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Reason: None provided.

I have tried and failed to find the original source of this screenshot. I have even used the subscription-based databases to search for archived news stories from foreign countries. I cannot find this story or wording anywhere in existence.

However, I do find ALMOST the exact copy of this wording in multiple copy-cat articles from that time, which isn’t uncommon with the AP. Here is one that is almost exactly the same, except for the every word but the “Kenyan-born” phrase.”

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-jun-27-adna-ryan27-story.html

So without the original source to evaluate, and with the other evidence that exists, I have TWO possible conclusions.

  1. In 2004 (the time that the alleged source cited was published as well as the MSM stories copying it), Barack Obama, an unknown, was already having his international birth status covered up by the MSM. Please note that in 2004, Obama was an Illinois State Senator, so the entire MSM would have to be covering for a random state Senator just in case he might run for POTUS in four years, among all the other more popular candidates like Clinton who was Supposed to Win.

  2. This is a fake screenshot that used an existing story from 2004 and added a Kenyan-born line. There is no evidence that this story has ever existed outside of this screenshot, and there are plenty of existing versions of this story published at the same time that do not have this line.

Wouldn’t you expect a Kenyan-based newspaper to spell the name “Barack” correctly? Then why is it misspelled in the screenshot?

Without the original source to analyze, I can’t tell that this is real. And without a real source to analyze, I can’t verify anything about this screenshot.

I paid actual money searching for this original article and could not find it. Is anyone else able to source the original text in this screenshot?

If not, what exactly is convincing you that this is a trustworthy piece of evidence besides the conclusion it supports?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I have tried and failed to find the original source of this screenshot. I have even used the subscription-based databases to search for archived news stories from foreign countries. I cannot find this story or wording anywhere in existence.

However, I do find ALMOST the exact copy of this wording in multiple copy-cat articles from that time, which isn’t uncommon with the AP. Here is one that is almost exactly the same, except for the every word but the “Kenyan-born” phrase.”

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-jun-27-adna-ryan27-story.html

So without the original source to evaluate, and with the other evidence that exists, I have TWO possible conclusions.

  1. In 2004 (the time that the alleged source cited was published as well as the MSM stories copying it), Barack Obama, an unknown, was already having his international birth status covered up by the MSM. Please note that in 2004, Obama was an Illinois State Senator, so the entire MSM would have to be covering for a random state Senator just in case he might run for POTUS in four years, among all the other more popular candidates like Clinton who was Supposed to Win.

  2. This is a fake screenshot that used an existing story from 2004 and added a Kenyan-born line. There is no evidence that this story has ever existed outside of this screenshot, and there are plenty of existing versions of this story published at the same time that do not have this line.

Wouldn’t you expect a Kenyan-based newspaper to spell the Kenyan name “Barack” correctly? Then why is it misspelled in the screenshot?

Without the original source to analyze, I can’t tell that this is real. And without a real source to analyze, I can’t verify anything about this screenshot.

I paid actual money searching for this original article and could not find it. Is anyone else able to source the original text in this screenshot?

If not, what exactly is convincing you that this is a trustworthy piece of evidence besides the conclusion it supports?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

I have tried and failed to find the original source of this screenshot. I have even used the subscription-based databases to search for archived news stories from foreign countries. I cannot find this story or wording anywhere in existence.

However, I do find ALMOST the exact copy of this wording in multiple copy-cat articles from that time, which isn’t uncommon with the AP. Here is one that is almost exactly the same, except for the every word but the “Kenyan-born” phrase.”

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-jun-27-adna-ryan27-story.html

So without the original source to evaluate, and with the other evidence that exists, I have TWO possible conclusions.

  1. In 2004 (the time that the alleged source cited was published as well as the MSM stories copying it), Barack Obama, an unknown, was already having his international birth status covered up by the MSM. Please note that in 2004, Obama was an Illinois State Senator, so the entire MSM would have to be covering for a random state Senator just in case he might run for POTUS in four years, among all the other more popular candidates like Clinton who was Supposed to Win.

  2. This is a fake screenshot that used an existing story from 2004 and added a Kenyan-born line. There is no evidence that this story has ever existed outside of this screenshot, and there are plenty of existing versions of this story published at the same time that do not have this line.

Without the original source to analyze, I can’t tell that this is real. And without a real source to analyze, I can’t verify anything about this screenshot.

I paid actual money searching for this original article and could not find it. Is anyone else able to source the original text in this screenshot?

If not, what exactly is convincing you that this is a trustworthy piece of evidence besides the conclusion it supports?

2 years ago
1 score