Posted on 05/07/2011 11:22:05 AM PDT by Hotlanta Mike
Hey, who removed the squirrel!?
The felt tip pin thing ~ this site says the first one was made in 1953 http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blpen.htm so do you have a source of some kind that says there were no felt tip markers in existence by 1961 that technology having fallen short of any further development or interest?
Excerpt from the web site that you cited:
“Highlighters and fine-line markers were first seen in the 1970’s. Permanent markers also became available around this time. Superfine-points and dry erase markers gained popularity in the 1990’s.
The modern fiber tip pen was invented by Yukio Horie of the Tokyo Stationery Company, Japan in 1962. The Avery Dennison Corporation trademarked Hi-Liter® and Marks-A-Lot® in the early ‘90s. The Hi-Liter® pen, commonly known as a highlighter, is a marking pen which overlays a printed word with a transparent color leaving it legible and emphasized.”
A signature as seen on the Obama COLB would have had to be done with a “fine-tip” marker.
Cherry might be better received if she weren’t so lame in her writing and spelling abilities.
Agreed...but sometimes they have some interesting insights with humor!
"now all Shep will be in a jilted Obama lover" mean?
and how about: :
"herein lies the lies or lays the lies or is the lie of the fraud "
This this writer on crack or something?
The question still remains about that felt pen being decades out of place.
I don't know enought to say whether the document is real or a a fake.
But have you really, really never seen a fountain pen?
How old are you anyway?
That's still a year after the miraculous birth. Just because Horie invented a fiber tip pen doesn't mean it was patented and mass produced in '62. It was not until about '78 that the Bic felt tip super fine pen was popular. I know this because my college bf gave me a dozen boxes of them for Christmas because I thought they were the neatest new things on the market. It was amazing how easily it glided across paper and it seemed you could write faster. Before that, everyone used ball point pens. Highlighters were just beginning to be popular then, too.
Yes, there were felt tipped markers before that but they were big fat things that were used to write on cardboard - mainly moving boxes. And they didn't come in more more than black, red, and maybe blue and green.
Dear Lord. One is bad enough. Three sounds like some sort of Satanic trinity.
God bless Jerome Corsi! He is an excellent detective and very gutsy besides.
I wonder what the stated purpose was for Hawaii using a COLB instead of just a copy of the original.
I'm sure there were others ~ but that one is noteworthy.
Then there's
http://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-media/product-gallery/B0007DZ8M0
That's an ad for a hard cover book telling you how to use felt pens for artistic work in 1959.
No, artists found such pens around ~ legitimate or not.
Really, back in the more recent Dark Ages, people made do with what they had. When it comes to penmanship all of them wrote much better than we do today (I've given up handwriting myself ~ just don't do it anymore) ~ and they sought to leave a handsome line ~ and could do it quite artistically.
How that sort of work "scans" may yield an artifact that was not intended by the designers of the scanning system.
No, artists found such pens around ~ legitimate or not.
This was a government agency, not an art school. Question everything but the Pretender’s bona fides...
Where are the hard copies that Fuddy mentioned in the letter to Obama? Instead of being able to forensically anaylze those 2 documents we get another electronic document. Can you say ABSTRACT???
I wonder what the stated purpose was for Hawaii using a COLB instead of just a copy of the original.
I wonder what the purpose of releasing an electronic document instead of the hard copies that Fuddy mentioned in the letter to Obama?
Could it be that Obama’s latest fabrication is indeed an ABSTRACT instead of a certified copy of an original like the Nordyke’s?
this article appears to have been translated from Klingon, to Spanish, then to English.
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