It’s weird how myths start. There is not a pinch, shred or atom of evidence that the photos of the “exotic” model have anything to do with either FMD or SAD.
Only in the rotten imagination of people with agendas, and then it became a myth that people somehow for some reason believe in.
It’s all a huge Nothing. Other woman, other photographer, some other location.
Corsi was a fool to give any of it credence, and Gilbert was merely making yet another mockumentary. I wonder if anyone paid him to make it.
DON'T TAKE ANY NOTICE OF THE EVIDENCE.
FOR THE RECORD:
Gilbert says that over one million copies of his film were mailed to voters in Iowa, Ohio, Nevada, New Hampshire and Colorado in the time leading up to the 2012 United States presidential election. He refused to disclose who funded the film’s distribution, and a report by The Daily Beast pointed out that there was no way to verify the numbers claimed by Gilbert.[3]
Two of the fetish photos in question were actually printed in issue 23 of the magazine Exotique, which was published in early 1958.[5] At that time, Ann Dunham was only 15 years old, and was living in Mercer Island, Washington.[6] The Dunham family did not move to Hawaii until the summer of 1960.[6]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreams_from_My_Real_Father
Exotique had no nudity, pornographic content, or even sexually suggestive situations. Nevertheless, much like fellow publisher Irving Klaw (a major influence on Burton) in 1957, Burtman would be targeted as a pornographer. He was relentlessly pursued by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service (acting as a censorship agency then) and local law enforcement (who functioned in coordination with Postal Inspectors and the Catholic Church). Eventually, he was arrested, his magazines and materials confiscated, and brought to trial. This led to the demise of the magazine in 1959.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exotique