THE CRIME
DUAL OF HILLARY & BILLARY, THE “HOPE & CHANGE” HUCKSTER OBAMA AND CIRCUS FREAK TRUMP…..
Their march to the guillotine.
Let us hope
they take the Bush Crime Family with them!
"But
the Clintons personify this corruption just as much as Trump, even if they made
use of a different mechanism and on a somewhat smaller scale. They amassed a
fortune exceeding $150 million in the decade after Bill Clinton left the White
House, mainly through six-figure fees for addressing corporate and Wall Street
audiences. Barack Obama will shortly take a similar path, reaping his reward
from the financial aristocracy whose interests he safeguarded so assiduously
over the past eight years."
Michelle Obama, Saintly Buckraker?
The Hollywood Reporter recently broke a scoop
about the latest Netflix documentary from the Obamas, designed to offer us an
oasis of joy as we suffer through the coronavirus pandemic. It's called
"Becoming," and it will be available worldwide on May 6. As the title
suggests, it promotes Michelle Obama's memoir of the same name, which has sold
more than 10 million copies. So let's get this straight. The Obamas were
awarded a book deal worth an estimated $65 million for their memoirs, hers and
then his. They also struck an estimated $50 million production deal with
Netflix. (We don't have actual numbers. Could someone in the media ask for a
tax return?)
With this
self-aggrandizing documentary, their second deal is being used to accentuate
the profits of their first. The buckraking here is intense. President Donald
Trump surely admires their self-promotional moxie. The Obamas quickly became
super rich. Vanity Fair celebrated these "Obamoguls" and hailed
Michelle Obama for her "saintly popularity." This so-called saint
doesn't spurn the finer things. Last August, TMZ reported the Obamas were
buying a $15 million mansion on the coast of Martha's Vineyard to match their
$8 million Washington, D.C., mansion. Non-Fox network coverage? Zero. In
December, they actually bought said Martha's Vineyard mansion for $11.75
million. Non-Fox network coverage? Again, zero. There would be no denting
haloes by asking how much they're giving to charity. The documentary celebrates
Michelle Obama's "Becoming" book tour events at stadiums that charged
Obama superfans $300 or more a ticket, often with celebrities like Oprah
Winfrey along for the ride.
Media outlets repeated Obama's self-puffery
without rebuttal. "Those months I spent traveling -- meeting and connecting
with people in cities across the globe -- drove home the idea that what we have
in common is deep and real and can't be messed with," she said in a
statement. She augmented her new status as a self-help guru with a workbook of
sorts: "Becoming: A Guided Journal for Discovering Your Voice,"
complete with "an intimate and inspiring introduction by the former First
Lady and more than 150 inspiring questions and quotes to help you discover --
and rediscover -- your story."
Not everyone famous
is praised for self-help books for women. The current president's daughter
Ivanka Trump wrote one in 2017, and The New York Times was brutal. "It
reads more like the scrambled Tumblr feed of a demented 12-year-old who just
checked out a copy of Bartlett's Familiar Quotations from the library," it
wrote.
There are never Republican critics of Obama
in the "news" these days. In a Washington Post story on the
documentary, writer Sonia Rao quoted Anita McBride, chief of staff to former
first lady Laura Bush, who said Obama was "a reluctant first lady"
but then formed lasting public connections through her "extraordinary use
of media and pop culture and television."
Is that Michelle's
gift to the media? No, it's the media's gift to Michelle. The infatuated titans
of "news" and entertainment media appear to have granted her every
"extraordinary" wish in building this "billion-dollar
brand."
The cheers are
always presumed to be unanimous. Dissent from this party line is ignored. And
no one asks about the profits. For the Obamas, greed is cast as just another
inspiring voyage of self-discovery.
Tim Graham is director of media analysis a
David is a
bestselling author of three books exposing the Obama
administration and the Washington, D.C. swamp:
|
David is a
bestselling author of three books exposing the Obama
administration and the Washington, D.C. swamp:
|
David Garrow’s Obama Backstory Bombshells
'Dreams from My Father' was a novel,
but now it’s a memoir and autobiography again.
March 11, 2020
Lloyd
Billingsley
“Dreams from My Father was not a memoir or
an autobiography; it was instead, in multitudinous ways, without any
question a work of historical fiction. It featured many
true-to-life figures and a bevy of accurately described events that indeed had
occurred, but it employed the techniques and literary license of a novel, and
its most important composite character was the narrator himself.”
That was Pulitzer Prize
winner David Garrow on page 538 of his 1460-page Rising Star: The
Making of Barack Obama, published in
2017. Those who persevered to page 1049 discovered another bombshell. An
unidentified reporter says White House staffers are “terrified of people poking
around Obama’s life. The whole Obama narrative is built around this narrative
that Obama and David Axelrod built, and, like all stories, it’s not entirely
true. So they have to be protective of the crown jewels.”
The president’s official
biographer thus gave the game away, but three years later it’s a different
story.
“Barack Obama’s
memoir Dreams From My Father, first published in 1995, played an
important role in his progress to becoming President of the United States in
2008.” That’s David Garrow in “Obama’s airbrushed dreams,” in the March edition of The Critic, “Britain’s new
monthly magazine for politics, ideas, art, literature and more.”
Garrow cites Michiko
Kakutani, who wrote in the New York Times that Dreams was
“the most evocative, lyrical and candid autobiography written by a future
president.” In the 2744-word article, Garrow never recalls that he proclaimed
the Dreams book a novel. Now it’s both a memoir and
autobiography again, and Garrow has come up with original typescript, a kind of
Dead Sea Scrolls bristling with details that did not make the final cut.
As Barack departs the
Nairobi airport, “his father’s stepmother, Granny Sarah, rushes through to hand
him his grandfather’s colonial passbook and the carbon copies of his father’s
old application letters to US universities.” This remarkable gesture,
“exemplified his Kenyan relatives’ deep desire to draw their impressive
American offspring into the family bosom.” And so on.
Dreams from My Father devotes more than
2,000 words to “Frank,” a happy-drunk poet and counselor. In Rising
Star, Garrow identified “Frank” as Frank Marshall Davis, a Communist Party
journalist and pornographer. “Davis’ Communist background plus his kinky
exploits made him politically radioactive,” wrote Garrow. In the Critic piece,
Garrow downgrades Davis to “a one-time communist” and sexual adventurer.
Rising Star ignored Paul
Kengor’s The Communist: Frank Marshall Davis: The Untold story of
Barack Obama’s Mentor, published in 2012. Garrow also skirted Joel
Gilbert’s 2012 Dreams From My Real Father film, which
contended that Davis was Obama’s actual father. In Rising Star, Garrow
said Obama would “forcefully reject the Davis hypothesis,” and in
the Critic piece Garrow goes after Gilbert and his
“outlandish notion,” without covering any of the evidence he produced.
Garrow notes that Gilbert
interviewed Malik Obama, son of the Kenyan Barack Obama. Garrow does not recall
that Malik said the president did closely resemble Frank Marshall Davis. Malik
was even willing to undergo a DNA test, and told Gilbert, “I
don’t know how I’d deal with it, if it really came out that he really is a
fraud or a con.”
In his Critic piece,
anyone less than worshipful of POTUS 44’s official account is a “conspiracy
theorist,” and Paul Joseph Watson is a “far right conspiracy theorist.” Garrow
deploys the “birther” smear four times, but the issue with Gilbert was not
place of birth but the true identity of the father.
Rising Star explains that
Barack Obama devoted dozens of hours to reading Garrow’s manuscript and cites
his “understandable remaining disagreements – some strong indeed – with
multiple characterizations and interpretations.” The former Barry Soetoro
cannot have been pleased that Garrow exposed Dreams from My Father as
a novel and the author a composite character. Garrow now cites this mysterious
original typescript, presumably infallible, but fails to follow up on key
details already in the public record.
Barack Obama’s “old
application letters to US universities,” dramatically delivered to the Dreams author
at the Nairobi Airport, made their way to the Schomburg Center for Research in
Black Culture in Harlem. As the New York Times noted, in all
his communications from 1958 to 1964, the most crucial period in his life, the
Kenyan Barack H. Obama never mentions an American wife and Hawaiian-born son.
POTUS 44 never viewed the Kenyan’s collection, which escapes attention in
Garrow’s Rising Star.
That book, in turn, gets
no mention in The World As It Is: A Memoir of the Obama White House,
released in 2018 by Ben Rhodes who said Dreams from My Father was
the “Rosetta Stone” to Obama’s life and claims he re-read it a dozen times. In
similar style, Michelle Obama’s 2018 Becoming avoids Rising
Star, which contended that Dreams from My Father was
“in multitudinous ways, without any question” a novel and the author a
composite character.
Back in 1995, those
realities were visible to any reader of Dreams, which speaks of a
“useful fiction” and deploys the Kenyan as a “prop in someone else’s
narrative.” Coming from David Garrow, esteemed author of Bearing the
Cross and The FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr., the
novel revelation was a stunner. After all, the composite character had been
president of the United States, the most powerful person in the world, for
eight years.
It is as though Hugh
Gregory Gallagher, author of FDR’s Splendid
Deception, suddenly claimed that president Roosevelt made no effort to
conceal his disability from the public. That would be a bombshell, and so is
the notion that Dreams from My Father is once again an
acclaimed memoir and authentic autobiography.
David Garrow does not
explain what could account for such a complete transformation. On the other
hand, it is certainly possible to guess.
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