
from The American Spectator
The Man Who Despises America
By Mark Hyman on 11.11.09 @ 6:09AM
The very next paragraph is going to make the nut jobs on the far left excitable
beyond belief. I am not referring to all Democrats or even a majority of
liberals. I am singling out the "they've-lost-all-touch-with-reality" crowd.
This includes Media Matters for America led by the admitted hit-and-run,
drunk-driving serial liar. The group includes the unshaven, bathrobe-clad
unemployed who live in their mother's basement and are devout followers of
MoveOn.Org. It is also the bitter, aging spinster working at the New York Times,
the morbidly obese documentary film maker, and cable TV news' resident drama
queen who hosts MSNBC's Countdown. They are about to simultaneously suffer from
brain aneurisms. So without further delay, I'll say it.
Barack Obama despises America.
When people who voted for Obama in 2008 -- including registered Democrats --
start speaking in normal conversational voices at dinner parties, neighborhood
gatherings and PTA meetings that the over-inflated ego from Chicago has it "in
for America," then it's clear most reasonable people have reached the same
conclusion.
The central conviction of Obama's ideology is that America is guilty of
limitless moral failures and is the chief architect of the world's ills. Obama
has boundless enmity for America, its key institutions, and its longtime allies.
Consider these facts.
The 30-years of Obama's post-adolescent life are radical by any measure. First,
he grew up listening to the ramblings of committed Communist Frank Marshall
Davis. It had such a profound effect on him that he wrote fondly of Davis in his
first book. In fact, that book is replete with statement after statement about
how the U.S. is deeply flawed. Most Americans believe in American exceptionalism.
Not so with Obama.
Patriotic Americans would not have listened to the bigoted, anti-Semitic,
hate-America rants of a fringe religious leader for 20 seconds let alone for 20
years. Yet, Obama who admitted he attended services at Trinity United Church at
least twice a month for two decades called Jeremiah Wright his mentor and his
moral sounding board.
Nor would most Americans cultivate a close friendship with an admitted domestic
terrorist and his wife whose most notable life's accomplishments were to set off
bombs that killed and maimed innocent people.
Joining Al Sharpton and Jeremiah Wright in organizing attendance at Nation of
Islam leader Louis Farrakhan's 1995 march on Washington is beyond imaginable.
Especially after Farrakhan demonstrated public support for Colonel Muammar
Qaddafi during the Libyan Leader's most bellicose years against the U.S., which
included Libyan complicity in numerous terrorist attacks.
Obama's view of America in national security and foreign affairs is profoundly
disappointing to say the least.
Americans overwhelmingly view the men and women who saved Europe and the Far
East during World War II as comprising the Greatest Generation. By his comments
and actions, President Obama obviously thinks otherwise.
Obama did not honor American greatness on the 60th anniversary of the Berlin
Airlift while on his first European trip. Instead, he accused "America [of
having] shown arrogance and been dismissive, even derisive" toward its European
allies.
He also denigrated the accomplishments of the American G.I. during World War II
in the Pacific theater when he offered a thinly veiled apology for the U.S.
having dropped the A-bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Those acts brought the war
to a swift conclusion, perhaps saving hundreds of thousands of lives when it
appeared Japan was prepared to wage an island-by-island battle to the last man.
Obama ordered the release of the so-called CIA "torture memos," seriously
damaging delicate intelligence relations with allied nations and placing at
grave risk the safety of U.S. intelligence officers working overseas. The impact
of his action handcuffs the ability of U.S. intelligence officials to protect
the U.S. and American interests from acts of terrorism.
In a matter of weeks last spring, Obama gave deference to a variety of
belligerent leaders while stiff-arming longtime American allies. First, he
called for closer relations with Cuba while ignoring that nation's long list of
continuing human rights abuses. Then he warmly welcomed Venezuelan dictator Hugo
Chavez at an Organization of American States summit.
Next, he failed to respond and set the record straight after Nicaragua's
Communist leader Daniel Ortega listed alleged U.S. crimes and atrocities during
a nearly one-hour rant at the OAS meeting. It is unsettling that in his own
remarks Obama incorrectly claimed the OAS has 36 members rather than the actual
34. Ortega and the hemisphere's other Socialist leaders claim the OAS would
include 36 members if Cuba and an independent Puerto Rico were allowed to join.
Mere coincidence or Freudian slip?
Immediately following the OAS embarrassments, Obama ignored a request from
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to meet. Obama would repeat this snub
six months later before agreeing at the last moment to meet Netanyahu after the
Israeli leader was en route the U.S.
In his speech before the Muslim world, Obama made the patently absurd claim of
equivalency between the status of displaced Palestinians and the slaughter of
millions of Jews during the Holocaust. His claim that 7 million Muslims live in
the U.S. is a figure inflated by as much as 700%.
In an earlier speech, Obama claimed that the U.S. is not a Christian nation,
which is at odds with the fact that 79% of Americans self-identify as Christians
and the nation's founders were devout Christians.
In less than six months in office, Obama apologized for Guantanamo Bay; for
alleged mistakes committed by the CIA; for U.S. policy in the Americas; for
America's history of slavery; for "sacrificing [American] values;" for "hasty
decisions" in the war on terror; for "America's standing in the world;" for
American errors in foreign policy; and for U.S. relations with the Muslim world.
He pronounced Iran's pursuit of nuclear technology acceptable and he warned
Netanyahu against targeting Iran's nuclear facilities. Obama's approach to Iran
is eerily similar to that of Jimmy Carter, whose actions contributed to the fall
of that nation into the control of Islamic radicals.
This summer, the door to greater individual freedoms in Iran was firmly closed
shut when Obama announced the U.S would not meddle in Iran's election and he
offered no encouragement to democracy activists who protested the obviously
stolen elections. His silence was deafening when regime security agents savagely
attacked and killed countless Iranians who took to the streets.
In contrast to his deference to anti-American leaders such as Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, Hugo Chavez, and Daniel Ortega, Obama strong-armed Netanyahu on key
Israeli matters. In addition to snubbing the Israeli Prime Minister's requests
to meet, Obama demanded an end to Israeli settlements and insisted on the
creation of a two-state Palestine solution.
Obama abandoned NATO members Poland and the Czech Republic by canceling the
central Europe missile defense plan just as rogue nations North Korea and Iran
make advances in nuclear and ballistic missile production. The cancellation was
demanded by Moscow authorities who have adopted a more confrontational posture
toward the west.
Solidarity with freedom-loving East Germans has been a staple of the American
presidency for nearly 50 years. John Kennedy pronounced himself a Berliner.
Ronald Reagan demanded Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev "Tear down this wall!"
Yet, this bricks and mortar icon of first, Soviet totalitarianism, and then,
second, the end of Soviet domination did not make the cut as Obama chose not to
attend the 20th anniversary of the fall of the wall. In the summer of 2008,
Obama altogether skipped mentioning the role of the U.S. -- or even the West,
for that matter -- in bringing down the wall, instead crediting "a world that
stands as one."
Obama's disagreement with American values and institutions is evident in
domestic issues. He has stocked his administration with wild-eyed radicals who
believe foreign law trumps the U.S. Constitution (Harold Koh); include an avowed
Marxist and "truther" who believes George Bush was complicit in the 9/11 attack
and is also an ardent supporter of cop-killer Mumia Abu Jamal (Van Jones); and
include a devoted admirer of Mao Tse-tung who slaughtered as many as 75 million
people (Anita Dunn). (In contrast, George W. Bush's Attorney-General nominee
John Ashcroft was savaged by the news media for being an Evangelical Christian.)
Three weeks after America's first black president was sworn in, the nation's
first black Attorney-General who was hand-picked by Obama, called America "a
nation of cowards" for some perceived race relations shortfall. The understood
meaning of Eric Holder's comments is that white people are still racists.
However, the reality is the people most preoccupied with fomenting the racial
divide are those who populate the ranks of the Obama Administration.
Obama's Homeland Secretary designated military veterans as terrorists-in-waiting
to be equally as dangerous as other domestic terrorists including pro-lifers and
citizens opposed to the flood of illegal aliens.
One of Obama's very few suggestions to cut into his $1.4 trillion budget deficit
was to have servicemen and women pay for their own war injuries. He's all for
providing free health care to illegal aliens but believes wounded warriors
should foot their own hospital bills. In fact, the Defense Department is about
the only sector of government in which Obama has proposed slashing spending.
Hours after a belligerent "African-American Studies" Harvard professor engaged
in behavior unbefitting anyone let alone a professional man, Obama accused the
exceedingly tolerant Cambridge police officers as having "acted stupidly" and
then digressed into how people of color have been unfairly treated by white
America.
Bush was prolific in quietly and privately visiting the military wounded and
family of the fallen. In contrast, Obama attempted to make political capital of
his one visit to Dover Air Force Base. Obama's motives were so transparent that
families of 17 of the 18 fallen denied permission for Obama to engage in a
photo-op alongside the returning caskets.
In May, Obama immediately issued a statement that he was "shocked and outraged
by the murder" of a Kansas doctor specializing in partial-birth abortions. He
called it a "heinous act of violence." Attorney-General Holder mobilized U.S.
Marshals nationwide to provide protection to abortion clinics.
But Obama remained silent the very next day when two U.S. soldiers were gunned
down by a Muslim extremist outside a Little Rock recruiting station. After
repeated prodding for a presidential comment, the White House faxed an
after-hours statement to select media outlets two days later offering a tepid
remark that Obama was "saddened" without even mentioning the soldiers were
murdered.
Five months later, another Muslim fanatic gunned down nearly four dozen
Americans, killing 13, at the Ft. Hood army base. It was an act that demanded
the most serious demeanor of the military's Commander-in-Chief. Yet, Obama
referenced the massacre in the most insincere fashion just seconds after a
jocular shout-out to an audience member during a public speaking engagement. It
was the equivalent of attending a funeral in swimwear while en route to the
beach.
The odd inadvertent comment or occasional verbal faux pas can be explained away
as just that. However, Obama has a lifetime of comments and actions including 10
months as president that belie his real attitude toward the U.S. The difference
between Obama and his immediate predecessors such as Ronald Reagan, the George
Bushes and Bill Clinton who actually revere and honor the greatness of America
and its citizens and institutions cannot be overstated.
Mark Hyman is a commentator appearing nationally on the television stations
of Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc