As I have said, there are many possibilities. He certainly could have applied in Connecticut, or he could have applied from Indonesian and it would have been handled through any of a number processing centers located in different states. An application for a social security number could have been mailed to any social security office for processing
I agree, so why doesn't he just explain? It's hard to feel sorry for you people over birthers when under W your mantra was he should answer any and all questions no matter how contrived or it proved he had something to hide and under Obama your standard did a 180. As for applying from Indonesia, I also thought of that, but Connecticut seems a pretty unlikely place for it to go to be processed for no reason
As SSA has said, the area number prior to 1972 did not indicate where a person resides. Basically, it was used as a pointer to where his social security records were kept. It may have been where he resided or it may not have been.
Right, but according to the quote you and others presented it did show where you applied
If you look hard enough, you will find anomalies in everyone's life. When I was a kid, I worked in many temporary and part time jobs. I had no social security number. I got my social security card when I was 21 in Texas looking for a job but before I found one I moved back home to Louisiana. So today, I have a Social Security card with area number of 451 but I never actually resided in Texas. I had a middle age man who worked for me who said he had no birth certificate because he was abandoned as a child and he never knew his parents or anything about his birth. In order to get a Social Security card, he had to gather records about his early childhood. An estimate was made of his place and date of birth. The courts issued a "Fact of Birth" which allowed him to get a social security card, however it is not accepted as a birth certificate by all government agencies.
Right, again, you know why it's Texas, you applied there. And your quote said it's where they applied as well. No one has supported they moved around applications. Frankly that would have been way LESS likely then as it was all paper, not electronic like today. It's hard to imagine they really took paper applications and shipped them out of State and no one has said they did, now your conjecture is getting pretty wild.