A Worthy Topic for Suspicions About Birth Certificates and Racism

    Pity Rep Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn. Her Congressional bill proposes upgrading infrastructure such as transportation, water treatment, energy, and telecommunications through a National Infrastructure Development Bank (NID). She promoted it with support from politicians, business investors, labor unions, the American Society of Civil Engineers, and US Chamber of Commerce—boring stuff.
    Consequently Clear Skies people who would see the common sense of it aren’t hearing about it. Publicists need to link the NIDB to national discussions about questionable birth certificates, racism, and Middle Eastern control of U.S. money. The potential is there. 
    The proposed NIDB copies successful banks worldwide that have Boards of Directors without earmark biases. It would fund public benefit projects with bonds sold in investment markets. The U.S. budget would provide $5 billion for five years, and have committed capital from the Treasury for another $250 billion.
    The capital would attract $2.2 trillion in private investments that the American Society of Civil Engineers estimates are needed to repair our current infrastructure. The engineers estimate every $1 billion means 47,500 jobs and $6.2 billion in economic activity and tax revenues to cut the deficit.
    Publicists connecting the NIDB to questionable birth certificates, prejudice, and world control of U.S. money should create greater public awareness.   
    One supporter is Felix Rohatyn, the financier who restructured the City of New York debt to rescue it from a financial abyss during the 1970s. He claims he was born in Vienna, Austria, but can he prove it?  Suspiciously, French greed could be lurking. He lived in France during the impressionable ages of 6 to 14, and served our ambassador from 1997-2000. Incredibly, he is a commander in the French Legion of Honor!
    Another supporter is Rep. Steve Israel, D-Long Island. Never mind that he is seen as a consensus builder and one of Newsday’s eight “rising stars” nationally. He’s Jewish. Would he help the nation of Israel get NIDB funds? He confessed on his website that he was instrumental “in helping to monitor and close tunnels from Egypt to the Gaza strip.” Could he build tunnels to siphon off NIDB funds?
    Finally, Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minneapolis supports the bill because the I-35W Bridge collapsed in Minneapolis in 2007. But, he’s an Afro-American Muslim who took the oath of office on the Quran. Engineers could handcuff him in a citizen’s arrest for diverting construction money to the Middle East. He could charge racism from an unsound bridge. Obama could add that it was stupid to arrest him on his own bridge.
    Publicists could arrange a supper at the White House, requiring official birth certificates to attend. Everyone would expect to view the confrontation on televisions, computer screens, and ipods. Mysteriously, the White House would go dark leading the media to speculate on an infrastructure failure. People would see the need for infrastructure investments. Those discussions would replace babble about Obama’s birth certificate and racism brought on by two misbehaving men and one misspeaking president.  
    Debates about the NIDB deserve attention because it would create jobs, invest in our future, generate revenues to reduce deficits, and depoliticize public investments. 

 
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