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WND - Farah's Birthday Challenge : $10K gift to hospital
Obama has resisted pleas from a growing chorus of Americans who can't understand why he would spend more than $800,000 fighting lawsuits calling for the release of the document rather than let the American people see it.
"We've tried the stick," said Farah. "Today, as Barack Obama celebrates what he claims to be his birthday, I want to try the carrot approach. Obama has said he was born in Kapi'olani Hospital in Honolulu. He participated in a fund-raiser for the medical center in January. WND will send a check to whatever birth hospital is listed on his long-form birth certificate. All Obama has to do to see that donation made is to release it publicly."
This is your opportunity to raise the bounty!
Farah said this offer does not supplant or replace a previous offer he put on the table to provide a minimum of $10,000 to anyone providing proof he or she was present at Obama's birth. Last week, Jason Hommel, an investment adviser, offered a $100,000 reward to anyone who can prove Obama is a natural born citizen and eligible to be president.
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Kapi'olani Hospital in Honolulu |
The controversy over Obama's birthplace has lingered since last year's presidential campaign, but has heated up in the last three months since Farah began what he calls a "personal crusade" to get to the truth. The last two weeks have witnessed a barrage of coverage by the U.S. and international news media - mainly ridiculing the notion that there is any legitimate controversy at all.
Nevertheless, recent polls show the issue resonating with the American people, who are buying up bumper stickers, yard and rally signs and donating to Farah's campaign to purchase billboards around the country asking, "Where's the birth certificate?"
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"Where's The Birth Certificate?" billboard next to Santa Ana Freeway in Commerce, Calif. |
To date, no hospital in Hawaii has come forward to claim this historic birth.
No doctor or nurse has come forward to say they were present for that historic birth.
No witness of any kind has come forward to say they have first-hand knowledge or involvement in that historic birth - at least in Hawaii.
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In fact, during the course of shooting and editing "A Case of Eligibility," the award-winning filmmaking team, veterans of many controversial movie projects, made the unusual request to keep its identity secret for fear of retribution from the administration.
"That's how hot this topic is," said Farah. "That's how hot this movie is."
"A Question of Eligibility" ships to customers today, Aug. 4, the date Obama claims as his 48th birthday.
"I guess you could say it's a special birthday surprise for Obama," said Farah. "But, honestly, I don't think he'll like it. In fact, I believe the facts revealed in this documentary keep Obama awake at night. This eligibility issue is the only issue that threatens not only the future of his presidency, but almost everything he thinks he has already accomplished as president."
In "A Case of Eligibility," Farah chose four key presenters to bring the issue home:
- WND senior staff writer Jerome Corsi, the No. 1 New York Times bestselling author of "The Obama Nation";
- Orly Taitz, one of the most visible attorneys involved in filing lawsuits challenging Obama to produce proof of his qualifications for office;
- Alan Keyes, a participant in one of those lawsuits, a presidential candidate himself, and the Republican candidate who opposed Obama in his successful bid to become a U.S. senator, the job that brought him to national attention;
- and Janet Porter, an activist and pundit who writes a weekly column for WND
Farah's birthday challenge: $10K gift to hospital
WND editor pledges donation if Obama releases long-form document
WASHINGTON - In another bid to persuade Barack Obama to release his long-form birth certificate publicly, WND Editor and Chief Executive Officer Joseph Farah today said he would donate $10,000 to the birth hospital listed on the document.
Obama has resisted pleas from a growing chorus of Americans who can't understand why he would spend more than $800,000 fighting lawsuits calling for the release of the document rather than let the American people see it. "We've tried the stick," said Farah. "Today, as Barack Obama celebrates what he claims to be his birthday, I want to try the carrot approach. Obama has said he was born in Kapi'olani Hospital in Honolulu. He participated in a fund-raiser for the medical center in January. WND will send a check to whatever birth hospital is listed on his long-form birth certificate. All Obama has to do to see that donation made is to release it publicly."
This is your opportunity to raise the bounty!
Farah said this offer does not supplant or replace a previous offer he put on the table to provide a minimum of $10,000 to anyone providing proof he or she was present at Obama's birth. Last week, Jason Hommel, an investment adviser, offered a $100,000 reward to anyone who can prove Obama is a natural born citizen and eligible to be president.
The controversy over Obama's birthplace has lingered since last year's presidential campaign, but has heated up in the last three months since Farah began what he calls a "personal crusade" to get to the truth. The last two weeks have witnessed a barrage of coverage by the U.S. and international news media - mainly ridiculing the notion that there is any legitimate controversy at all.
Nevertheless, recent polls show the issue resonating with the American people, who are buying up bumper stickers, yard and rally signs and donating to Farah's campaign to purchase billboards around the country asking, "Where's the birth certificate?"
To date, no hospital in Hawaii has come forward to claim this historic birth.
No doctor or nurse has come forward to say they were present for that historic birth.
No witness of any kind has come forward to say they have first-hand knowledge or involvement in that historic birth - at least in Hawaii.
If you are a member of the media and would like to interview Joseph Farah about this story, email press@wnd.com. Now you can watch eligibility story
Farah produces 1st feature documentary on Obama mystery
In fact, during the course of shooting and editing "A Case of Eligibility," the award-winning filmmaking team, veterans of many controversial movie projects, made the unusual request to keep its identity secret for fear of retribution from the administration.
"That's how hot this topic is," said Farah. "That's how hot this movie is."
"A Question of Eligibility" ships to customers today, Aug. 4, the date Obama claims as his 48th birthday.
"I guess you could say it's a special birthday surprise for Obama," said Farah. "But, honestly, I don't think he'll like it. In fact, I believe the facts revealed in this documentary keep Obama awake at night. This eligibility issue is the only issue that threatens not only the future of his presidency, but almost everything he thinks he has already accomplished as president."
In "A Case of Eligibility," Farah chose four key presenters to bring the issue home:
It's a fast-moving, original work shot entirely in Washington, D.C., and based on the voluminous investigative work of the news agency that has spent more time and money on the story than all other news media combined – the WND news team, said Farah.
"I'm hoping people will purchase a copy for themselves and pass it around to their friends - devotees of the issue and skeptics alike," said Farah. "I'm hoping people will share it in their living rooms, at tea party planning sessions and especially with their members of Congress - so officials in Washington can see first hand they've been sold a bill of goods about Obama's qualifications."
Farah says sooner or later the truth will come out on Obama's failure to prove his eligibility and maybe even his inability to prove it.
"Obama is choreographing a top-down revolution in America - one it may take generations from which to extricate ourselves," says Farah. "It will be a shame if we only learn he was ineligible to serve in the office of president after he's gone. If we can force the issue to be addressed while he is still in office, we have a chance of turning back the clock on many of the destructive actions he has taken already. If he's not able to prove his constitutional qualifications, we might all be able to wake up one day and think of the Obama administration as just a bad dream." Magnetic Bumper Stickers:
Billboard Gallery:
"Where's The Birth Certificate?" billboard on I-78 eastbound near Hamburg, Pennsylvania
"Where's the Birth Certificate?" billboard near the Santa Ana Freeway in Los Angeles
"Where's The Birth Certificate" digital billboard near Buena Park, California
"Where's The Birth Certificate" digital billboard on Highway 165 in Ball, Louisiana
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