Before Rev. Wright, there was Obama’s Mom

By Chicago

A lot of “strong personalities” shaped Senator Obama, including the mother he didn’t seem to like all that much if you read his book Dreams From My Father. Obama called his mother “the dominant figure in my formative years. . . . The values she taught me continue to be my touchstone when it comes to how I go about the world of politics.”

“She was not a standard-issue girl of her times. … She wasn’t part of the matched-sweater-set crowd,” said Wall, a classmate and retired philosophy teacher who used to make after-school runs to Seattle with Dunham to sit and talk — for hours and hours — in coffee shops.

“She touted herself as an atheist, and it was something she’d read about and could argue,” said Maxine Box, who was Dunham’s best friend in high school. “She was always challenging and arguing and comparing. She was already thinking about things that the rest of us hadn’t.”

In his best-selling book, “Dreams From My Father” and in campaign speeches, Obama frequently describes the story of his mother, who died of cancer in 1995, as a tale of the Heartland. She’s the white woman from the flatlands of Kansas and the only daughter of parents who grew up in the “dab-smack, landlocked center of the country,” in towns “too small to warrant boldface on a roadmap.”

Implicit in that portrayal is this message: If you have any lingering questions or doubts about the Hawaiian-born presidential candidate with a funny name, just remember that Mom hails from America’s good earth. That’s the log cabin story, or his version of Bill Clinton’s “Man from Hope.”

But interviews with their friends from Kansas, now in their mid-to-late 80s, and interviews with their daughter’s former classmates and teachers, now in their mid-60s or older, paint a vivid portrait of Barack Obama’s mother as a self-assured, iconoclastic young teen seemingly hell-bent to resist Eisenhower-era conformity.

Boyish-looking, Stanley Ann was prone to rolling her eyes when she heard something she didn’t agree with. She didn’t like her nose, she worried about her weight, she complained about her parents — especially her domineering father. Her sarcasm could be withering and, while she enjoyed arguing, she did not like to draw attention to herself. The bite of her wit was leavened by a good sense of humor.

While her girlfriends, including Box, regularly baby-sat, Stanley Ann showed no interest. “She felt she didn’t need to date or marry or have children,” Box recalled. “It wasn’t a put-down, it wasn’t hurtful. That’s just who she was.”

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/chi-0703270151mar27,0,5157609.story?page=2

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8 Responses to “Before Rev. Wright, there was Obama’s Mom”

  1. huntingdonpost Says:

    Sounds like an interesting character. You have to give it to him, he doesn’t having a boring social set.

  2. goodtimepolitics Says:

    Obama wasn’t thinking so good when he left out the small town middle class working Americans, He wasn’t thinking so good when he said that we small town Americans cling to our gund because we’re bitter, well I have news for you, we hunters in North Carolina are not bitter and we will show you in the votes!
    http://goodtimepolitics.wordpress.com/2008/05/04/the-racial-issue-has-toppled-other-black-hopefuls-obama-may-not-be-immune/

  3. Lofter Says:

    Sure looks like he’s got the nomination all but locked up!

  4. thegreatgeno Says:

    I’m not really sure how any of that points to the fact that he didn’t like his mother very much. In fact, the very next sentence, the one where he says “The values she taught me continue to be my touchstone when it comes to how I go about the world of politics,” seems to imply the exact opposite.

    Maybe you’ve read the book and see something I’m missing? I’m interested in knowing if that’s the case, or if you only say it because you want to give the impression of a sexist politician who couldn’t handle his strong feminist mom.

    From every thing I read about Obama’s relationship with his mother, he seemed to be very fond of her, if not particularly close (she spent much of his late childhood half a world away, though I guess that doesn’t necessarily mean they weren’t real close).

  5. Lofter Says:

    I really don’t think it’s gonna make any difference which gets nominated, or elected, for that matter. The huge chasm that divides the aisles in congress will effectively kill any hope for true change. And our media continues to pedal lie, upon lie, upon lie… all to avoid telling us the truth.

    For more thoughts on the political duopoly we’re suffering under, check out the outstanding post over on Conquering the Truth.
    Time for a wake up call, folks!

  6. huntingdonpost Says:

    More electoral analysis here: http://www.talkleft.com/story/2008/5/9/223743/2156.

    If Clinton wins she has a bigger chance of carrying a Democratic congress with her. And that will help her do things. No president does everything he or she promises. The executive has to know how to get things done.

  7. Lofter Says:

    LOL! One of two things will happen… (a) a president will get elected, and congress will remain steadfastly divided along party lines – which means more of the “let’s talk about it, but nothing will really get done” that we’ve grown so accustomed to. Or, (b) a president will get elected, and swing enough coattail to carry a super majority in congress – which mean that, while some legislation may actually get passed, it will only address the concerns of half the populace, as the country itself is split right down the middle along those same party lines! Either way, it’s a losing proposition for the average Joe Citizen out there.
    Two reason why I wouldn’t vote for Clinton: (1) I disagree with her policies, especially her mandatory payroll deductions from my meager earnings to support her massive socialist healthcare agenda. And (2) because you are absolutely correct, an executive has to know how to get things done. That pretty much lets her off on the technicality, right? Remember Bill? If she can’t manage her husband, she can’t handle the country!
    One last thing… you say that no president does everything he or she promises… why do you think that is? And if they know they can’t do it, why do the lie to us and promise us that they will? Just curious… seems honesty would be the better policy – but honesty isn’t politically correct these days. Go figure.

  8. huntingdonpost Says:

    In “Dreams From My Father”, he states that at about 17 his mom was upset with him. Obama wrote, “I had given her a reassuring smile and patted her hand and told her not to worry, I wouldn’t do anything stupid. IT WAS USUALLY AN EFFECTIVE TACTIC, ANOTHER ONE OF THOSE TRICKS I HAD LEARNED; PEOPLE WERE SATISFIED SO LONG AS YOU WERE COURTEOUS AND SMILED AND MADE NO SUDDEN MOVES. THEY WERE MORE THAN SATISFIED; THEY WERE RELIEVED, SUCH A PLEASANT SURPRISE TO FIND A WELL MANNERED YOUNG BLACK MAN WHO DIDN’T SEEM ANGRY ALL THE TIME.”

    I wonder if he also called her “Sweetie.”

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