Barack Obama in His Own Words Part 1 of 3
cinops be gone Sunday, September 7, 2008
What are Obama’s core believes? You decide. The September 1st issue of National Review is a classic on Barack. The following are excerpts from p. 37-8
Obama published his autobiography, Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance in 1995, when he was in his mid-thirties….
Dreams is a complex, introspective book. Its theme is how Obama, born in Hawaii to a white student mother and Kenyan student father, grows to view himself and the white society around him. The Obama of Dreams abandons his multiracial roots to forge an alienated black identity – that of a man steeped in radical ideology who views history in terms of a huge chasm separating oppressor from oppressed, white from black, and rich from poor; a man who is never more emotionally at home than when sitting in the church pew listening to Rev. Jeremiah Wright rant about white racism….
In Dreams, his heart swells at many things but sight of a flag certainly isn’t one of them. There he presents a warts-only history of the U.S., a story of evil and suffering. U.S. society is a “racial caste system” where “color and money” determine where you end up in life.
Obama says the Hawaiian islands, where he grew up, are beautiful, but quickly reminds us that behind the beauty lurks the “ugly conquest of native Hawaiians …. crippling disease brought by missionaries … the indenturing system that kept Japanese, Chinese, and Filipino immigrants stooped sunup to sunset in {the fields}.”
Candidate Obama proudly tells audiences that his white grand-parents were raised in the American heartland. But in Dreams he describes this heartland as the “landlocked center of the country, a place where decency and endurance and the pioneer spirit were joined at the hip with conformity and suspicion and the potential for unblinking cruelty.”…
American affluence offends Obama. The vast upper-middle class lives in a land of isolation and sterility. As a teenager, he envies the white homes in the suburbs but senses that the big pretty homes contain “quiet depression” and “loneliness,” represented by “a mother sneaking a tumbler of gin in the afternoon.” American consumer culture is comforting but mentally and spiritually numbing, yielding a “long hibernation.” … Finishing Dreams, I could not recall a single positive sentence about the United States or European society. I {the author} reread the book specifically looking for positive remarks….
P.S. And this man wants to be elected President of the U.S.A. How is it possible that the American public did not know of the above during the primary elections? Hillary would have won the primaries. Is the news media that corrupt, biased and politically correct? Remember, the corrupt news-media has not informed us about Planned Parenthood or about the evils of abortion on women. Let’s end it! Down with censorship and political correctness!
George H. Kubeck, Duplicate and or translate into Spanish or Vietnamese.
Sunday, September 7, 2008
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