What are some of those things an honest, objective biographer would look at to determine what a person's religious beliefs are? Childhood experiences? Membership records in churches (or mosques)? Eyewitness statements of people who saw him believing in something? Can you actually see someone believing in something?
I'm an atheist myself (I've rejected both Catholicism and Judaism - long story) and I wish that American politics didn't require politicians to pay lip service to their "faith." Those with "true faith" are certainly scarier than those who merely toe the line in this regard since they may see themselves as answering to a "higher power" that doesn't actually exist (or exists only in their minds). I really don't care what church they attend or what they ostensibly "believe" as long as they check that stuff at the door when it comes time to make decisions and take actions in their positions of power. I expect them to fully honor the separation of church and state.
I've read Obama's books, and he pays the required lip service to religious faith, and maybe he has true feelings of faith, deriving comfort from it or whatever. To me it's all delusion, but much as alcohol is the socially accepted intoxicant, religion is a socially accepted delusion. I don't know what Obama truly believes "in his heart" when it comes to religion, but it seems to be pretty well established that he has defined himself as a Christian for many years, and has operated as such - active in a church and all that. He does seem to accept that other faiths are equally as valid as Christianity, something many "strong Christians" would probably not accept (the one true faith and all that). I see this as a major nod to reality (most of the world's people are not Christian) and a plus.
I guess the point of the smear campaign that Obama is "really a Muslim" is twofold. One is to try to make him seem scary and "other" and un-American, and since Muslims are the enemy of choice in modern America, and since Obama had some Muslim connections in his family and in his youth, he must be a Muslim - time to be very afraid. The other point is that if he's really a Muslim, he must have a secret hidden Muslim agenda, and once in office he will sell out America or Israel or do whatever bad stuff his secret Muslim handlers want him to do. Like the Manchurian Candidate. Is this it? Will he do this through executive orders or secret CIA operations, or will the Democratic majority of Congress convert en mass to Islam and back up President Obama in his nefarious acts? How is this "he's secretly a Muslim" thing actually supposed to work when he gets into office?
Or does it really come down come to, hey, let's get serious, the dude's black?
You know, I've always appreciated your blogging and, especially, your enthusiasm for my addons, but that last comment is so insulting that, well, once again, in order to continue as a member of this community, I have to swallow a gallon of gall.
OPPOSING BARAK OBAMA'S CANDIDACY IS NOT PER SE RACIST.
Now, to answer your question about what an honest, objective biographer of Obama would look to to try to find out what his actual views on the world are -- you'd look to who he spent substantial amounts of time with, who he
SAID were influential on his life, what ideas he was exposed to and seemed to embrace for substantial parts of his life.
To be clear, I absolutely, positively do not conclude from my own study of the man's biography that he "is a Muslim." But what I do know is that
TWO YEARS AGO, I began studying the Trinity United Methodist Church in Chicago. I did this because
TWO YEARS AGO I concluded that Barak Obama had a good chance of being elected president, and at that time he was saying that this church had a big influence on him, and that its pastor was his "spiritual mentor." No one I know would say such a thing unless the person to whom they were referring had had some substantial influence on their life in some way.
It took a
HUGE effort from completely outside the mainstream media to get some attention onto Obama's church and its pastor. When that happened, Obama had a problem -- a serious problem. This was because the vast majority of people in the United States, when exposed to even a superficial fraction of the ideas at the very heart of Obama's pastor's world view, were deeply offended. It is impossible not to find that ideology racist and extremely left-wing, because it is, when judged by the standard of the values of the vast majority of people in the U.S.
I'll be happy to substantiate every word of the above paragraph, but I'm willing to bet that I don't have to, because any informed observer of the political and cultural scene in the U.S. knows this to be true.
So what happened when the spotlight was finally forced onto Jeremiah Wright and "black liberation theology"? Obama at first said he wouldn't repudiate his "spiritual mentor" -- he could "no more do that than repudiate a member of his family." But then, with
GREAT EFFORT, the media was
FORCED to look more deeply into the content of Wright's thinking and what lay behind it. Bang! Obama tossed Wright under the bus, saying he didn't know about what Wright was saying.
This is patently absurd and any rational person, if they
REALLY THINK ABOUT IT will know it's absurd. Of course Obama knew what Wright stood for.
So -- did Obama agree with Wright or not? Let's give him the benefit of the doubt, and say he secretly reserved judgment on the things Wright said and stood for. Why, then, would he attend the church for twenty years, and call Wright his "spiritual mentor"? The natural explanation is that Trinity United was the most politically influential church among left-wing actors in Chicago. The natural explanation -- if you want to think well of Obama -- is that he didn't
REALLY believe these things, but simply "went along to get along." Which means that, until
THIS YEAR, something Obama said was a crucial part of his life and character really wasn't. It can't be both -- either he believed or he didn't, and if he didn't, then ... well ...
Which then leads us to other questions of honest biography. Obama is a young man. His political career only began 15 years ago or so. To the millions of young people who will be voting for him, that seems like an eternity ago, but to people my age -- and yours, it doesn't. An honest political biiographer of Obama would look at where Obama stood politically such a short time ago. And if they did, they would at least consider the knd of material discussed here:
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=OTc3NzZkZDYxODZiZjE2OTg5YWRmNDkzM2U0YTIwZGQ=&w=MA==
Now, I can see the eyes rolling as I write these words. "
National Review??!!?? That's a right-wing magazine!" Of course it is -- do you think you'll read this kind of thing in the
New York Times? The question is, will you read it? I read the
NYT. How else would I know what the left is thinking and saying?
I know this is all moot -- it doesn't matter. At this point, opposition to Obama is simply the death-twitch of a corpse. But perhaps someone who would want to just pause for a moment to check the path they're on would take just a few mometts to ask -- why are the details of Sarah Palin's religious biography so crucial in determining her suitability as a candidate, but even talking about the
EXACT SAME KIND OF MATERIAL about Obama is a "racist smear."?