WorldNetDaily keeps up its deceitful birther ways in a spate of recent articles.
A June 21 WND article by Jerome Corsi makes a big deal out of how “The computer graphics expert Fox News relied upon to claim the birth certificate the White House released April 27 was legitimate insists that the network must retract the story, claiming it deliberately misquoted him.” Corsi quotes Jean Claude Tremblay at length grumbling about Fox News. But as the Obama Conspiracy blog notes, Corsi also quotes Tremblay as saying:
“First, I never thought that what I saw in the Birth Certificate PDF was a proof of its authenticity,” he wrote. “For me, what I have seen does not prove that it is legit, nor that it is a fake, nor that there has been any tampering whatsoever,” he wrote. “The title of the blog does not represent my conclusion. It would be unprofessional and simplistic within my area of competence to come to a conclusion one way or the other.”
Which means he’s not calling the certificate a fraud, which is the thrust of most WND birther reporting these days.
Then, a June 23 article by Corsi presents the opinion of Gary Poyssick, whom Corsi presents as “an expert on Adobe Systems Inc. software” who “has written more than 50 titles about Adobe software, the printing industry, coding and programming, website development and workflow management,” about the birth certificate. Through that description, Corsi implies that Poyssick is an expert on the PDF format created by Adobe, the form in which the long-form birth certificate was released to the public.
That would be false. A listing of Poyssick’s books currently available on Amazon.com lists no titles involving PDF or Adobe Acrobat, the program historically used to create PDFs. The only Adobe programs Poyssick has apparently written about are Photoshop and Illustrator, the most recent of those titles appearing in 2006.
Of course, all of WND’s obsessing over combing through every bit and pixel of the PDF is just meaningless birther masturbation — it’s not the paper certificate.
Meanwhile, Joseph Farah declared in his June 24 WND column that “every document expert WND has conferred with scoffs at the preposterous notion that the document is somehow valid on its face.” That’s easy since WND has apparently gone out of its way to make sure it talks only to people who will declare the certificate invalid. As we’ve noted, Corsi has studiously avoided talking to the Obama Conspiracy blog, which has compiled a detailed rebuttal to the rantings of Doug Vogt, to whom Corsi devoted a three-article series.
UPDATE: A ConWebWatch reader noticed that Corsi’s article has been changed from its original. Corsi originally claimed, as noted in this copy-and-paste of the original article, that Poyssick was “an early employee” of Adobe and that he “was at the San Jose-based tech company when it counted no more than 14 employees.” The reference to Poyssick being an “early employee” of Adobe has been removed, and the article now states that “Poyssick had a working relationship with the San Jose-based tech company when it counted no more than 14 employees.” As per WND style, readers were not alerted to the change and no correction was issued.