Philip J. Berg

The original claim was Hillary started it, then it evolved into her campaign, now it's a Democrat started it, so what, Trump is the one that ran with it, even claiming he had evidence gathered by a PI.

Sadly, the liar Thingy claim about me is not true. I don't believe Trump is off the hook for his birferism. In fact, it was one of the things I can't stand about him.

But I don't expect honesty from you or Thingy.
 
It's an apologist thread, period.

If you blame Berg for the years-long birther campaign, then McCain is responsible for the Russian investigation - not Dems. Period.

You're really a hack, through & through.

I merely stated a fact that a Democrat started birtherism and you have fucking insane shit fit.

:rofl2:
 
Hillary is a known conspiracy theorist [the vast right wing conspiracy lol!] so it's easy to see how someone might attribute birtherism to her.

Also, just because Hillary wasn't actively involved in its origin, anyone who wants to argue she wasn't silently cheering for Berg's law suit can go peddle that bridge somewhere else.
 
Why did you leave this part out:

Berg filed a complaint in federal district court on August 21, 2008, against Democratic Party presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama, the Democratic National Committee and the Federal Election Commission, alleging that Obama was born actually in Mombasa, Kenya and that the "Certification of Live Birth" on Obama's website is a forgery.

:rofl2:

? We've already established that Berg is a grandstanding idiot and a disbarred lawyer. We've established that he claims Obama was born in Kenya. Just what are you trying to argue?
 
What a sad sack apologist you are. Must defend your precious dems even when they started the birfer movement.

Hack.

No, they didn't. I already posted this on another thread.

Though it’s true that the specific allegation that Obama wasn’t born in the U.S. first reared its head during the 2008 presidential race, rumblings about Obama’s “otherness” had been percolating since long before that. In 2004, a political gadfly named Andy Martin issued a press release calling Barack Obama a “complete fraud” who had “misrepresented his heritage” in his memoir, Dreams From My Father, and “is a Muslim who has concealed his religion.” The theme was pushed further in December 2006 by conservative columnist Debbie Schlussel, who published an article entitled “Barack Hussein Obama: Once a Muslim, Always a Muslim,” which stated that “Obama has a ‘born-again’ affinity for the nation of his Muslim father, Kenya.

The likeliest point of origin we’ve been able to find was a post on conservative message board FreeRepublic.com dated 1 March 2008 (which, according to a report in The Telegraph, was at least a month before Clinton supporters got on the e-mail bandwagon)...

The same rumor was repeated, with elaborations, four days later on the conservative blog Ruthless Roundup...

http://www.snopes.com/hillary-clinton-started-birther-movement/
 
Why do liberals get so angry at the fact Berg started the birfer movement?

You think it's just about a lawsuit? Go look at the archives here. Liberals were angry with everybody who pushed the birther business, even those who claimed "well, I don't believe he was born in Kenya but he should just release his birth certificate for the other people who do."
 
You think it's just about a lawsuit? Go look at the archives here. Liberals were angry with everybody who pushed the birther business, even those who claimed "well, I don't believe he was born in Kenya but he should just release his birth certificate for the other people who do."

See what I mean.^
 
You think it's just about a lawsuit? Go look at the archives here. Liberals were angry with everybody who pushed the birther business, even those who claimed "well, I don't believe he was born in Kenya but he should just release his birth certificate for the other people who do."

You're wasting your time trying to get YoYo to admit the truth.

He was undoubtedly a birther himaself.
 
Though it’s true that the specific allegation that Obama wasn’t born in the U.S. first reared its head during the 2008 presidential race

That Hillary Clinton supporters circulated such an e-mail isn’t in question, but the claim that that’s the moment the birther theory “first emerged” simply isn’t true. The likeliest point of origin we’ve been able to find was a post on conservative message board FreeRepublic.com dated 1 March 2008 (which, according to a report in The Telegraph, was at least a month before Clinton supporters got on the e-mail bandwagon)
 
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