I wouldn't want to hijack this thread with some random dwelling on conspiracy theories, but could somebody briefly explain the whole birth certificate issue? I've been seeing this popping up every now and then, and treated it as one of the "wacky Americuns" anecdotes, but never thought it was so widespread a belief.
So, what was the problem? Why did he take so long to produce this certificate if it's such a big issue?
Oh. Oh, Jesus. Oh, you did ask, didn't you. Here's a
Google search if you don't value your sanity.
The state of Hawaii, where every rational person knows Barack Obama was born, only provides a "certificate of live birth" or "short-form" birth certificate, which anybody could see. Hawaii had to pass a bill allowing their department of health to deny multiple requests from the same source, though, the workload was becoming too much. Two successive governors of Hawaii, one from each party, said that Barack Obama was a natural-born citizen of the United States. Two Hawaiian newspapers carried birth announcements for Barack Obama, available in their records for anyone who cared to look.
I don't know why he eventually released the long-form, nor why eventually was now. According to the
timeline as I understand it he released his long-form birth certificate on April 27th, before he was certain he would be giving the order for the OBL raid, so if there was an attempt to drop the birth certificate down the memory hole it couldn't have been a sure thing. Nor, if it were an attempt to memory-hole, would that be a problem for me -- if it were to help put the issue to bed sooner, all the better.
There might be a fundraising angle, Obama's reelection campaign is
hawking merch with the certificate on it.
I don't know why so many were irrational for so long -- I tend to put it down to tribalism, saying "Barack Obama wasn't born here" was just part of the package of a raft of beliefs, not actually held as an opinion, more said as a shibboleth.
About half of birthers gave it up in the four days following the long-form certificate's release, or approximately thirty million people abandoning a preposterous idea at once. That's impressive, I guess, if only one doesn't consider how many believed it to start, or how they came to believe it.