His father, Dr. Obama, went back to Africa, where he was a high ranking official in the Kenyan government. He was a polygamist, and "lousy husband to all his wives." However, to Barack, he was a heroic, near mythic figure. Bawer writes,
One can, of course, well understand why a small boy – or even a young man – might idealize out of all proportion the father he never met. But Obama shows few signs in this book of recognizing that he’s doing this. Meanwhile, perversely, he treats his mother and grandparents, who by his own account raised him with extraordinary devotion, all but dismissively.
Perhaps most discouraging is that Obama reveals himself to be "unbearably self-absorbed – yet, at the same time, astonishingly short on self-knowledge." He seems to feel owed something by the world, and is obsessed with racial injustice of whites against blacks.
4 comments:
That man needs help if idealizes that creep
shoprat,
It is a phenomena that I have seen many times, and I think about it a lot. The parent who is actually there for the child gets dismissed, and the absent parent gets idealized.
*shakes head* I can't see this man as president. Not because he's black, but because he uses his blackness instead of other gifts he has.
mrs. who,
Agreed.
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