Why is Barack Obama so
comfortable around people who so despise America and its allies? Maybe it’s
because they’re so comfortable around him.
He presents as the transcendent agent of “change.” Sounds
platitudinous, but it’s really quite strategically vaporous. Sen. Obama is loath
to get into the details of how we should change, and, as the media’s Chosen One,
he hasn’t had to.
We are a congregation which is Unashamedly Black and Unapologetically Christian… Our roots in the Black religious experience and tradition are deep, lasting and permanent. We are an African people, and remain ‘true to our native land,’ the mother continent, the cradle of civilization.
Rev. Wright inspired his congregation — of which the
Obamas were 20-year members — with “black liberation theology.” The doctrine is
itself the inspiration of James Hal Cone, a professor of “Systematic Theology”
at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. Cone is also the author of
several books, which a tendentious Wright urged Sean Hannity to read during a
recent interview.
It’s a useful suggestion. For example,
there is Cone’s 1969 opus, Black Theology and
Black Power, in which he helpfully
explains:
Black theology refuses to accept a God who is not identified totally with the goals of the black community. If God is not for us and against white people, then he is a murderer, and we had better kill him. The task of black theology is to kill Gods who do not belong to the black community.... Black theology will accept only the love of God which participates in the destruction of the white enemy. What we need is the divine love as expressed in Black Power, which is the power of black people to destroy their oppressors here and now by any means at their disposal. Unless God is participating in this holy activity, we must reject his love.
Black liberation theology, as
Wright has elaborated, is closely aligned with the “liberation theology” of
Nicaragua during the seventies and eighties: i.e., the doctrine that catalyzed
Marxist revolutionaries. It spurred an unabashedly Leftist movement that
emphasized, you guessed it, the crying need for “change” — as George Russell
aptly
described it in a 2001
Time magazine
analysis, “social change in the process of spiritual improvement.”
It is this same drive for upheaval, for supplanting a
political order which purportedly treats blacks as “less than human,” that
impelled Wright’s plea for God to “damn America.” In the oppression narrative,
the murder of 3000 Americans on 9/11 isn’t terrorism but social justice.
America, after all, had it coming. For Wright, it was “chickens coming home to
roost.” Indeed, Wright sometimes prefers to call our country “the U.S. of KKK A”
— a grotesque sentiment which, we shall see, is shared by others with whom the
Obamas choose to associate themselves.
For their part, the Obamas couldn’t get enough of Wright.
Barack and Michelle had him marry them. They chose him to baptize their
children, who were routinely exposed to Wright’s race-baiting bombast.
Obama and his supporters brusquely
dismiss the drawing of sensible inferences from these gestures of admiration as
“guilt by association.” In point of fact, though, the Obamas didn’t just
associate with Wright.
They subsidized
him to the tune of over $20,000 — not exactly chump change from a couple without
great means or any history of philanthropy to speak of. And until recent public
attention to the pastor’s noxious rants threatened to derail his White House
bid, Sen. Obama kept Wright officially
on board
as part of his campaign’s “African American Religious Leadership Committee.”
BILL AYERS AND BERNADINE DOHRN
With this as background, is it really all that startling
that Sen. Obama enjoys a friendly relationship with Bill Ayers and his wife,
Bernadine Dohrn, a pair of terrorists?
I want to be clear here: Not
terrorist sympathizers. Terrorists.
The mainstream media, in their zeal to
elect a Democrat, are assiduously airbrushing Ayers: “an aging lefty with a
foolish past,” as the Chicago Sun-Times
has so delicately put it. In fact, it is the press that is rife with foolish,
aging lefties. Ayers, by contrast, is an unapologetic terrorist with a savage
past — one who beat the system he so reviles when, after his years of fugitivity,
terrorism charges were dropped due to government surveillance violations. He’s
“guilty as sin,” by his own concession, but “free as a bird.”
Ayers didn’t just carry a sign outside
the Pentagon on May 19, 1972. He bombed it. As his memoir gleefully
recalled, “Everything was
absolutely ideal on the day I bombed the Pentagon. The sky was blue. The birds
were singing. And the bastards were finally going to get what was coming to
them.”
Whether Pentagon bombing day was more or less ideal than
other days, when he, Dohrn and their Weathermen comrades bombed the U.S.
Capitol, the State Department, and sundry banks, police stations and
courthouses, Ayers does not say. But on each occasion, there was surely optimism
that the bastards were finally going to get what was coming to them.
There were lots of bombs. There is no
remorse. “I don’t regret setting bombs,” he told the
New York Times in 2001,
sorry only that he and the others “didn’t do enough.” Like what? We can’t be
sure, though National Review Online’s
Jonah Goldberg
recounts Ayers’s sentiments
back in the day: “Kill all the rich people. Break up their cars and apartments.
Bring the revolution home, kill your parents, that’s where it’s really at.”
Ayers and Dohrn have done the actual dirty work of terror,
while Jeremiah Wright draws the line at waving pom-poms. But the prism through
which they assay the dirty work is precisely the same: America has it coming.
For them, that makes all the
difference. It’s not terror, just chickens coming home to roost. “Terrorists
destroy randomly,” Ayers
rationalizes with
nauseating arrogance, “while our actions bore ... the precise stamp of a cut
diamond. Terrorists intimidate, while we aimed only to educate.” Right. As her
companion Discover the Networks
profile illustrates, Dohrn now goes even further:
insisting their bombings
weren’t terrorist acts at all: “We rejected terrorism. We were careful not to
hurt anybody.”
Maybe she’s forgotten the “bastards
getting what was coming to them” part. Or maybe she’s just lying. She was, we
can be confident, something less than a model of compassion back then — like at
the Weathermen “War Council” meeting in 1969, when she famously
gushed over the barbaric
Manson Family murders of the pregnant actress Sharon Tate, coffee heiress
Abigail Folger, and three others: “Dig it! First they killed those pigs, then
they ate dinner in the same room with them. They even shoved a fork into the
victim’s stomach! Wild!”
Charming. The “War Council,” it should be noted, concluded
by first condemning the United States for — what else? — its pervasive racism,
then formally declaring war against what the Weathermen called “AmeriKKKa.” Rev.
Wright would have understood.
It was at the Chicago home of Ayers and Dohrn that
Obama, then an up-and-coming “community organizer,” had his political coming out
party in 1995. Not content with this rite of passage in Lefty World — where
unrepentant terrorists are regarded as progressive luminaries, still working
“only to educate” — both Obamas tended to the relationship with the Ayers.
Barack Obama made a joint appearance
with Bill Ayers in 1997 at a University of Chicago panel on the outrage of
treating juvenile criminals as if they were, well, criminals. Obama apologists
say, “So what? People appear with other people all the time.” Nice try. This
panel was orchestrated by none other than Michelle Obama, then an Associate Dean
of Student Services. Ayers didn’t happen to be there — he was
invited by the Obamas to
educate students on the question before the house: “Should a Child Ever Be
Called a ‘Super Predator?’”
William Ayers, author of A Kind and Just Parent: The Children of Juvenile Court (Beacon Press, 1997), says “We should call a child a child. A 13-year-old who picks up a gun isn’t suddenly an adult. We have to ask other questions: How did he get the gun? Where did it come from?”
Ayers, who spent a year observing the Cook County Temporary Juvenile Detention Center in Chicago, is one of four panelists who will speak on juvenile justice[.]
The other panelists included
“Illinois State Sen. Barack Obama … who is working to block proposed legislation
that would throw more juvenile offenders into the adult system.” The goal was to
promote change, to actuate the vision of “Chicago reformer” Jane Addams, who’d
sought “the establishment of a separate court system for children which would
act like a ‘kind and just parent’ for children in crisis.” Never mind the crises
they’d caused
the victims of their wanton murders and mayhem — the fault for those, surely,
was our downright mean society.
The Ayers and Obama, meantime, kept
up. There was
yet another panel in 2002,
Obama and Ayers waxing on “Intellectuals in Times of Crisis.” Dohrn, too, was
asked to weigh in, on a panel addressing the question, “Why Do Ideas Matter?”
I’m sure it was, er, wild.
RASHID KHALIDI
In the interim, Ayers and
Obama had teamed up for three years on the board of the Woods Fund, a Chicago
charitable organization. Together, they voted to donate $75,000 of the largesse
they controlled to the Arab American Action Network. The AAAN was co-founded by
Rashid Khalidi, a longtime
supporter of Palestinian
“resistance” attacks against Israel, which he openly regards as a racist,
apartheid state. Despite considerable evidence to the contrary, Khalidi
peremptorily
denies having been a PLO
operative or having directed its official press agency for six years (from 1976
to 1982). There can be no gainsaying, though, that he was an influential
apologist for Yasser Arafat, the terror master who spawned two Intifadas and
ordered the murder of American diplomats.
In the mean, besotted United States,
of course, being a terrorist, a terror apologist, or simply raging at the
machine qualifies one for a cushy academic soapbox. Thus did Khalidi eventually
land on his feet at the University of Chicago, where he ran in the same circles
as Associate Dean Michelle Obama, Law Professor Barack Obama, University of
Illinois-Chicago Education Professor Bill Ayers, and Northwestern Law Professor
Bernadine Dohrn (who prepared for a career in instructing future officers of the
court with a
stint in federal prison for
flouting a judge’s order that she testify in a grand jury investigation into the
Weathermen’s infamous Brinks robbery-murders).
For Khalidi, though, greener pastures
called: the opportunity to become a professor of Arab Studies at Columbia
University. There, he now directs Edward Said’s legacy: Columbia’s notoriously
Israel-bashing Middle East Institute — though, much to the University’s chagrin,
he was
scratched in 2005 from a program designed
educate teachers on instructing their young students about the Middle East. New
York City schools chancellor Joel Klein concluded Khalidi’s splenetic
meanderings mightn’t be the best model.
They didn’t faze Barack Obama, though.
He was front and center with Ayers and Dohrn at a farewell bash when Khalidi
left Chicago for New York. It was only right. Khalidi, after all, had hosted a
fundraiser for Obama in 2000, when the latter launched an unsuccessful campaign
for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. And so it goes. A few weeks
ago, Khalidi
told worldnetdaily.com he
supports Obama’s presidential run “because he is the only candidate who has
expressed sympathy for the Palestinian cause,” and because Obama has promised
negotiations with Iran.
Ayres, too, provided a minor ($200)
contribution to Obama, in 2001. That was the year of September 11, just a few
days before the Times
published its excerpt of Ayres’s remembrances of bombings past. Read
the short interview and ask
yourself: Could anyone, let alone someone as sophisticated as Barack Obama, chat
with Bill Ayers for about 30 seconds and not know exactly where is coming from?
Could they really have been friends? Well, Ayers is
virtually channeling Michelle Obama and Jeremiah Wright when he wails that
American “society is not a just and fair and decent place.”
“God, what a great country,” he
scoffed to the Times.
“It makes me want to puke.”
Hey, right back at you there, Professor. At least that’s
how most of us are likely to feel. But not Sen. Obama. And that’s why Ayers —
like Khalidi and Wright and Michelle Obama, and others who know the senator well
while we’ve been told precious little — sees in Barack Obama the change he’s
been waiting for.
No thanks.