Does anyone know obama




















Similar versions of this claim that intend to perpetrate the falsehood that Obama, the 44th President of the United States, did not attend Columbia University have been circulating for over a decade. Other fact-checkers have debunked it since for example here , here. As reported by factcheck. Mifflin, who was also a student at Oxy at that time, met Obama during a poetry seminar. Photographs of Obama as an Oxy student are visible here bit.

Columbia lists Obama as an alumni here. He graduated in with a major in political science here. Obama has recalled his time in Columbia as a quieter period. In an interview with Columbia College Today published in Jan. I was like a monk. Carmi, Illinois—a town on the Little Wabash River, down in the southern tip of the state, twenty-five miles from Kentucky, population about fifty-five hundred. A group of twelve farmers—burly white men with ruddy complexions and very short hair—sitting around a rectangle of pushed-together tables in a nondescript room, talking with their junior senator, Barack Obama.

He sat at one end of the tables, leaning back in his chair, his knee propped against the table edge. He wore a tie but had removed his jacket and rolled up his shirtsleeves. A young farmer complained about the Jones Act, a law that he felt was partly responsible for a detrimental consolidation in the barge market.

Another farmer had a question about ethanol. Right now cellulosic ethanol is potentially eight times more energy-efficient than corn-based ethanol, because you eliminate the middle step of converting it into sugar before you convert it into ethanol. Now, you know the economics of it better than I do. But we have to create more efficient ethanol if we want to see a significant growth in the market.

The fact of the matter is that Brazilian ethanol is substantially cheaper than U. Obama seldom does any of these things. He tends to underplay his knowledge, acting less informed than he is.

He rarely accuses, preferring to talk about problems in the passive voice, as things that are amiss with us rather than as wrongs that have been perpetrated by them. And the solutions he offers generally sound small and local rather than deep-reaching and systemic. Take a recent forum in Las Vegas on health care. Here are Hillary Clinton and Obama speaking about the same subject, preventive care.

She spoke energetically but composedly, conveying the impression that she had spent a great deal of time preparing for the event because it was extremely important to her. That is upside down and backwards! Now here is Obama. In the past couple of months, Obama has hosted health-care forums of his own—in New Hampshire, in Iowa.

In these forums, he is tranquil and relaxed, as though on a power-conserve setting. He paces slowly, he revolves, he tilts his head. He comments in a neutral, detached way. He says that the system is broken and needs to be fixed, but conveys no particular urgency.

This mode of his is often called professorial, and Obama himself likens these forums to the constitutional-law classes that he taught at the University of Chicago.

Despite the criticism he has received for being all inspiration and no policy, Obama has so far stuck to what appears to be an instinct that white papers belong on Web sites, not in speeches. Barack is the opposite. Even in law school, perhaps the place more than any other where sheer cleverness is prized and love of argument for its own sake is fundamental to the culture, he was not much interested in academic jousting.

It is also doctorly in the sense that Obama thinks about the body politic as a whole thing. There is also, of course, a racial aspect to this. Doug Wilder was an example. David Dinkins. Mayor Bradley in L. Some people may have seen his speech at the Democratic Convention, or heard that he rocked the house, and they may be disappointed, but the mainstream is not ready for a fire-breathing black man.

Bigotry has always made exceptions. The first thing almost everybody who knows Obama says about him is how extremely comfortable he is with himself. His surface is so smooth, his movements so easy and fluid, his voice so consistent and well-pitched that he can seem like an actor playing a politician, too implausibly effortless to be doing it for real. Obama has become known for his open-necked shirts—he may do to the tie what John Kennedy did to the hat—but he never looks casual.

That angry character lasts from the time I was fifteen to the time I was twenty-one or so. I guess my explanation is I was an adolescent male with a lot of hormones and an admittedly complicated upbringing. Why focus on an aspect of himself that seems so politically unpalatable? He probably realized that revealing his druggy past was the best way to defuse the issue in the future.

When he was working as a community organizer in Chicago, Obama spoke to a number of black ministers, trying to persuade them to ally themselves with his organization, and in the course of these conversations he discovered that most had something in common. They all mentioned periods of religious doubt. That was the source of their confidence, they insisted: their personal fall, their subsequent redemption.

It was what gave them the authority to preach the Good News. But in another sense his life runs directly counter to the American dream, rejecting the American dreams of his parents and grandparents, in search of something older. He moved to California, then to Seattle, and then, finally, to the last frontier, as far west as he could go without ending up east again, to Hawaii. She gave her son, then thirteen, the choice whether to come with her or stay behind at his school in Hawaii, and he chose to stay.

He left his pregnant wife and his son to study econometrics at the University of Hawaii. There he met Ann Dunham, married her, and had another child, Barack. He left his second family to return to Kenya to work for the government, where he married another American woman and had two more children with her.

Angry and penniless, he started to drink. This is disappointing to those who hoped that his presidency would be seen as an unequivocally bright period in American history. The ACA expanded substantially the number of people insured by requiring everyone to have health insurance and helping to provide it. It imposed regulations to make medical coverage — with no limits due to preexisting conditions — available to all through the expansion of Medicaid optional for states and state or federal insurance exchanges, and provided subsidies to help individuals pay for insurance.

Democrats hailed it as a landmark breakthrough. Republicans saw it as Big Government intrusion at its worst and as a policy that worsened the health care system. Unemployment benefits and payroll tax cuts were later extended.

The national economy recovered — more jobs and economic growth, with low interest rates and low inflation — especially compared to other countries that adopted more austere measures. Democrats praised these actions but lamented that had added government spending not been thwarted by Republicans, economic growth and wages would have recovered further. Republicans criticized Obama for not cutting taxes and government regulations that could have enabled the market to produce a stronger and lasting recovery to benefit the middle class.

Partisan critics disagree on whether this regulation or intervention was too little or too much — or even necessary. And there was more disagreement: Exceeding the initiative taken by George W. Democrats praised this for sparing jobs and boosting manufacturing, while Republicans were less supportive of the level of government involvement.

Republican leaders especially complained about the use of executive orders to impose new regulations. The politics of international relations that Obama specialized in while a Columbia political science major changed dramatically after the end of the Cold War.

His foreign and national security policies have led to heated debates that perhaps began when he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, not long after he took office, for his ongoing emphasis on diplomacy. He also created controversy by reaching out to the Muslim world, and with his concerns about nuclear proliferation and climate change. Obama ended U. A high point was when he successfully ordered the Navy Seals mission that found and killed Osama bin Laden in retaliation for the terrorist attacks.

Obama stood fast, emphasizing the need for a political solution in the region based on the American experience in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He was severely criticized for not providing sufficient arms to the Syrian rebels whom the U. The administration succeeded in helping topple — leading to the killing of — Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, but this produced conflict and instability in Libya, where U.

Ambassador J. There was vehement, and especially partisan, disagreement over the ending of tight and effective sanctions against Iran and the freeing of Iranian funds held by the U. The U. Consumers also benefitted greatly from a sharp drop in the price of gasoline. On the other hand, this development on the energy front led to further partisan debates about environmental protection regulation — including conflict over the use of hydraulic fracking, which had greatly expanded production.

Rather, there was a return of racial conflict reminiscent of the s, including violent protests after a number of shootings of blacks by police officers and subsequent killings of police. There were also new racial and ethnic-related tensions over immigration, the threat of radical Islamic terrorism and the U. Racial resentment that had earlier divided the two parties resurfaced.

Obama was criticized on both sides, by his opponents for the disruptions and for not adequately backing law enforcement, and by his supporters for not defending racial justice more directly and loudly. This partisan conflict may have had racial underpinnings as well, as suggested by continued Republican accusations that he was not born in the U. Where does this leave us?



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