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Silver Surfer #1, 'The Origin of the Silver Surfer' (August 1968)

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simoom4/21/2010 10:57:47 pm PDT

re: #62 simoom

CNN’s AC360 blog from tonight:

Latest ‘birther’ move: A good idea or a waste of time?

I’m going to take bake some of my AC360 criticism. I was just looking over tonight’s transcript from the show and it looks like they did a segment on the Arizona Birther bill. One of the lawmakers who voted for it, State Representative Cecil Ash, was on and it reads like Anderson Cooper really hammered him:
transcripts.cnn.com

COOPER: I mean, as you said, the certificate of live birth is available for anyone to see. It’s been released. And, in Hawaii, there are only electronic records at this point, and the health department there has verified it. They have made public statements.

So, why vote for something which perpetuates these false Internet rumors?

ASH: Well, Anderson, I think there’s been a lot of controversy over the issue. It’s created a division among a lot of people in the United States. And, for better or worse, many people don’t believe he is a U.S. citizen. They believe he has loyalties — divided loyalties, I suppose you could say.

COOPER: Right, but those people are wrong. I mean, he is a U.S. citizen.

ASH: Well, you’re telling me that he’s wrong. I have never investigated that. If he is, then he has nothing to fear.

COOPER: But — but, I mean, that — the information is out there. It has been released. It has been shown. There are some people who don’t believe it, but there are also some people who believe that the moon is made out of cheese. And you can say you have never investigated it, but I think you would probably say the moon is not made out of cheese.

ASH: Well, I certainly would.

But the reason I spoke up on this bill is simply because there is a lot of division in the country. And I believe this would put an end to any future controversy about a president’s qualifications.

COOPER: You told our producer you voted for this because you get a lot of calls from constituents with questions based on things they have read on the Internet.

I mean, isn’t it your job as a leader to actually lead, not to throw up your hands and say, well, who knows what’s real or not on the Internet, to actually say, well, actually, you know, Hawaii has released this information, and it’s factually correct?

COOPER: You told my producer you thought the president spent a million dollars fighting the release of his birth certificate, and then that raised concerns for you.

ASH: That’s what I have heard. As I said, it…

COOPER: Right. But that’s not — you know that’s actually not true?

ASH: I — I don’t know that that’s not true. As I said, I haven’t studied it. You get a lot of information on the Internet. As you know, much of it is inaccurate.

This has not been a focus of my attention for the last two years. But I know it is a matter of — of controversy for many people. And I looked at this as simply a — a means to end that controversy.

COOPER: You — you also said to our producer that the president identified himself as a foreigner on his college application.

ASH: Yes.

COOPER: You know that’s not true, right?

ASH: I didn’t know that that was not true.

COOPER: That’s a story that was put out on April Fool’s Day. It’s a fake AP news story.