Did a Google on “xray3delta” and ran across this interesting bit of info:
Talks about the databases, and who could have access and who usually couldn’t.
Hmmmmm.....
I’d go after the “dad was Kenyan citizen” angle; that by itself disqualifies 0
I'd go after beating him in 2012.
I agree, most telling to me was the fact that this educated man, thinks its a shame that his reputation is tarnished as President. He does not seem to understand that Obamas mother could not confer citizenship to her son, as she was out of the country too long, and not back in long enough before his birth.
Of course, the fact that his father was NEVER a US Citizen disqualifies him immediately. but...
This guy does not realize that his statement, if true, makes Obama ineligable for POTUS.
For that reason alone, his lack of knowledge concerning eligibility, it rings true to me, however, saying it, and proving it, are two different things.
Also telling, is the fact that all the government people know, and are not talking.....
Hmmmmm....
I’d want to do some real checking. That article was mostly people saying what they thought. I’ve learned from experience that you don’t trust Hawaiian officials when they speak off-the-record about what they think. You have to look at the laws themselves and do official requests for documents. Then, and only then, will you possibly get the truth.
For instance, voter registration happens all the time, not just during an election. In fact, the voter registration would get heavier BEFORE the election. So this article trying to say that registration wouldn’t have been happening because the election hadn’t been held yet is just rot.
And the department in question would make a huge difference as to what a person could get access to. Of course the HDOH has the BC’s. But a government official who needs to see BC’s in the process of enacting a transaction on behalf of someone is authorized to see the birth certificates.
If birth certificates were required to document citizenship for voter registration, I have no doubts that SOMEBODY there had access to BC’s - contradicting what the people who work there are trying to say (off-the-record, of course). Somebody should ask them whether they do any verification of eligibility for registering voters there, and see if their answer gets a little more “nuanced”. This taking the bureaucrats at their word without making a legal request (that they can’t lie on) or looking up the laws is shoddy work.
I don’t have the time right now, but somebody should check the voter registration statutes and see what is involved in verifying eligibility to be a voter. That would tell us a heckuva lot more than just asking a Hawaii bureaucrat, especially after so many examples where HI officials have lied to the press only to be found out through official UIPA requests by people a little more concerned with accuracy than the press is.