Obama’s Communist Mentor

Obama’s Communist Mentor

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    Apr 16, 2008#1

    Obama’s Communist Mentor

    AIM Column  |  By Cliff Kincaid  |  February 18, 2008


    Is “coalition politics” at work in Obama’s rise to power?



    Photo by Joe Crimmings*

    In his biography of Barack Obama, David Mendell writes about Obama's life as a
    "secret smoker" and how he "went to great lengths to conceal the habit." But
    what about Obama's secret political life? It turns out that Obama's childhood
    mentor, Frank Marshall Davis, was a communist.
    In
    his books, Obama admits attending "socialist conferences" and coming into
    contact with Marxist literature. But he ridicules the charge of being a
    "hard-core academic Marxist," which was made by his colorful and outspoken 2004
    U.S. Senate opponent, Republican Alan Keyes.

    However,
    through Frank Marshall Davis, Obama had an admitted relationship with someone
    who was publicly identified as a member of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA). The
    record shows that Obama was in Hawaii from 1971-1979, where,
    at some point in time, he developed a close relationship, almost like a son,
    with Davis, listening to his "poetry" and getting
    advice on his career path. But Obama, in his book, Dreams From My Father, refers to him repeatedly as just "Frank."

    The
    reason is apparent: Davis was a known communist
    who belonged to a party subservient to the Soviet Union. In fact, the 1951
    report of the Commission on Subversive Activities to the Legislature of the Territory of Hawaii identified him as a
    CPUSA member. What's more, anti-communist congressional committees, including
    the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), accused Davis of involvement in
    several communist-front organizations.  

    Trevor
    Loudon,
    a New Zealand-based libertarian activist, researcher and blogger, noted
    evidence that "Frank" was Frank Marshall Davis in a posting in March of 2007.

    Obama's
    communist connection adds to mounting public concern about a candidate who has
    come out of virtually nowhere, with a brief U.S. Senate legislative record, to
    become the Democratic Party frontrunner for the U.S. presidency. In the
    latest Real Clear Politics poll average, Obama beats Republican
    John McCain by almost four percentage points.

    AIM recently disclosed that Obama has
    well-documented socialist connections, which help explain why he sponsored a "Global Poverty Act" designed to send
    hundreds of billions of dollars of U.S. foreign aid to the rest of the world,
    in order to meet U.N. demands. The bill has passed the House and a Senate
    committee, and awaits full Senate action.

    But
    the Communist Party connection through Davis is even more ominous.
    Decades ago, the CPUSA had tens of thousands of members, some of them covert
    agents who had penetrated the U.S. Government. It received secret subsidies
    from the old Soviet
    Union.

    You
    won't find any of this discussed in the David Mendell book, Obama: From Promise to Power. It is
    typical of the superficial biographies of Obama now on the market. Secret
    smoking seems to be Obama's most controversial activity. At best, Mendell and
    the liberal media describe Obama as "left-leaning."

    But
    you will find it briefly discussed, sort of, in Obama's own book, Dreams From My Father. He writes about
    "a poet named Frank," who visited them in Hawaii, read poetry, and was
    full of "hard-earned knowledge" and advice. Who was Frank? Obama only says that
    he had "some modest notoriety once," was "a contemporary of Richard Wright and
    Langston Hughes during his years in Chicago..." but was now "pushing
    eighty." He writes about "Frank and his old Black Power dashiki self" giving
    him advice before he left for Occidental College in 1979 at the age of
    18. 

    This
    "Frank" is none other than Frank Marshall Davis, the black communist writer now
    considered by some to be in the same category of prominence as Maya Angelou and
    Alice Walker. In the summer/fall 2003 issue of African American
    Review, James A. Miller of George Washington University reviews a book by John
    Edgar Tidwell, a professor at the University of Kansas,
    about Davis's career, and notes, "In Davis's case, his political
    commitments led him to join the American Communist Party during the middle of
    World War II-even though he never publicly admitted his Party membership."
    Tidwell is an expert on the life and writings of Davis.

    Is
    it possible that Obama did not know who Davis was when he wrote his
    book, Dreams From My Father, first
    published in 1995? That's not plausible since Obama refers
    to him as a contemporary of Richard
    Wright and Langston Hughes and says he saw a book of his black poetry.

    The
    communists knew who "Frank" was, and they know who Obama is. In fact, one
    academic who travels in communist circles understands the significance of the
    Davis-Obama relationship. 

    Professor
    Gerald Horne, a contributing editor of the Communist Party journal Political Affairs, talked about it
    during a speech last March at the
    reception of the Communist Party USA archives at the Tamiment Library at New York University. The remarks
    are posted online under the headline, "Rethinking the History and Future of the Communist Party."

    Horne,
    a history professor at the University of Houston, noted that Davis, who
    moved to Honolulu from Kansas in 1948 "at
    the suggestion of his good friend Paul Robeson," came into contact with Barack
    Obama and his family and became the young man's mentor, influencing Obama's
    sense of identity and career moves. Robeson, of course, was the well-known
    black actor and singer who served as a member of the CPUSA and apologist for the old Soviet Union. Davis had known Robeson from
    his time in Chicago.

    As Horne describes it, Davis
    "befriended" a "Euro-American family" that had "migrated to Honolulu from Kansas and a young
    woman from this family eventually had a child with a young student from Kenya
    East Africa who goes by the name of Barack Obama, who retracing the steps of Davis eventually
    decamped to Chicago."

    It was in Chicago that Obama became a "community organizer" and
    came into contact with more far-left political forces, including the Democratic
    Socialists of America, which maintains close ties to European socialist groups
    and parties through the Socialist International (SI), and two former members of
    the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), William
    Ayers and Carl Davidson.

    The SDS laid siege
    to college campuses across America in the
    1960s, mostly in order to protest the Vietnam War, and spawned the terrorist
    Weather Underground organization. Ayers was a member of the terrorist group and
    turned himself in to authorities in 1981. He is now a college professor and
    served with Obama on the board of the Woods Fund of Chicago. Davidson is now a
    figure in the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism, an offshoot of the old
    Moscow-controlled CPUSA, and helped organize the 2002 rally where Obama came
    out against the Iraq War.

    Both
    communism and socialism trace their roots to Karl Marx, co-author of the
    Communist Manifesto, who endorsed the first meeting of the Socialist
    International, then called the "First International." According to Pierre
    Mauroy, president of the SI from 1992-1996, "It was he [Marx] who formally
    launched it, gave the inaugural address and devised its structure..."

    Apparently unaware that Davis had been
    publicly named as a CPUSA member, Horne said only that Davis "was
    certainly in the orbit of the CP [Communist Party]-if not a member..."

    In addition to Tidwell's book, Black
    Moods: Collected Poems of Frank Marshall Davis, confirming Davis's Communist Party membership,
    another book, The New Red
    Negro: The Literary Left and African American Poetry, 1930-1946,
    names Davis
    as one of several black poets who continued to publish in CPUSA-supported publications
    after the 1939 Hitler-Stalin non-aggression pact. The author, James Edward Smethurst, associate
    professor of Afro-American studies at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst,
    says that Davis, however, would later claim that he was "deeply troubled" by
    the pact.

    While blacks such as Richard Wright left the CPUSA, it is not
    clear if or when Davis ever left
    the party.

    However, Obama writes in Dreams
    From My Father
    that he saw "Frank" only a few days before he left Hawaii for
    college, and that Davis seemed just
    as radical as ever. Davis called
    college "An advanced degree in compromise" and warned Obama not to forget his
    "people" and not to "start believing what they tell you about equal opportunity
    and the American way and all that ####." Davis also
    complained about foot problems, the result of "trying to force African feet
    into European shoes," Obama wrote.

    For his part, Horne says that Obama's giving of credit to Davis will be
    important in history. "At some point in the future, a teacher will add to her
    syllabus Barack's memoir and instruct her students to read it alongside Frank
    Marshall Davis' equally affecting memoir, Living
    the Blues
    and when that day comes, I'm sure a future student will not only
    examine critically the Frankenstein monsters that US imperialism created in
    order to subdue Communist parties but will also be moved to come to this
    historic and wonderful archive in order to gain insight on what has befallen
    this complex and intriguing planet on which we reside," he said.

    Dr. Kathryn Takara, a
    professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at the University of Hawaii at Manoa who also
    confirms that Davis is the "Frank" in
    Obama's book, did her dissertation on Davis and spent much time
    with him between 1972 until he passed away in 1987.

    In an analysis posted online, she
    notes that Davis, who was a columnist for the Honolulu Record, brought "an
    acute sense of race relations and class struggle throughout America and the world"
    and that he openly discussed subjects such as American imperialism,  colonialism and exploitation. She described
    him as a "socialist realist" who attacked the work of the House Un-American
    Activities Committee. 

    Davis, in his own writings,
    had said that Robeson and Harry Bridges, the head of the International Longshore and
    Warehouse Union (ILWU) and a secret member of the CPUSA, had suggested
    that he take a job as a columnist with the Honolulu Record "and see if I could
    do something for them." The ILWU was organizing workers there and Robeson's
    contacts were "passed on" to Davis, Takara writes.

    Takara says that Davis "espoused freedom,
    radicalism, solidarity, labor unions, due process, peace, affirmative action,
    civil rights, Negro History week, and true Democracy to fight imperialism,
    colonialism, and white supremacy. He urged coalition politics."

    Is
    "coalition politics" at work in Obama's rise to power?

    Trevor
    Loudon, the New Zealand-based blogger who has been analyzing the political
    forces behind Obama and specializes in studying the impact of Marxist and
    leftist political organizations, notes that Frank Chapman, a CPUSA supporter,
    has written a letter to the party newspaper hailing the Illinois senator's
    victory in the Iowa caucuses.

    "Obama's
    victory was more than a progressive move; it was a dialectical leap ushering in
    a qualitatively new era of struggle," Chapman wrote. "Marx once compared
    revolutionary struggle with the work of the mole, who sometimes burrows so far
    beneath the ground that he leaves no trace of his movement on the surface. This
    is the old revolutionary ‘mole,' not only showing his traces on the surface but
    also breaking through."

    Let's challenge the liberal media to report on this.
    Will they have the honesty and integrity to do so?

    [img]file:///C:/DOCUME%7E1/STEPHA%7E1/LOCALS%7E1/Temp/moz-screenshot-8.jpg[/img]
    "...government programs that will invade every area of freedom as we have known it in this country until one day...we will
    wake to find that we have socialism, and...one of these days we are going to spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children, what
    it once was like in America when men were free.


    -Ronald Reagan/Norman Thomas




    "In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem."


    - President Ronald Reagan (January 20, 1981)




    "We are a nation that has a government--not the other way around."


    - President Ronald Reagan (January 20, 1981)




    "From time to time we've been tempted to believe that society has become too complex to be managed by self-rule, that government by an elite group is
    superior to government for, by, and of the people. Well, if no one among us is capable of governing himself, then who among us has the capacity to govern
    someone else?"


    - President Ronald Reagan (January 20, 1981)

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