nycpeter wrote:
In the Addendum to the Elections Fraud complaint filed with the Secretary of State of IN and Elections Commission /s/ wrote:
Please note, I will not be available between March 22 and April 1,
Sincerely,
/s/ Dr. Orly Taitz ESQ
1. Where's she going? Bit late for Spring Break on Padre but...
2. Are we off from school that week too?

[/quote]
Shrug, this is so common for birthers I've lost track.
"It's the crime of the century, the biggest fraud ever committed! We must gather for a million man march on the White House! This is the most important issue in American history oh but I have an aunt visiting that day and I said we'd go refrigerator shopping so I won't be there BUT I'LL BE THERE IN SPIRIT!"
To rob from Patrick, birthers are the best example of the 101st Fighting Keyboards. They all want the Great Usurper gone, dead, tried, jailed, removed, protests abounding, We the People rising up...everyone else but them. They're the people that, if it ever did happen, would make up stories of how They Were There when they actually sat at home.
I will say this one, very minor, thing for Lakin - he was duped, he was mistaken, he was and still is wrong - but he knew what he was inviting by his actions. Had he not, at the end, changed his tune and decided to plead guilty (which was best for his family, and since he was wrong all along the best choice) and instead stuck by his guns, he'd be, IMO, a focal point of the birther movement now.
Birthers want the gains that come from potential civil disobedience but without the costs - they compare themselves to civil rights pioneers and revolutionaries from the War for Independence, but those gentlemen signed on the dotted line pledging their Lives, their Fortunes, and their Sacred Honor. They knew what they were getting into and that they'd be ruined - and likely killed - if they lost. Birthers have no right to compare themselves to those men if they can't take a day off from work to attend a rally focusing on the Biggest Crime Ever.