An interesting footnote has emerged to a theory that raged around  the  Internet during Sarah Palin's candidacy for Vice President: 
The  theory is that 
Sarah Palin is actually the 
grandmother of her  purported son Trig, not the mother, and that she staged a gigantic hoax during the campaign to cover up this fact.
Professor  Bradford Scharlott of Northern Kentucky University has looked into this  story in detail and 
written a long academic article about it. He concludes  two things:
- First, that the "conspiracy theory" is likely true--Sarah Palin staged a huge hoax, and, second,
- The American media is pathetic for not pursuing the story more aggressively
Scharlott's article walks through all the evidence supporting the   theory, including the photos of Palin in what is said to have been a   late-stage pregnancy, the leisurely 20-hour trip home that Palin took   after she supposedly went into labor in Texas, the refusal of the   hospital where Trig was supposedly born to even confirm that he was born   there (let alone who was the mother), strange statements from Palin's  doctor and the McCain campaign, and so on.
And  Scharlott  concludes that, given that this hoax would be a massive  fraud perpetrated on  the entire country by a vice-presidential  candidate,  the media absolutely should have pursued the story more  aggressively. Because  the mainstream media did not--and has not--pursued the story 
at all  (let alone  aggressively), Professor Scharlott has done some of the  work himself. He  has also attempted to explain why the media was so  wimpy and gullible during the campaign.
One  of Professor Scharlott's theories, interestingly, is that  conservatives have been extraordinarily effective at  shaming anyone who  has even brought up the matter, let alone  investigated it. He notes  how different this is than the Democrats ability to quell the other  conspiracy theory that has 
obsessed the nation in recent years--the  theory that President Obama was born in Kenya.
Given the amount of publicity (and support) presidential candidate  Donald Trump has gotten in recent weeks by picking up the  Obama-wasn't-born-here mantra, the silence on this other question is  indeed startling. The evidence Scharlott's cites about about Palin's  possible hoax is by no means conclusive, but it certainly raises as many  questions as the logic about Obama's birthplace.
In light of  Scharlott's evidence that Palin staged a hoax, as well  as the ongoing absence of any proof that Palin is actually Trig's  mother,  one wonders if the media will now, finally, seek to determine  the  truth--especially because Palin is considered a candidate for   president.
The suspicions started with the story the Palins  told about how Sarah Palin and her husband behaved after she went into  labor while on a trip to Texas. Namely, they took a 20-hour trip home.
                                                             The  press release Palin put out announcing Trig's birth did not say where  the birth took place. The hospital where Trig was supposedly born did  not list him as being among the babies born that day.
                                                                                              After  Palin supposedly went into labor in Texas, her husband Todd did not  mention this to her aides. Flight attendants on the way home did not  notice that Palin seemed pregnant.
                                 When Palin returned to work three days later,  she seemed unsure about the timing of her water breaking. In her later  book, she implied she went into labor at 4AM in the morning--and then  stayed in Texas long enough to give her speech before beginning her  20-hour trip home
The hospital where Trig was supposedly born  lacks pre-natal intensive care, which made it a "less-than-ideal" place  to deliver a child with Down syndrome. Palin was close to several  hospitals in Texas and Anchorage that did have these facilities.
                                                             Two  months earlier, when Palin announced her pregnancy to her staff (at 7  months), her staff was shocked: No one thought she looked pregnant. 
                                 Photos of Palin in the weeks before she gave birth gave no indication that she was pregnant
(Another photo, from four weeks before the birth)
After Trig's birth, the McCain campaign issued a bizarre statement
During the campaign, Palin had promised the  press that she would release her medical records. The night before the  election, she did. The section from her personal physician about Trig's  birth was worded in a way that it barely said anything
Nothing in the doctor's statement suggested that  the doctor was present for the birth, and the doctor declined to answer  any questions.
                                                             Finally, one traditional media tried to figure out the truth... and ran into a brick wall.
                                                                                              The  editor of the Anchorage paper tried to explain to Palin why he wanted  to investigate the issue: To determine once and for all that it wasn't a  hoax. Palin never responded.
                                 All Palin would have had to do--then and now--to prove that she was Trig's mother was, ironically, produce a birth certificate
One of the only American journalists who looked  into the story, Andrew Sullivan, suggests that we may have witnessed one  of the greatest frauds in history
Did Palin stage a hoax? Should the media have investigated more aggressively? 
 
 
     
 
 
 
 
   
 
     
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