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Libya & Kenya: Mama Sarah Obama visit to Gadhafi Palace in Tripoli has caused jittery in the family
Jaluo Blog ^ | June 3, 2010 | Leo Odera Omolo

Posted on 02/26/2011 5:55:26 PM PST by Seizethecarp

The controversial trip recently made to Tripoli, Libya by Mama Sarah Obama, the step grand mother of US President Barack Obama Jnr has caused jittery and big split within the Obama family in Alego Kogelo Nyang’oma backyard in Kenya.

Mama Sarah Obama, the 88 year old step grand mother who sprung into fame immediately soon after the election victory of her step grand son Barack Obama jnr as the President of the United States of America, the most powerful nation on earth has visited other countries including Saudi Arabia and Rwanda.

The Obama family in Kenya is currently embroiled in serious dispute about where the Kenya government should build the Kshs 100 million Barack Hussein Obama Cultural Center in Nyang’oma village.

Mama Sarah Obama visited Tripoli last month in the company of her youngest son Saidi Obama, a main and other person and were lavishly entertained by President Gadhafi in his Tripoli Palace.

The motive of the visit to Tripoli by Mama Sarah Obama remained unclear, but other unconfirmed reports says President Obama got the wind of the visit and appeared to have been embarrassed as he is said to have phoned his cousin Saidi Obama expressing his disappointment at what was going on around his Kenyan ancestral home backyard.

A source confided to us that it was the first time the US President used harsh tone in conversation with his cousin. Mr. Saidi Obama, however, could not be reached for his immediate comments.

Visitors at the Obama rural home in Alego Kogelo at the weekend were shown a huge album of containing a series of photographs of Mama Sarah Obama, her host Gadhafi and her entourage. It is believed some niceties had changed hands during the visit.

(Excerpt) Read more at blog.jaluo.com ...


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: certifigate; libya; mamasarahobama; naturalborncitizen; obama; obamacrimefamily; sarahobama; talkslikejarjarbinks; tnb
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To: Fred Nerks

Is that really her? Without the bandana looks like a man.


81 posted on 02/27/2011 12:05:29 PM PST by caww
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To: bgill; Smokeyblue; Seizethecarp; warsaw44; ColdOne; Dubya-M-DeesWent2SyriaStupid!; GQuagmire; ...
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Was searching for Anna Toot again and ran across this perverted 2008 British article about Davis. Didn’t know if you’d seen it.

No US paper would write such but it brings in another person, a Dawna Weatherly-Williams, and it talks about Stanley. Wonder what caused Davis and Stanley to drift apart and when, in the 80s.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/barackobama/2601914/Frank-Marshall-Davis-alleged-Communist-was-early-influence-on-Barack-Obama.html

I glanced through some of the Telegraph’s 2008 related 0bama links and they are very interesting.

Thanks, bgill.

. . . . Also, check out # 78 by Smokeyblue, and # 79 by Seizethecarp.

Thanks, guys.

82 posted on 02/27/2011 12:45:12 PM PST by LucyT
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To: Spaulding
Obama Jr was born a British subject, by the 1948 British Nationality Act.

IF, and that's a big IF, Senior is legally the daddy listed on the BC. It may at one point, but right now biology and DNA doesn't matter. Just because he claims Senior is his daddy, the only thing that matters is the legally named father on the BC. Right now it's hearsay. He knows that. He knows that until that BC comes to light, there is no way to prove his British citizenship. I'm thinking there's no big surprise on the BC but the only reason he's keeping it under lock and key is that until daddy's citizenship is proven then he can hang out in the white hut as long as he wants.

Every Senator attested, in Pat Leahy’s Senate Res 511, April 2008, to the understanding that a natural born Citizen is born of citizen parents. There is no doubt. (The local trolls will claim "but they were talking about McCain." The provision does not change with the candidate.)

Every senator including the usurper himself agreed to the "two citizen parentS" definition. He can't deny that. He can't do a flip-flop. There's no do-over. So, again, as long as that BC never sees the light of day no one can touch him.

83 posted on 02/27/2011 2:00:30 PM PST by bgill (Kenyan Parliament - how could a man born in Kenya who is not even a native American become the POTUS)
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To: Seizethecarp
The fact remains that it would be very easy for the aging relatives in Kenya 40+ years after the fact to conflate the nicknames of Stanley Ann and Madelyn Dunham.

Not if the name ANNA TOOT came to the family when the son of a kenyan goat-herder wrote to them from the mainland and told them he was 'working for an oil company and had married a white woman named ANNA TOOT'

ANNA and TOOT make their first appearance in 'Dreams' - their names were STANLEY ANN DUNHAM & MADELYN DUNHAM.

You just can't see HOW they hung the name of another woman onto Stanley Ann and her mother, to get rid of ANNA OBAMA.

And STOP throwing WIKI at me. You might as well quote directly from 'Dreams'.

84 posted on 02/27/2011 2:21:54 PM PST by Fred Nerks (FAIR DINKUM!)
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To: Seizethecarp

ENTER ANN, ANNA & TOOT INTO THE NARRATIVE:

“See, your mom and dad decided to take this friend of his sightseeing around the island. So they drove up to the
Lookout, and Barack was probably on the wrong side of the road the whole way over there-”

“Your father was a terrible driver,” my mother explains to me. “He’d end up on the left-hand side, the way the British
drive, and if you said something he’d just huff about silly American rules-”
“Well, this particular time they arrived in one piece, and they got out and stood at the railing to admire the view. And Barack, he was puffing away on this pipe that I’d given him for his birthday, pointing out all the sights with the stem, like a sea captain-”

“Your father was really proud of this pipe,” my mother interrupts again. “He’d smoke it all night while he studied, and sometimes-”

“Look, Ann, do you want to tell the story or are you going to let me finish?”
“Sorry, Dad. Go ahead.”

“Anyway, this poor fella-he was another African student, wasn’t he? Fresh off the boat. This poor kid must’ve been
impressed with the way Barack was holding forth with this pipe, ’cause he asked if he could give it a try. Your dad
thought about it for a minute, and finally agreed, and as soon as the fella took his first puff, he started coughing up a fit.
Coughed so hard that the pipe slipped out of his hand and dropped over the railing, a hundred feet down the face of the cliff.”

Gramps stops to take another nip from his flask before continuing. “Well, now, your dad was gracious enough to wait
until his friend stopped coughing before he told him to climb over the railing and bring the pipe back. The man took
one peek down this ninety-degree incline and told Barack that he’d buy him a replacement-”

“Quite sensibly,” Toot says from the kitchen. (We call my grandmother Tutu, Toot for short; it means “grandparent”
in Hawaiian, for she decided on the day I was born that she was still too young to be called Granny.) Gramps scowls
but decides to ignore her.

“-but Barack was adamant about getting his pipe back, because it was a gift and couldn’t be replaced. So the fella took another look, and shook his head again, and that’s when your dad picked him clear off the ground and started dangling him over the railing!”

Gramps lets out a hoot and gives his knee a jovial slap. As he laughs, I imagine myself looking up at my father, dark
against the brilliant sun, the transgressor’s arms flailing about as he’s held aloft. A fearsome vision of justice.
“He wasn’t really holding him over the railing, Dad,” my mother says, looking to me with concern, but Gramps takes
another sip of whiskey and plows forward.

“At this point, other people were starting to stare, and your mother was begging Barack to stop. I guess Barack’s
friend was just holding his breath and saying his prayers. Anyway, after a couple of minutes, your dad set the man back
down on his feet, patted him on the back, and suggested, calm as you please, that they all go find themselves a beer.
And don’t you know, that’s how your dad acted for the rest of the tour-like nothing happened. Of course, your mother
was still pretty upset when they got home. In fact, she was barely talking to your dad. Barack wasn’t helping matters
any, either, ’cause when your mother tried to tell us what had happened he just shook his head and started to laugh.

‘Relax, Anna,’ he said to her-your dad had this deep baritone, see, and this British accent.” My grandfather tucks his chin into his neck at this point, to capture the full effect. “ ‘Relax, Anna,’ he said. ‘I only wanted to teach the chap a lesson about the proper care of other people’s property!’ ”

Gramps would start to laugh again until he started to cough, and Toot would mutter under her breath that she
supposed it was a good thing that my father had realized that dropping the pipe had just been an accident because who
knows what might have happened otherwise, and my mother would roll her eyes at me and say they were exaggerating.
“Your father can be a bit domineering,” my mother would admit with a hint of a smile. “But it’s just that he is
basically a very honest person. That makes him uncompromising sometimes.”


85 posted on 02/27/2011 4:27:01 PM PST by Fred Nerks (FAIR DINKUM!)
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To: Fred Nerks
What woman would allowed herself to be nicknamed 'Toot'? I went to the Urban Dictionary, and not to be vulgar, but here is the very first entry [meaning, it's the one that got the most positive votes]:

Toot: 1) Slang for fart

Not to be even more vulgar, but a little further down the page:

Toot: Another word for fart. Beans, beans, the musical fruit/the more you eat, the more you toot.

I don't buy it. No woman wants to be known as 'slang for a fart'.

86 posted on 02/27/2011 4:40:00 PM PST by Fantasywriter
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To: Fantasywriter
...(We call my grandmother Tutu, Toot for short; it means “grandparent” in Hawaiian, for she decided on the day I was born that she was still too young to be called Granny.)

They had to work TOOT in there somehow...I think he wrote home to Kenya, told them exactly what the relative who was quoted, said.

He worked for an oil company, married a white woman named ANNA TOOT.

And they REMEMBERED.

87 posted on 02/27/2011 4:54:48 PM PST by Fred Nerks (FAIR DINKUM!)
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To: Fred Nerks
Agreed, Fred.

Not only that, but the idea that 'tutu' is the word for grandmother is as big a lie as everything else about this pathological fraud Obama:

According to my Hawaiian dictionary, the word for grandparent is "kupuna" or "kuku." To distinguish grandmother, you would add the word for woman, "wahine" to the end of either one of these. To distinguish grandfather, you would add the word for man, "kanaka" or "kane."
In Hawaiian, you cannot have the letter "t" at all. That sound is found in Tahitian, a closely related language, but not in true Hawaiian.
Source(s):
"Introduction to the Hawaiian Language and English-Hawaiian Vocabulary" by Henry P. Judd, Mary Kawena Pukui, and John F.G. Stokes, 1945, Tongg Publishing, Honolulu, Hawaii.


Hhhmm... Been away from home for quite sometime, so I can't remember most of the Hawaiian dialects now. One thing that I cannot forget is the foods and all the good times (the spirit of aloha and the beauty of the island). Something that is missing here in upstate N.Y. Maybe I will go back there someday when I'm retired, or when I reach that point to become a grandfather,ha ha ha...

Edit: Kupuna, spells as kopona, but spell it as a hard "o", so you don't pronounce it as a "u". Wahine also spells different. The "i" sounds like a hard "e", example is the word "it", so most "i" in Hawaiian word, are not the same as "i" as in English pronounciation. Another example is the right pronounciation of Hawaii is Hawa"ee", hard "e" of course...

So Kupuna kane (grand father) and Kupuna wahine (grand mother) are the right words to use. I hope I didn't lost you...

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20081021153505AAglWyf

88 posted on 02/27/2011 5:09:57 PM PST by Fantasywriter
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To: Seizethecarp; Fred Nerks
...as recounted by bill Ayers, constructing Obama’s life narrative and “remembered” conversations from whole cloth to protect Obama? That is what Dreams appears to me to be. I find Jack Cashill's take persuasive and don't believe most of what is in Dreams, absent independent documentation.

I don't have a copy of Dreams at my side, but isn't there a disclaimer in the front to the effect that the contents are sort of half-remembered and semi-fictionalized, and that some characters are composites of real people?

The problem with that book is that so many people (present company excepted) are treating it as a straight biography [BO/Ayers left enough "wiggle room" for interpretation of what was real and what was not] when it really is not.

89 posted on 02/27/2011 5:18:37 PM PST by thecodont
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To: Fantasywriter
...I hope I didn't lost you...

Far from it, you have been MOST helpful, thanks.

90 posted on 02/27/2011 5:20:20 PM PST by Fred Nerks (FAIR DINKUM!)
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To: Seizethecarp; Spaulding
Obama shows us every day that the birth location issue is the issue he fears, not his UK subject father.

Agreed.

91 posted on 02/27/2011 5:20:54 PM PST by thecodont
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To: bushpilot1; Spaulding
It has been my contention for several months natural born Citizens are the descendants of the original citizens created after the ratification of the Constitution.

That has been my understanding also. The Founders didn't envision anchor babies.

92 posted on 02/27/2011 5:24:40 PM PST by thecodont
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To: thecodont
...but isn't there a disclaimer in the front to the effect that the contents are sort of half-remembered and semi-fictionalized, and that some characters are composites of real people?

EXACTLY! And there's enough 'wiggle' room for a truck to drive through!

Although much of this book is based on contemporaneous journals or the oral histories of my family, the dialogue is necessarily an approximation of what was actually said or relayed to me. For the sake of compression, some of the characters that appear are composites of people I’ve known, and some events appear out of precise chronology. With the exception of my family and a handful of public figures, the names of most characters have been changed for the sake of their privacy.

93 posted on 02/27/2011 5:27:19 PM PST by Fred Nerks (FAIR DINKUM!)
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To: Fred Nerks

Fred, I’m glad it was helpful. You post some of the most interesting and insightful information on the Eligibility threads, and I have learned so much from reading your comments. I just wanted to clarify that it was not me, but the Hawaiian native who added that, ‘I hope I haven’t lost you’ comment. I think she thought she was going into too much pronunciation detail, fwiw.

The really interesting thing is the question on top of the p. I cited. The OP starts with the assumption—no doubt gleaned from Obama’s Ayers-written piece of propaganda—that ‘tutu’ is Hawaiian for ‘grandmother’. The responders/native speakers have to correct that bit of misinformation.

Sound familiar? Every time Obama puts out a so-called fact, it has to be corrected. He is a sick man, but we’ll get to the bottom of it all eventually.


94 posted on 02/27/2011 5:30:45 PM PST by Fantasywriter
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Comment #95 Removed by Moderator

To: bitt; AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Berosus; bigheadfred; ColdOne; Convert from ECUSA; ...

Thanks bitt. I don’t know why this would cause jitters in the White House — unless the media’s complete blackout (so to speak) of Zero’s support for his cousin and coreligionist’s fight to overthrow the legally elected government of Kenya could be brought to an end at last.


96 posted on 02/27/2011 5:49:33 PM PST by SunkenCiv (The 2nd Amendment follows right behind the 1st because some people are hard of hearing.)
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To: Fred Nerks; Fantasywriter

I lived in HI for many years and often heard people use the word “tutu” for grandmother. I never heard it shortened into “toot”.


97 posted on 02/27/2011 7:43:22 PM PST by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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Adding, after reading above - maybe it isn’t authentic Hawaiian, but people do use it. But - it’s more than odd that some people from the mainland, newly arrived, would use that word for grandmother. Contrived.


98 posted on 02/27/2011 7:59:14 PM PST by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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To: little jeremiah

Thanks, lj. There’s no substitute for firsthand information.


99 posted on 02/27/2011 8:00:40 PM PST by Fantasywriter
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To: Fantasywriter

http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_can_Tutu_be_Hawaiian_for_grandmother_when_there_is_no_letter_T_in_the_Hawaiian_alphabet

How can Tutu be Hawaiian for grandmother when there is no letter T in the Hawaiian alphabet?

Officially there is no ‘t’ in the Hawaiian alphabet but ‘t’ and ‘k’ were recognizably interchangeable in Hawaiian. ‘T’ was a hold-over consonant from Tahitian and other Polynesian language bases. Tamehameha was an acceptable alternative spelling for Kamehameha. In Hawaiian one of the staple plants was the ki plant but most people know it as the ti plant or ti leaves.

(I did my share of picking ti leaves and never heard them called “ki” leaves.)


100 posted on 02/27/2011 8:44:27 PM PST by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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