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Obama's Guide to 'A Promised Land'--Intel on his forthcoming opus
Frontpagemagazine ^ | Sep 21, 2020 | Lloyd Billingsley

Posted on 09/21/2020 7:17:26 AM PDT by SJackson

On Tuesday November 17, two weeks after election day, 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.” And so on, as if the author was some kind of president for life. 

Wary readers might take a cue from C.S. Lewis, who when a new book came out preferred to read an old one. In the case of POTUS 44, formerly known as Barry Soetoro, that means Dreams from My Father, published in 1995 during the Clinton Era.

“Dreams from My Father was not a memoir or an autobiography,” wrote David Garrow in the 2017 Rising Star: The Making of Barack Obama. “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.” That calls for review of the way Dreams deals with “the divisions in our country,” race relations, political ideology and such.

Readers encounter “Frank,” a happy-drunk poet wise in the ways of women.“They’ll drive you to drink, boy,” Frank tells young Barry, but there’s a lot more to this poet.  As the Dreams author publicly acknowledged on several occasions, Frank was Frank Marshall Davis, an African American Stalinist and longtime supporter of all-white Soviet Communist dictatorships. Dreams doesn’t get into that, but Franks duly breaks out some Communist Party themes.

“Black people have a reason to hate,” Frank tells Barry. “That’s just how it is. For your sake, I wish it were otherwise. But it’s not. So you might as well get used to it.” When Barry goes to college, Frank warns, “they’ll train you so good, you’ll start believing what they tell you about equal opportunity and the American way and all that shit.”

Barry gathers books by James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison and Richard Wright, but “only Malcolm X’s autobiography seemed to offer something different.” Barry also encounters Malik, formerly with the Nation of Islam.

“You won’t see me moving to no African jungle anytime soon,” Malik says. “Or some goddamned desert somewhere, sitting on a carpet with a bunch of Arabs. And you won’t see me stop eating no ribs. And pussy too. Don’t Malcolm talk about no pussy?”

In Los Angeles, Barry meets Reggie, fresh off an encounter with the LAPD. “They had no reason to stop me. No reason ‘cept I was walking in a white neighborhood,” Reggie says. “One of ‘em pulled out his piece. I didn’t let ‘em scare me, though. That’s what gets these storm troopers off, seeing fear in a black man.”

These passages recall the “Black Acting School” of Robert Townsend’s Hollywood Shuffle, where the instructors are all white. So this dialogue could be the work of “Obama’s narrator” David Axelrod, who touts his storytelling skills in his 2015 Believer.

In Dreams from My Father, Barry hooks up with the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, a “dynamic young pastor. His message seemed to appeal to young people like me.” As Rev. Wright explains, “Life’s not safe for a black man in this country, Barack. Never has been. Probably never will be.” This is the doctrine Black Lives Matter is now preaching, and which Barry first learned from Frank, profiled at length in Paul Kengor’s The Communist.

Frank disappeared from the audio version of Dreams and never appeared in The Audacity of Hope or any other official materials, including Axelrod’s Believer. Readers might check to see if Frank shows up in A Promised Land, and how it handles Garrow’s Rising Star. The official biography is missing from Michelle Obama’s Becoming and Ben Rhodes’ The World as it Is: A Memoir of the Obama White House, both released in 2018.

In 2012, the president told Russia’s Dimitry Medvedev he would have “more flexibility” after the election. See how A Promised Land handles that exchange, and what the account says about the November 5, 2009, Fort Hood “workplace violence” massacre and the $1.7 billion in cash shipped to Iran. See if the Promised Land author still believes if the future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam.

When the composite character became president, the United States was already a top-heavy welfare state. He transformed it into an arrangement where the outgoing president picks his successor and deploys the FBI and DOJ against her opponent. See how A Promised Land  handles Midyear Exam and Crossfire Hurricane.  If readers are in the mood for something more exciting, they might try Frank’s Sex Rebel: Black, a pornographic novel that is really autobiography.

“Davis’ Communist background plus his kinky exploits made him politically radioactive,” David Garrow explained in Rising Star. So Barry needed the “historical fiction” of Dreams from My Father, the best foreword to A Promised Land, due two weeks after the election.

The author and his handlers want Joe Biden to win. As President Trump says, we’ll have to see what happens.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: obama; obamabook

1 posted on 09/21/2020 7:17:26 AM PDT by SJackson
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To: SJackson

Written by Bill Ayers?


2 posted on 09/21/2020 7:22:49 AM PDT by struggle
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To: SJackson

I can hardly wait to read this 768 page ghost written fictional account of Barry Soteros’s great fraud against the American public. I am sure that it will be as riveting as his other ghost written works.


3 posted on 09/21/2020 7:23:40 AM PDT by fireman15
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To: SJackson

We don’t have a democracy.


4 posted on 09/21/2020 7:24:40 AM PDT by ecomcon
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To: SJackson

Thanks, but I stocked up on toilet paper during the scamdemic......


5 posted on 09/21/2020 7:26:36 AM PDT by clintonh8r (Truth is hate speech to those who hate the truth.)
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To: clintonh8r
Ba-Da-Boom!

Soon it will be cheaper than TP.

6 posted on 09/21/2020 7:53:48 AM PDT by Aevery_Freeman (Freedom Is In Peril! Defend it with your life.)
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To: SJackson
Billingsley (correctly, imo) states that;"...its most important composite character was the narrator himself."

This is damningly insightful, as Narcissists have no core, and ALWAYS make themselves up as they go along, stumbling from one purloined identity to another.

7 posted on 09/21/2020 7:55:52 AM PDT by spankalib
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To: SJackson

768 pages? BO didn’t write one book, let alone 2 volumes. He couldn’t heal himself of his delusions how can he heal a nation he helped to fragment, divide, destroy?


8 posted on 09/21/2020 8:17:27 AM PDT by b4me (God Bless the USA)
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To: SJackson

An HONEST accounting of the administration that claimed to be the ‘most transparent in history’???

That OBAMA???


9 posted on 09/21/2020 8:47:59 AM PDT by ridesthemiles
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To: SJackson
768 pages explaining,in exquisite detail,how horrible this country is and how horrible I,and those like me,are.

I'll take a rain check on that one.

10 posted on 09/21/2020 12:24:49 PM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Thanks To Biden Voters Oregon Is Now A Battleground State!)
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