U.S. Army MSGT Ret. wrote:
Suranis wrote:
U.S. Army MSGT Ret. wrote:
But the Hawaii OCON form doesn't have the Constitutional provisional wording does it? No. It just says he is legally ok to be on the ballot. Totally different. I'm just reading what it states factually.
What difference does it make whether it says the word, constitutionally or not? .
It's state law.
Some questions for you, then:
Under that state law, which you seem terribly concerned to have followed
to the letter, how would you define "the appropriate official of those parties"?
If Sequoia is correct (as she seems to be) that an entire LINE was omitted (note, not a sentence, a line):
Quote:
line 2 (2000, 2004, 2008)
President of the United States are legally qualified to serve under the provisions of the
line 3 (2000, 2004) (missing from 2008)
United States Constitution and are the duly chosen candidates of both the state and the
line 4 (2000, 2004); line 3 (2008)
national Democratic Parties by balloting at the Presidential Preference Poll and Caucus
...doesn't it seem to you that the likeliest explanation for its omission is a typist's error? What sense does "...under the provisions of the national Democratic Parties by balloting..." make? None.
If it is not a typist's error, what other explanation can
you provide?
It certainly couldn't be that someone connected with the creation, certification, and filing of that letter actually thought that 'Constitutionally'
should be omitted for any reason?
What do you believe?
I think it's quite obvious that it was an innocent typist's transcription error, that wasn't caught at the time. Thus the wording used (or omitted) has not the remotest bearing on whether Obama is Constitutionally qualified, or whether anyone involved thought he was Constitutionally qualified. The very fact that the filing was carried through with, testifies to the fact that everyone involved had no doubts about his Constitutional qualifications. Do you disagree?
Edit: To make my point clearer:
What are the possible ways to finish the following phrase, when referring to the Presidency: "legally qualified to serve under the provisions of the..."?
Where, besides the Constitution, are there "provisions" that "qualify" who may "legally serve" as President?
Nowhere. The ONLY POSSIBLE way to finish that sentence meaningfully is "Constitution". The fact that it's missing CAN ONLY be historical curiosity, derived from a clerical error. What bearing can its absence have on anything? Of what conceivable interest is its absence to anyone?