miércoles, junio 20, 2012

Barack Obama, the Illusion/ Judi McLeod

Canada Free Press/ Judi McLeod



If Barack Hussein Obama were a movie, he’d be the Steven Spielberg directed Catch Me if You Can.
Politicians and despots down through the ages have proven out as phonies, liars and thieves, but the one who took Barry Soetoro all the way to the White House as the self-proclaimed President Barack Obama, is a painstakingly crafted illusion.
Catch Me If You Can was a Hollywood blockbuster biographical film based on the slippery eel-like Frank Abagnale Jr., who before his 19th birthday, successfully performed cons worth millions of dollars by posing as a Pan American World Airways pilot, a Georgia doctor, and a Louisiana bayou parish prosecutor.  The primary crime of this ‘gifted’ grifter was check fraud.  In fact he became so skillful at it that the FBI supposedly turned to him for help in catching other check forgers.
On screen, Tom Hanks played Hanratty, the FBI agent who worked with the infamous fraudster.  Pretty Boy Leonardo DiCaprio took time out from saving the environment to play a credible Abagnale.
In real (if there’s anything real about Obama’s)  life, Tom Hanks is an Obama sidekick; a fawning perennial White House dinner guest.
In real life imitating art, Soetoro/Obama has pulled off the biggest scam in history on an unsuspecting, economically challenged world.
Other authors have tried to pin the tail on the donkey called Obama, but biographer David Marraniss admits in his book “Barack Obama: The Story” that there was no Obama family.
Now we know why Obama’s brother George Hussein, living in a Kenyan shack on less than $1 a month gets no support from his wealthy brother, the president.  They are not brothers.

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