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by Mike Memoli
A recent poll showed many Americans are uncertain of his faith, but President Obama said in an interview Sunday that he can't worry about dispelling every rumor about him with so many serious challenges to handle.
"The facts are the facts, right?" Obama told NBC's Brian Williams in New Orleans, where he marked the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. "There is a mechanism, a network of misinformation that in a new media era can get churned out there constantly. We dealt with this when I was first running for the U.S. Senate. We dealt with it when we were first running for the Presidency. ... I will always put my money on the American people. And I'm not gonna be worrying too much about whatever rumors are floating on out there."
Alluding to rumors as well about whether he was not born in the United States, he added: "I can't spend all my time with my birth certificate plastered on my forehead."
Obama also defended his comments on a proposed Islamic community center near Ground Zero in New York, and said he has been consistent on the issue.
"I was not endorsing any particular project. I was endorsing our Constitution. And what is right," he said. "The media, I think, anticipating that this was gonna be a firestorm politically seemed to think that somehow there was inconsistency and there wasn't."
More highlights from the interview after the jump, including his reaction to the Glenn Beck rally in Washington Saturday.







