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Dennis Prager
Dennis Prager
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Who is Barack Obama?

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Who is Barack Obama? The truth is that neither Sen. Obama's supporters nor opponents can answer that question. We know he is bright, eloquent and charismatic. But if he were elected president of the United States, he would be the least known man to be elected in modern American history, perhaps in all of American history.

That is why the remarks and views of those closest to Sen. Obama take on much more significance than the remarks and views of the people closest to Sens. Hillary Clinton and John McCain. Whether we like or dislike either of those two candidates, we have every reason to believe we know them.

The people closest to Sen. Obama — and by his own account the two greatest living influences on his thinking — are his wife Michelle and his pastor, Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., of Chicago's Trinity United Church of Christ. And each of them has made comments about America that could dissuade Americans from voting for Sen. Obama at least until they can get to know him better.

On Feb. 18, in Milwaukee, Wis., Michelle Obama announced, "For the first time in my adult life I am proud to be an American." Anyone in public life must be given slack regarding comments they later regret. But on the same day in another speech in Madison, Wis., Mrs. Obama said virtually the same thing: "For the first time in my adult lifetime I am really proud to be an American."

Sen. Obama later explained his wife's remarks this way: "What she meant was, this is the first time that she's been proud of the politics of America."

I do not believe that Sen. Obama's explanation is valid. I think Mrs. Obama said what she meant and meant what she said. But even if Sen. Obama's reformulation of his wife's remarks is valid, the fact remains that the closest person in the world to Barack Obama has never been proud of the politics of America, that it took her husband's primary wins to change a lifelong lack of pride in anything about America's political life. That's troubling on its own — for his and her contempt for American politics. And it is even more troubling for its narcissism — do Sen. Obama and his wife believe that only his success has made American politics worthy of pride?

We are therefore confronted with either a contempt for America — if the original statement reflects Michelle Obama's thinking — or some real narcissism on the part of both Sen. and Mrs. Obama. That narcissism is easily demonstrated. Just imagine if Hillary Clinton or John McCain had said they supported their spouse's view that until their primary victories, they had never been proud of their country's politics.

Either of them would have looked foolish before the American people. That is why many believe Sen. Obama has been getting a relatively free ride in the American media, which largely adore him.

But it gets worse. The other closest person in Sen. Obama's life, the man whom the senator calls his mentor, the man who married Barack and Michelle Obama, who baptized his daughters, who inspired the title of his book "The Audacity of Hope," and whose church Sen. Obama has been attending for 20 years, has been a voice of anti-white racism and anti-American venom. In a widely viewed sermon from 2003, the Rev. Wright shouted from his pulpit, among other things:

"The government gives them the drugs, builds bigger prisons, passes a three-strike law and then wants us to sing 'God Bless America.' No, no, no, God damn America, that's in the Bible for killing innocent people. God damn America for treating our citizens as less than human. God damn America for as long as she acts like she is God and she is supreme."

He then went on to blame America for 9/11 since America has been engaged in state terrorism that has murdered far more innocents than were killed in America on 9/11. We should recall that when some conservative Christian leaders suggested that America had in some ways brought on 9/11 by its sins, these people were read the riot act by the mainstream media.

According to the Associated Press, Wright "also gave a sermon in December comparing Obama to Jesus, promoting his candidacy and criticizing his rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton. 'Barack knows what it means to be a black man living in a country and a culture that is controlled by rich white people,' Wright told a cheering congregation. 'Hillary can never know that. Hillary ain't never been called a nigger.'"

Sen. Obama says he was not present when the Rev. Wright said these things.

Maybe so. But it is hard to believe that Sen. Obama has never heard such things from his Afro-centric minister. Additionally, one must ask why a man raised entirely by a white mother and white grandparents after being abandoned as a small child by his black father would choose to identify so fully with such a pastor. Coupled with his wife's remarks, fair-minded people — whether Democrat or Republican — may well conclude that until we know more about who Sen. Barack Obama is, he ought not be the Democrats' candidate for president of the United States. His two greatest living influences have raised red flags.

In fact, if Shelby Steele (who also has a white mother and black father) is right, we should not only be waiting until we better know who Barack Obama is. We probably need to wait until Barack Obama better knows who he is.

Dennis Prager hosts a nationally syndicated radio talk show based in Los Angeles. He is the author of four books, most recently "Happiness Is a Serious Problem" (HarperCollins). His Web site is www.pragerradio.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Let me tell you something, as an African-American I'm not always proud of being an American. This is probably something you won't understand. The larger population, can at times, demean me, belittle me, and makes me feel unwelcome here. When I hear of my ancestors being beaten, raped, poisoned, or killed simply for being a darker hue I am challenged to find something to love about this country. That is most times what Black America grapples with on a daily basis. Would you like to know how many times I've been called that charming N word, how many times I've been ignored in a store, how many times I've been treated as less than a person, or would you like to know how many times I've been told I could just go back to Africa? I've never been to Africa by the way, that was at least 8 generations ago. I was born and bred in California. These are things that maybe the majority will never understand. I think that the majority doesn't even want to understand it.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Bethany Smothers
Thu Mar 20, 2008 3:24 PM
Barak Obama should be ashamed of himself. The reason he should be ashamed of himself is not because someone he knows spoke out against the USA government. The reason is because he condemned the words of a man speaking the truth, that being his "former" pastor Reverend Jeremiah Wright.

Mr. Obama had an opportunity to reinforce these words of truth and expose the USA government for the decades of atrocity, human rights violations, anti-democratic operations and refugee manufacturing it has participated in.

Here is a bit of what Rev. Write is referring to...

Fact: The USA is the only country to have used its nuclear arsenal in combat. The USA unleashed 2 atomic bombs on civilian populations in Hiroshima and Nagasaki of Japan.

Fact: The USA has used bio and chemical weapons on civilian populations and military targets in Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Panama, Iraq and others.

Fact: The USA demands that many countries in the world undergo inspections of their nuclear and bio-chemical weapons developments, but has voted against resolutions for its own extensive arsenal to be held to the same standard.

Fact: The USA has backed, trained and financed despot authoritarian dictatorships, apartheids, non-democracies and paramilitary organizations around the world throughout its existence. Of these, both Osama Bin Laden and Saddam Hussein are included.

Fact: The USA has backed, trained and financed efforts to overthrow democratically elected officials on many occasions and in many countries, including Syria, Greece, Cuba, Iran, Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Chile, and Australia. This list is limited to successful endeavors.

Fact: The USA increased its funding to Saddam Hussein after the Iraqi military gassed Kurdish populations in the 1980's.

Fact: The USA represented the sole vote against United Nations resolutions over 60 times since 1978. The USA is one of only a few nations with veto power in the United Nations. Some of the resolutions that the USA has vetoed include:

-1978: Call for developed countries to increase the quantity and quality of development assistance to underdeveloped countries

-1980: Emphasizes that the development of nations and individuals is a human right.

-1981: Urges negotiations on prohibition of chemical and biological weapons

-1981: (On 7 different occasions) Condemns South Africa for attacks on neighboring states, condemns apartheid and attempts to strengthen sanctions

-1982: To promote international actions against apartheid

-1983: Affirms the right of every state to choose its economic and social system in accord with the will of its people, without outside interference in whatever form it takes

-1983: Resolutions against apartheid in South Africa (4 different occasions)

-1983: Declares that education, work, health care, proper nourishment, national development are human rights

-1984: On the elimination of racial discrimination

-1984: Prohibition of chemical and bacteriological weapons

-1984: Proposing economic assistance to the Palestinian people

-1986: To strengthen international security

-1987: Calls on Israel to abide by Geneva Conventions in its treatment of the Palestinians

-1987: Opposition to the development of new weapons of mass destruction

-2004: Production and processing of weapon-usable material should be under international control

-2006: Calls for an end to Israeli military incursions and attacks on Gaza

In each of these occasions, the USA was the sole vote against, with the exception of 2 of the 7 votes condemning apartheid, in which the USA was but 1 of 2 nations to vote against.

All of these facts are verifiable and irrefutable. All of these facts represent some of the reasons there exists a violent anti-American sentiment in much of the world.

That is much of what Rev. Write was trying to get across, and he is right.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Gregory Armitage
Thu Mar 20, 2008 7:38 PM
Google in the input: (clshoe.us )you can find many brand names, even more surprising is that he will sell you the unexpected o(∩_∩)o
Comment: #3
Posted by: meiou
Sat Nov 20, 2010 4:24 PM
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