Why Did Obama Call His Grandfather a “House Nigger”?

In “Dreams From My Father”, Obama wrote this passage about his grandfather:

What Granny had told us scrambled that image completely, causing ugly words to flash across my mind. Uncle Tom. Collaborator. House nigger.”

The reason for the ugly condemnation gives us important insight into our President’s psyche and supports the theme of Dinesh D’Souza”s political documentary, “2016: Obama’s America”. D’Souza believes that the key to understanding Obama is to understand his deep-rooted anti-colonialism. The angry “house nigger” slur comes from that place in Obama. His grandfather had committed the heresy of admiring parts of Western culture. Dinesh explains,

From Obama’s point of view, Onyango’s unforgivable heresy was not merely his admiration of the British, but how this man contemplated the differences between Western and African ways.

When Onyango returned home to his village after his confinement, he began to ponder the question of how the British, from their tiny island, were able to conquer so much of the globe. Here I must quote Sarah Obama on her husband: “He respected the white man for his power, for his machines and weapons and the way he organized his life. He would say that the white man was always improving himself, whereas the African was suspicious of anything new.”

Read the enlightening article here.

This story reminds me of two other stories from Obama’s life. First, when Obama discussed his first job, he characterized himself as being ashamed to be working in a capitalist enterprise. He said he was “working behind enemy lines”. He wondered if he was a “sellout”. He soon left the business world for good and became a community agitator in Chicago….. where he did things like organize anti-capitalist demonstrations against banks, essentially forcing them to give home loans to people who could not pay back the loans. In this way, he helped create the economic mess he “inherited”.

Second, when young Barry Soetero lived in Indonesia, his stepfather took a good paying job with an American oil company. This angered Barry’s mother who did not want her husband working for a capitalist enterprise that was ‘exploiting’ Indonesia (by offering high paying jobs and improving the Indonesian standard of living???). Barry’s real father had similar anti-capitalist views. The acorn did not fall far from the tree. The fact is that the entire forest Barry grew up in had anti-capitalist views.

The Real Unemployment Story

One of the great unanswered mis-representations of the election season is the unemployment picture given by the media.  I would be willing to bet that most of the nation actually believes that the unemployment figure is hovering around 8%.  The real number is closer to 11% (and 19% if you add “under-employment” — part-time jobs that are placeholders for real work).  Lets all recall what Obama said about what would happen if he couldn’t turn those numbers around:

Lets hold him to it.   For more details on the dismal job numbers, take a look at the following news article in the Wall Street Journal:

Mortimer Zuckerman: Those Jobless Numbers Are Even Worse Than They Look

“Recovery”, by the numbers…

Reality tends to be theme here at realitybatslast.com, so we put a lot of importance on showing it by the numbers whenever possible.  It is especially important to study the numbers when our fearless leaders at the DNC this week decide to make honesty and truth themes of their convention. Probably the core “truth” bantered continually by their speakers is the idea that we are much better off than we were when Obama took office.  For most Americans, this statement rings about as true as the pitch of a Chinatown street vendor trying to sell a ”genuine” Louis Vuitton bag for $20…

The writers at www.investors.com felt the same way and were kind enough to provide their readers with some of the facts:

Better Off? Let’s Count the Ways We’re Not – Investor’s Business Daily