I’ve always thought there wasn’t much to it until today when the FEC seemed to join the Obama campaign for a dismissal. Why would the FEC get involved and want the case to go away? To avoid embarrassment, maybe? I don’t know, but the FEC’s involvement made me get out my tin foil hat.
>>Ive always thought there wasnt much to it until today when the FEC seemed to join the Obama campaign for a dismissal. Why would the FEC get involved and want the case to go away?<<
I read that the FEC stated the allegations are “patently false.” I wonder what they based that on.
The FEC is named in the suit. Berg says they have the responsibility of making sure the election is run properly and they need to do that.
The courts keep saying that an average Joe Citizen doesn’t have standing to file suit - IOW, “It’s none of your darned business.”
That’s why Berg also names the DNC. Having contributed to the DNC, his money is wasted if the DNC doesn’t do their job of nominating an eligible democratic candidate that he can vote for.
I called my Sec of State here in Nebraska and asked who is supposed to verify the eligibility of the people who are put on the ballot. The gal said the candidate makes a sworn statement that they are eligible. She was going to have somebody with more info call me back but hasn’t yet. The way to force him to release the certificate would be to charge him with perjury for filing a false sworn statement of eligibility. Then he’d have to prove he’s eligible, I’d think.
But then again, this is America. Why should we think the system will work how it’s supposed to?
Berg sued Nobama, and his 5 different names-—The DNC-—and the FEC in the original lawsuit.
Berg has amended that lawsuit to add more charges, but the DNC and the FEC have facilitated this fraud to let it continue this long.
DNC should have vetted him as best I can determine.
FEC soesn’t have the policy to do that, but one would think they would be putting pressure onto the DNC.
I want a different person in all 50 states to sue the Attorney General in that state to examine the eligibility question.