Barack Hussein Obama, who has called Frank Davis a "mentor", has shocking ties to the communist party and way of thinking:
Accuracy in Media
Worldnet Daily
This is from 2006 when Obama was running for the Senate, even then people had questions about his leanings and beliefs
And this is from politicalaffairs.net, Marxist Thought Online...the article is called
"Rethinking the History and Future of the Communist Party"
When these sources are explored, I think scholars of the future will be struck by,
for example, the response in Honolulu when tens of thousands of workers went on
strike when labor and CP leaders were convicted of Smith Act violations in 1953
– a response totally unlike the response on the mainland. Of course 98% of these
workers were of Asian-Pacific ancestry, which suggests that scholars have also been
derelict in analyzing why these workers were less anti-communist than their Euro-American counterparts. In any case, deploring these convictions in Hawaii was an African-American poet and journalist by the name of Frank Marshall Davis, who was certainly in the orbit of the CP – if not a member – (Note: CP = communist party) and who was born in Kansas and spent a good deal of his adult life in Chicago, before decamping to Honolulu in 1948 at the suggestion of his good friend Paul Robeson. Eventually, he befriended another family – 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.
In his best selling memoir ‘Dreams of my Father’, the author speaks warmly of an
older black poet, he identifies simply as "Frank" as being a decisive
influence in helping him to find his present identity as an African-American, a
people who have been the least anticommunist and the most left-leaning of any constituency in this nation – though you would never know it from reading so-called left journals of opinion. 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.
PEOPLE! PAY ATTENTION!!!
DR