Do the numerous made up assertions about Obama have a common source?

Linky no worky.

But it also says (this is all near the end of the story – not the way I would have written it, burying the lede):

That’s how it works. Not centrally organized, perhaps, but not just random solitary citizens venting, either; very definitely crime-with-intent.

(Fixed link.)

Breitbart covers that in more depth:

And:

I’ll believe it when I believe it. It seems highly implausible that in 4+ years of Birther bullshit, and contards looking under rocks and interviewing Obama’s Kenyan relations and dissecting his birth certificate for signs of forgery, something like this, purportedly distributed by Obama himself, or someone he hired, would not have surfaced before now. And the past four years have taught me that Obama-bashers will lie as easily as they breathe.

But whether or not it is centrally organized is precisely the issue. See the thread title. I am certainly not trying to deny (and neither, I think, is anyone else) that some (perhaps even most) of these rumors are started and spread with malicious intent, by Obama haters. But, again, that is not what was being asked about. The question is “do they have a common source?” The answer, according to both common sense and that article, is “No.”

Anyway, the article is little more than a mess of malicious speculation and innuendo itself.

:confused: It’s thick from beginning to end with documented facts.

It’s worth noting that that article is very, very carefully written. Although they have BORN IN KENYA in giant letters on the front page, the actual article treads very carefully from making any specific accusations. As an easy example, let’s look at the sentence cited above:

And it has. Often by people making stuff up about him. Did they really use that blurb? Did someone at the publishers’ office make a mistake? Was it a deliberate attempt by them to sell the book by altering his background to create a stronger link of Africa? Did Obama ever even see the damn thing? Who knows? We don’t. They don’t. But the big black words BORN IN KENYA are there nonetheless as a nudge-nudge-wink-wink to the faithful.

In short, and to borrow a phrase,

Quel surprise.

Actually, this is turning out to be an excellent example of how these stories spread. Breitbart writes it, the other media pick it up, various interested parties spread the word, the media picks up on the fact that people are interested in the story and talk about it more, rinse and repeat.

Note that at no point does anyone seem to be doing much in the way of fact-checking.