'Ex-communist' – A Term Still  in Obama's Future 
© Jack Cashill
_WND.com_ 
(http://www.wnd.com/2012/08/ex-communist-a-term-still-in-obamas-future/)  - 
August 29, 2012 
“There is one experience  which most sincere ex-Communists share,” wrote 
Whittaker Chambers in his classic  conversion narrative “Witness,” and that 
is the epiphany, the road to Damascus  moment, the instant they realize the 
life they have been living is a lie.  
Chambers memorably quotes one young woman about her father’s  Damascus 
moment: “He was immensely pro-Soviet . . . and then -- you will laugh  at me -- 
but you must not laugh at my father -- and then -- one night -- in  Moscow 
-- he heard screams. That's all. Simply one night he heard screams.”  
Barack Obama has never heard those screams. He has written two  books—or at 
least put his name on two books—and not hinted that he ever had  anything 
like a Damascus moment.  
His anti-Americanism runs too deep. When in Indonesia his  stepfather, Lolo 
Soetoro, asked his mom to meet some of “her own people” at the  American 
oil company where he worked, she shouted at him, “They are not my  people.”  
In the midst of all these “ugly Americans,” Ann remained, in  Obama’s 
words, “a lonely witness for secular humanism, a soldier for New Deal,  Peace 
Corps, position-paper liberalism.”  
As a boy, Obama learned that perhaps the only thing exceptional  about 
America was Barack Hussein Obama. Back in Hawaii, his communist mentor,  Frank 
Marshall Davis, reinforced his mom’s ugly American riff, and Obama soaked  it 
in.  
In his 1995 memoir, “Dreams from My Father,” he describes the  
Americanization of Hawaii as an “ugly conquest.” Missionaries brought 
“crippling  
diseases.” American companies carved up “the rich volcanic soil” and worked  
their indentured laborers of color “from sunup to sunset.”  
During World War II, of course, the government interned  Hawaii’s “
Japanese-Americans.”  
In Obama’s account, as in the standard progressive retelling of  American 
history, facts are bent to serve a larger purpose. In the litany above,  
Obama bends one fact beyond the breaking point.  
In reality, more than 99 percent of Hawaii’s Japanese and  
Japanese-Americans were not interned. After Pearl Harbor, this policy  
suggested not racism 
or of oppression, as Obama implies, but of enlightened  restraint.  
After hitting the mainland Obama surrounded himself with  leftists well 
versed in Marxist cant.  "I chose my friends carefully," he  writes in “Dreams,”
 "The more politically active black students. The foreign  students. The 
Chicanos. The Marxist professors and structural feminists and  punk-rock 
performance poets."   
With his new friends, Obama discussed "neocolonialism, Franz  (sic) Fanon, 
Eurocentrism, and patriarchy" and flaunted his alienation. Dr. John  Drew 
confirms that the Obama he met at Occidental College was indeed a “Marxist  
planning for a Communist style revolution."  
The literary influences Obama cites include radical  anti-imperialists like 
Fanon and Malcolm X, communists like Langston Hughes and  Richard Wright, 
and tyrant-loving fellow travelers like W.E.B. DuBois.   
"Joseph Stalin was a great  man," DuBois wrote upon Stalin's death in 1953. 
"Few other men of the 20th  century approach his stature."   
In “Dreams,” Obama gives no suggestion that this reading was in  any way 
problematic or a mere phase in his development.  He moves on to no  new 
school, embraces no new worldview.   
Obama unwittingly gives the game away in 2006 book, “Audacity  of Hope.” 
When scolding his fellow liberals for not facing up to current  international 
threats, he writes, “It’s useful to remind ourselves that Osama  bin Laden 
is not Ho Chi Minh.”  
No, of course not. In ObamaWorld, Ho is the kind of murderous  thug kids 
still look up to, sort of like Ché, just not cute enough to put on a  T-shirt. 
 
In 2008, some Obama campaign workers in Texas proudly tacked  Ché posters 
to the wall, blissfully unaware that communist executioners lack red  state 
crossover appeal.  
Not surprisingly, given his inputs, Barack Obama has embraced a  vaguely 
Marxist, post-colonial view of the capitalist enterprise.  In the  2004 
preface to “Dreams,” written after his keynote speech at the Democratic  
convention, he describes an ongoing "struggle--between worlds of plenty and  
worlds 
of want."  
America, he implies, prospers only at the expense of the rest  of the 
world, a zero-sum fallacy common among those who refuse to understand the  way 
free enterprise works.  
"I have seen, the  desperation and disorder of the powerless: how it twists 
the lives of children  on the streets of Jakarta or Nairobi in much the 
same way as it does the lives  of children on Chicago's South Side," Obama 
continues.  
When the powerless strike back, the powerful respond with "a  steady, 
unthinking application of force, of longer prison sentences and more  
sophisticated military hardware."  
By equating Chicago with the third world, Obama endorses the  link between 
racism and imperialism, the presumed motive for America's  involvement in 
Vietnam.   
Later in “Dreams,” he makes this point more explicitly when he  talks 
about righteous insurrections in "Soweto or Detroit or the Mekong Delta."  For 
the left, racism at home parallels imperialism abroad, one or both of which  
must inevitably underwrite the capitalist adventure.   
To be fair, the "Detroit" and "Mekong Delta" references--the  whole preface 
for that matter--are more likely to have come from Bill Ayers’ pen  than 
Obama's, but if so, Obama surely felt comfortable with Ayers’  conclusions.   
And from all evidence, even after nearly four years of  spreading the 
misery in a failed quasi-socialist experiment, he still hasn’t  heard those 
screams.  
Time to take the damn cotton out of your ears, Barry! 

-- 
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