Saturday, March 14, 2009

Dr. Orly Taitz - Profile of Courage - Chief Justice Roberts

The BOPAC Report:

Dr. Orly Taitz continues to astound me with her courage and determination to present the truth to the public concerning Obama's lack of eligibility to serve as the President of the United States. Thank you Dr. Orly!

From Dr. Orly's site:

Chief Justice John Roberts discusses Lincoln
Regardless of the presented interpretation of the event below, Orly did it. She got the documents to Chief Justice Roberts. Her story didn't sound like this one below; but who else would have traveled thousands of miles to fight this in justice.

Thank you Dr. Taitz!


http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/6420ap_id_roberts_idaho.html
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
101 Elliott Ave. W.
Seattle, WA 98119
(206) 448-8000

Chief Justice John Roberts discusses Lincoln

MOSCOW, Idaho -- Chief Justice John Roberts discussed the legal prowess of President Lincoln during a university lecture Friday and fended off an audience member who advanced the widely discredited theory that Barack Obama was not legally qualified to be president.

Roberts said Lincoln had such a finely developed sense of justice as a lawyer that he had trouble taking cases he did not believe in, and could not do his best work on such cases. This trait was well known among his fellow lawyers, Roberts said.

"He could not ignore his internal compass," said Roberts, who was nominated by President George W. Bush to lead the Supreme Court and took office in 2005.

Roberts also noted that Lincoln lost his only case before the nation's highest court, a complicated real estate dispute.

Roberts spoke before a packed house of some 1,200 people at the annual Bellwood Memorial Lecture Series at the University of Idaho.

At one point during the audience question period, Orly Taitz, a woman from Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif., said she had documents proving that President Obama was not born in the United States and thus could not be president. While audience members laughed, she said she had half a million signatures of people demanding the Supreme Court hear the matter.

Roberts cut her off by saying that if she had documents with her, she should give them to security officers.
He also said he could not discuss the issue.

Excerpt