http://bit.ly/49EHMj

- - -
The experts in the field have told me to stick with old-fashioned literary
detective work, and I have done just that.  Mr, Midwest has helped.  His
most recent contribution is a good example of keen-eyed detection.  

Going forward, I will be referring to five books.  These include Ayers' 1993
To Teach, his 1997 A Kind and Just Parent (shorthand: Parent), his 2001
memoir Fugitive Days, and Obama's 1995 Dreams From My Father (Dreams).
Casual critics of this research have repeated the canard that I attributed
both Obama books, Dreams and the 2006 Audacity of Hope (Audacity), to Ayers.
I never have.  From the beginning, I have asserted that the two books appear
to have two different authors, and so I will leave Audacity out of the
equation until the end.

...

I read through all 759 matches and culled out those that I would consider
B-Level or above.  There were 180 of these.  As a control, I tested them
against my own 2006 book Sucker Punch, like Dreams and Fugitive Days a
memoir that deals extensively with race.  In that I am closer to Ayers in
age, race, education, family and cultural background than Obama is, our
styles should have had more chance of matching.  They don't.  Of the 180
examples, I matched, strictly speaking, on six.  Even by the most generous
standard, we matched on only sixteen.

Let me just cite a few matches between Ayers' work and Dreams that I found
intriguing.  Rather astonishingly, as Mr. West points out, at least six of
the characters in Dreams have the same names as characters in Ayers' books:
Malik, Freddy, Tim, Coretta, Marcus, and "the old man." Many of the stories
involving these characters in Dreams seem as contrived as their names.

...

"Underneath it all," Ayers says of standard school textbooks, "the social
studies and literature texts reflected and promoted white supremacy.  There
were no pictures or photographs of African Americans . . . there was
throughout an assumed superiority and smug celebration of the status quo."  

Both authors, by the way, use the phrase "beneath the surface" repeatedly.
And what they find beneath the surface, of course, is the disturbing truth
about power disparities in the real America, which each refers to as an
"imperial culture."  Speaking of which, both insist that "knowledge" is
"power" and seem consumed by the uses or misuses of power.  Ayers, in fact,
evokes the word "power" and its derivatives 75 times in Fugitive Days, Obama
83 times in Dreams.

More exotically, both authors evoke images of a "boy" riding on the backs of
a "water buffalo" and prodding the beast not just with sticks, but with
"bamboo sticks."  Ayers places his boy in Vietnam.  Obama puts his in
Indonesia.

Both authors link Indonesia with Vietnam. In each case, clueless officials -
plural -- with the "State Department" try to explain how the march of
communism through "Indochina" will specifically imperil "Indonesia." The
Ayers account, however, at least sounds vaguely real.  The Obama account
sounds like an Ayers' memory imposed on Obama's mother.  She allegedly
discussed these geo-political strategy sessions in Indonesia with her
pre-teen son.

Ayers and his radical friends were obsessed with Vietnam.  It defined them
and still does. To reflect their superior insight into that country, they
have shown a tendency to use "Mekong Delta" as synecdoche, the part that
indicates the whole.

In Fugitive Days, for instance, Ayers envisions "a patrol in the Mekong
Delta" when he conjures up an image of Vietnam.  Ayers' wife, Bernadine
Dohrn, pontificated about "a hamlet called My Lai" in a 1998 interview, but
to flash her radical chops, she located it "in the middle of the Mekong
Delta," which is in reality several hundred miles from My Lai.

Given Obama's age, "Mekong Delta" was not likely a part of his vocabulary,
but that does not stop him from writing about "the angry young men in Soweto
or Detroit or the Mekong Delta."  Ayers, of course, would also have had a
much deeper connection than Obama to "Detroit," whose historic riot took
place shortly before Obama's sixth birthday.  Ayers worked in Detroit the
year after those same riots.

Returning to the exotic, in his Indonesian backyard Obama discovered two
"birds of paradise" running wild as well as chickens, ducks, and a "yellow
dog with a baleful howl."

In Fugitive Days, there is even more "howling" than there is in Dreams.
Ayers places his "birds of paradise" in Guatemala.  He places his ducks and
dogs together in a Vietnamese village being swept by merciless Americans.
In Parent, he talks specifically about a "yellow dog."   And he uses the
word "baleful" to describe an "eye" in Fugitive Days. For the record,
"baleful" means "threatening harm."  I had to look it up.

Ayers is fixated with faces, especially eyes.  He writes of "sparkling"
eyes, "shining" eyes, "laughing" eyes, "twinkling" eyes, eyes "like ice,"
and people who are "wide-eyed" and "dark-eyed."  

As it happens, Obama is also fixated with faces, especially eyes.  He also
writes of "sparkling" eyes, "shining" eyes, "laughing" eyes, "twinkling"
eyes, and uses the phrases "wide-eyed" and "dark-eyed." Obama adds
"smoldering eyes," "smoldering" being a word that he and Ayers inject
repeatedly. Obama also uses the highly distinctive phrase "like ice," in his
case to describe the glinting of the stars. 

If Ayers is fixated on eyes, about eyebrows he is positively fetishistic.
There are six references to "eyebrows" in Fugitive Days -- bushy ones,
flaring ones, arched ones, black ones and, stunningly, seven references in
Dreams -- heavy ones, bushy ones, wispy ones.  It is the rare memoirist who
talks about eyebrows at all.

On three occasions in Dreams, Obama speaks of people with "round" faces.  On
four occasions in Fugitive Days, Ayers does the same.  Both speak of
"grim-faced" people, people with "soft" faces, and, most unusually, people
with "tight" faces.  
- - -

The evidence at some point became overwhelming. One must be willfully blind
to ignore the conclusion and its implications.

For shame, America. You have elected as president a total fraud whose
greatest claim to intellectual achievement and only discernable
accomplishment before becoming a politician is a memoir ghost written by a
domestic terrorist.

- Bob


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