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Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

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  • Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

    Especially in politics it is of the utmost importance to try to look behind the facade: who makes up the team of the presidential candidate? The future presi...

    Especially in politics it is of the utmost importance to try to look behind the facade: who makes up the team of the presidential candidate? The future presi...


    I don't know exactly what to think of this historian/political analyst's speculations, but I have noted that Zbigniew Brzezinski has been fervently anti-Russian and it is true that they are behind Obama's administration.

    Basically, the shift in foreign American foreign policy under Obama would be to forget about attacking Iran, but instead to isolate China from Sudan and Pakistan, turn these nations against China, and instead of isolating Iran and Syria they want to turn them against Russia by any means possible.

    Barrack is just an instrumental puppet to return esteemed public opinion towards American government from Americans, Europeans, and the populations of all of Brzezinski's targets with a face of "hope, change, and (especially) peace".

    I don't know what you guys think of it but I say the video rings true.

  • #2
    Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

    This guy is spot on. He's absolutely right in all of his analysis. I actually was reading reviews of his book on Amazon the other day. I wasn't aware there was this youtube clip. But of course, Obama's supporters have their heads so far up their asses they cannot see the forest from the trees, and are still in trance.

    First, may I suggest you view this also just to see the sheer level of mindlessness and fervor over the masses?

    Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


    Also to note: Obama chose his Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel. This guy is an avid pro-Israeli whose father was a member of the Irgun, the terrorist group that that bombed Palestinians. "We are all one", "we must unite for peace", are these empty phrases in the Obama cliche portfolio? Time will tell, and the clock is already ticking loudly. Emanuel is a super-Hawk who thinks dualistically in Neocon comic book terms of good guys, bad guys, which means his Manichean philosophy negates Obama's peace and unity rhetoric right off the bat if he has any influence on the White House's foreign policy, or even domestic policy
    Achkerov kute.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

      Obama has no say; as long as Brzezinski is in the picture, it's all in his hands. Regardless of the sitting president, this is going to happen.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

        I think the sheeple better wake up and realize that there are no substantive difference between Republican and Democrat. Similarly, there are no real elections in the US. As much as I hate Bush and company (including McCain and Palin) I am getting sick to my stomach over Obama worship. In real political terms, Obama will prove to be just as bad if not worst than Bush and his Neocon criminals. Obama was not elected, he was "chosen" to replace the failed neocons in Washington. The agenda of the empire needed a new face to move forward. Obama is that new face. Obama is not even president yet and look at who is already behind him - foreign policy maker Zbigniew Brzezinski, an American imperialist and an ardent Russophobe and Rohm Emanuel - a fervent Zionist. Wake up Americans and realize that you don't live in a democracy...
        Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

        Նժդեհ


        Please visit me at my Heralding the Rise of Russia blog: http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

          Originally posted by Anonymouse View Post
          Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


          Also to note: Obama chose his Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel. This guy is an avid pro-Israeli whose father was a member of the Irgun, the terrorist group that that bombed Palestinians.
          Whatever, yeah he shouldn't have been arrested by i understand it. Imagine if that guy got further into that crowd and a few people got angry and a fight started. If there were more McCain supporters around the fight could have spread and become ugly and that guy would have been beat to a pulp. Even if there were no other McCain people around, people could be drunk, people could have guns, and sh*t could have gone down. It's pretty obvious the guy wore that shirt to incite some anger in the crowd, it's like walking into a synogogue with a "free Palestine" t-shirt on. If the cops ask you to leave, leave and come back around another way, or take off your stupid shirt, don't argue with them

          Speaking of Rahm Emanuel, apparently there are stories of him stabbing a dinner table with a knife when angry, and sending someone a dead fish. Sounds mobbish, but also a little cool.
          Last edited by ara87; 11-09-2008, 05:52 PM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

            Originally posted by Armenian View Post
            Wake up Americans and realize that you don't live in a democracy...
            Well, one thing we learned from history is that sheeple never wake up until they are ruined and begin rioting.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?



              A nice pic I found
              For the first time in more than 600 years, Armenia is free and independent, and we are therefore obligated
              to place our national interests ahead of our personal gains or aspirations.



              http://www.armenianhighland.com/main.html

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

                Originally posted by ara87 View Post
                Whatever, yeah he shouldn't have been arrested by i understand it. Imagine if that guy got further into that crowd and a few people got angry and a fight started. If there were more McCain supporters around the fight could have spread and become ugly and that guy would have been beat to a pulp. Even if there were no other McCain people around, people could be drunk, people could have guns, and sh*t could have gone down. It's pretty obvious the guy wore that shirt to incite some anger in the crowd, it's like walking into a synogogue with a "free Palestine" t-shirt on. If the cops ask you to leave, leave and come back around another way, or take off your stupid shirt, don't argue with them

                Speaking of Rahm Emanuel, apparently there are stories of him stabbing a dinner table with a knife when angry, and sending someone a dead fish. Sounds mobbish, but also a little cool.
                Wow, I never thought we would get one of these Obama minions who actually think voting means something, to visit this thread!

                Considering all of these things, how do you feel about "casting" your "vote" for Masta' Obama?
                Achkerov kute.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

                  Barack Obama, Legal Scholar
                  By Ed Lasky

                  Barack Obama promises to accomplish quite a lot if he becomes our next President. These promises are symbolized in his campaign themes: hope and change. But just how likely is he to fulfill his own promise and the promises he has made to the American people?

                  Judging by his previous career, not very likely. We have seen this movie before in Barack Obama's life, and the end is not a happy one. In fact, when you examine his career in its various dimension, it seems to be marked disturbingly often by failure.

                  Faced with his failures, he tries to obscure the record; or else he blames mistakes on staffers or other people.

                  The "successes" he uses as campaign tropes often turn out to be due to the work of others for which he has claimed credit, or to be much less significant than meets the eye. Fortunately, the spell seems to be wearing off and the media has begun to scrutinize his career a bit more, and it has been found wanting.

                  Far more serious scrutiny of Obama's professional track record is necessary, for there is a danger when an unexamined candidate meets an uninformed voter. In the case of Barack Obama, disheartening aspects emerge when one pulls off the rose-colored glasses.

                  His career has three chapters: academia, community organizing, and politics.

                  Today we begin where his national career first took off: Harvard Law School and examine his legal career. Future articles will cover Senator Obama's community organizing and his political career.

                  Harvard Law Review president

                  Barack Obama originally emerged on the national scene as the first African-American president of the Harvard Law Review. This selection may have been based on factors that do not necessarily reflect merit, as he himself recognizes.

                  He has refused to answer questions about his days at Harvard (such holes in his life are a recurring feature). He was clearly a man of promise given the historic step that was taken when he was appointed President of the Law Review.

                  Has he fulfilled his promise as a legal scholar?

                  One thing he did not do while at the review was publish his own work. The absence of a paper trail is a pattern throughout his academic and to some extent his political career.

                  The pattern of leaving no intellectual footprints pre-dates Harvard. He has claimed he lost his senior thesis from Columbia University, where he majored in political science. The thesis was on Soviet nuclear disarmament. The depth of knowledge on display in Barry Obama's undergraduate thesis is of particular interest because he was wrong about a crucial Kennedy-Khrushchev conference, and about the diplomatic history between America and the Soviets.

                  How likely is it that someone would lose his senior thesis -- particularly someone who thought his life was compelling enough that he would write an autobiography just a few years later?

                  Legal scholar

                  Indeed, he has left little in the way of a record for Americans to judge his legal abilities. No written records, no signed legal papers, no research papers authored or co-authored by him. Nothing.

                  This is especially surprising because he served as a senior lecturer and law professor (there is some dispute over his title) at the University of Chicago Law School for twelve years. He was certainly popular with his students, who were, like him, young and enthusiastic. "Liberals flocked to his classes" and they give him high marks as a professor.

                  But among his fellow faculty members, apparently the verdict was mixed.

                  He shied away from intellectual jousting that is otherwise the hallmark of academia. Jodi Kantor of the New York Times portrayed his shortcomings as a colleague in an academic community:

                  The Chicago law faculty is full of intellectually fiery friendships that burn across ideological lines. Three times a week, professors do combat over lunch at a special round table in the university's faculty club, and they share and defend their research in workshop discussions. Mr. Obama rarely attended, even when he was in town.

                  "I'm not sure he was close to anyone," Mr. Hutchinson said, except for a few liberal constitutional law professors, like Cass Sunstein, now an occasional adviser to his campaign. Mr. Obama was working two other jobs, after all, in the State Senate and at a civil rights law firm.

                  Because he never fully engaged, Mr. Obama "doesn't have the slightest sense of where folks like me are coming from," Mr. Epstein said. "He was a successful teacher and an absentee tenant on the other issues."
                  Legal expertise

                  Senator Obama often invokes his expertise on constitutional law. Does he actually have any? You can't tell from his publications, and he even lacks a record of intellectual engagement as a legal scholar.

                  Although he was president of the Harvard Law Review as a student, in which capacity he no doubt wrote some unsigned notes, a search of the HeinOnline database of law journals turns up exactly nothing credited to Obama in any law review anywhere at any time. This is yet more indication that his status as "lecturer" at Chicago was not a regular faculty appointment, since regular full-time faculty are expected to produce scholarship. Notwithstanding an apparent eleven-year teaching career in constitutional law at a top-flight law school, not one single article, published talk, book review, or comment of any kind, appears anywhere in the professional legal literature, under Barack Obama's name.

                  As a person who prides himself on his legal background, should we be surprised that he did not seek a seat on the judiciary committee, a coveted spot for the Senate's most legal beagles?

                  Casting doubt

                  On the campaign trail he has issued a series of statements that cast doubt on the breadth and depth of his legal knowledge.

                  During a fundraiser in Denver, Barack Obama was asked what he hoped to accomplish in his first hundred days in office. His response:

                  "I would call my attorney general in and review every single executive order issued by George Bush and overturn those laws or executive decisions that I feel violate the constitution," said Obama"
                  One should not have to remind the former President of the Harvard Law review that a President of the United States cannot overturn a law. Only the Supreme Court can overturn a law; Congress can change laws. A President -- even one consumed by his own grandiosity -- cannot "overturn" a law. That is Constitutional Law 101.

                  He has certainly been wrong about the law and terrorism, and was wrong about the applicability of the Nuremberg trial in terrorism related legal matters (Does Obama Know What He Is Talking About? ). He certainly missed key legal aspects.

                  Blaming others

                  He misjudged the constitutionality of Washington D.C.'s gun control law -- which is surprising considering this has been a signature issue for him throughout his political career. He believed the DC handgun ban was constitutional and supported it. The Supreme Court disagreed and threw out the ban. In a move that has become a pattern with Barack Obama, he sought to distance himself from his earlier opinion, blaming an "inartful " statement from an "unnamed aide" for stating that Obama believed that DC ban was constitutional. Blaming staffers for his mistakes and problems may not be an inspiring campaign slogan but it is certainly a motif for Barack Obama.

                  Neither he nor his campaign objected or sought to clarify that statement when it was published last year in the Chicago Tribune. Only when the Supreme Court ruled and decided his view was legally wrong did he and his campaign try to disavow this position. This will be a problematic pattern: blame others for mistakes and seek to recreate history.

                  Constitutional misinterpretation

                  State Senator Obama willfully misinterpreted a "Born Alive" bill that came before the Illinois State Senate when he served there. This legislation was meant to address the issue of babies who were born during abortion procedures. Illinois had been rocked by scandals of babies being allowed to die (there were even macabre "comfort" rooms set aside in hospitals where nature was allowed to take its tragic course). Legislation was submitted that afforded these babies the protection of the law. Babies born alive during an abortion would be treated just like every other baby born alive and prematurely. The legislation was also clear that it did not apply to unborn babies and would not restrict abortions or violate Roe v. Wade. Nevertheless, Obama spoke out against the bill saying it would not pass "constitutional muster" and three years later, in his book The Audacity of Hope, wrote that it would have overturned Roe v. Wade.

                  He was wrong. For those with a legal bent, the elements of this bill may seem familiar -- as it should. Almost the exact same bill: the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act, which passed in the U.S. Senate in 2001 by a margin of 98-0, supported by Senators such as Barbara Boxer who are fervent pro-choice advocates. Neither these Senators nor has the Supreme Court seen any constitutional problems with the legislation.

                  But Barack Obama, the constitutional law expert, somehow did. The superb new book, The Case Against Barack Obama: The Unlikely Rise and Unexamined Agenda of the Media's Favorite Candidate provides a very insightful treatment to this and many other issues involving Barack Obama; see also this.

                  However one may feel about abortion, the fact remains that Barack Obama was completely wrong on the legal merits of this legislation. Disappointing for a man who prides himself on being a constitutional expert.

                  For a man who was President of the Harvard Law Review and taught constitutional law for 12 years, he seems to have a very odd conception of the law. Or is there something more at work -- a yearning to interpret and apply the law to advance his liberal goals, even if it means ignoring case law and the Constitution?

                  This leads one to question how Barack Obama would see to it that he fulfills his Presidential obligations as outlined in Article 2 of the Constitution to

                  "take care that the laws be faithfully executed" (Article 2)?
                  We may be skeptical of his fealty to this principle, when he told the Teamsters union he would end federal oversight of the union in exchange for their electoral support. Such oversight was the result of a long history of corruption of the union. It was an unusual stance for a Presidential candidate; one not taken at any time before by any candidate. Up until now, union anti-corruption efforts have been treated as a legal matter left to the Justice Department. Barack Obama instead offers to lift this monitoring -- meant to prevent crime -- in order to gain votes.

                  How actively will he and the attorneys and judges he appoints monitor groups such as ACORN?

                  The Courts

                  Finally, how will a President Obama select Supreme Court nominees? They, too, apparently do not require a rigorous grounding in constitutional law. He disagreed even with fellow Democrats over the selection of Justices Roberts and Alito and voted against their confirmation -- despite (or maybe because of?) their sterling academic and legal credentials. He refused to participate in the so-called Gang of 14, a bipartisan group of Senators (including John McCain) who worked together to overcome roadblocks in the way of judicial confirmations.

                  His criteria for selecting justices (and remember a President appoints all federal judges and US Attorneys):

                  "We need somebody who's got the heart, the empathy, to recognize what it's like to be a young teenage mom. The empathy to understand what it's like to be poor, or African-American, or gay, or disabled, or old. And that's the criteria by which I'm going to be selecting my judges."
                  How about legal acumen? A sterling record of scholarship? Are those just optional?

                  These are lifetime appointments.

                  Nobody can deny that Barack Obama has an impressive list of titles to his name as a lawyer. But when it comes to actual substance as a lawyer and a scholar, very few accomplishments can be pointed to. The pattern of leaving no footprints when it comes to ideas should raise questions in the eyes of voters still trying to understand the man behind the public persona of Barack Obama.

                  Achkerov kute.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Obama: An even more imperialistic shift in American Foreign Policy?

                    Nice article, it presented a lot of good evidence about Barack Obama that I don't think a lot of people (including myself) are aware of. Now that we are done exposing Obama's shortcomings, what would be the alternative? Bush-clone McCain?

                    Comment

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