SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Carolyn who wrote (85492)3/11/2012 11:21:06 PM
From: Oeconomicus1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90947
 
More precisely, Wikipedia is whatever its most eager and active "contributors" or voluntary "editors" make it. It's a blank slate upon which the left's (or the right's, for that matter) propagandists can paint whatever picture they like, with no constraints other than the willingness of honest contributors to monitor and correct it. Obviously the former have more to gain and thus are often more motivated.

Ultimately, it will have to find a way to police itself better or it will become so discredited - at least with regard to anything political or controversial - that people seeking objective information will completely stop using it.



To: Carolyn who wrote (85492)3/12/2012 12:14:07 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 90947
 
National Archives Confirm INS Records For Week Of Obama's Birth Mysteriously Missing

Arpaio investigation: Obama might be Kenyan
Records that could document status mysteriously missing

World Net Daily Thursday, March 8, 2012

Among the records missing for Barack Obama that would be available for an ordinary president are passport records, school records such as those from Punahou, Occidental, Columbia and Harvard, Harvard Law Review writings, scholarly articles for the University of Chicago, state bar association records from Illinois, Illinois state senate records, the marriage and divorce documents for his mother, his adoption records and others.

Now it has been revealed that the Cold Case Posse assembled by Sheriff Joe Arpaio in Maricopa County, Ariz., cannot confirm yet that Obama was not born in Kenya and brought to the United States as a days-old infant for his birth to be registered in Hawaii.

The reason? Missing records.

Speculation has held that Obama actually was born in Kenya, and as the son of an American woman and Kenyan father, probably would not have been considered under any circumstances to be a “natural born citizen” of America, as the Constitution demands for presidents.

It’s been revealed that the Kenyan government actually investigated that possibility earlier, without conclusive results.

Now Arpaio’s team, which was assembled to work on a volunteer basis after hundreds of constituents expressed fear that Obama was having his name put on the 2012 election ballot in Arizona using a fraudulent document, has reported that it checked to determine whether a young mother arrived in the United States from Kenya in the days after Obama’s reported Aug. 4, 1961, birth date.

The investigation report said that the records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service cards, which were filled out by passengers of that era arriving on international flights originating outside of the United States, cannot be found.

The investigation sought the records from part of the month of August 1961, and took a researcher to the National Archives in Washington, D.C., where other records of that time and from that time frame are stored.

NOTE: In case you missed the news conference of Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s “Cold Case Posse,” you can view it here.

It is the records from the week of Obama’s birth that cannot be tracked, investigators confirm.

The Arpaio report said the hunt for airline passenger flight manifests for 1961 for foreign flights landing in Honolulu was an attempt to see if Obama’s mother returned at that time.

“The idea was that if Barack Obama had been born in Kenya, or any other location outside the United States, there should be a passenger record of the airline flight on which she, a new mother, returned to Hawaii with her newly born infant son,” the report said.

But “to date, investigators have not been able to locate the relevant airline passenger flight manifests for 1961.”

What was found were records of cards the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service required all passengers – including both U.S. citizens and foreign citizens – to fill out and file with passport control when arriving in Honolulu from a foreign city of origin.

The report said, “Microfilm records of INS cards for passengers arriving in New York on foreign files in 1961 have been found in the National Archives only recently; consequently these records have not yet been examined. Microfilm records of INS cards for passengers arriving in Honolulu on foreign files originating around the Pacific rim in 1961 have been examined at the National Archives in Washington, D.C.”

The microfilms that were found for the time period include “NARA Record Group A3573, Reel 184, INA records from July 28, 1961 through Aug. 7, 1961? and “NARA Record Group A3573, Reel 185, INA records from Aug. 8, 1961 through Aug. 12, 1961.”

However, “Remarkably, all INS records for the week of Obama’s birth, Aug. 1 – Aug. 7, 1961, were missing from the end of Reel 184 and were not discovered anywhere on Reel 185, or any other microfilm reel in the record group,” the report said.

“The National Archives confirmed in a letter written on National Archives stationary that the INS records for foreign flights arriving in Hawaii during the week of Obama’s birth were missing, not only on the microfilm reels examined, but also in the primary database itself,” the report said.

CONTINUED HERE: wnd.com



To: Carolyn who wrote (85492)3/12/2012 12:17:20 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 90947
 
Obama Biographers, Journalists Covered Up Radical Derrick Bell Video







by Charles C. Johnson
breitbart.com
The failure of the mainstream media to examine Barack Obama's support for Critical Race Theory founder Derrick Bell is one of the most glaring cases of journalistic malpractice and neglect in recent memory. Nearly every single Obama biographer and profiler has mentioned the contentious racial climate of Harvard Law School during the time that Obama was president of the Harvard Law Review.

Some have even mentioned the speech that Obama gave at a protest where he literally embraced Bell.

Yet none, seemingly, bothered to track down and report on the content of the speech itself--or on Bell's radical ideas.

A PBS election special in 2008 showed footage of the protest but dubbed over critical portions of Obama's speech in which he endorsed Bell. A selectively edited clip released by Buzzfeed yesterday included the relevant audio but cut out the footage of Obama embracing Bell.

Harvard Law school professor Charles Ogletree (pictured above)--who was also a debate coach for Obama during the 2008 campaign--told an audience at Harvard last year: "We hid this throughout the 2008 campaign. I don’t care if they find it now."

Many of Obama's biographers appear to have been aware of the Bell protest but showed little interest in Bell or what Obama said about him.

David Remnick, longtime editor of The New Yorker and author of the bestselling Obama book, The Bridge: The Life and Rise of Barack Obama mentioned the speech on p. 214.

David Mendell, who has covered Obama since 2003 for the Chicago Tribune, and author of Obama: From Promise to Power, mentioned the speech on p. 85, writing: “Obama largely steered clear of the fray, but he did give a speech calling for greater faculty diversity and heaping praise on Derrick Bell.”

Yet they did not explore the speech--or the Obama-Bell relationship--further.

Journalists, too, didn’t bother to look too closely into the Obama-Bell connection.

Dahlia Lithwick, contributing editor at Newsweek and senior editor at Slate, mentioned the racial climate at HLS on April 7, 2008:

When it comes to the question of race in America, Barack Obama is used to hot tempers, accusations of bias, protests, speeches and pained outrage. In 1990 Harvard Law School was a key battleground in the identity wars. The faculty was angrily split over minority hiring and how to teach race in the classroom. Two years earlier 50 students had occupied the dean's office, demanding a more diverse faculty; that spring Derrick Bell--the first African-American to get tenure at Harvard Law School--resigned over the issue.

And yet Lithwick never mentioned Obama’s support of Bell during that contentious time. Lithwick’s piece was entitled, “ A Complicated Record on Race,” but Obama’s views weren’t all that complicated: he supported Bell.

Buried way down in Lithwick's story was this: “[Obama] attended meetings of the Black Law Students Association [which supported Bell’s position] and spoke to at least one event demanding greater diversity on campus.” That event may well have been the speech where Obama embraced Bell, but we cannot know from Lithwick. Lithwick did not mention that Obama served on BLSA’s board.

Nor did we learn much from Jodi Kantor, who covered the Obamas and authored the book The Obamas. Kantor, herself a Harvard Law School dropout, was among the first journalists to write about Obama’s time as a student there. In the piece she filed on January 28, 2007, there was only this mention, buried well below the lede and couched in language to make Obama look moderate:

As the president of the review, Mr. Obama once again walked a delicate line. He served on the board of the Black Law Students Association, often speaking passionately about the tempest of the week, but in a way that white classmates say made them feel reassured rather than defensive. He distanced himself from bombast; he did a mischievous impersonation of the Rev. Jesse Jackson when he came to speak on campus, recalled Franklin Amanat, now a federal prosecutor in Brooklyn. Mr. Obama’s boldest moment came at a rally for faculty diversity, where he compared Professor Bell to Rosa Parks.

His “boldest moment”? Or his most revealing?

Game Change author John Heilemann, in New York Magazine on October 22, 2007, appears to have misrepresented Obama's political commitments in describing the period (my emphasis):

There were rallies, sit-ins, overnight occupations of the dean's office, even a student-propagated discrimination lawsuit; the prominent professor and critical race theorist Derrick Bell resigned over the issue. But Obama was a missing person in these pitched contretemps. "His absence from the leadership was conspicuous," Keith Boykin, one of the prime movers of the campaign, says. "We wanted him to be front and center, because he represented a lot of the points that we were making. But nobody was particularly surprised that he wasn't more involved….Some say that Obama was simply too busy for campus politics.

And yet the video is clear that Obama was involved in those very racial campus politics.

Heilemann, by the way, is also author of the anti-Palin Game Change film, which ought to make us question his credibility.

One of the few who came close to the Obama-Bell connection was Harvard professor James T. Kloppenberg, author of Reading Obama: Dreams, Hopes, and the American Political Tradition. He wrote in 2010 that Obama was “immersed in debates about race,” and described Derrick Bell as having “made a career of using the Alinsky-style confrontation tactics to dislodge practices of racial segregation.”

“To [Bell’s] defenders, including Obama," Kloppenberg wrote, "Bell was keeping alive the spirit of Rosa Parks and other heroes of the civil rights movement.”

The truth was the opposite: Bell believed the civil rights movement was a sham, a way of keeping blacks enslaved to the white supremacy of the American legal and constitutional system as a whole.

And Obama's many mainstream media scribes were either too lazy to find the Bell protest speech or complicit in its suppression.

ON BREITBART TV The Vetting: Obama Embraces Racialist Harvard Prof