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Obama's broken promise of aid to father's village

Yet another story painting a not so bright picture about Obama's character, and that we will never hear about in mainstream media. This story comes from an UK publication. One wonders why we don't hear anything about Obama's relatives in Kenya. Well, here's the answer.

Barack Obama's broken promise to African village
David Cohen, Evening Standard, July 25, 2008

It is an extraordinary sight to walk into a basic two-room house under a mango tree in rural east Africa and discover what is essentially a shrine to Barack Obama.

The small brick house with no running water, a tin roof and roving chickens, goats and cows is owned by Sarah Obama, Barack's 86-year-old step-grandmother. Inside, the walls are decorated with a 2008 Obama election sticker, an old "Barack Obama for Senate" poster on which he has written "Mama Sarah Habai [how are you?]", a 2005 calendar that says "The Kenyan Wonder Boy in the US", and more than a dozen family photos.

But this bucolic scene in his father's village of Kogelo near the Equator in western Kenya conceals a troubling reality that, until now, has never been spoken about. Barack Obama, the Evening Standard can reveal, after we went to the village earlier this month, has failed to honour the pledges of assistance that he made to a school named in his honour when he visited here amid great fanfare two years ago.

At that historic homecoming in August 2006 Obama was greeted as a hero with thousands lining the dirt streets of Kogelo. He visited the Senator Obama Kogelo Secondary School built on land donated by his paternal grandfather. After addressing the pupils, a third of whom are orphans, and dancing with them as they sang songs in his honour, he was shown a school with four dilapidated classrooms that lacked even basic resources such as water, sanitation and electricity.

He told the assembled press, local politicians (who included current Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga), and students: "Hopefully I can provide some assistance in the future to this school and all that it can be." He then turned to the school's principal, Yuanita Obiero, and assured her and her teachers: "I know you are working very hard and struggling to bring up this school, but I have said I will assist the school and I will do so."

Obiero says that although Obama did not explicitly use the word "financial" to qualify the nature of the assistance he was offering, "there was no doubt among us [teachers] that is what he meant. We interpreted his words as meaning he would help fund the school, either personally or by raising sponsors or both, in order to give our school desperately-needed modern facilities and a facelift". She added that 10 of the school's 144 pupils are Obama's relatives. Obiero was not the only one to think that the US Senator from Illinois, who had recently acquired a $1.65 million house in Chicago, would cough up. Obama's own grandmother Sarah confidently told reporters before his visit: "When he comes down here, he will change the face of the school and, believe me, our poverty in Kogelo will be a thing of the past."

But the Evening Standard has heard that the promises he made to help the school as well as a local orphanage appear to have been empty.

Seven months ago I travelled to Iowa to cover the start of the US primaries and was impressed by Obama's charisma and integrity as he kicked off a thrilling battle with Hillary Clinton for the Democratic Presidential nomination. Now, with only John McCain standing in the way of him making history as America's first black President, and amid the fanfare over his current world tour, nowhere is this possibility more eagerly awaited than in Kogelo, the place where his father and grandfather are buried. Yet there is disappointment and hurt here, too. Granting us access to the school and its records, Principal Obiero, 48, tells us: "Senator Obama has not honoured the promises he gave me when we met in 2006 and in his earlier letter to the school. He has not given us even one shilling. But we still have hope."

The letter Obiero refers to - dated 22 June 2005, signed by Obama and addressed to her - was written after his election to the US Senate in 2004 and hangs, framed, on the wall of her spartan office alongside photographs of Obama's visit to their school. It says: "I am honoured that you have decided to rename the Kogelo School in my name.

The land that the school is built on was donated by my grandparents and I am proud to carry on the tradition of supporting the school."

Obiero and her board of governors followed up his letter offering " support" with a bald, formal request for funds in the form of a nine-page proposal, a copy of which has been provided to the Evening Standard, laying out their ambitions for the school. In it they ask for 8.2 million Kenyan shillings (approximately £65,000) to upgrade the school. The money would be used, they say, to bring water to the school by sinking a borehole and building a water tank, erect a perimeter fence, complete the science laboratory and add muchneeded new classrooms, additional latrines, and a school dining hall.

Obiero recalls: "When the US Ambassador William Bellamy came to visit the school for the official renaming ceremony in February 2006, we gave him two copies of the proposal, one for the Embassy and one to give to Senator Obama. But we have not heard anything from either of them since."

Recently, she adds, she gave another copy of the proposal to Obama's Kenyan half-sister, Auma Obama, who recently returned to Nairobi after living in England and working in children's services in Reading. Auma had been married to a British man but they are now divorced. "Auma also promised to pass it on to her brother," says Obiero.

When we ask an Obama spokesperson in Kenya, who is also a family member, why no support has been forthcoming, he says: "We have no comment, the family are not doing any interviews at this time."

However, the school's senior teacher Dalmas Raloo, 41, who is often used as a translator for Obama's grandmother who only speaks Luo, and is a friend of the family, says the family are mystified by what they are calling "Obama's lapse". "If you ask whether Obama's family think he should give something to the village and to the school, the answer is 'yes, definitely'. But they feel it should come from him spontaneously. They don't want to ask him for it."

During Obama's visit to the school, he opened their half-finished science laboratory (built with £4,900 raised by the community) and wrote in the visitor's book: "Congratulations on the new laboratory!" Today, the lab has been mothballed because they ran out of funds to equip it and because, critically, there is no running water. "We must pay the man with the donkey to fetch us water from the river four kilometres away," says Obiero. The situation in the school mirrors that of Kogelo village where the people live without water, electricity or access to proper healthcare and on average incomes of less than $1 a day. Yet they remain diehard fans of the man who has put their rural community on the map and have even renamed the beer, called Senator, in his honour: locals now order "an Obama".

Obama's "lapse" is all the more difficult to understand given that he wrote in his 1995 autobiography, Dreams from My Father, that Kogelo occupies a special place in his heart as being where he reconciled the diverse parts of himself - American and African, white mother and black father. Obama wrote how he fell to his knees, sobbing, between the graves of his father and grandfather at the family compound.

"When my tears were finally spent," he wrote, "I felt a calmness wash over me. I felt the circle finally close. I realised that who I was, what I cared about, was no longer just a matter of intellect or obligation, no longer a construct of words. I saw that my life in America - the black life, the white life, the sense of abandonment I'd felt as a boy, the frustration and hope I'd witnessed in Chicago - all of it was connected with this small plot of earth an ocean away."

Obama had visited Kogelo for the first time in the 1980s after attending Columbia University and then again in 1991 to research his memoirs after graduating from Harvard Law School. He would later become a civil rights lawyer and community organiser before going into politics and serving in the Illinois Senate in 1997 and then the US Senate in 2004.

On those two voyages of personal discovery to Kogelo, he learned that his grandfather, Hussein Onyango Obama, who lived to 105 according to his gravestone (1870-1975), had been a respected elder and witchdoctor. But it was the road travelled by his estranged father, Barack Hussein Obama, that inspired and intrigued him. His father had transcended his roots as a goat herder to get a PhD at Harvard and work for the Kenyan government before falling from grace and dying in a car accident in 1982 at just 46.

Barack's father, an economist, had split up with his white mother, Ann Dunham, from Kansas, when Barack was two. Apart from a month-long visit from his father when he was 10 years old, Obama would know him only through letters. As an adult he learned there was a darker side to his father, reflecting in his book that he had apparently also been "a bitter drunk", "an abusive husband", and "a defeated, lonely bureaucrat". But during this process of soul-searching he came to know and adore the elderly woman who had raised his father, his step-grandmother Sarah Obama.

We had been told that Sarah's house, which is adjacent to the school, was patrolled by two armed security guards - who pays their wages is not clear - but when we visited the home, Sarah was away in Nairobi and we were shown in by one of Obama's young cousins.

The house is basic with a concrete floor, an outside kitchen, latrines and no running water. The only sign of modernity is the recently installed solar power unit that provides electricity for lights and a television set. Chairs are neatly laid out around the sides of the living room, each with an embroidered cover and as you enter, there is a photograph of a young Barack Obama bent over under the weight of a sack of maize.

THE graves of Obama's father and grandfather are in the yard, and Obama's cousins and uncles, including Said Obama, 41, his father's younger brother, also live on the compound in smaller one-room houses. Behind the house there is a thriving maize plantation and a clump of banana trees in addition to the giant mango trees that dominate the property. Villagers say that despite her age, Sarah Obama still comes to market where she sells her homegrown fruit and vegetables.

The market is where we head next to speak to villagers about their hopes for an Obama victory in November and what it might do for their village. Mary Manasse, 40, who runs the Mama Siste Mini Shop selling staples such as bread and cow's milk (packaged in old Coke bottles) says she has a photograph of Obama shaking hands with her on his 2006 visit.

"Back then I was looking after 40 orphans at the orphan centre," she recalls. "We faced a desperate shortage of money and Obama told us that he especially liked special, dedicated projects like ours and wanted to help. We thought he would give funds to help our project but we got nothing. A few months later we were forced to shut down the orphan centre because of lack of funds. Just a million Kenyan shillings [£6,000] would have kept us going another year. I feel disappointed that he did not come through."

A few stalls away mango-seller Gladys Anyango, 60, does an impromptu Obama impression to the amusement of her fellow peddlers. She places her hands on her hips, gazes into the middle distance and, mimicking his deep voice, says: "How are you, people of Kogelo?" Her friends collapse with laughter. She also takes off Obama's wife, Michelle, who had accompanied him on his visit along with his two daughters, Malia and Sasha.

"Oh, but there will be a big party here when Obama wins," she adds. "We still have hope that he will bring electricity and build schools so the children have a good education. Maybe when he's President of America, he'll remember his roots and look after his community in Kenya."

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23520981-details/Barack+Obama%27s+broken+promise+to+African+village/article.do

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What can McCain do to defeat the Obama PR machine??

I just don't get why the McCain campaign isn't exploiting this Texas sized hole in the reasoning of Obama's self proclaimed "right judgment" regarding troop withdrawal in Iraq. The Obama campaign and his surrogates are touting over and over again how Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki and the Iraqi government want a timetable for American troop withdrawal, and how Maliki agrees with Obama's timetable. Hence, according to Obama's campaign, he has been right all along and "now" is the time to pull our troops out.
 
I am a fair guy, and I will say that if the Maliki-lead government of Iraq wants us to leave, we should leave. But does anyone in his or her right mind believe that Maliki would be saying this except for the fact that he believes that Iraq is stable enough for Iraqi troops to completely take over the security of Iraq? And what has brought about stability in Iraq? Some liberal extremists and Obama himself continue to deny that the surge was the key factor that lead to stability in Iraq. Fine, let them dispute the success of the surge. However, reasonable minds cannot dispute that had we followed Obama's Iraq policy of immediate withdrawal of American troops last year, the stability in Iraq today would not exist! Maliki certainly would not be talking in July 2008 about American troop withdrawal. So why is Obama being allowed to revel on having the "right judgment" to say that American troops can be withdrawn from Iraq in 16 months? The McCain campaign and his surrogates need to be out there pointing out the idiocy of Obama's patting himself on the back for having the "right judgment" about troop withdrawal timeline.
 
The McCain campaign also needs to be doing a whole lot better exposing what Obama said in 2004 about being against troop withdraw and "artificial" deadline:
 
 
The McCain campaign did put a great montage together regarding all the contradictions made by Obama regarding Iraq (which does include parts of Obama's 2004 interview noted above), but the message is just not getting out to the people:
 
 
So if you were John McCain, what would you do to help Americans see past the Obama PR machine?
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Obama: I am not a flip-flop. I am just inartful!

Anyone notice how Obama and the Democrats like to use the word "inartful?" It's like Roger Clemens using the word "misremembered." Whenever Obama flip flops on an issue, neither he nor the Democrats can bring themselves to admit that there has been a change in position. Never mind that a good leader needs to be flexible and ready to change his or her position, IF there are circumstances that call for a such a change in position. Only problem for Obama is that political expedience, his inexperience and ineptitude do not fall in the category of "circumstances that call for such a change in position." Consequently, Obama and his surrogates have to hold the party line that there has been no change in position. Maybe they were "inartful." But heavens knows that "my policy hasn't changed, and it's been very consistent"!!
 
I suppose Obama was only being inartful when he said that he would use public funds for campaign if his Republican counterpart did the same. Then he inartfully said that he never agreed to it. He was merely "considering" it.
 
Remember the ban on gun issue? When completing a questionnaire, someone in the Obama campaign answered that Obama believes that the D.C. ban on guns is a good law. Obama himself said last year that he supported the D.C. gun ban. After Obama initially refused to comment about his thoughts of how the U.S. Supreme Court should decide on the lawsuit against the D.C. gun ban, Obama finally said that he believes that the 2nd Amendment gives individuals the right to bear arms. When asked about prior representations that he and his campaign made that Obama supported the D.C. gun ban, Obama's referred to the earlier statements as "inartful." Obama's campaign then said that a "clerk" made a mistake when answering the questionnaire.
 
When Katie Couric interviewed Obama and asked him about his comment about keeping Jerusalem undivided, and then backtracking on that statement after getting flak, Obama's response was: "We just had phrased it poorly in the speech ... But my policy hasn't changed, and it's been very consistent." Way to be "inartful" again Mr. Obama.
 
I suppose Obama was also being "inartful" when he told Couric that the conditions on the ground in Iraq had improved significantly, that U.S. troops have helped reduce violence in Iraq, while still refusing to support the surge or even directly acknowledge that the surge in troops brought about the current level of security in Iraq.

Couric:
But talking microcosmically, did the surge, the addition of 30,000 additional troops ... help the situation in Iraq?

Obama: Katie, as ... you've asked me three different times, and I have said repeatedly that there is no doubt that our troops helped to reduce violence. There's no doubt.

Couric: But yet you're saying ... given what you know now, you still wouldn't support it ... so I'm just trying to understand this.

Obama: Because ... it's pretty straightforward. By us putting $10 billion to $12 billion a month, $200 billion, that's money that could have gone into Afghanistan. Those additional troops could have gone into Afghanistan. That money also could have been used to shore up a declining economic situation in the United States. That money could have been applied to having a serious energy security plan so that we were reducing our demand on oil, which is helping to fund the insurgents in many countries. So those are all factors that would be taken into consideration in my decision-- to deal with a specific tactic or strategy inside of Iraq.

Couric: And I really don't mean to belabor this, Senator, because I'm really, I'm trying ... to figure out your position. Do you think the level of security in Iraq would exist today without the surge?

Obama: Katie, I have no idea what would have happened had we applied my approach, which was to put more pressure on the Iraqis to arrive at a political reconciliation. So this is all hypotheticals ....

Senator Obama, let me answer your question as to "what would have happened" had your approach to Iraq been applied 18 months ago. Iraq would have been in total chaos, because American troops would not be there to reduce the violence by fighting the terrorists and insurgents. You wouldn't have had the photo op with smiling American soldiers. You wouldn't be touting how Maliqui "supports" your 18 months troop withdrawal deadline. Bottom line is that we would have lost the war in Iraq!! But of course, in the grand scheme of things, Obama and the Democrats want us to lose the war in Iraq. Because losing the war in Iraq is the best and only way Obama and the Democracts can articulate why they should be in the White House. Perhaps if Obama and the Democracts could just stop being so inartful ...
 
Last but not least, and totally unrelated to flip flopping, Obama said that Wesley Clark was being "inartful" when Clark dismissed John McCain's experience in Vietnam as being anything but relevant for someone running to be the commander-in-chief.
 
PS: I do give credit to Couric for actually asking tough questions during the interview, and not let her left bias get in the way of journalism for most of this interview. Let's see if she and CBS can keep it up.
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Obama's energy plan: wind and solar powered cars

We all know how expensive gasoline is nowadays. There are several theories out there addressing what is causing the high gasoline prices, and different people have different theories. Meanwhile, Obama and McCain are sparring over who has a better energy plan. Obama's plan is no additional domestic drilling and invest all our resources on alternative energy sources. McCain's energy plan is to drill more domestically and also promote alternative energy sources. McCain used to oppose offshore drilling, but changed his position in light of the current perceived energy crisis. So liberals have accused him of flip flopping. Unlike Obama though, McCain's shift in position came from the realization that there is a different set of circumstances facing the American people nowadays. Energy plans that were sensible when gasoline was $2.00 per gallon may not exactly be sensible when the national average gas price exceeds $4.00 per gallon. Moreover, technological advances in offshore production methods have improved dramatically in the last ten years to the point that ecological concerns are negligible if not outright non-existant. Unlike Obama's flip-flop, McCain's change in position in offshore drilling was NOT a change in McCain's core value and belief system such as Obama's change about whether or not the 2nd Amendment provides individuals the right to bear arms. Or Obama's change about the public finance of election campaigns. But I digress, so going back to the energy issue, Obama's plan totally ignores the fact that 99.999% of Americans own gasoline powered vehicles. Are Americans supposed to ride bikes to work everyday? Walk? Will wind and/or solar energy power our cars?? Assuming (and that's a big assmption) that alternative energy cars totally independent of fossil fuels (unlike current hybrids in the market) are widely available within the next 3-5 years, the Obama Plan's sole focus on promoting alternative energy sources while totally ignoring fossil fuel production will force 99.999% of Americans to spend $30,000 or more on new electric or hydrogen powered cars. Most Americans don't have the money to be buying new cars, but Obama is totally ignorant of that fact. So Obama wants Americans to either buy new cars (assuming they are available) or pay $8, $9 or $10 per gallon for gasoline. Given Obama's rock star status, he might be one of the 500 celebrities that have access to purchase one of the 500 Honda hydrogen powered vehicles available in the U.S. And he can probably afford to pay $8 per gallon for gasoline too. Unfortunately, most Americans can't afford to pay $8 per gallon. And most Americans can't afford and don't even have the option to get a hydrogen powered car.

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