Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Barack Obama—The Radical Mansourian Candidate

Barack Obama—The Radical Mansourian Candidate

Posted 09/24/2012 06:59 PM ET

The Obama Record

The Obama Record: A 1979 column confirms our 2008 editorial positing that the 44th president might owe his meteoric rise to an education funded by Israeli-hating adviser to a Saudi billionaire.

On Sept. 9, 2008, we published an editorial as part of our attempt to properly vet the then junior senator from Illinois, Barack Obama, whose past was somewhat foggy. We pointed out the connection between one Dr. Khalid Abdullah Tariq al-Mansour, born Donald Warden, an Israeli-hating Islamist supporter and top adviser to radical Saudi Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal, and a college student .

That college student, a young Obama, found al-Mansour's favor and would one day be president as Israel was abandoned by America and the Middle East burst into flames amid a sea of presidential apologies, including one for our freedom of speech.

In a televised interview in 2008 on New York's all news cable channel, NY1, 88-year-old Percy Sutton, a former borough president of Manhattan and a credible mayoral candidate in 1977, made some interesting revelations about his links to the young Obama.

Sutton told NY1 reporter Dominic Carter on the show "Inside City Hall": "I was introduced to (Obama) by a friend who was raising money for him." He asked Sutton to write a letter in support of Obama's application to Harvard Law School.

"The friend's name is Dr. Khalid al-Mansour, from Texas," Sutton said. "He is the principal adviser to one of the world's richest men. He told me about Obama."

Sutton recalled that al-Mansour said that "there is a young man that has applied to Harvard. I know that you have a few friends up there because you used to go up there to speak. Would you please write a letter in support of him?" Sutton did.

According to Newsmax columnist Kenneth Timmerman, "At the time, Percy Sutton, a former lawyer for Malcolm X and a former business partner of al-Mansour, says he (al-Mansour) was raising money for Obama's graduate school education, al-Mansour was representing top members of the Saudi Royal family seeking to do business and exert influence in the United States."

These revelations by Timmerman were dismissed as the ramblings of an old man with fading faculties and memories. Now more dots have been unearthed and connected by blogger Frank Miele at Daily InterLake.com. He cites a November 1979 column by TV commentator and respected Chicago Tribune columnist Vernon Jarrett with the title "Will Arabs Back Ties To Blacks With Cash?"

If that name sounds familiar, the late Vernon Jarrett was the father-in-law of one Valerie Jarrett, who would go on to become what Miele calls "the consigliere of the Obama White House." Mr. Jarrett was a colleague and one of the best friends of Frank Marshall Davis, the former Chicago journalist and lifelong communist who moved to Hawaii in the late 1940s and years later befriended Stanley and Madelyn Dunham and their daughter Stanley Ann, mother of Barack Obama.

Davis is known to have taken an active role in the rearing of young Obama from the age of 10 until he turned 18 and left Hawaii for his first year at Occidental College in Los Angeles in 1979. That was the same year al-Mansour was seeking Arab financial support for students such as Obama.

Vernon Jarrett's column details how al-Mansour told him about a proposal he made to OPEC Secretary-General Rene Ortiz regarding a program to spend "$20 million per year for 10 years to aid 10,000 minority students each year, including blacks, Arabs, Hispanics, Asians and native Americans."

These minority students would then migrate through the political system promoting Palestinian and radical Islamist causes. Al-Mansour told Jarrett that the program had been endorsed by Ortiz and other OPEC administrators.

So here we have al-Mansour's interest in creating a fund to give "financial help to disadvantaged students," a man with connections to the Saudi royal family, particularly Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, later asking a prominent New York politician to intercede on college student Obama's behalf.

There is scant mention of the OPEC fund after Jarrett's column and no official evidence that any such funds helped Obama get through college.

But Jarrett's column confirms that the likes of Khalid al-Mansour and Davis provided the young Obama with a support network and an ideological impetus that explains a great deal in the current context.

Al-Mansour once told an audience in South Africa that "the Palestinians are treated like savages." Our soon-to-be-second-worst ex-president, Jimmy Carter, as well as the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, in whose pews Obama sat for two decades, might agree with him. Al-Mansour has also accused Israeli Jews of "stealing the land the same way the Christians stole the land from the Indians in America."

When he was known as Donald Warden, according to the Social Activism Project at the University of California at Berkeley, al-Mansour was the mentor of Black Panther Party founder Huey Newton and his associate, Bobby Seale. What did this radical extremist see in young Obama that he would seek to sponsor and finance his education?

We now have a president who bows to Saudi princes and snubs the prime minister of Israel, our only true ally in the Middle East, while apologizing through his own words in Cairo or through our Egyptian embassy to those who want to kill us because we represent freedom of speech and religion and true representative government.

Domestically he preaches "shared sacrifice" and redistribution of wealth while making war on capitalist institutions and risk-taking entrepreneurs who built this shining city on a hill. The grown-up Obama has learned his lessons well, preaching from each according to their means and to each according their needs.

The past is prologue, they say, and it certainly is in the case of Obama.

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