Wednesday, June 12, 2013

So . . . . why didn't the Republicans spread this story about Obama's disdain for 'the suburbs' (and ALL that the USA stands for that is GOOD for that matter?) back in 2008 . . . . the Dems sure used that surreptitiously obtained 47% line against Romney often enough!
 
 
 
Obama's 1990 Interview: "We’re Going To Reshape Mean Spirited Selfish America . . . The Suburbs Bore Me"

Text from newsprint article, "Harvard student tackles racism at core" . . .
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) His boyhood friends in Indonesia were street peddlers, and his grandmother still lives in a mud-walled house in Kenya.
But Barack Obama is another world away, presiding over the Harvard Law Review as the first black president in the prestigious journal’s 103-year history.
The charismatic 28-year-old, ensconced in the halls where tradition reigns, is taking aim at another custom: Obama’s sights are set on the South Side of Chicago, not on a U.S. Supreme Court clerkship or a fast-track career with, a cushy firm.
"I’m not interested in the suburbs. The suburbs bore me. And I’m not interested in isolating myself," Obama said in a recent interview. "I feel good when I’m engaged in what I think are the core issues of the society, and those core issues to me are what’s happening to poor folks in this society." His passion is rooted in his background. He was born in Hawaii, his father an Oxford and Harvard-educated economist from the African nation of Kenya, his mother a white anthropologist from Kansas. (Really? An antropologist? All I know for sure is that she managed to travel the Marxist-Socialist World on a dime provided by Tim Geithner's dad!)
Obama moved to Southeast Asia at age 2 when his parents divorced and his mother married an Indonesian. Until the fifth grade. Obama attended Indonesian schools, where most of his friends were the sons of servants, street peddlers and farmers.
Concern for Obama’s education led his mother to return him to Hawaii, where he attended public schools through high school. In 1983, he graduated from Columbia University with a degree in political science. (So, where are all those college records?)
At a recent meeting in a Harvard cafeteria, his affinity with the underdog was readily apparent. "I lived in a country where I saw extreme poverty at a very early age," Obama said. "Parts of my family in Kenya remain very poor. My grandmother still lives in a mud-walled house with no running water or electricity.
"That’s who I am, that’s where I come from, not always literally, but at least emotionally."
Obama entered Harvard Law School in 1988, and through a combination of grades and a writing competition, was elected to head the law review this February. He succeeded Peter Yu, a first generation Chinese-American. Obama cautions against reading too much into his election.
"It’s crucial that people don’t see my election as somehow a symbol of progress in the broader sense, that we don’t sort of point to a Barack Obama any more than you point to a Bill Cosby or a Michael Jordan and say ‘Well, things are hunky dory,’" Obama said.
"There’s certainly racism here. There are certain burdens that are placed, more emotionally at this point than concretely," Obama said.
"Professors may treat black students differently, sometimes by being, sort of, more dismissive, sometimes by being more, sort of, careful because they think, you know, they think that somehow we can’t cope in the classroom," he said.
Obama sees the inner cities as the front lines of racism.
"It’s critical at this stage for people who want to see genuine change to focus locally. And it is crucial that we figure out how to rebuild the core of leadership and institutions in these communities," he said.
For five years before law school, Obama took on that task in Chicago. As the director of a program that tried to bring South Side churches, unions and block associations together on projects, Obama was not trying to solve local problems, he said. Instead he sought to construct something more lasting a forum for the community, "I’m interested in organizations, not movements, because movements dissipate and organizations don’t," Obama said.
America suffered when the movements of the 1960s dissipated, he said. Those movements succeeded in raising doubts about harmful traditions of sexism and racism, but failed to offer a viable alternative.
"Hopefully, more and more people will begin to feel their story is somehow part of this larger story of how we’re going to reshape America in a way that is less mean-spirited and more generous," Obama said.
"I mean, I really hope to be part of a transformation of this country. "And the future of black people and of America generally? "It depends on how good I do my job," he said.
 
Original Link: http://www.nakedemperornews.com/youngObama.pdf
 
 
 
That was 1990. Today, all we get from Obama's Administration is scandal, scandal, scandal:

1. Terrorist attack at Ft. Hood deemed simple "work-place-violence" incident by Obama;
 
2. Holder /Obama "Fast and Furious" illegal gun-running scandal;
 
3. Obama and Hillary's deadly Benghazi-terrorist-attack cover-up;
 
4. DOJ's secret phone-record-grab of AP personnel scandal; and secret phone-record grab of FOX News journalist James Rosen and his family;
 
5. IRS scandal of targeting and intimidation of the Tea Party groups, other conservative groups, Christian groups, pro-life groups, pro-marriage groups, etc., etc.;
 
6. NSA's scandalous surveillance of EVERYBODY . . .
Obama's scandals paint a "reshape" and a "transformation" that NO one wants! This is worse than any 1984 Orwellian prophesy!
 
 
Not exactly the "hope" and "change" promised in his big 2008 campaign and he has turned out to be the biggest racist of all.
 
Posted by Freda Barry