OBAMA: ONE MORE SOCIOPATH LAWYER
The former president clearly expects to call the shots, so voters have good cause to consider him still on the ballot. This time, however, they know for certain that his founding narrative, Dreams from My Father is a novel, and the author Barack Obama a fictitious character.
There’s Something About Barry
Fun facts about POTUS 44 that might simplify the November election.
“Listen, can you imagine if I had had a secret Chinese bank account when I was running for re-election? You think Fox News might have been a little concerned about that? They would have called me Beijing Barry.”
That was Barack Obama, campaigning in Pennsylvania for basement-bound Joe Biden, unable or unwilling to speak for himself, and perhaps ordered not to. Anyone tuning in might wonder why ex-president Barack would refer to himself as “Barry.” As some may have forgotten, he did the same in his founding narrative, Dreams from My Father, way back in 1995.
At the outset, he is Barry, stepson of Lolo Soetoro, the Indonesian foreign student his mother Ann Dunham married in 1966. By the end of the book Barry Soetoro has become Barack Obama, son of the Kenyan foreign student who died in a car accident in 1982. The retooled Barack went on to become a U.S. senator and the 44th president of the United States. A few months after he left office, official biographer David Garrow delivered a bombshell review of the president’s founding narrative.
“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 (Garrows’ italics). 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.”
To spot-weld the Pulitzer Prize winner, Dreams was a novel and the author a fictitious character. Garrow’s massive Rising Star: The Making of Barack Obama provides other revelations about the man who in 2020 again calls himself Barry. In Indonesia, for example, Barry attended the “predominately Muslim” Besuki school, hardly his only influence.
Barry’s beloved Frank Marshall Davis, the poet “Frank” in the novel, was a dangerous subversive on DETCOM, the FBI’s most wanted list of Communists marked for immediate detention in case of a national emergency. As Garrow explains, “Davis’ Communist background plus his kinky exploits made him politically radioactive.” So Frank duly vanished from the audio version of Dreams and made no appearance in The Audacity of Hope.
“You masquerade, you pompous jive, you act,” girlfriend Genevieve Gook wrote in a poem to Barry. “You think you got it taken care of, but I’m tellin’ you bro, you don’t.” Pompous Barry took it in stride. He hooked up with the erudite Sheila Miyoshi Jager, who told Garrow she was “completely missing” from Dreams and wonders “if the unedited Dreams is as inaccurate as the published version.” On the other hand, Barry has a lot to say about the Rev. Jeremiah Wright.
Barry “felt at home,” in Wright’s church, and it was the explicitly political aspect to the message, “that I found appealing.” Barry also spends time with Weather Underground alums Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dohrn, but as he told Garrow, “it wasn’t until I moved to Chicago and became a community organizer that I think I really grew into myself in terms of my identity.” On that theme, Garrow omits a key detail.
In his written communications from 1958 to 1964, including more than 20 letters, the Kenyan Barack Obama mentions nothing about an American wife and Hawaiian-born son. Still, Barry had strong disagreements over Rising Star, but other books shed light on his presidential career.
As Sharyl Attkisson noted in Stonewalled: My Fight for Truth Against Obstruction, Intimidation and Harassment in Obama’s Washington, the president said he campaigned in 57 states, invented the “Austrian” language, and thought Savannah was on the Gulf Coast. The administration targeted “those on to something big,” such as the “Fast and Furious” scandal. The liberal Attkisson found her computer infiltrated with spyware proprietary to government agencies such as the CIA and FBI.
Establishment media and government formed such an interlocking directorate, Attkisson found, that “stories may as well have been written by the White House.” On Obamacare, journalists accepted everything from the government at “face value,” with critics demonized, the familiar pattern of a totalitarian state.
The president who did all that, told people they could keep their health plan, and shipped billions in cash to Iran, is now campaigning for his addled vice president Joe Biden. Should Biden be victorious, as some see it, Democrats would quickly deploy the 25th Amendment to topple Biden and install Kamala Harris. After the election, meanwhile, another dynamic kicks in.
On Tuesday November 17, Penguin Random House will release A Promised Land, the first of two volumes by former president Barack Obama. As he explains, the 768-page book will provide “an honest accounting” of his presidential campaign and thoughts on “how we can heal the divisions in our country going forward and make our democracy work for everybody.”
The former president clearly expects to call the shots, so voters have good cause to consider him still on the ballot. This time, however, they know for certain that his founding narrative, Dreams from My Father is a novel, and the author Barack Obama a fictitious character. That might simplify voters’ task on November 3. As President Trump says, we’ll have to see what happens
Jack Cashill’s new book, Unmasking Obama: The Fight to Tell
the True Story of a Failed Presidency, is widely available.
See also www.cashill.com.
Unmasking Obama: The Fight to
Tell the True Story of a Failed Presidency Hardcover – August 18, 2020
by Jack Cashill (Author)
5 ratings
Unmasking Obama: The Fight to
Tell the True Story of a Failed Presidency Hardcover – August 18, 2020
by Jack Cashill (Author)
Jack Cashill’s Unmasking Obama By Thomas
Lifson
To my surprise, Jack Cashill's new book,
Unmasking Obama, couldn't be more relevant to the political struggle facing us
today. In 2020, as in 2008 (and throughout the two Obama presidential terms),
the key to political power is what must be called "information
warfare" (my term, not Jack's) between the mighty establishment media and
the feisty conservative alternative media, which Jack likens to the samizdat
underground commentary in the old Soviet Union. It is the process of the
unmasking of the phony propaganda peddled by the all-powerful establishment by
the resource- and prestige-poor "Lilliputians" (an appropriation of
Jonathan Swift's work that the satirist surely would approve of) that is the
heart of the book. The narrative history presented in Unmasking Obama is
captivating. Jack takes readers along with him as he was both a participant in the
warfare and a historian of it, digging up parts of the elusive truth about the
real Barack Obama in the face of derision and obstruction that came his way.
But Jack is far from the sole hero of the story of the warfare. Because of his
literary detective work, proving beyond a reasonable doubt that Bill Ayers
wrote the autobiographical book, Dreams from My Father, that first established
Obama as a serious intellect, Jack enjoyed access to many of the most
formidable truth-tellers about Obama. The book's prologue, in fact, begins with
a phone call Jack received in 2011 from a then little-known lawyer named
Michael Cohen, acting as a lawyer for Donald Trump. Unmasking Obama takes the
reader through the major aspects of the fraudulent picture of Obama that was
painted by the media and political establishments and details how the truth was
uncovered and often partially suppressed by the retaliatory efforts launched in
response. It often resembles detective fiction in the drama of the struggle to
get at the truth and the struggle to prevent that. I hesitate to call it beach
reading, for it is not in any sense fluff, intended to while away time. But it
is vastly entertaining and thought-provoking, and the 218 pages fly by rapidly.
Today, exactly the same struggle is underway between the Lilliputians seeking
to uncover who really is running the front-man candidacy of Joe Biden and the
shadowy movement that is looting and destroying our cities and the coordinated
might of the mass media that spends 95% of its time pushing a party line that
Trump is an unprecedented threat to human civilization and Joe Biden an amiable
and pragmatic centrist. Future historians, if there are any left still
interested and able to dispassionately understand how America came to the current
point of crisis, will find the story told in Unmasking Obama a very helpful
guide. If journalism is the "first draft of history," Unmasking Obama
is a well considered second draft, adding crucial perspective and assessment of
the consequences of the real-time reports. You don't have to wait that long,
though. It went on sale last week, and is well worth your time.
Obama's General Flynn Problem
When the real message of
'Dreams from My Father' becomes clear.
May 11, 2020
Lloyd Billingsley
And the fact that there is no
precedent that anybody can find for someone who has been charged with perjury
just getting off scot-free. That’s the kind of stuff where you begin to get
worried that basic — not just institutional norms — but our basic understanding
of rule of law is at risk.
That was former president Barack Obama last
week after the DOJ dropped the case against former National Security Advisor
Michael Flynn, who had not been “charged with perjury,” or anything else. The
FBI set up Flynn in a perjury trap, with threats against his family, and that
violated both institutional norms and the rule of law. The 44th president set
up the whole thing in a January 5, 2017 Oval Office meeting with FBI boss James
Comey, vice president Joe Biden, CIA boss John Brennan, and other
administration officials. This revelation created a stir, but it’s really old
news.
“POTUS wants to know everything we are doing,” Lisa Page texted to Peter Strzok, the FBI factotum in the
campaign against candidate and President Trump. To keep that operation going
once Trump took office, POTUS needed to take down Flynn. The January 5 meeting
was key but in May of 2017 a bigger bombshell would explode.
'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.
This was the judgement of POTUS
44’s official biographer David Garrow, a Pulitzer Prize winner and acclaimed
author of Bearing the
Cross, The
FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr. and other books. Garrow let his
subject preview the manuscript of Rising
Star: The Making of Barack Obama and it’s easy to see why the
president maintained strong disagreements with the account.
Dreams from My Father was a novel, and Garrow was on to the composite
authorship. On page 1049 of Rising
Star, an unidentified reporter explains, “The whole Obama narrative
is built around this narrative that Obama and David Axelrod built, and, like
all stories, it’s not entirely true.” The president’s official biographer also
explained why the former Barry Soetoro needed a new narrative.
Dreams from My Father devotes more than 2,000 words to “Frank,” a happy-drunk poet
and counselor. In Rising
Star, Garrow correctly identified “Frank” as Frank Marshall Davis,
an African American Communist who spent most of his life defending all-white
Stalinist dictatorships. As Garrow explained, “Davis’ Communist background plus
his kinky exploits made him politically radioactive,” so if Barry was to become
a political player, Frank had to go.
In the best Stalinist
tradition, Frank disappeared from the audio version of Dreams, and did not
appear in the 2006 The
Audacity of Hope. In similar style, Frank does not appear
in The World As It
Is: A Memoir of the Obama White House, released in 2018 by
Iran deal promoter Ben Rhodes, or in Michelle Obama’s 2018 Becoming. Also missing
in both books is David Garrow’s Rising
Star: The Making of Barack Obama. The author, doubtless under
pressure from the former president, is now changing his tune.
In “Obama’s Airbrushed Dreams,” in the
March 2020 edition of The
Critic, Garrow transforms Dreams
from My Father back into a legitimate memoir and
autobiography. For further research, see Barack ‘em
Up: A Literary Investigation, and Yes I Con:
United Fakes of America. And adapt
what the former president said last week.
There is “no precedent” for a
composite character with a bogus autobiography becoming president of the United
States, yet it happened in 2008, and again in 2012. There was no precedent for
an outgoing president to deploy deep state operators to support his chosen
successor and attack her opponent, yet in 2016 the composite character did just
that.
In similar style, there was no
precedent for an outgoing president tasking the FBI to target a National
Security Advisor with a perjury trap to destroy his life and reputation. In
2017, the composite character sprung that trap, and in 2020 he tricks it out
with the lie that Flynn was charged with perjury. And if you like your plan,
you can keep it.
What the FBI did to Flynn was a
violation of institutional norms and the rule of law, but as Sebastian Gorka noted on Saturday,
“as of this writing, not one person has been charged with any crime connected
to the FBI’s use of its enormous power for political purposes. Not one. Not
Comey, not Strzok, not McCabe, not Lynch. No one.” So maybe the composite
character’s transformation of America is the new normal going forward.
Back in 2016, his chosen
successor was former First Lady Hillary Clinton. In 2020, he endorses his
former vice president Joe Biden, so one might say the composite character is
still on the ballot.
As November 3 approaches, look
for more lies and obfuscation from the former president whose own biographer
proclaimed him a composite character in the historical fiction of Dreams from My Father.
As President Trump says, we’ll have to see what happens.
* * *
A Call for Kristallnacht Against Christians
Murals and stained glass windows of Jesus are a “gross form of
white supremacy” and “should all come down,” says non-black leftist Shaun King.
June 24, 2020
Lloyd
Billingsley
“All murals and stained glass
windows of white Jesus, and his European mother, and their white friends should
also come down. They are a gross form of white supremacy. Created as tools of
oppression. Racist propaganda. They should all come down.”
That was a June 22 tweet from
Shaun King, and the “far-left activist,” wasn’t
done.
“Yes I think the statues of the
white European they claim is Jesus should also come down. They are a form of
white supremacy. Always have been,” King tweeted. “In the Bible, when the
family of Jesus wanted to hide, and blend in, guess where they went? EGYPT! Not
Demark. Tear them down.”
The casual reader might wonder
about this man Shaun King, so eager for a Christian Kristallnacht. As Fox
News noted, King was “a surrogate for Sen. Bernie Sanders,” and introduced the
Vermont socialist at a rally for his presidential bid. Bernie Sanders is big
fan of Denmark, so King’s anti-Jesus tweets may be a form of socialist
distancing. For their part, other groups on the left have been distancing
themselves from Shaun King.
“King was once a leading voice
in the Black Lives Matter movement,” according to Fox News, “but fell from
grace when his race was questioned and he was accused of being a Caucasian
falsely portraying himself as black.” In the 2015 “The Shaun King Controversy Explained,” German Lopez delved into the back story.
Shaun King had “been told” that
his actual father was a light-skinned black man. Lopez found that official
sources in Kentucky listed the father as Jeffery Wayne King, like his mother
“also white.” A family member also told CNN that King’s parents were both
white, but King claimed he didn’t lie about using his race to obtain an Oprah
Scholarship to historically black Morehouse College.
Lopez claims that race “may not
be biologically real,” but it’s clear that Shaun King, 40, is a genuine fake.
Aside from the racial issue, the former “senior justice writer” for the New York Daily News has been
criticized as self-promoter, narcissist and
incompetent activist. King’s anti-Jesus hatred is likely an effort to recover
credibility with Black Lives Matter. On the other hand, it recalls a central
reality of the left.
Marxist-Leninist
revolutionaries have always hated Christianity because it elevates truth and
offers a moral authority beyond politics. In America, black leftist radicals
continued the tradition. As University of Pennsylvania professor Thomas J. Sugrue notes, black-power radicals derided the Rev. Martin Luther King, a
Christian minister, as “de Lawd” and branded him as “hopelessly bourgeois, a
detriment rather than a positive force in the black freedom struggle.”
In the novel Dreams from My Father,
so proclaimed by the “composite character” author’s own biographer David
Garrow, young Barry’s strongest influence is “Frank.” Frank is the African
American Communist Frank Marshall Davis, a lifelong supporter of all-white
Soviet dictatorships. When it comes to reading, Barry tries James Baldwin,
Ralph Ellison, and such but “only Malcolm X’s autobiography seemed to offer
something different.”
In a supposedly “white
supremacist” United States, the son of an African American father and white
mother became president of the United States, the most powerful person in the
world. That president brought Black Lives Matter bosses to the White House and
the ex-president recently expressed the hope that his vanguard of protesters
would “seize the moment.” As he
knows, the current surge of violence has nothing to do with George Floyd and
everything to do with taking power by force.
Any campaign against murals and
stained glass windows would be a prelude to the targeting of churches,
ministers, and Christians. In similar style, the axis of Black Lives Matter,
Antifa, and prominent Democrats aims to remove President Trump from office, but
the strategic target is the United States itself. For this crowd, the ultimate
statue for takedown is Lady Liberty herself, and radical Muslims are taking the
lead.
“The Islamic State militant
group (ISIS) planned to attack the Statue of Liberty in New York City with
pressure cooker bombs,” Newsweek reported in January of 2018, “the Statue of Liberty has a very weak
point in its lower back,” noted Munther Omar Saleh, 21, “if I can get a few
pressure cooker bombs to hit the weak point, I think it will fall face down.”
The FBI busted Saleh and fellow bomber Fareed Mumuni, 22, who were aided
by Australian jihadi Neil Prakash and an English supporter of ISIS.
Islamic militants and the
American left are united in their hated of Christians and Jews. As Daniel Greenfield notes, a Farrakhan
supporter played a leading role in violence that targeted Fairfax, the oldest
Jewish community in Los Angeles. For Melina Abdullah of Black Lives Matter,
these were people “who think that they can just retreat to white affluence.”
Shaun King follows suit with a
call for a Kristallnacht against
Christians.
Axelrod’s Antics
Obama narrator is now lead ventriloquist for leftists’ puppet Joe
Biden.
Wed Sep 9, 2020
“Give people light and they will find a way,” Joe Biden told the
DNC. “I’ll be an ally of the light, not the darkness.” When the Delaware
Democrat finally emerged from his basement isolation ward, he continued in the
same style.
“The incumbent president is incapable of telling us the truth,
incapable of facing the facts and incapable of healing,” Biden proclaimed in
Pennsylvania. “He doesn’t want to shed light, he wants to generate heat and
he’s stoking violence in our cities.”
This from a man who called a college student a “dog-faced pony
soldier,” told an auto worker he was “full of shit,” and who said he was
running for the U.S. Senate, where he spent nearly half a century. In 2020, it
would be hard to find anybody who believes Biden writes a single word of his
speeches. Those come from his handlers and “Democrat strategist” David Axelrod
provides evidence that he is Biden’s chief ventriloquist.
In May, Axelrod defended Biden against sexual
assault accusations by Tara Reade. Back in 2008, Biden was the leading
contender for vice president and the vetting process, Axelrod said, “certainly
would have turned up any formal complaints filed against Biden during his
36-year career in the Senate. It did not.” And the name of Tara Reade “never
came up.”
In 2019, Biden claimed that, as vice president, he pinned a Silver
Star on a U.S. Navy captain in the Konar province of Afghanistan. Trouble was,
as the Los Angeles Times noted, “there’s no military record
of that specific ceremony,” and Biden traveled to Konar before he was vice
president. The incident, would not “tip the scales,” Axelrod explained, and the
story billed Biden as someone who “empathizes with those in pain.”
In 2014, vice president Biden said that Turkey, Qatar and UAE had
offered financial support to Al Qaeda-linked insurgents fighting against the
regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Biden later apologized to Erdogan and Abu Dhabi crown prince
Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, and Axelrod had Biden’s back. “I have great
affection for Joe Biden,” Axelrod told reporters, “I think he’s been a
great vice president. Everybody’s strength is their weakness. His is, he speaks
his mind and he says what’s on his mind.”
If people might wonder what David Axelrod is all about, they can
consult Believer: My Forty Years in Politics, an
elephantine autohagiography published in 2015. His father listed his political
party as “Communist” but Axelrod doesn’t explain what might have
attracted his father to that murderous movement. His mother was a journalist
with the leftist PM, home to pro-Communist writers such as I.F.
Stone and Howard Fast. Mrs. Axelrod left journalism for advertising and her son
followed suit.
“I felt more comfortable, and proficient at, telling stories,”
Axelrod explains. He worked for “jug-eared bow-tied liberal” Paul Simon but was
more eager to become narrator of the former Barry Soetoro, also known as Barack
Obama. He had no record of publication but David Axelrod, the believer,
contends that “Barack was an exceptional writer” and Dreams From My
Father, “a powerful and poignant work.”
According to “Axe,” as powerful Democrats know him, “what
animated The Audacity of Hope were stories written with the
narrative skill of a gifted novelist. It occurred to me, in reading the
manuscript, that Obama approached every encounter as a participant and an
observer. He processed the world around him with a writer’s eye, sizing up the
characters and the plot, filing them away even as he fully engaged in the
scene.” Like Eve Rand in Being There, Axe thus reveals himself to
himself, and he is drenched and purged.
As official biographer David Garrow explained in Rising
Star: The Making of Barack Obama, Dreams from My Father was
indeed a novel, not a memoir or autobiography, and the author a “composite
character.” The composite character’s strongest influence was the African
American Stalinist Frank Marshall Davis, a supporter of all-white Soviet
dictatorships. When the community organizer became president of the United
States, faithful narrator David Axelrod signed off on his every word. Former
vice president Joe Biden is now the Democrats’ pic for the top job.
During the primaries, Joe Biden expressed a preference for “truth
over facts” and often seemed unsure of his location. This same Joe Biden now
proclaims himself an “ally of the light,” and in the style of the composite
character president he served, Biden calls on the nation to deal with “original sin.” This from a man who
tells African Americans they “ain’t black,” if they fail to support him.
Joe Biden calls President Trump “a toxic presence in our nation
for four years,” and Joe says Trump plans to steal the election, and so on. Witness the
familiar demonizing, the inversion of reality, and the fathomless mendacity.
Axe’s stank is wafting strong from the composite character’s vice president.
“Everybody’s strength is their weakness,” David Axelrod said of
Joe Biden in 2014. As Orwell put in 1984, “Ignorance is
Strength.” If anybody thought that described Democrats in 2020 it would be hard
to blame them.
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