Whatever Hawaii birth certificate Obama comes up with, if it doesn’t explain what we’ve already experienced with the Hawaii government it better not be accepted as the real deal. The crimes that have been committed cannot go away even if Obama is able to age a document so it passes as authentic.
This is why I really believe that the criminal justice system needs to be brought into this.
And I think you’re right about the “court of public opinion” - which is why the dems are willing to try to go for broke by using this as a wedge issue between conservatives. They can’t win the case on its merits. If we had a factual conversation in the public sphere about this Obama would lose big-time. So they’re trying to make it into a big political game.
Law enforcement should never be subject to political games. We saw it with the Duke lacrosse case. We saw it with Scooter Libby. We’ve seen it with William Jefferson. Heck, we saw it with Bill Clinton and his “Magnificent Seven” DC Circuit Court judges who bypassed the random assignment of cases to get the Clinton buddies’ cases for themselves.
I think we REALLY need to push hard on the law enforcement aspect of this because whether it is considered “conspiracy” or not, we have ample proof that law enforcement at every level has refused to investigate valid concerns and evidence brought forth by the public. And only a moron would say it’s “extreme” to expect law enforcement to put politics aside.
Ran across this last night...This is as good a place to post it as any...
Thought it was interesting....Follow the money...and all that. No wonder Kenya isn’t talking. 8X is a lot of money.
According to a study, U.S. Arms Exports and Military Assistance in the Global War on Terror, compiled by the Center for Defense Information at the World Security Institute last September: (2008???)
Kenya is considered a vital U.S. ally in the war on terror and has supported U.S. counterterrorism efforts by sharing intelligence, providing overflight rights and granting access to airfields and bases. The State Department considers Kenya to be a front-line state in the war on terror and this counterterrorism cooperation has yielded an increase in U.S. military assistance for Kenya since Sept. 11, 2001.
In the five years after Sept. 11, Kenya received nearly eight times the amount of military assistance it received in the five years prior to Sept. 11.