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Top Ten Things That You Should Know About
Barack H. Obama’s, (a/k/a Barry Soetoro) US Citizenship
1. He may not be a natural born citizen qualified to serve as President under Article II of the Constitution
2. He is a suspected illegal alien for two possible reasons
3. He took elected office and was admitted to the Illinois Bar under an alias |
He admits he was born to an American mother and a British subject, suggesting dual citizenship at best. [1]If he was not born on U.S. soil, and his mother was a minor, she was ineligible to convey US citizenship.[2] Under the British Nationality Act of 1948, he was born a British Citizen.[3] His paternal grandmother claims to have attended his birth in Kenya.[4] Kenya memorializes his place of birth.[5] At age 3, his mother and father divorced. His mother remarried and his step-father enrolled him in school in Indonesia as "Barry Soetoro."[6]
No record of any legal
name change from ‘Barry Soetoro’ to ‘Barack Obama’ has ever been found. |
4. He probably lost his citizenship. |
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5. He is suspected of secretly holding a foreign passport. |
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6. He posted an illegitimate birth record to deflect questions and allegations.
7. The Certification of Live Birth is a suspected forgery. |
The "Certification of Live Birth" shown on FightTheSmears.com is not a birth certificate, but an image of an abstract that was invalidated by alteration. As indicated on that same image, the blacked out certification number invalidates the document. Document analysis shows it to be a suspected forgery.
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8. He refuses to release relevant records. |
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9. His selective service registration may be falsified. |
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10. Not a single cause of action has been won by Obama on the merits. |
All pending suits attempting to get Obama/Soetoro to produce simple documents have been dismissed on technical grounds such as the standing of the plaintiff. Therefore, the courts, including the Supreme Court of the United States have never ruled on the merits of his citizenship. |
[1]
“Dreams from my Father”
[2]
Section 301(a)(7) of the Immigration and Nationality Act of June 27, 1952,
66 Stat. 163, 235, 8 U.S.C. §1401(b)