Politics | Sarah Palin 'Trig Palin Birtherism' Is Back New academic paper asserts that 'conspiracy theory' is actually true By Evann Gastaldo Posted Apr 14, 2011 7:07 AM CDT Copied Former GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, talks to her son Trig Palin, at a Tea Party Express rally at the Arizona Capitol Friday, Oct. 22, 2010, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin) See 1 more photo More than two years after it first emerged, the issue of Trig Palin's birth is back in the headlines, thanks to a Northern Kentucky University journalism professor. Brad Scharlott's 29-page academic paper on the matter concludes that all the conspiracy theorists were right: Sarah Palin is not Trig's real mother, but a "spiral of silence shut down the story" and the media basically ignored it. Business Insider offers up a slideshow of Scharlott's evidence, which includes the fact that Palin took a 20-hour trip back to Alaska to give birth after she says she went into labor in Texas; the fact that the hospital where Trig was allegedly born has never confirmed he was born there; and photos of Palin just weeks before the birth in which Scharlott notes she doesn't look pregnant. Not everybody's impressed: On Salon, Justin Elliott writes, "The fact that a journalism professor produced this article is frankly embarrassing for Northern Kentucky University." Click for his entire column. Read These Next Girl, 11, disappeared in 1996. An arrest has just been made. Hillary might nominate Trump for a Nobel if he ends war. Kristi Noem is catching some flak over her new home. Russia's foreign minister had quite a sweatshirt. See 1 more photo Report an error