Monday, October 13, 2008
A Deviant and sneaky hoodwinker - Barack Obama in his own words ....
RUSH: A-ha. So in his own book read by him here, he admits the trick to making himself look unthreatening. Don't display that radical temperament that all of his friends have. He's learned the trick. Finally, he says that he was a spy behind enemy lines when he worked in corporate America here.
OBAMA: Eventually a consulting house to a multinational corporation agreed to hire me as a research assistant. Like a spy behind enemy lines, I arrived every day at my mid-Manhattan office and sat at my computer terminal.
Se full article below
Barack Obama in His Own Words
October 10, 2008
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BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Now, what we have done here for today's program in large part -- not a large part of it -- we've got a number of sound bites here. You know, Barack Obama has written a couple books. He also recorded the audio version of those books. We went out there, and we got the audio version of those books and we got some sound bites of Obama speaking his own book. This is his book, Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance
OBAMA: He had grown up in Philadelphia, the son of a Baptist minister. He had resisted his father's vocation at first, joining the Marines out of college, dabbling with liquor, Islam, and Black Nationalism in the sixties.
RUSH: He's discussing there the Reverend Jeremiah Wright. He's discussing the Reverend Jeremiah Wright when he says, "He grew up in Philadelphia, son of a Baptist minister, resisted his father's vocation at first, joining Marines, dabbled with liquor, Islam, and Black Nationalism in the sixties," and he held onto the Black Nationalism, obviously, and still has it. Now, after listing a few examples of racism directed at him by whites as he was growing up, Obama says this...
OBAMA: It's just how white folks will do you. It wasn't just the cruelty involved, I was learning that black people could be mean and then some. It was a particular brand of arrogance, an obtuseness in otherwise sane people that brought forth our better laughter. It was as if whites didn't know they were being cruel in the first place or at least thought you deserving of their scorn.
RUSH: This is Barack Obama reading his book, "Dreams from My Father, A Story of Race and Inheritance." Now, here is another little clip of Obama reading his own book, referring to his reading of the book Heart of Darkness and what it taught him about why white people hate.
OBAMA: So I read the book to help me understand what it is that makes white people so afraid, their demons, the way ideas get twisted around. It helps me understand how people learn to hate.
RUSH: This is Barack Obama reading from his book, discussing white people, why they hate, how he had to learn about it. Let's do a flashback here. Let's go back to March 21st in Philadelphia. Obama's on the radio, and the host asked Obama about his Tuesday morning speech that week on race in which he referenced his own white grandmother and her prejudice. Here's his response.
OBAMA: The point I was making was not that my grandmother, uh, harbors any, uh, racial animosity. She doesn't. But she is, uh, a typical white person who if she sees somebody on the street that she doesn't know, you know, there's a reaction that's bred into our experiences that -- that doesn't go away and that sometimes come out in -- in the wrong way.
RUSH: Right. So he tried to rehab his grandmother, threw her back under the bus with that comment. And that was back on March 21st of this year. Another reading from his book: Dreams from My Father.
OBAMA: The emotions between the races could never be pure. Even love was tarnished by the desire to find in the other some element that was missing in ourselves. Whether we sought out our demons or our salvation, the other race would always remain just that: menacing, alien, and apart.
RUSH: Now, remember, this is the great unifier. This is the man who can bring all of the peoples of the world together for a common cause, such as reducing the sea level and freezing the arctic waters again so that we have ice and we can save the planet. He's going to unify all this, and he writes these two books, and you can find lots of passages where he clearly doesn't ever expect to be unified with "the white race."
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: I have three more sound bites prior to the Official Obama Criticizer Report today. From Obama reading from his book, Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance. Now, this is a key passage. He is admitting in this passage in his book that he reads himself, to his own radicalism. He says he couldn't escape it if he tried. Here we go.
OBAMA: Black Nationalism provided that history. An unambiguous morality tale that was easily communicated and easily grasped: a steady attack on the White race, the constant recitation of black people's brutal experience in this country served as the ballast that could prevent the ideas of personal responsibility --
RUSH: Stop the tape. What is this? Ballast? He doesn't talk this way. You know, there are stories out there, he may not have written this book. There's a guy named Jack Cashill who has gone back. He can't say for sure, but he's read Ayers books. In both these books, Obama first submitted the manuscript. It took him ten months to do. The publisher rejected it. It was worthless. So he went back. They'd written him a big advance (I'm really shortening the story here) and now Jack Cashill has compared some of these passages in Obama's book to Bill Ayers, who does write very well. There's no evidence that Obama has ever written anything prior to this except a poem, and the poem was as dumb as "A River, Rock, and a Tree" that Maya Angelou did at the Slickster's inauguration back in 1993. There's no evidence that he has any kind of writing talent. We haven't seen anything he wrote at Harvard Law, or when he was at Columbia, or any tests that he's written. But if you read his books, if you listen to his audio reading of the book here, you don't hear this when Obama goes out and speaks. I would like for him to be given a test on his own book. You know how Charles Barkley once said he was misquoted in his own book? (laughs) I would like for Obama to actually be given a test on his own book. Here's the rest of this bite.
OBAMA: -- into an ocean of despair. "Yes," the nationalists would say, "Whites are responsible for your sorry state, not any inherent flaws in you."
RUSH: Of course not.
OBAMA: "In fact," the nationalists would continue, "whites are so heartless and devious that we can no longer expect anything from them."
RUSH: Well, of course.
OBAMA: "The self-loathing you feel, what keeps you drinking or thieving, is planted by them."
RUSH: Right.
OBAMA: "Rid them for your mind and find your true power liberated. Rise up, ye mighty race!" All this was painful to consider. It's painful now as it had been years ago. It contradicted the morality my mother had taught me --
RUSH: Mmm-hmm.
OBAMA: -- a morality of subtle distinctions --
RUSH: Mmm-hmm.
OBAMA: -- between individuals of goodwill and those who wished me ill --
RUSH: Mmm-hmm.
OBAMA: -- between active malice and ignorance or indifference.
RUSH: Mmm-hmm.
OBAMA: I had a personal stake in that moral framework.
RUSH: Yeah.
OBAMA: I discovered that I couldn't escape it if I tried.
RUSH: Jeremiah Wright.
OBAMA: As it turned out, though, it was questions of effectiveness and not sentiment that caused most of my quarrels with Rafiq [al-Shabazz, black nationalist].
RUSH: So he didn't disagree with it. He didn't think it was very effective, but it didn't change what he thought of Black Nationalism, which is what Reverend Wright teaches to this day, or did. It's still taught from the pulpit of Obama's church. This is another portion of Obama reading from his own book, Dreams from My Father.
OBAMA: It was usually an effective tactic, another one of those tricks I had learned. People were satisfied so long as you were courteous and smiled and made no sudden moves. They were more than satisfied. They were revealed. Such a pleasant surprise to find a well-mannered young black man who didn't seem angry all the time.
RUSH: A-ha. So in his own book read by him here, he admits the trick to making himself look unthreatening. Don't display that radical temperament that all of his friends have. He's learned the trick. Finally, he says that he was a spy behind enemy lines when he worked in corporate America here.
OBAMA: Eventually a consulting house to a multinational corporation agreed to hire me as a research assistant. Like a spy behind enemy lines, I arrived every day at my mid-Manhattan office and sat at my computer terminal.
RUSH: Barack Hussein Obama admitting to feeling a spy in the office behind enemy lines in corporate America.
END TRANSCRIPT
Read the Background Material...
• National Review: Sen. Status Quo - Thomas Sowell
http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_101008/content/01125107.guest.html
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