Slandering Obama with Out-of-Context Quotes

by Glenn Sacks on July 15, 2008

in Politics

Recently a few readers have sent me an e-mail that has been circulating around the internet for the past few months warning about Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama. The e-mail says:

Think you know who this man is? This possible President of the United States!! We CANNOT have someone with this type of mentality running our GREAT nation!! I don’t care whether you a Democrat or a Conservative. We CANNOT turn ourselves over to this type of character in a President. PLEASE help spread the word.

It then calls our attention to several quotations from Obama’s book Dreams from My Father. I happen to be reading that book right now — I’m not quite finished — and thought I would examine some of the quotes in light of what I’ve read. I’m sure there are many other people who have done this too, but below is my version.

Quote #1: “There was something about him that made me wary, a little too sure of himself, maybe. And white.”

This quote is taken out of context. Obama was referring to Marty, a community organizer in Chicago under whom Obama worked. They were working almost exclusively in black Chicago. Marty was white. Naturally, that meant he had to prove himself a little more than a black organizer.

I’ve done community organizing work vaguely similar to what Obama did, in the same types of black or Latino low income neighborhoods, and faced the same suspicions myself. There is nothing racist or “reverse racist” about what Obama is saying here — it would apply to any group.

Quote #2: “I ceased to advertise my mother’s race at the age of 12 or 13, when I began to suspect that by doing so I was ingratiating myself to whites.”

Quote #3: “I found a solace in nursing a pervasive sense of grievance and animosity against my mother’s race.”

Quote # 4: “It remained necessary to prove which side you were on, to show your loyalty to the black masses, to strike out and name names.”

Three more meaningless quotes. Much of the book deals with Obama’s struggle to find himself as a man, half black and half white, in a racially divided nation. According to his autobiography, he spent much of his teens and his 20s ruminating over this.

On one level, I can completely understand and sympathize. On another, it eventually became a little boring to read about, at times feeling like listening to a 16-year-old endlessly pondering the meaning of life.

Regardless, the quotes above reflect this struggle. If he considered himself white, or immersed himself in so-called white culture, he would be called a sellout or an Uncle Tom by blacks. Looking at the poverty that many blacks endured, he felt a desire and a responsibility to try to help them. To be “loyal” to them.

On the other hand, if he embraced black culture, he felt as if he would be disrespecting his white mother, and his two white grandparents who largely raised him. It’s a legitimate dilemma, and his discussion of it hardly merits these attempts to take quotes out of context and make them seem incendiary.

Quote #5: “I never emulate white men and brown men whose fates didn’t speak to my own. It was into my father’s image, the black man, son of Africa , that I’d packed all the attributes I sought in myself , the attributes of Martin and Malcolm, Du Bois and Mandela.”

It is particularly hard to understand why this quote is considered so terrible. Two of the four men he mentions — Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela — are indisputably heroes. Mandela, for example, spent 27 years in a South African prison as part of his struggle against that country’s racial apartheid.

The other two men mentioned here — Malcolm X and W. E. B. Du Bois — are also admirable. Du Bois helped found the NAACP and was a civil rights leader in an era when it was unpopular and dangerous to be one.

Malcolm X can be admired for several reasons. For one, he raised himself up from being a junkie and a criminal to being a justifiably respected leader of a political movement, as well as being a good family man. He became a leader of the Nation of Islam at a time when this was an understandable thing to do. He later broke with the Nation of Islam because of its hostility towards whites, declaring the enemy is not whites but instead “white racism.”

I would also add that I’ve taught in many black schools and pictures of these four men are often displayed. It is hardly unusual or sensational for a modern black man or woman to admire “the attributes of Martin and Malcolm, Du Bois and Mandela.”

On a larger level, I like Obama’s background. I like that his perspective is different from those of practically any other presidential candidate. I like the fact that he has spent so much of his efforts considering how to help poor people and black people. He seems more complex and less one-dimensional than most candidates and former presidents.

That being said, I can’t say I think he is qualified to become the next president of the United States. He often touts his background as a community organizer. However, having read his autobiographical description of his years as a community organizer, it’s real, real hard to see how this qualifies him to be president of the United States, and I don’t see a lot else he’s done which does.

Regardless, we should be judging him based on who he is, instead of misleading, out of context quotes.

Glenn Sacks, www.GlennSacks.com

[Note: If you or someone you love is faced with a divorce or needs help with child custody, child support, false accusations, Parental Alienation, or other family law or criminal law matters, ask Glenn for help by clicking here.]

{ 9 comments }

1 kenmccracken July 16, 2008 at 6:50 am

I agree with a lot of this.

The reasons to oppose Obama is not his background, but rather what is not in his background, namely, experience.

2 P Mike July 16, 2008 at 8:25 am

by the same token, if these quotes we translated (in context) to a "white" environment this man would be pilloried.   The fact that he is "a person of color" does not disqualify him from racism, which may be relavent to those who care. 

I haven’t seen the emails in question and I don’t know exactly what they say, but those who are concerned that he may not adequately represent them because he is racist have the right (maybe an obligation) to voice thier concerns just as if he were a white guy.  (I should probably note that I don’t have the same concern regarding color, and his recent statements regarding personal responsiblity could be very comforting if they were historical instead of campaign rhetoric, because they align with my views).

3 TexasAg03 July 16, 2008 at 11:38 am

The reasons to oppose Obama is not his background, but rather what is not in his background, namely, experience.

I agree completely.  I don’t care that he is half black/half white.  I wouldn’t care if he were white or black or Asian or any other race.  I just think he is unqualified and I think his views on many issues are just too liberal.

That’s why I don’t like him.

However, I have heard MANY people (not just whites) say they won’t vote for him because of his name.  They just don’t think someone named Barack Hussein Obama should be president.

4 jamson64 July 16, 2008 at 2:45 pm

Good post and comments. On target.

5 CosmicConservative July 17, 2008 at 12:56 am

I guess if you’re looking to excuse Obama’s quotes, you can find many, many ways to do it.

CosmicConservative’s last blog post..The Daily Toon

6 jrogge July 17, 2008 at 2:12 pm

I think it’s funny that I can go to snopes.com and in 5 seconds find an article that has been researched and properly referenced that debunks most of these e-mails youget with these quotes. there’s another one going around that says Obama is muslim and that he would side with the Muslims handing our country over to terrorists! Also, I have gotten e-mails on Bush or have found quite a few rumors debunked on snopes too. Not saying it’s definitive but apparently they do some of the research on this kind of crap and the site can be a good timesaver.

7 TexasAg03 July 17, 2008 at 3:57 pm

I think it’s funny that I can go to snopes.com and in 5 seconds find an article that has been researched and properly referenced that debunks most of these e-mails youget with these quotes.

What’s bad is that people continually forward bogus stories without taking the 5 seconds to check Snopes (or Hoaxbusters et. al.).  I always reply back to the sender with a link to Snopes (or wherever I found the information) when the email is bogus, no matter what the subject is.

8 Dave Price July 19, 2008 at 11:41 am

“There was something about him that made me wary, a little too sure of himself, maybe. And white.”

They were working almost exclusively in black Chicago. Marty was white. Naturally, that meant he had to prove himself a little more than a black organizer.

See, but that’s racist.  Reverse black and white in that statement and you would have something that would be a death knell for any white Presidential candidate.  "I was suspicious because he was black" would have the NAACP issuing condemnations and holding marches every single day.

9 Dean Esmay July 19, 2008 at 5:44 pm

Hate to say it, because I often agree with people who object to minorities claiming a constant victim status and/or shrieking "racist!" too fast, but, the truth of the matter is that in all-black communities it really is rare to see a white person there and it really does raise pretty much an immediate question in your mind. It’s not racist, it’s just out of the ordinary so is likely to make one suspicious.

Of course I’m also un-PC enough to say that if you’re in, say, a rural community without any hispanic people living within 100 miles, and one suddenly shows up out of the blue trying to organize people for some "pro-farmer" cause or whatever, I would expect them to look at him a little funny and wonder who the heck he was and why he thought he understood their community and its needs and desires. He’d just have a little something to prove is all. Same with the Obama example above.

When something or someone seems out of place, it is a normal human reaction to be a little curious and a little suspicious. If you ask me, anyway.

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