Pete is a "brither", (eg a member of the brithers).  LOL  I 
wounder whether brither is a derivative of the word 'brith"

Brith, n.

1) the jewish rite of circumcision.

Brith
n:  the jewish rite of circumcision performed on a male 
child on the eighth day of his life.

Regards,

LelandJ




On 07/27/2009 12:47 PM, Adam Buckland wrote:
>> From The Daily Telegraph - UK - A right/republican paper...
>
> Right Wing US conspiracists question Obama's birth certificate by
> Leonard Doyle in Washington  Published: 5:31PM BST 25 Jul 2009
>
> Congress is wrestling with historic health care reforms, soldiers are
> dying in far off lands and President Barack Obama is fighting to keep
> the economic recovery on track.
>
> But on the wilder shores of the American Right, the question that
> refuses to die is whether Mr Obama was genuinely born on US soil. If
> not, he would be ineligible to be President.
>
> Conspiracy theorists and far right wingers, who have begun to call
> themselves "birthers", maintain that Mr Obama is not entitled to be
> President of the US because he is "foreign born".
>
> The White House has published copies of Mr Obama's official birth
> certificate - a printed summary of his birth details, including the name
> of the medical centre in Honolulu, Hawaii, where he was born. But the
> conspiracists maintain there is something suspicious in the absence of a
> photocopy of his original birth record, known as the "long form". This
> would have been prepared by doctors or hospital officials involved in
> his birth and would contain fuller details - including the address of
> his parents.
>
> They dismiss as a distraction a birth announcement for Mr Obama that
> appeared in the Honolulu Advertiser on August 13, 1961 - nine days after
> he was born.
>
> George Gordon Liddy, the former Nixon supporter who served a four and a
> half year prison sentence for leading the Watergate burglary and who is
> now a conservative talk radio host, said: "This whole thing could be
> settled in a minute if the President would simply produce a valid birth
> certificate."
>
> Mr Liddy maintains that Mr Obama was in fact born in Kenya, his father's
> home country, and claims to have seen a deposition by the President's
> Kenyan step-grandmother, 86-year-old Sarah Obama, stating that the city
> of his birth was Mombasa. The President is therefore "an illegal alien",
> Mr Liddy says.
>
> The debate might have continued to bubble away beneath the radar of most
> Americans had the suspicions not been given a mainstream airing by Lou
> Dobbs, a popular CNN commentator and host who has his own popular radio
> show broadcast by the network.
>
> Mr Obama should do more to dispel the claims, he said on his programme -
> a mixture of news and opinion - last week. "When this could be dispelled
> so quickly, and simply by producing it, why not do it?" he asked.
>
> CNN has attempted to distance itself from the doubts of Mr Dobbs and the
> beliefs of the conspiracy theorists, displaying Mr Obama's "short" birth
> certificate on air. "To a large and vocal group of Americans, this paper
> (birth certificate) that I just showed you might as well be bathroom
> tissue," said Rick Sanchez, one of the station's news anchormen. But
> their claim, he added, was "a completely unfounded story".
>
> The television company's president, Jon Klein told staffers of Lou Dobbs
> Tonight that the controversy regarding the legitimacy of Mr Obama's
> birth certificate now appeared to be a "dead" story.
>
> In an email, he said that CNN researchers had determined that Hawaiian
> officials discarded paper documents in 2001. Because of that, Obama's
> long-form birth certificate no longer exists and the shorter certificate
> of live birth that has been made public is the sole official record. "It
> seems to definitively answer the question," he said.
>
> Other investigators have meanwhile established that the supposed
> deposition from Mr Obama's Kenyan step-grandmother was in fact no more
> than a partial transcript of a telephone conversation with the woman,
> who does not speak English. According to the transcript, the caller
> suggested Mr Obama was born in Kenya but was told by the translater that
> he was mistaken.
>
> The renewed controversy has outraged the American Left and horrified
> many conservatives too.
>
> The liberal radio host, Steven Collins, said: "We have serious issues
> right now. We have a huge economy, millions of people out of work.
>
> "It's so ridiculous that we're sitting here tonight wasting time talking
> about, 'Is he an American?' Come on!"
>
> The reason, he said, was that "many people in this nation cannot still
> accept the fact that a brilliant African-American is the
> commander-in-chief, and they're looking for ways to reduce the greatness
> of his purity as a person who is serving this nation."
>
> Joe Scarborough, a former Republican Congressman who hosts his own cable
> news show described the "birthers" as "cartoon characters".
>
> "Instead of trying to actually figure out what's happening to their
> country, the terrible things that are happening economically to their
> country," such people would rather "embrace conspiracy theories," he
> said.
>
> He compared the conspiracy theorists to people who believe "the United
> States government blew up its own buildings and killed its own people on
> September 11", or that American astronauts "never landed on the moon."
>
> Michael Medved, a conservative talk-show host, described the leadership
> of the so-called "birther" movement as "crazy, nutburger, demagogue,
> money-hungry, exploitative, irresponsible, filthy conservative
> impostors."
>
> They caused terrible damage to the conservative movement, he added. "It
> makes us look weird. It makes us look crazy. It makes us look demented.
> It makes us look sick, troubled, and not suitable for civilised
> company."
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of Leland F. Jackson, CPA
> Sent: 27 July 2009 18:28
> To: ProFox Email List
> Subject: Re: [OT] Obama sure has classy friends
>
> Pete, I would describe you as a conservative, but somehow
> that term just doesn't do you justice.
>
> What label could I use for a guy like you, that belongs to a
> group asserting Barack Obama isn't really president of the
> USA; because, he is not a USA citizen.   I not going to use
> the cliche "extremist", but perhaps the term "far, far, far,
> far, far, far, right Republican" would better describe your
> particular brand of political ideology.  LOL
>
> Regards,
>
> LelandJ
>
>
> On 07/27/2009 12:13 PM, Pete Theisen wrote:
>> Leland F. Jackson, CPA wrote:
>>> This may help a little, but it also raises more questions
>>> than it answers, as the article at the end of the link tries
>>> to present the events that took place from two very
>>> different perspectives with too many contradictions between
>>> the players.
>>>
>>>
> http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jHud4VBSlwHX-0MPU8m15Y
> h9lE8gD99MH3381
>>> or
>>>
>>> http://tinyurl.com/lohx52
>> Hi Leland,
>>
>> Yep, you're a liberal. Your Obama is too.
>>
>>>>>> Please don't try to pin a liberal label on me.
>
>
>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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