The Hartfordian Theory
The release of the birth certificate certainly proves that someone named Barack Obama was born in Hawaii in 1961. But Hartfordians don’t deny that Barack Obama exists; we just don’t believe that he is the current president. The Hartfordian theory is that the current President of the United States is actually former senator Christopher Dodd.
All of the questions surrounding Obama’s past are easy to reconcile, once you realize that his many accomplishments are actually those of Dodd. Much has been made of Obama’s 2004 keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention, a call for unity that thrust him into the national spotlight. But records from the time show that the real Barack Obama was only a state senator. The DNC would never have given him that kind of platform. Christopher Dodd was a United States senator, and potential presidential candidate. Clearly, it was Dodd who gave that speech.
In the Senate, the man from Hawaii stood in as a front for legislation that Dodd would have considered too controversial to put his own name on. For example, the Mercury Export Ban Act of 2008 was supposedly sponsored by “Senator Barack Obama.” But the true author of the bill left behind plenty of coded messages in the text, so posterity would have no doubt who really sponsored it. (Click below for a larger image.)
Anti-Hartfordian critics have pointed out that it is impossible for Dodd to have sponsored both Obama’s legislation and his own at the same time. But Dodd is one of the great legislative geniuses of all time, and was able to manage it without raising suspicion. In 2010, “President Barack Obama” signed into law the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The former president, George W. Bush, had been opposed to financial regulation. But the man from Hawaii takes office, and all of a sudden financial reform is on the table? Obviously, Dodd signed his own bill into law.
The idea that the President of the United States is Barack Obama is one of the greatest frauds ever perpetrated on the American people, despite overwhelming evidence that it is actually Chris Dodd. I guess people just see what they want to see.
April 28th, 2011 at 7:36 am
Are you fucking crazy. UNSUBSCRIBE
April 28th, 2011 at 8:26 am
Erin I believe this is satire.
April 28th, 2011 at 9:39 am
The release of the “real” birth certificate just shows how widespread and historic this conspiracy actually is. Clerk’s in records offices in Hawaii were being paid less that $2.50 per hour in 1961. Open to bribery? I rest my case. You’ve read it hear. Don’t expect to see anything like this in the lamestream medias!
April 29th, 2011 at 5:32 am
Indeed, this was meant to be satire. Perhaps Erin only read the first sentence or two.
I was poking fun at both the birthers and the Oxfordians, and I’m not sure who came out the worse in the comparison.