed is listed as Disqualified. What was the disqualification for? Greg Goss
Original Message From: Elections To: Greg Goss Sent: Wednesday, January 14, 2009 8:23 AM Subject: RE: Presidential Ballot Rules
I can tell you what the law currently says regarding your questions (subject to change between now and next presidential election).
To be a candidate on the NH PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY ballot, a candidate must file a declaration of candidacy and pay a $1,000 filing fee during the filing period which usually occurs in late October or November of the year preceding the presidential primary election.
To be a third party (independent, libertarian, etc) candidate on the NH GENERAL ELECTION ballot as a candidate for president, the candidate must file a declaration of intent during the June filing period and pay a $250. filing fee. THEN, the candidate must obtain 3,000 individual signatures on nomination papers signed by registered voters in NH have those signatures certified by the supervisors of the checklist where the voter lives, and then file those papers with the Secretary of States Office. There are deadlines for all of the above, but since that next election isnt until the year 2012, I dont have the exact dates.
I hope this helps answer your questions.
Karen Ladd
Assistant Secretary of State
Original Message From: Greg Goss [mailto:Gwg1955@XXX] Sent: Tuesday, January 13, 2009 5:46 PM To: Elections Subject: Presidential Ballot Rules
This will mark the third attempt at obtaining information concerning the election of federal offices that appear on NH ballots. I have two questions.
1.) What is required for a candidate for President to appear on the NH ballot?
2.) What is the process for meeting or verifying those requirements?
Your attention is required and much appreciated.
Greg Goss
Hudson NH