All The President's History - "Release The Birth Documents"
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By: Michael Johns
Contact
Michael at Email: michaeldjohns@gmail.com
One of
the most constructive developments of the past eight months is that tens of
millions of Americans appear to be reawakening to the critical importance and
relevance of the U.S. Constitution. The brazen growth of the federal
government, which now controls sizable portions of the economy (automobiles,
banks, health care, mortgages and other industry segments), violates the tenets
of free market capitalism, the system that has been the foundation of our
nation's globally unprecedented growth and prosperity. But this debate is not
merely a policy one. Increasingly, as millions of Americans associated with the
burgeoning Tea Party and 912 Project movements are demonstrating, the debate is
about whether such expansions of federal powers are even Constitutionally
permissible.
It is
difficult to pinpoint exactly when the dangerous disregard for our nation's
founding legal document began. It certainly predates this administration. But
the culture upon which it rests might be best exemplified in the apparent
Congressional and media group think that our 44th President holds no obligation
to respond to questions about his Constitutional eligibility, under Article II,
Section I of the Constitution, to hold the office to which he ran and was
elected. This Constitutional provision states unequivocally that no person
except a natural born citizen shall be eligible to the Office of President.
Is
Barack Obama a natural born citizen of the United States? Probably. But because
Obama is going to great lengths to conceal the documents that would settle this
issue definitively, it is impossible to say for sure. Since October 2008, Obama
has spent in excess of $1.35 million in legal fees to file protective and
privacy motions in at least eight federal lawsuits to avoid releasing the
documents--his mother's hospital admission record, his Hawaii certificate of
live birth, his educational records during his four years of residence in
Indonesia, his Indonesian citizen status at that time and the time of his
subsequent reentry to the U.S., and his college and law school admission
records--that likely would definitively establish his Constitutional
eligibility. Congress, the media, and even many Obama opponents, meanwhile,
have failed to exert any pressure on him to halt his pro-active legal measures
to avoid disclosure of these documents.
Quite
obviously, the question of a President's Constitutional eligibility is serious
business. It was serious business when, in February 2008, The New York Times
called into question Senator John McCain's eligibility for the office because
McCain was born on an American Naval base in the Panama Canal Zone, which was
then under U.S. control. "It is certainly not a frivolous issue," The
Times quoted Atlanta attorney Jill Pryor as saying at the time. The questions
also were serious enough for the U.S. Senate to investigate them, with the
Senate ultimately concluding in a unanimous vote that the U.S. administration
of the Panama Canal Zone at that time meant that McCain was indeed a natural
born citizen and eligible for the Presidency.
Whatever
these records might reveal, Obama's extensive, year-long efforts to conceal
them are now inexplicable, inexcusable and harmful to the nation. There is no
innocuous explanation for his extensive efforts to conceal them, especially
since their release is easily authorized and would settle the controversy,
permitting the nation to move on with full confidence in his Constitutional
eligibility and the Constitutional foundations of our nation in 2009. But Obama
has refused to do this and, as a result, a frightening and growing number of
Americans now understandably ask the question: What exactly is he hiding?
Let me
stipulate that, despite following this issue for a year, I am utterly unable to
answer that question. But logic dictates that one would not expend in excess of
a million dollars in legal fees, as Obama has done, knowing that the only
likely result is that a certain percentage of the American people will view
such efforts as non-transparent, or even malfeasant. Conversely, it also is
wrong to conclude, in the absence of these documents, that Obama has
necessarily misrepresented anything about his birth location or Constitutional
eligibility, as some critics of Obama's concealment of these documents continue
to do. Under pressure to settle the issue during his Presidential candidacy,
the Obama campaign ultimately produced a Certification of Live Birth in 2007,
but that document, skeptics argue, is manufactured by the state and is not an
unequivocal authentication of his birth location.
The most important point is this: No national interest is served by permitting these important questions to linger and persist. To settle them, Obama should cease blocking release of the documents sought by the plaintiffs in the various federal cases over his eligibility. And going forward, it seems reasonable to insist that our nation's Federal Election Commission (FEC), which is charged with regulatory oversight of Presidential elections, require Presidential candidates to submit, along with their candidacy filing, the documents that clearly establish their natural-born eligibility for the office. Americans' confidence in our Constitutionally-rooted democratic political system requires no less.
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