American
Thinker...
Media
Blackout in Obama Georgia Ballot Eligibility Case
By Cindy
Simpson
January 30,
2012
Last week,
I noted that Obama turned his back not just on Arizona’s Governor Jan
Brewer,
but also on the laws of the State of Georgia. I closed my column,
“Georgia
Ballot Challenge: Obama Walks on By,” with the observation: “And most
of the
media has followed along right behind him.”
At the
time, I had just witnessed an historic hearing that actually discussed
the
eligibility of the sitting president of the United States to run for a
second
term. The president had been subpoenaed to appear, and instead of his
attorney
respectfully following protocol to have that subpoena recalled, both
Obama and
his attorney, Michael Jablonski, simply failed to show up at all or
offer any
defense whatsoever.
Isn’t there
a headline in there somewhere?
The hearing
proceeded as planned, even though the table for the defense was empty.
Attorneys Van Irion and J. Mark Hatfield presented their cases first
and
offered compelling arguments -- not regarding Obama’s birthplace, but
rather
that the non-U.S. citizenship of Obama’s father precluded Obama’s
“natural
born” eligibility under the Constitution and existing Supreme Court
precedent.
Attorney Orly Taitz, however, did present interesting evidence that
questioned
the validity of Obama’s birth certificate and questions surrounding his
Social
Security number.
When the
hearing ended, the media in attendance almost literally pounced on
Taitz. Irion
and Hatfield and their clients had left the premises earlier, while
Taitz was
still presenting her case; however, Irion asserted to me that not one
member of
the press stopped them on their way out. Doubtless the media did not
want to
discuss the law -- they’d rather write their usual stories on the birth
certificate and interview the one they’ve dubbed the “birther queen.”
Attorney
Taitz handled herself well, even though the press taunted her with
rudeness and
leading questions she has doubtless experienced many times. After the
reporters
finished letting Taitz feel the full extent of their contempt for both
her and
the entire morning’s event, they packed up to leave.
I walked up
to one particular reporter from one of the prominent mainstream
entities,
noting that he seemed frustrated that he didn’t get a clear answer from
Taitz
to one of his questions, and I informed him that I did know the exact
answer,
if he’d like to hear more about it. He said no, he didn’t. I asked
then, wasn’t
he a reporter, and why did he ask the question if he didn’t want the
answer?
And as I was speaking, he turned and walked away from me.
The same
thing happened with another reporter from another major network. He had
asked
Taitz why no one cared that there were past presidents who had fathers
not born
in the country. I explained to him that it was not the place of birth
of the
presidents’ fathers that was the issue, but rather the status of their
citizenship at the time of their sons’ births. The reporter scoffed and
told me
that that was just my opinion, but when I attempted to inform him that
it was
also the opinion of the Supreme Court, he turned and walked away from
me while
I was in mid-sentence.
Does this
behavior seem familiar?
Even though
I saw reporters from every major network on the scene, the actual
reporting of
the event was scant -- primarily only in blogs or local news. Google
“Georgia
Ballot Challenge” and note the non-mainstream coverage of the event.
Rachel
Maddow must not have gotten the memo, though, because she dedicated a
full 8
minutes of her January 26 show to telling her viewers why they should
“feel
almost duty-bound as a patriot to ignore” the hearing and not to
“dignify this
nonsense or elevate it by paying it any attention.” Not only were none
of the
legal points addressed in the hearings brought up by Maddow, but Maddow
excused
the extraordinary fact that Obama and his counsel, instead of
respecting the
law, had simply snubbed it, calling the case “ridiculous.”
As Sunny of
Sunny TV points out in this hilarious but uncomfortably true video,
“Tyranny is
as Tyranny Does”; “[l]et’s just hope the next President is just as
benevolent
as Obama because they could really use that power for bad.” At the end
of the
clip, as Sunny pretends she is Obama, issuing orders right and left,
she points
to her crown and says: “This makes me in charge.” As Teri O’Brien noted
in her
interview discussing Obama’s penchant for walking away from those with
whom he
disagrees, “[g]ods don’t debate. They issue decrees.”
Attorney
Irion, in this follow-up letter from his Liberty Legal Foundation,
pointed out:
“Yesterday President Obama completely ignored a court subpoena, and the
world
shrugged.”
Yes, Obama
shrugged, and the media has shrugged along. Irion further noted:
Obama’s
behavior yesterday is even more disturbing than Nixon’s. Nixon at least
respected the judicial branch enough to have his attorneys show up in
court and
follow procedure[.] ... Nixon acknowledged the authority of the
judicial branch
even while he fought it. Obama, on the other hand, essentially said
yesterday
that the judicial branch has no power over him. He ordered his
attorneys to
stay away from the hearing. He didn’t petition a higher court in a
legitimate
attempt to stay the hearing[.] ... Rather than respecting the legal
process,
Obama went around the courts and tried to put political pressure
directly on
the Georgia Secretary of State. When that failed, he simply ignored the
judicial branch completely.
It is
disconcerting to see that the president, whose primary duty is to
preserve,
protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States, has turned
his back
on the rule of law of one of those states. Especially, as Sunny
uncomfortably
reminded us, since this is the same president who routinely sidesteps
the law
or places himself above it.
Even more
troubling is the fact that the mainstream media not only seems to
approve --
but they fail to report it at all.
Editor’s
Note: As usual, we checked the
link that came with the article, only to find out the page had been
removed. So
you may take that in any way you wish.
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