TV ad features Obama mocking Bible Candidate's 'Fight the Smears' site tries to bury video documentation

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andrea ERICKSON

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Oct 11, 2008, 4:09:43 PM10/11/08
to Minnesota for McCain
TV ad features Obama mocking Bible
Candidate's 'Fight the Smears' site tries to bury video documentation
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Posted: October 10, 2008
11:30 pm Eastern

By Drew Zahn
(c) 2008 WorldNetDaily

Screen shot from Obama's 'Fight the Smears' website

A television commercial showing clips of Sen. Barack
Obama<http://www.worldnet daily.com/ ?pageId=77629#>mocking the Bible
has prompted backlash from the candidate's "Fight the
Smears" website, which falsely accuses the ad's creator of trying to scam
Christians out of their money by promising to air a spot that will never be
broadcast.

Under the heading "Scamming the
faithful,"<http://fightthesmea rs.com/articles/ 14/sermononthemo unt>Obama's
official website says of the man who made the commercial, "The
trickster's claims about Barack's faith are every bit as false as his claims
that this amateurish video is really a TV
ad<http://www.worldnet daily.com/ ?pageId=77629#>
."

WND has confirmed, however, that – true to his word – the ad's creator
purchased air time for the commercial on television stations in the
battleground state of Pennsylvania. Sources at WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh and a
cable company servicing Erie told WND that the ad had been aired on several
occasions.

Nonetheless, in an Oct. 3 update to "Scamming the Faithful," the Obama
website maintains its attack of the commercial's creator, Stephen Marks of
the organization pH for America <http://www.phforame rica.com/>.

"Nothing has changed here," reads the Oct. 3 update, "The scammer is still
untrustworthy. … Making scams seem plausible is what tricksters like him are
known for. In the end, he's even less credible now than he was when he first
started taking people's money."

"It is ironic indeed," responded Marks in a statement, "that this so-called
'Fight the Smears' website (is) not fighting smears but creating them."

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Marks insists that every dollar he has raised through his website and the
appeal for support at the end of the ad "has gone to pay for the media buys
and minimal production costs." Marks also claims that that pH for America
purchased a television as a gift for the Obama campaign "so they can watch
the TV and see the ads airing for themselves."

Made into both a one-minute and two-minute commercial format, the shorter of
the two advertisements can be seen here:

Marks told WND, "If this ad is seen by all the swing voters in all the key
swing states, it would not only anger anyone who reads the Bible, but will
make anyone who sees the ad re-think the Jeremiah Wright fiasco as well as
Obama's remarks in April that 'small town America' is so bitter that they
have to 'cling to their guns and religion.'

"Most Americans have thus far given Obama a pass on those two issues, but
after seeing our ad, it will make many, if not most folks think, 'Now I
finally understand why Obama would belong to such a radical church,' and
'Now I finally understand Obama's true contempt for people of faith
regarding his 'cling to their guns and religion' remark," Marks said.

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WND!<http://www.wnd. com/index. php?fa=PAGE. view&pageId= 74350>
*

Obama's website claims that Marks deliberately edited clips of the candidate
to make Obama look bad and that the commercials don't reflect the nature of
the speech from which they were taken.

"With such a deceptive person behind this video, it's not surprising that
everything he says about
Barack<http://www.worldnet daily.com/ ?pageId=77629#>is deeply dishonest
and wrong, too," says the "Fight the Smears" website.
"The video takes 5 sentences out of a 4,500-word speech Barack gave in 2006
completely out of context to stoke division and hatred."

The commercial features edited clips from a speech Sen. Obama made before a
conference in Washington, D.C., June 28, 2006. The entire transcript of the
speech can be seen
here<http://obama. senate.gov/ speech/060628- call_to_renewal/>,
but the immediate context is as follows:

Whatever we once were, we are no longer just a Christian nation; we are also
a Jewish nation, a Muslim nation, a Buddhist nation, a Hindu nation, and a
nation of nonbelievers.

And even if we did have only Christians in our midst, if we expelled every
non-Christian from the United States of America, whose Christianity would we
teach in the schools? Would we go with James Dobson's, or Al
Sharpton's<http://www.worldnet daily.com/ ?pageId=77629#>?
Which passages of Scripture should guide our public policy? Should we go
with Leviticus, which suggests slavery is ok and that eating shellfish is
abomination? How about Deuteronomy, which suggests stoning your child if he
strays from the faith? Or should we just stick to the Sermon on the Mount -
a passage that is so radical that it's doubtful that our own Defense
Department would survive its application? So before we get carried away,
let's read our Bibles. Folks haven't been reading their Bibles.

The group pH for America is a 527 organization – so named for the IRS
designation for such groups – created by Marks, a Republican political
consultant who also created advertisements criticizing 2004 Democrat
candidate John Kerry. The group's website boasts it "is hoping to become the
'Swiftboat' 527 organization of 2008," referencing the Swift Boat
Veterans<http://www.worldnet daily.com/ ?pageId=77629#>for Truth, a 527
organization that created commercials widely credited with
contributing to Kerry's defeat.

Evan Tracey, chief operating officer of Campaign Media Analysis Group, told
CNN the appeal for money at the end of the pH for America advertisement,
rather than an indication of "scamming" or "tricking" people, is common for
527 organizations trying to impress donors.

"Even though an ad buy might be small now, remember, these groups are
auditioning right now for late donations to take these ads to a larger
scope," Tracey said. "Remember, the Swift Boat original ad buy was less than
$1 million and ran in only a handful of small media markets."

Marks echoed that strategy in a release announcing the successful purchase
of air time for his group's commercial.

"Unlike other 527 groups who are funded by millionaires, ours has been
funded by grass-roots blue-collar voters offended by the side of Barack
Obama <http://www.worldnet daily.com/ ?pageId=77629#> they see in our ad,"
Marks said. "We hope that as more folks see the ad, that we will eventually
get help from more affluent contributors. "

--

andrea ERICKSON

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Oct 11, 2008, 8:25:31 PM10/11/08
to Minnesota for McCain
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