Obama and Reality: When Worlds Collide
by Ian Mosley

An op-ed from the Australian Times makes some very interesting comments on what appears to be America’s impending experiment with the joys of black rule. Washington correspondent Geoff Elliott writes in a recent article:
“It was early 1994 when Nelson Mandela gave a speech in a slum outside Cape Town and spoke in grand terms of a new beginning and how when he was elected president every household would have a washing machine. People took him literally. A few months later he became South Africa’s first black president. That’s when clerks in department stores in Cape Town had to turn people away demanding their free washer and dryer. Having spent some time as a reporter in South Africa watching the Mandela presidency I was reminded of that story this week when I traveled with Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama on the campaign trail.”
This is a fascinating point. You see, although no one seems to have noticed it yet, there is nothing to Obama. When he gets up and bloviates for the cameras and all the silly white girls scream and swoon like he was the fifth Beatle, he almost never says anything of any substance. The last time young white girls swooned and obsessed over a black; it was Michael Jackson, and millions of fans were in store for a rude awakening. (more…)






