Posted on 08/03/2009 2:12:53 PM PDT by Calpernia
There are now modified photos of the COLB that broke here yesterday. The changes are so slight, that no one is noticing them.
The original one posted in breaking news:
One of the modified ones:
The changes are so subtle, you can barely tell which one you are looking at.
This modified one is showing jokes like: The Font of the Certificate=Schmutz (A Schmutz is a chump, as in you are a chump) #5733=The number of the Certificate, is code for : "Problem with Windows REGISTRY", a sly reference to your claim that Obama does not appear on the Hawaii Live Birth Registry. 47O44=Easiest of all. BOH's age=47 0=O (if you look close you can tell that that is a Schmutz Font "Oh" not "Zero") EF Lavender is ORGANIC DISH SOAP
The original one does not say EF Lavender, it says KF Lavender. The original one shows the number is: 47,644.
Post 52 was 35 min or so after the story broke. That picture is the real one.
Oh...well, there ya go too :-) Thanks, that’s pretty much put the nail in that coffin.
What I see is noise that is a result of digitization errors. K.F. from E.F. is a result of JPG errors or other averaging that software does.
PNG are supposed to be lossless.
Yes he does but now I wish the Lord would get rid of my eye twitches...:))
I have the image on my desktop. I can e-mail it to an email address but don’t have an account to transfer images from my laptop to the Net. I also have two other images on my desktop, with subtle changes that were made subsequent to the first image I saved.
Just hit Ctrl++ on your computer to enlarge it. You can see it’s a K and not an E. Then to reset, hit Ctrl+0 (zero) or go up to View on your computer and click on zoom. It tells you what to do. It helps a lot to enlarge it, it really does.
I have seen that several times. Mombassa is in an area called the Coastal Section which was part of Zanzibar. The inhabitants of the area were related to the people in Kenya and intended to be part of the entity the Brits carved out as Kenya.
In October, 1963, an agreement was entered into between Zanzibar and the Coastal area pursuant to which Zanzibar released any claim to the Coastal area and consented that it would become part of the Republic of Kenya at which point all local governmental agencies and titles immediately retitled themselves "Republic of Kenya" in order to memoralize the agreement.
One thing I do not know is how the "Provence" was attached to the Coastal area--was it a provence in the civil colonial administration of the Brits? I believe the correct title of the Hospital was the Coastal Provencial General Hospital--on the certificate it is removed--I assume because the Coastal area was a Provence of Zanzibar. Someone ought to make a point of looking that up.
Again, I assume Mr. Farrah has considered that and addressed the issue. Someone might want to forward him this post.
Someone save that screen shot to a had drive before they scrub it.
At least I provide proof of concepts and evidence. What have you provided other than....?
I saved a copy yesterday morning from the Taitz website and it has E.F., not K.F., on it.
In the court document, it is clearly E.F. Lavender
And you don’t get billed until your account goes north of $10. So if just pop in for a few pages it basically no charge.
I provided exact instructions on how to zoom it so you can read it clearly. You provided a crappy picture.
“This post has the real COLB in it.
Its plain as day, post 52.”
Yup.
First of all, in Brit-speak, “pence” is the plural of “penny”. “Pences” is not a word. For unknown reasons, they abbreviated pence using the letter “d”.
Kenya issued a set of stamps commemorating independence, and a year later, a set commemorating the official transition to a republic. Both of those sets of stamps were denominated in shillings and cents, not shillings and pence.
Prior to independence, Kenya issued no stamps, but used stamps marked “Kenya Uganda Tanzania”, which could be used in all of those areas. These were issued by an agency of the British colonial government, and were still issued after Kenya became independent. Presumably, one could use either type. These stamps were denominated in shillings and cents.
It’s quite possible that British (shillings/pence) currency was used interchangably with the local (shillings/cents) currency.
It’s also possible that there was some confusion in the printing of these forms (they may well have been printed in Mother England).
If other similar forms ever do show up that are known to be genuine, then we can feel better about this one.
It’s not looking good though, as much as I would like to see the King nailed on something.
What time of day did you save that? And what time zone?
Honestly, I don’t think my post proves anything. The picture of the seal is so distorted it could look like anything.
I just thought that the indecipherable mumble that is that picture looked most like the two shilling coin.
What time of day did you save that? And what time zone?
In the first posted picture, 35 minutes after the story broke, it was KF. Its psot 52 in the original 5K post thread. Link at 304 in this thread. CONFUSION!
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