By Cliff Kincaid
TrevorLoudon.com
July 30, 2012
Obama biographer David Maraniss wrote an 1139-word article,
“The Audacity of Doubt,” for The Washington Post on Sunday that
purported to be a refutation of what some critics have been saying about
the President. Maraniss focuses mostly on questions about Obama’s
religion and place of birth and pretends to have the answers.
However, Maraniss ignored the fact that the critics were right four
years ago when they identified communist Frank Marshall Davis as Obama’s
mentor in Hawaii and the mysterious “Frank” from Obama’s book, Dreams from My Father.
Maraniss had written a 10,000-word piece for the Post in 2008, when
the information could have made a difference in the campaign, ignoring
this critical fact. He told me in an email that he had ignored Davis
because he had somehow concluded that Davis didn’t have much of an
impact on Obama.
The Maraniss piece, “Though Obama Had to Leave to Find Himself, It Is Hawaii That Made His Rise Possible,” ran in the August 22, 2008 edition of the Post.
Not content to slink away with egg on his face for ignoring the story
of the century, Maraniss spent years working on a book about Obama,
thinking the public would regard it as definitive. He is suffering under
a delusion.
Since Maraniss wants us to believe he dwells on “facts,” here are
some inconvenient facts about Davis before we get into the tawdry and
highly personal side of the Obama-Davis relationship: