Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Hey, Dallas - 'Where's the birth certificate?' Billboard campaign moves into heart of Texas


© 2010 WorldNetDaily


New "Where's the Birth Certificate?" billboard in Dallas

DALLAS, Texas – The question has been asked – and not yet answered – in Alabama, Florida, Pennsylvania, California, Tennessee and even in San Antonio. It's also been asked in state and federal courts across the land, even in the U.S. Supreme Court, and also remains unanswered.

Maybe Dallas will be different.

The "Where's The Birth Certificate" billboard campaign has arrived in this city, with the posting of the question that is key to the dispute over whether President Barak Obama is eligible to occupy the Oval Office from which he has directed the government takeover of Wall Street, Motor City and your doctor's office.

The question pertains to the core issue raised in all of the legal and other challenges to Obama: Was he qualified under the requirements of the U.S. Constitution that the president be a "natural born citizen," a requirement not imposed on other federal officeholders.


New "Where's the Birth Certificate?" billboard in Dallas

In San Antonio, the billboard was posted on Loop 410, near Old Pearsall Road:


San Antonio billboar

Polls in recent weeks show that some 6 in 10 Americans doubt whether Obama constitutionally is eligible to occupy the Oval Office, and the Dallas sign is the latest by WND founder and Chief Executive Officer Joseph Farah's campaign to make Barack Obama prove it.



Other signs recently have been posted in Florida and Tennessee:

Billboard near Panama City, Fla.
Billboard in Nashville, Tenn.

Billboard near Panama City, Fla.
Billboard near Panama City, Fla.

The billboard campaign has posted dozens of signs throughout the country since it was launched in 2009.

Farah attributes widespread interest in the great "birth-certificate controversy" to the billboard campaign that, he believes, rekindled the debate about Obama's constitutional eligibility for office. The campaign asks the simple but unanswered question, "Where's the birth certificate?"

The campaign has been sustained by contributions from WND visitors and others who have discovered it from simply driving past a billboard.

Farah is convinced that it's working and promises to sustain it if he can continue to get financial help.

"No matter how hard my colleagues try to make the public forget about this issue, no matter how hard they attempt to ridicule anyone who wants to see the proof, no matter how much they demean even decorated military officers who take their own oaths seriously, this issue will not go away. It's going to be around in 2012. It may even be the defining issue in 2012," he said.

Billboard near Navarre, Fla.

Farah says he could not have pulled off the campaign without the support of WND's visitors. The cost of the billboards has been offset by donations – and Farah says he wants to step up the campaign because it's winning.

A recent CBS–New York Times poll showed only 58 percent of Americans even think Obama was born in the USA. Another later poll by CNN indicated six in 10 hold doubts about Obama's birth and, therefore, eligibility.

Billboard near Talledega, Ala.

"I'm quite sure based on our own polls that if those people were asked whether they would like to see Obama release his birth certificate, more than half the country would say 'yes' – and all the other personal papers he has refused to disclose," Farah said.

Farah says the billboards have had a lot to do with changing popular opinion – even if the media don't get it.

"People simply shouldn't have to conjecture about where they think their president was born," he says. "It ought to be a matter of public record – and it clearly is not."

Aside from the billboard campaign, WND has devoted more investigative reporting to the issue of eligibility than "all other media outlets combined," says Farah.

In addition, the billboard campaign was rejected by three major billboard companies, all owned by major media outlets – CBS, Clear Channel and Lamar.

Billboard near Bethel, Pa.

"What I need Americans to understand is that this billboard campaign is working," said Farah. "There is no shortage of billboards available to us. The only thing there's a shortage of is the money to erect them. We need to raise tens of thousands of dollars a month just to keep them in place."

"The impact of the billboards is magnified by local television and talk-radio shows in every market they enter," explains Farah. "It's not just the billboard. It's the earned media that comes along with it. It's astounding. We have turned millions of people around on this issue with the billboards. It's just that simple."

In addition to the billboard campaign, Farah has:

* produced a video-documentary primer on the issue called "A Question of Eligibility";

* produced a 40-page special report on the subject;

* manufactured yard and rally signs to bring attention to the topic;

* pledged to donate at least $15,000 to any hospital in Hawaii or anywhere else that provides proof Obama was born there and given you an opportunity to raise the amount;

* created a line of T-shirts you can wear to appearances by the president to raise visibility of the issue;

* created a fund to which you can donate to further the kind of investigative reporting into this matter only this company has performed over the last two years;

* launched a line of postcards you can use to keep the issue alive;

* distributed thousands of bumper stickers asking, "Where's the birth certificate?";

* perhaps most notably, gathered more than 500,000 names on a petition demanding any and all controlling legal authorities in this matter take appropriate action to see the requirements of the Constitution of the United States are followed;

* gathered another 25,000 names on a second petition attempting to rally state officials to make presidential candidates prove their eligibility before getting on ballots.

"There are all kinds of things we need to do right now to get our country back on track, but I can think of nothing more important than for us to see that our Constitution is observed, followed, adhered to and honored, especially when it comes to such simple, straightforward matters as the eligibility of the president of the United States," says Farah. "Please help me bring this matter to a head right now."

See birth-certificate signs around the country.

Have you contributed to the "Where's the birth certificate?" billboard campaign yet? If you haven't contributed this month, please do so now.

Related offers:

See the movie Obama does not want you to see: Own the DVD that probes this unprecedented presidential eligibility mystery!

Want to turn up the pressure to learn the facts? Get your signs and postcards asking for the president's birth-certificate documentation from the Birth Certificate Store!

Join the petition campaign to make President Obama reveal his long-form, hospital-generated birth certificate!

Send a contribution to support the national billboard campaign that asks the simple question, "Where's the birth certificate?"

Get your yard signs and rally signs that ask the same question – and make sure it's in time for the next tea party rally

Get your permanent, detachable magnetic bumper stickers for your car, truck or file cabinet – and join the campaign for constitutional integrity.

Get the most comprehensive special report ever produced on the Obama eligibility issue.

Previous stories:

Look what's on horizon in San Antonio

Check out the latest eligibility billboard

You'll never guess what Obama saw at Gulf

Is the billboard campaign working?

Eligibility issue hits Hotlanta!

'Where's the Birth Certificate?' billboards are back!

Hey, Pennsylvania! 'Where's the birth certificate?'

New 'birth certificate' billboard erected in Florida

Billboard questions reach Mile High City

'Birth certificate' billboards on the Net

Multi-state car dealer plans birth-certificate billboards

Radio host: I want my own birth-certificate billboard

Eligibility billboard campaign goes viral

THE FULL STORY: See listing of more than 200 exclusive WND reports on the eligibility issue

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