hp_fa
Veteran
- Feb 19, 2004
- 3,290
- 178
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
View attachment 8517Yes it is interesting that they would say that.
Most cities and states have 'digitized' their documents and destroyed the original.
My birth certificate was 'digitized' (scanned to microfilm) and I have a copy of the original.
Same with my marriage license and my Mothers Birth Certificate.
We recently needed a copy of my brothers birth certificate and it even had his little baby footprint on it.
Recently (the past 10 years or so) microfilm copies have been transferred to pdf.
I would think a printed copy of the microfilm or pdf would be acceptable.
Where is it?
B) xUT
Like I said...
Isn't quite the same is it?
Post it a few more times and maybe I'll believe it.
If I can get a microfilm copy of my Mothers original birth certificate from Ohio 1929, how hard would it be to produce the same for NoBama?
I am guessing 'impossible'? h34r:
I suspect that many governmental entities are no longer using microfilm and you couldn't get records that way. That said I am not sure if Hawaii ever went to microfilm at all and perhaps skipped that technology entirely and went from paper to e-records.
Like I said, I don't know the specifics as to whether or not what I say is correct, but it would make sense (at least to me).
Hawaii Vital Records
Hawaii has birth and death records beginning in 1853. Prior to 1896, however, the records are incomplete. Early vital records were kept by local government authorities and clergymen. There are a few missionary reports that date back as early as 1826. They are on file at the Hawaii State Archives, the Department of Health, and the Daughters of the American Revolution Library in Honolulu, and many are at the FHL in Salt Lake City. Since 1911, delayed birth certificates can be applied for in Hawaii. They often contain valuable genealogical information. The FHL has seventy microfilm rolls of delayed birth records for Hawaii. This collection contains 50,000 delayed birth records and covers the period from 1859 to 1903, with indexes from 1859 to 1938. Most records are now deposited with the State Department of Health.
For birth, marriage, and death records, write:
Hawaii Department of Health
Vital Records Section
P.O. Box 3378
Honolulu, HI 96801-9984
And that will change what?As POTUS I not only want to see his original birth certificate but his college transcripts including his professors notes as well.
And that will change what?
The people who are beating this dead horse would never have voted for him, nor ever will. They also will not change any of the minds of those who did.
People in the talk radio circuit and noise machine shows are the only ones who have any motive to drag this out...(money).