Posted on 08/22/2009 3:18:32 PM PDT by NoobRep
A man who had claimed to have a copy of President Obama's Kenyan birth certificate, attempted to sell it on eBay and then disappeared from contact has reappeared, this time with a video of the document he claims proves Obama's foreign birth.
As WND reported, Lucas Smith, a former resident of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and known by the eBay handle "colmado_noranja," claimed online and in phone conversations with WND to have an authentic document from Coast Provincial Hospital in Mombasa proving Obama's birth there at 7:24 p.m. on Aug. 4, 1961.
(Excerpt) Read more at wnd.com ...
Many people had Unix email addresses in the sixties; particularly people in remote locations.
This purports to be a copy of the original filing--because that is the only way you get the footprint.
But, in August 1961, the Coast Provincial Hospital was located in the Coast Province of Tanzania, not Kenya--and certainly not in the British Protectorate of Kenya.
If you had a record Certification of Birth under a governmental agency in Kenya such as the one Orly has issued on a date after October, 1963, you would believe it was validly issued. It wouldn't show the footprint either.
So I doubt it. Now if it proves this is in fact Obama's footprint, that might be another story.
Further, the original filing of which I am aware in fact also has two doctors--one an administrator. But the doctor who delivered the baby was a woman and her subsequent history has been traced out to 2005 at which time she was still alive and well.
And the form of the original filing was different than this--more like the one Corsi shows.
So, this doesn't look real. Does't mean it isn't.
George Onyango is wearing a stocking cap. It must get pretty cold in that part of Kenya.
Error in 102—Zanzibar, not Tanzania.
The protectorate issue may also not be so clear as I describe it. The coastal strip including Coastal Province of Zanzibar was leased and might have been administered by the Brits prior to independence of Kenya (and therefore included as part of “Kenya administered by the” British Colonial Service).
Many people had Unix email addresses in the sixties; particularly people in remote locations.
That is not technically correct.
The Telexs that were in common use in the 60's had addresses that looked a lot like the Unix addresses in use later.
Point is the issue about "the Administrator's email address"--was it an address that purported to be a Unix address or is it a Telex address?
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