I'd like to stay on topic. I still don't know what it is that is to be "produced", and how it is to be obtained an produced.
I love this, though:
Quote:
I never thought I'd say this, bogus, but I have to disagree with you about Obama releasing his long-form BC now.
Barack Obama cannot "release his long-form BC".
That's the game here, and you should know that by now.
And this really gets to the heart of how many people do not understand how our system of government works, and what the rule of law means.
The President is not some dictator who can order anything he wants done. In fact, the President - any President - is utterly powerless to change valid state laws.
The State of Hawaii does not issue long form birth certificates to ANYONE. Those are their rules. Even if you are the President of the United States, you cannot ask any state official to violate the rules of that state. Period. End of story.
So, I'll add to my unanswered questions about "what" and "how"... Specifically how is Barack Obama to persuade the State of Hawaii to violate its own regulations to obtain this long form birth certificate? By asking nicely and pointing out the laws do not apply to him?
They do apply to him, just as they apply to anyone else. And speaking of those "millions of people around the world", I do a lot of international travel, because a large part of my work involves a peculiar international standards organization. And that time is spent in the REAL world - not some set of echo-chamber blogs. During a typical year, I spend about a month and a half outside of the US.
If you think the rest of the developed world - all of which have figured out some sort of insurance scheme for all of its citizens, and many of which treat US tourists for free - is recoiling in horror at the notion that the US is struggling with a debate on a subject they've settled long ago, then I really have to wonder about your knowledge of this world and the people in it. The general reaction abroad to the debate over this issue in the US is one of stunned disbelief.