- Corsi, Jerome L.
The Obama Nation.
New York: Threshold Editions, 2008.
ISBN 978-1-4165-9806-0.
-
The author of this book was co-author, with John O'Neill, of
the 2004 book about John Kerry,
Unfit for Command (October 2004),
which resulted in the introduction of the verb “to swiftboat”
into the English language. In this outing, the topic is Barack Obama, whose
enigmatic origin, slim paper trail, and dubious associates are
explored here. Unlike the earlier book, where his co-author had first-hand
experience with John Kerry, this book is based almost entirely on secondary
sources, well documented in end notes, with many from legacy media
outlets, in particular investigative reporting by the
Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune.
The author concludes that behind Obama's centrist and post-partisan
presentation is a thoroughly radical agenda, with long-term associations
with figures on the extreme left-wing fringe of American society. He
paints an Obama administration, especially if empowered by a filibuster-proof
majority in the Senate and a House majority, as likely to steer American
society toward a European-like social democratic agenda in the greatest
veer to the left since the New Deal.
Is this, in fact, likely? Well, there are many worrisome, well-sourced,
items here, but then one wonders about the attention to detail of an author
who believes that Germany is a permanent member of the United Nations
Security Council (p. 262). Lapses like this and a strong partisan tone
undermine the persuasiveness of the case made here. I hear that
David Freddoso's The Case Against Barack Obama
is a better put argument, grounded in Obama's roots in Chicago
machine politics rather than ideology, but I haven't read that book and I
probably won't as the election will surely have gone down before I'd get to it.
If you have no idea where Obama came from or what he believes, there are
interesting items here to follow up, but I wouldn't take the picture presented
here as valid without independently verifying the source citations and
making my own judgement as to their veracity.
October 2008