Posted on 12/16/2010 1:17:21 PM PST by Cardhu
Lakin Sentenced
1545: Sentence announced. Dismissal, confinement for 6 months, total forfeitures.
I said that whether he is the President depends on whether the breach in the law to certify the electoral vote legally negates the certification.
A person can be arrested but if the Miranda warning is not given exactly according to the law it undoes everything.
There is a lawsuit about this (the Kerchner case) and a ruling has not yet been made.
My point is that it doesn’t matter if he is the President. The 20th Amendment says that if the President elect has failed to qualify by Jan 20th the Vice President elect is to “act as President until a President shall have qualified.”
What matters, then, is whether Obama can “act as President”. And there are cases about that also, but none have been decided.
So the matter is still pending. For the military to say it’s irrelevant is dead wrong.
The sad truth is Obama can NOT legally be President, no matter how many millions of otherwise sane people, say he is.
The Army is being utterly stupid in this punishment levyed. They are offering $200K to $400K accession bonuses for physicians and dentists in war-critical specialties. As I posted earlier on this matter, being a field experienced LEAD surgeon, a doc like Lakin is worth his weight in GOLD.
It is a STUPID WASTE OF TAXPAYER MONEY and a hazard to our troops in the field. It is not only mean, over-the-top, but it’s like the Generals in on this idiocy passing the current service handgun around and shooting their own feet off. Both feet.
Idiocy like this is typical of a banana-republic or dictatorship military.
Let COLONEL Lakin back into the field to do hat he he does best. Heal the wounded.
Obama needs to silence Political Prisoner #1.
Immigration Impact: Hawaii |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
All numbers are from the U.S. Census Bureau unless otherwise noted. Additional Census Bureau, INS, and other immigration-related data are available for Hawaii. Hawaiis population increased by 16 percent between 1990 and 2000, and by 6 percent between 2000 and 2006, bringing Hawaiis total population to approximately 1.3 million. Approximately 30.6 percent of the total population increase between 2000 and 2006 in Hawaii was directly attributable to immigrants. FAIR estimates the illegal alien population in 2005 at 3,000. This number is 50% above the U.S. government estimate of 2,000 in 2000, and 50% below the 1990 estimate of 6,000. According to an estimate of the Pew Hispanic Center, in 2005 there were an estimated 20,000 to 35,000 illegal aliens living in Hawaii.2/ FAIR estimates in 2004 that the taxpayers of Hawaii spent $7.2 million per year on illegal aliens and their children in public schools.3/ |
FAIRs projected annual fiscal costs to Hawaii taxpayers |
||
Current |
2010 |
2020 |
$9,000,000 |
$15,000,000 |
$25,000,000 |
Foreign-Born Population
Hawaiis foreign-born population increased by over 10.6 percent between 2000 and 2006. During that period Hawaii gained almost 22,000 immigrants, bringing the total number of foreign-born residents in the state to over 234,000.
Hawaii increased by nine percent, or 100,000 people, between 1990 and 2000
Hawaiis foreign-born population increased 30 percent during the 1990s. Between 1990 and 2000, Hawaii gained 50,000 immigrants
Disappearing Open Space: Each year, Hawaii loses 1,400 acres of open space and farmland due to development.4/
A study of urban sprawl between 1970 and 1990 that calculated the impact of population increase and per capita land use found that 23.7 square miles of additional land were consumed by urban sprawl in the Honolulu metropolitan area, and 100 percent of that sprawl was attributable to population increase. 5/
Crowded Housing: In 2005 37,538 Hawaii households were defined as crowded or severely crowded by housing authorities.6/ Studies show that a rise in crowded housing often correlates with an increase in the number of foreign-born.7/,8/
Poverty: 11.7 percent of immigrants in Hawaii have incomes below the poverty level, a 2 percent decrease since 2000. Among non-citizens, the rate climbs to 4.5 percent. 9/
Traffic: As population growth put more traffic on the roads, the average commute for Hawaii residents increased ten percent during the 1990s, to 26 minutes in 2000, 10/ and to 25.7 in 2005. 11/ 23% of Hawaii's major urban roads are congested and 65 percent of Hawaii's major roads are in poor or mediocre condition. Vehicle travel on Hawaii's highways increased 15% from 1990 to 2003. 12/
Driving on roads in need of repair costs Hawaii motorists $289 million a year in extra vehicle repairs and operating costs --- $347 per motorist. Congestion in the Honolulu metropolitan area costs commuters $331 per person in excess fuel and lost time. 13/ 16 percent of commuters had a commute that was at least 45 minutes in 2007. 14/
Solid Waste: Hawaii generates 1.4 tons of solid waste per capita. 15/
Education: It is projected that the enrollment of Hawaiis K-12 students will increase by over 20,000 (11 percent) students by the year 2015, to a total K-12 enrollment of 203,000. 16/ 17/ Hawaiis student-teacher ratio of 16.3 currently ranks 38th in the U.S. 18/
As a result of the swelling student population, schools throughout the state are struggling with overcrowding. Some schools on Windward Oahu and East and Central Honolulu are stretched beyond their physical abilities, and even new schools are finding themselves filled beyond capacity within a few years. Some schools are trying to cope by switching to year-round, multi-track scheduling.19/
The state Department of Education forecasts a classroom shortage crisis in the next few years, which will result in even more overcrowding. New schools, additional classroom building, and additional classrooms to alleviate overcrowding will not be built in sufficient quantities or in a timely manner, says one school official.20/
In some areas, like Kaneohe, classes are being held in converted closets, stage dressing rooms, teachers lounges, and a patio. In some cases, two classes are forced to share the same room at the same time.21/
Under a 1985 compact between the United States and newly independent Micronesia and the Marshall Islands, citizens of those territories may freely migrate to the U.S. To protect Hawaii from a major resettlement burden, the agreement specified that annual reports would be sent to Congress on the impact on Hawaii and the Pacific territories as a result of the compact to allow remedial actions. The Interior Dept. failed to issue those reports from 1989 to 1996, and the Hawaiian government sued the federal government to recoup outlays for the migrants.22/ The suit was dismissed by a federal appeals court as a political matter for Congress to resolve. However, the lawsuit caught the federal government's attention and has led to a new catch-up report and some federal assistance. Then-governor Ben Cayetano cited Census data showing that 4,815 immigrants from the two countries have migrated to Hawaii since 1985 and that nearly 40 percent of them were living below the poverty level, affecting welfare, health care, and crime.23/
Summary Demographic State Data (and Source) | |
---|---|
Population (2008 Census est.): | 1,288,198 |
Population (2000 Census): | 1,211,537 |
Foreign-Born Population (2008 FAIR est.): | 217,610 |
Foreign-Born Population (2000 Census): | 212,229 |
Share Foreign-Born (2008 FAIR est.): | 17.6% |
Share Foreign-Born (2000): | 17.5% |
Immigrant Stock (2000 CB est.): | 433,000 |
Share Immigrant Stock (1997 est.): | 35.7% |
Naturalized U.S. Citizens (2006 CB est.): | 120,587 |
Share Naturalized (2006): | 57.4% |
Legal Immigrant Admission (DHS 1997-2006): | 59,730 |
Refugee Admission (DHS 1997-2006): | 206 |
Illegal Alien Population (2008 FAIR est.): | 20,000 |
Costs of Illegal Aliens (2005 FAIR) | $9,00,000 |
Projected 2050 Population (2006 FAIR) | 1,812,670 |
Using the Current Population Survey, the U.S. Census Bureau estimated that in July 2008 Hawaiis population had increased to 1,288,198 residents, i.e., an annual average increase of about 9,235 residents since 2000. That is a rate of increase of about 0.7 percent per year.
Based on the Current Population Survey, the Census Bureau estimated that between the 2000 Census and July 2008 the states population increased by about 31,315 residents from net international migration (more foreign-born arriving than leaving). That was an annual average increase of about 3,775 residents, i.e., more than two-fifths (40.9%) of the total increase (not including the children born to the immigrants after their arrival in the United States).
The 2000 Census found 1,211,537 persons resident in Hawaii. This was an increase of 103,308 persons above the 1990 Census. The rate of increase (9.3%) was slightly lower than the national average of 9.9 percent for the country.
The 2000 population is about 45,000 more persons than the Census Bureau had expected to find in the state in 2000 when it issued its most recent state population projections in 1996. The significance of this is that the Census Bureau has concluded that much of the shortfall in their population estimates during the 1990s was due to an underestimation of the illegal alien population.
The population of Hawaii increased by 14.4 percent between 1980-1990 (from 964,691 to 1,108,229 residents).
Based on the American Community Survey (ACS), the U.S. Census Bureau estimated that the foreign-born population of Hawaii was 216,215 persons in 2006. The ACS is a large-scale, continuous sampling process designed to replace the need for a long-form in the 2010 Census. However, because the ACS does not have the same follow-up procedures as the Census to include non-respondents, it may underestimate the foreign-born population.
FAIR estimates that the foreign-born population of Hawaii was about 217,610 residents in July 2008. This meant a foreign-born population share of 17.6 percent. The amount of change since the 2000 Census indicates an average annual rate of increase in the foreign-born population of about 650 people, which is seven percent of the states annual average population increase. Since 2000, the foreign-born population has increased by 2.5 percent compared to a 7.1 percent increase in the native-born population.
Immigration also contributes to population growth through the children born to immigrants in this country. Nationally the share of births to the foreign-born is about double their share of the population. A 35.2 percent share of the states current births is large enough to account for about 6,345 births a year. Combining the increase in the foreign-born population and estimated immigrant births suggests that immigration may account for about 6,750 persons added to the states population annually, i.e., nearly three-fourths (73.1%) of the states overall population increase.
The 2000 Census recorded 212,229 foreign-born residents in the state. That was 17.5 percent of the state's overall population and an increase of 30.4 percent above the 1990 foreign-born population of 162,704 residents. That rate of increase in the immigrant population was much higher than the 5.7 percent increase in the state's native-born population, but it was lower than the national average increase in the foreign-born population of 57.4 percent.
A comparison of the increase in the immigrant population from 1990 with the change in the overall population during the same period shows that immigrant settlement directly accounted for 47.9 percent of the state's overall population increase over that decade. The share of the population increase due to immigration would be still higher if the children of the immigrants born here after their arrival were included with their immigrant parents in the calculation.
The 2000 Census found that 34.1 percent of Hawaii's foreign-born population had arrived in the state since 1990. This demonstrates the effects of the current mass immigration, although it was a lower share than the national average (43.7%).
An indicator of the change in the immigrant population may be seen in data on the share of the population that speaks a language other than English at home. Between 1990 and 2000 the share of non-English speakers at home in Hawaii increased by more than three-quarters, from 14.7 percent to 26.1 percent. Less than half (47.5%) of those who said they spoke a language other than English at home in 2000 also said they spoke English less than very well.
Speakers of Foreign Languages (at home in Hawaii in the 2000 Census) |
|
Tagalog | 60,965 |
Japanese | 56,225 |
Ilocano | 45,900 |
Chinese | 21,760 |
Hawaiian | 19,045 |
Spanish | 18,820 |
Korean | 18,335 |
Samoan | 11,530 |
Vietnamese | 8,270 |
Cantonese | 4,995 |
(Source: Census Bureau report: Language Spoken at Home for the Population 5 Years and Over, April 2004) |
The Census Bureaus American Community Survey found that in 2006, the foreign born population was 210,162 residents, an decrease of 1.0% percent since 2000. In comparison, the foreign-born population changed from 162,704 to 212,229 residents between 1990 and 2000, an increase of 30.4 percent.
The ten countries below constituted nearly three fifths (83.4%) of the foreign-born population in Hawaii in 2006. Philippines accounted for approximately one third alone (47.3%)
Foreign-Born Change Since 1990: Top Ten Countries 1990-2006 | ||||||||
Rank | Country | 1990 | Country | 2000 | Country | 2006 | ||
1 | Philipines | 73,841 | Philippines | 102,063 | Philippines | 99,341 | ||
2 | Japan | 19,102 | Japan | 20,590 | Japan | 19,499 | ||
3 | Korea | 13,265 | China | 20,241 | China | 18,063 | ||
4 | China | 10,068 | Korea | 17,202 | Korea | 15,641 | ||
5 | Vietnam | 5,556 | Vietnam | 8,775 | Vietnam | 7,393 | ||
6 | Canada | 3,947 | Polynesia | 5,974 | Canada | 6,746 | ||
7 | Hong Kong | 3,554 | Micronesia | 5,846 | Mexico | 2,915 | ||
8 | Germany | 2,509 | Canada | 3,743 | Taiwan | 2,777 | ||
9 | W.Somoa | 2,516 | Germany | 3,116 | Germany | 2,117 | ||
10 | Taiwan | 2,233 | United Kingdom | 2,155 | United Kingdom | 1,395 | ||
All Other | 26,032 | All Others | 22,524 | All Others | 34,875 | |||
Total | 162,704 | Total | 212,229 | Total | 210,162 |
Between the 2000 Census and the Census Bureau estimate for 2006, the foreign-born population in Hawaii decreased slightly by nearly 2,200 persons (1.0%). Latin America (including Mexico) increased by more than 1,100 immigrants (16.9%). Immigrants from Asia fell by 2.9% (about 5,500 people). Immigrants from Africa rose by 23.1% (240 persons). The immigrant population from Europe and Canada increased by nearly 2,100 persons (14.6%).
CONNECT TO LEGAL IMMIGRATION ADMISSIONS DATA
The Census Bureau estimated that there were about 433,000 people in Hawaii in 2000 who were "immigrant stock." That is a term that refers to immigrants and their children born here after their arrival. Based on that estimate, and the population size of 1,211,537, the immigrant stock share of the state's population was about 35.7 percent -- the 2nd highest share in the country.
As the graph below shows, the amount of Hawaiis population change due to the increase in the foreign stock is rising rapidly. Over the past 34 years the new immigrants and children born to them have added about 322,100 people to the population. Over this period, the increase in the foreign stock has accounted for 63.6 percent of the states population increase.
Data from the 2006 American Community Survey indicate that 120,587 residents, or 57.4 percent, of the foreign-born population in Hawaii were citizens, compared to 127,532 residents, or 60.1 percent, in 2000.
Nationally, 40.3 percent of the foreign-born population was citizens in 2000, and 42.0 percent in 2006
Refugee Settlement
Hawaii has received 206 refugees over the most recent ten fiscal years (FY'97-'06) including five persons in FY06.
Under the Office of Refugee Resettlement's (HH/ORR) assistance funding for FY'02 $75,000 is available for refugee employment training and other services programs in Hawaii based on a three-year refugee settlement program covering about 100 refugees. This allocation does not include a larger share (55%) of funding programs for communities heavily affected by recent Cuban and Haitian entrants, communities with refugees whose cultural differences make assimilation especially difficult, communities impacted by federal welfare reform changes, educational support to schools with significant refugee students, and discretionary grants. ORR grants for FY05 and FY06 respectively were $141,945 and $160,236..
Data are not available nationally on immigrant students (either legally or illegally resident in the United States) who are enrolled in primary and secondary schools (K-12). However, many of these students are enrolled in Limited English Proficiency/English Language Learning (LEP/ELL) instruction programs. Many may be U.S.-born, but the majority of these students may be assumed to be either immigrants or the children of immigrants, with the exception being areas with native Americans who speak a native language other than English.
In Hawaii, overall enrollment in 2002 (184,546) was 12 percent below enrollment in 1993. By contrast, LEP enrollment (13,173 - 7.1% of all enrollment) was 17.1 percent higher than a decade earlier.
Data on enrollment in LEP/ELL programs are collected by the federal government from school systems that receive Title VII funds for these special instruction programs. The data on LEP/ELL enrollment are understated because data from private schools that do not apply for Title VII assistance are sketchy.
In 2000, about three-tenths of all of Hawaii's children are either foreign-born or the child of an immigrant. Five percent are first-generation immigrants (foreign born) and 25 percent are second-generation (a child of an immigrant).
(Source: "Check Points," The Urban Inst. Sept. 2, 2000)
The 2006/07 annual report of the Institute of International Education (IIE) lists the number of foreign students attending post-secondary school in Hawaii as 6,032. Three schools in Hawaii are listed as having a major concentration of these students:
University of Hawaii had enrollment of 1,984 foreign students, 9.6% of total enrollment.
Hawaii Pacific University had enrollment of 1,247 foreign students, 15.4% of total enrollment.
Brighman Young University had enrollment of 1,201 foreign students, 48.2% of total enrollment.
Below, a chart illustrates the sharp increase of foreign students attending school in Hawaii from 1960-2000.
For information on foreign student issues see: Foreign Students in the United States.
FAIR Estimate - FAIR estimates the states illegal alien population as of 2008 is as many as 20,000 persons. This is part of an overall estimate of the U.S. illegal alien population of about 13 million persons.
INS/DHS Estimate - The INS (now dissolved into the Dept. of Homeland Security) estimated in February 2003 that the resident illegal population in Hawaii was 2,000 as of January 2000. This number was actually 7,000 lower than the INS' 1996 estimate.
Other Estimates - The Pew Hispanic Center estimates the illegal alien population of the state at 2,000 to 3,500 as of 2005.
Incarceration Costs- Hawaii has received partial compensation under the federal State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP) that was established in 1994 to compensate the states and local jurisdictions for incarceration of "undocumented," aliens who are serving time for a felony conviction or at least two misdemeanors.
The recent SCAAP amounts that Hawaii has received were:
FY99 | | $1,320,602 |
FY00 | | $693,832 |
FY01 | | $454,637 |
FY02 | | $325,683 |
FY03 | | $125,831 |
FY04 | | $171,317 |
The amount of SCAAP awards has been declining in both total distributions and even more as a share of the states expenses. In FY99 the state received 38.6% of its costs. FY'02 SCAAP data indicate that Hawaii's illegal alien inmate population had decreased by 23 percent from the 166 inmate years in FY'99 to 128 inmate years in FY'02, while compensation decreased by 75 percent, and then dropped much further.
Medical Costs- Under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, hospitals with emergency rooms are required to treat and stabilize patients with emergency medical needs regardless whether or not they are in the country legally or whether they are able to pay for the treatment. Congress in 2003 enacted an appropriation of $250 million per year (for 4 years) to help offset some of the costs due to use of this service by illegal aliens. This amount has been allocated among the states based upon estimates of the illegal alien population and data on the apprehension of illegal aliens in each state. This amount compensates only a fraction of the medical outlays. For Hawaii, the proposed payment in fiscal year 2004 is $47,694.
Educational Costs- In our study Breaking the Piggy Bank: How Illegal Immigration is Sending Schools into the Red, we estimated based on 2004 data that educational expenditures for illegal immigration were costing the Hawaii taxpayer $7.2 million dollars annually. This cost was partially for educating students who were themselves illegally in the country ($3.0 million) and in part for the education of their siblings born in the United States to illegal residents ($4.2 million).
You can view the voting record of your representatives in Congress regarding immigration issues in our voting report section.
You can view a listing of local immigration reform organizations here.
You mean to tell me that in the state you live in, you must speak to the DIRECTOR of the Department of Health in order to get a copy of your long form birth certificate?? *coughcoughbullsheetcoughcough*
That is completely ridiculous. I had to speak to Dr. Alvin T. Onaka HIMSELF, PERSONALLY in order to get an UNCERTIFIED copy of my birth certificate. That is complete bullcrap.
Hawaii HAS a process for getting that copy. It has a legally spelled out process for it. Yet Onaka is holding onto ALL such requests, and doing NOTHING with them. NOTHING. Until you call trying to track down not only where your money went, because you have to PAY for that privilege, but also to find out why there has been NO RESPONSE whatsoever to your request. None. Nada. You have to call the office and get the runaround before (in my case after 4 months) finally speak to Onaka’s secretary in order to find out they are ALL sitting in Onaka’s office. Literally ignored until someone who has spent the darned money getting the money order and the return reciept requested form from the Post office PROVING you mailed it and the HDOH GOT the damned thing....
The corruption REEKS. Hawaii is hiding more than the cretin’s records. But they have to hide his in order to hide everything else. Once his is out there, then all the rest will be too.
Instead of trying to get the cretins records, we should have been looking at the real reason Hawaii is so desperate it is breaking its own laws on such a wide scale. It isn’t just the Cretin. Its Immigration fraud, welfare fraud, citizenship fraud.... maybe something else in there. All I am saying is that THIS is where we should be looking.
Hawaii has a REASON to hide all this. What is it? It isn’t just Barry. That much I am utterly certain of.
The two people from the Ombudsmans Office that signed off on the e-mail response to me dont really understand state law?Strawman, since I never said that. I am not up on Hawaii (or any) state law to judge what would be used when a statute seems to forbid something and an older department rules document allows it. If you are not a legal expert on this either, I suspect we both could learn from someone who is.
But the HDOH is who the OIP is allowing to decide what can and cant be disclosed according to UIPA.
UIPA, as I posted earlier, has an exclusion for private information, so this makes sense.
Bottom line here is that with the information currently available, you are not convincing me that there is a grand conspiracy in the HDOH. You have certainly convinced me that they are chaotic, contradictory and incompetent at setting consistent rules and following them. Accusing them of extraordinary crimes means you have to have good evidence of those crimes, not just of incompetence. When you find that they have issued a noncertified COLB to a nonqualified applicant, that's definitive evidence.
Merry Christmas.
You mean to tell me that in the state you live in, you must speak to the DIRECTOR of the Department of Health in order to get a copy of your long form birth certificate??
No, I never said that.
Goodnight, and a Merry Christmas to you.
Except the information in question supposedly isn't private. Obama is claiming to have already released it with his jpg, so all the DOH would be doing is confirming the legitimacy of that information. If that information is truly private, the UIPA protects the release of such information when there is a public interest. The DOH has admitted there is an unprecedented public interest. We really don't need to make unnecessary excuses.
12/19/10
Public Statement from Commander Charles Kerchner:
###
LTC Terry Lakin stood up for us all in his effort to support and defend the Constitution.
The Congress has failed him when he wrote letters as a soldier to Congress people asking for a Congressional Inquiry into Obama’s exact legal identity like that same Congress investigated John McCain. The Congress did nothing.
The legal system in the USA both civilian and military failed him.
He has now paid the price for his courage. As I write this he is imprisoned in Ft. Leavenworth in Kansas starting a sentence of six months.
His wife was a stay at home mom raising their three young children. As part of his punishment he has lost all pay and benefits and any future retirement opportunities.
Upon release from prison he will be dismissed from the Army.
We must now stand up and financially support Terry Lakin and his family in his moment of need.
Please visit this website and make a financial contribution large or small to this specialized fund dedicated to supporting Terry and his family while he is imprisoned. I have.
http://www.TerryLakinActionFund.com/
I thank you in advance for any help you can give.
Sincerely,
CDR Charles Kerchner (Ret)
Lehigh Valley PA USA
http://www.ProtectOurLiberty.org/
http://obamareleaseyourrecords.blogspot.com/2010/12/free-terry-lakin-video-eyewitnesses.html
Huge boondoggle of graft and corruption there.
It’s clear there’s a huge # of immigrants there,
and I can only imagine the trillions that will
have gone under various covers to HI, since the
demon’s been in the WH. Just think of the census,
all the ACORN/types gathering and submitting that
info.
Just an FYI .. check if this is a valid point of
of interest (Hawaii Home Lands) and under
“secondary documents” here:
http://hawaii.gov/dhhl/applicants/appforms/applyhhl
You are not comprehending the meaning of “it shall be unlawful ... except as authorized by this part or by rules adopted by the department of health.”
Disclosure is unlawful unless the rules or law authorize disclosure. There is nothing in the law about non-certified certificates, so there is nothing to conflict with what the rules say there.
You said you would want the opinion of somebody who really knows the law. And I asked whether you were saying that the Ombudsman and her assistant are both ignorant of Hawaii law, that you don’t believe what they’ve said. It’s a valid question. The “No true Scotsman” logical fallacy is at play if you say you want an expert opinion but if an opinion doesn’t agree with yours you say the expert isn’t really an expert.
This is what I have been accused of doing, but it isn’t the disagreeing with me that makes a difference to me, nor their alleged expertise - only whether the argument they give is inwardly consistent and matches other sources of evidence including the actual words being interpreted.
The OIP has issued a LOT of Opinion Letters detailing what records are public v what are private, and what information is discloseable. If a document MAY be disclosed it is a public document. Any public document must be disclosed, although some information which holds a privacy interest is to be redacted unless the document itself is REQUIRED by law to be publicly disclosed. The OIP has ruled that birth date, social security number, and address have a privacy interest.
Basically we could argue about this forever. You have it set in your mind what is the only thing you will accept as evidence and any other evidence can be darned. So there’s pretty much no point in discussing this any more. Any disclosure that you would be too old for the record of the disclosure to exist any more, so you’re pretty safe from ever having to worry your head over this.
Merry Christmas.
Well, it’s pretty obvious you continue a thing about howthings really work in Hawaii.
Say, you know things are pretty corrupt in Chicago right? Prove it. Oh wait.... That’s right, when those who are in power, they can cover their tracks and threaten everyone involved if they tell, then hand out bonuses etc.
You are a fool SL. It will take an impartial investigation of Hawaii’s records to provide the “Proof” you demand. Why do you think it is me, a nobody who just happens to have lived there, was born there, who is bringing it up? What? Did 60 minutes cover it? Katie Couric? No wait, yea Eric Holder is all over it silly me....
Do the math SL. it is not that hard. Hawaii is more corrupt than Chicago. And unlike the mainland - the continental U.S., there isn’t a lot of square acreage on Oahu to hide on if you piss off the wrong people. There is no where to go and jobs are limited for former state workers. You catching on yet?
You are the one who tried to make having to speak to the Director of HDOH seem like a normal bureaucratic event. It’s NOT. and you know it.
Answer the question, because it IS a valid question that demands an answer. WHY??? was it necessary? Answer THAT question, because it is more important and bigger than Obama.
Tough task but we are well on our way.
The eligibility issue should have been decided by the Supreme court by now. Its an atrocity of justice that is has not.
Just sent a message to Lakin via the Action Fund site. Found out somebody put my daughter’s e-mail address on a spammer list - probably when I was using her computer to communicate. The same thing happened with my e-mail address when I was communicating with the HDOH about the 1961 birth index.
If my e-mail address is on a spammer list will it keep people from receiving e-mails from me if they have a spam filter? Do spam filters consult the spammer lists? How does a person get their address off the spammer list? And is there a way to find out who has put the address on a spammer list?
I’m sick of these crooks trying to mess with my communications. Now I have to find out if a few people I’ve been contacting haven’t responded because they never got my e-mail. Too much stuff to do even without this kind of crap to have to mess with. Ugh.
???
Merry Christmas
I agree. After his tour is finished and he has orders to return to the states, he should then refuse those orders, miss movement, and stay over there. That would certainly get some attention to his cause.
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