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Originally posted by Bilk22
reply to post by adam76
It was the British Colony of Kenya.
Originally posted by Bilk22
reply to post by Thunderheart
They plan to release some "explosive news" sometime this month from what I've heard.
Originally posted by buster2010
Originally posted by Bilk22
reply to post by adam76
It was the British Colony of Kenya.
Actually the colony was called British east Africa. But Kenya existed prior to 1964 but it was offically called a protectorate of Great Britain. No formal Kenyan government existed and therefore any legal birth place would have been the British Protectorate - as in - having a record of birth or marking citizenship.
East African Protectorate: AD 1895-1920...
Indentured labour from Britain's Indian empire is brought in to construct the railway. Subsequently the existence of the railway brings Indian traders from the coast into the interior. The result is that by the 1920s there is a sizable Indian population to demand a share in the developing political life of Kenya. (By this time the name has been changed from the East Africa Protectorate to Kenya Colony, celebrating the region's highest mountain.)
Read more: www.historyworld.net...
Originally posted by straddlebug
reply to post by sad_eyed_lady
At this point who cares? Just vote the guy out of office. NOTE: Obama should have been vetted by the media before he became President.
pod person 105 up, 20 down
A person pretending to be something they aren't, or an impostor. This is inferred because of the old alien movies where alien pods appear on earth and the "pod people" dispose of the humans and slowly reproduce the bodies, pretending to be humans.
The pod person was pretending to be my father, but I knew that he was an alien when he acted differently than my father ever would have.
Originally posted by hadriana
Just say, for sake of argument, that his mother was CIA and in service of her country. She got pregnant while on assignment in Kenya, and gave birth.
What WOULD the status of that child be? What would a birth certificate look like?
WHat would a child's life, born into a situation like that, be like?
This issue alone pales in comparison to Obama’s Indonesian Citizenship – for if by chance it is shown he was actually born in Hawaii (this would cause a huge investigation into the fraud of the COLBs and the whys) – Soetoro’s None Dual Citizenship of Indonesia is enough to shut him down when his mother allowed Barry to be adopted under Islamic Indonesian Law (no dual citizenship).
Sorry Larry, but if Obama was ever an Indonesian citizen, then the only way to regain US citizenship is through naturalization which would make his inelegible for the office of the President.
Originally posted by Xcalibur254
reply to post by sad_eyed_lady
Another nation does not dictate one's citizenship in another nation. If that were true a country like Iran could claim that the US president is now an Iranian citizen and is no longer a US citizen, thus no longer eligible to be president. I'm not even sure if under US law a person can renounce their citizenship. I think the way the US sees it is once a citizen, always a citizen.
A growing number of U.S. citizens who live abroad and have bank accounts there are making a radical decision to avoid paying taxes: They’re giving up their U.S. citizenship.
Last year, 1,780 Americans relinquished their citizenship to avoid disclosing foreign account information to the Internal Revenue Service. This is a sharp increase over 2010, when 1,485 renounced citizenship. In 2009, the number was 731 and in 2008 226.
The increasing numbers of Americans renouncing citizenship is the result of an IRS crackdown: Within the past three years, the agency has stepped up efforts to track down and prosecute U.S. citizens who evade taxes by hiding money and other financial assets in foreign bank accounts.
Alan Weisberg, a prominent tax attorney with the Miami firm of Weisberg and Kainen, said he has noticed an increase in interest by some clients in exploring the possibility of renouncing citizenship.
“I have seen more interest, but it’s not a floodgate yet,” he said.
More are renouncing U.S. citizenship as IRS cracks down
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'My name is Barry Soetoro. I am a third-grade student at SD Asisi. My mom is my idol. My teacher is Ibu Fer. I have a lot of friends. I live near the school. I usually walk to the school with my mom, then go home by myself. Someday I want to be president. I love to visit all the places in Indonesia. Done. The eeeeeeeeend,' the essay reads.