April  6, 2012 
By William Sullivan 
Two  years, three months, and seven days after his inauguration, Barack  Obama finally offered evidence to prove his eligibility for the  presidency.  On the White House website, officials posted an electronic document purported to be a scan of Barack Obama's long-form birth certificate.   It was a grand "I told you so" moment for the media and the left, which  had worked feverishly to marginalize "birthers" as the radical  counterpart of the zany "truther."
Of  course, there was never really any parity.  Truthers constructed silly  conspiracy theories about George W. Bush being an international  super-criminal that orchestrated impossibly complex measures to frame  al-Qaeda on 9/11.  Birthers, on the other hand, merely demanded that the  president, who is required  by the Constitution to be a natural born American citizen, show proof  of his eligibility.  And in reality, that is an entirely reasonable  expectation, albeit unprecedented.
Nonetheless, birthers were marginalized as fringe elements, and since the release of the electronic scan of the birth certificate,  the concerns of birthers have become even more ignored in the public  discourse.  As an example of the how the media now views the birther  movement, consider that the Huffington Post describes it as a "controversy that has been widely debunked but which remains alive in the eyes of some conservatives."
New evidence, however, has reignited conservative interest in Obama's birth certificate.   Conservative icon Sherriff Joe Arpaio of Arizona, at the behest of a  petition presented by the Surprise, Arizona Tea Party organization,  organized a "cold case posse" and completed a six-month examination of  the released birth certificate in order to determine its authenticity.  The results are in, Joe says, and they point to the document being a fake. 
Skilled  as Sherriff Joe's team undoubtedly is in identifying forged documents,  last month offered interesting substantiation of the team's findings.   Renowned skeptic of global warming theories Lord Christopher Monckton,  who has experience investigating high-level fraud as a policy adviser  under Margaret Thatcher, has given the claim added veracity.
According  to World Net Daily, Monckton said that "it appears that the document  was cobbled together in layers, pointing to evidence that three date  stamps and a registrar's stamp were superimposed on it from another  document."  If there were a single, original document to verify the  president's Hawaiian birth, why "go to all that trouble, he reasoned."
 Monckton's conclusion?  "My assessment is that they are right to be worried... That document is not genuine."
This  conclusion glaringly lacks ambiguity.  And if Monckton is correct, we  should be beyond worried.  We should be outraged, and we should demand  justice for the betrayal of the American people's trust.
Mockton's  testimony is a bombshell.  It is a credible voice suggesting that the  image on the White House website, offered to the American people in good  faith, was presented as an accurate depiction of Obama's birth certificate,  and for whatever reason, it is not.  This is forgery, a crime in  itself, but it is the reason for the possible forgery -- fraud -- that  keeps the media and lawmakers from running with this amazing story.
Anyone calling Obama's birth certificate  into question will have to entertain the notion that perhaps the  forgery was made because the president does not have legal proof of his  American birth.  And anyone carrying that message will have the stink of  "right-wing birther" on him, and he will be swiftly devoured by the  attack dogs in the media and marginalized.  So in a way, I don't blame  conservative lawmakers and pundits for treading lightly around the  issue.
The  discourse has already been cleverly manipulated, you see, to shift the  burden of proof from Obama to his detractors.  Reasonably, it should  never have been incumbent upon Americans to prove that Obama is not a  natural born citizen, but rather it should have always been incumbent  upon Obama to prove to the American people, verifiably and indisputably,  that he was born in the United States.
Barack Obama again has that chance, and Arpaio has articulated  that very point.  "The president can put all this to rest quite  easily," he said.  "All he has to do is demand [that] the Hawaii  Department of Health release to the American  public and to a panel of certified court-authorized forensic examiners  all original 1961 paper, microfilm, and computer birth records the Hawaii Department of Health has in its possession."
But  then, the president has always had the opportunity to do this, and he  has never seized it.  One can speculate as to why.  Some, like Ann Coulter,  find the withholding of definitive proof of his birth to be a ruse to  whip Obama's opponents into unreasonable frenzy, and thereby marginalize  them.  On the other hand, it is entirely logical to think that he has  not produced definitive proof because there is something that is being  hidden from the American public.  And the fact that this birth certificate appears to be a forgery certainly strengthens the second possibility.
I've  always been one of those who likes to preface sentences with "I'm no  birther, but..."  But in light of this new evidence, I certainly feel  that there is a warrant for investigation to satisfy the birthers'  concern, with Obama innocent until proven guilty, of course. And if that  makes me a birther, then so be it.
American Thinker
 
 
