Uncensored: What's Obama Up To?
EPISODE DETAILS
What's Barack Obama up to these days? Working to make people hate each other, as usual.
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Tucker Barack Obama has been out of office kind of a long time now, and because we don't see him every day, it's become really obvious to a lot of people that the whole Obama thing was based on race, hatred, anti-white hatred. That's how he got elected from white guilt and anger at white people. And that's how he maintained power. And he stoked it. Of course, a lot of people didn't see this coming. Obama seemed like the kind of person who could bring the country together, our first half white President. He could probably see both sides of the race question, but no, he saw only one side. And it's hate based. And so it shouldn't surprise you that now that he's a Netflix producer, along with his hate addled wife Michelle, he's producing more racial division in the form of scripted dramas. The latest is called Leave the World Behind. It's a fictional thriller about the collapse of technology and what humans would do with no phones or computers. The movie follows a family on vacation at a rental house, and one night they're visited by a father and a daughter who show up seeking shelter. They say their phones no longer work and they need a place to stay. So immediately, the white family, because they're evil, that's encoded in their DNA, of course, is suspicious of the visitors because they're black. And it goes on and on and on. Like this. Here's a clip.
Soundbite I'm asking for you to remember that if the world falls apart, trust should not be doled out easily to anyone, especially white people. Even mom would agree with me on that.
Tucker Yeah, especially can't trust white people. They're evil. This is the guy, remember, who became famous at the Democratic convention in 2004 by telling us there is no white America, there's no black America. It's just one America. But of course, that's not really a profit model in politics, is it? So he's been stoking race hatred ever since, and the disarray around us is the result. Very few people have made a study of this. How did this happen? But Scott McKay has is a contributing editor at the American Spectator, author of the new book, Racism, Revenge, and Ruin, It's All Obama. Which it is. He joins us now. Scott McKay, thanks so much for coming on. So before we get into the larger questions about Obama, just tell us about this Netflix, whatever it is, Drama. What does it tell us?
Scott McKay Right. Well, what it tells you a lot is the Obama worldview, right? I mean, the trade press reported after this movie came out that Obama is listed as an executive producer because he made copious notes on the script to make it more realistic. But if you watch the movie, what you don't find a lot of is realism, as you noted. The movie basically injects race into a thriller about the end of the world. And it basically starts out with a black family. Mahershala Ali plays a guy who is obviously a captain of industry of some sort. He shows up in a $5,000 tuxedo and a top of the line Mercedes saying, hey, I'm the guy that rented you this Airbnb. I've got $1,000 in my pocket to reimburse you for a night of your stay. We need to rack out in the basement because the power's out in the city. And Julia Roberts, who is the, the the wife in this, you know, drama doesn't want to let him in the house because obviously, she's racist. And based on this woman's background, she's a Brooklynite ad executive who's clearly a Democrat. Who would have voted for Obama. You know, it's like it's all perfect fit, right? Just like, oh, yeah. Okay, so this is what the Obamas think of their own voters. And, you know, of course, the clip you played is, you know, you can't trust white people in the even in the middle of the apocalypse, when most people would tell you that race goes away in the middle of a crisis like that. And here's a point. So remember, after nine 9/11, 90% of the country lined up behind George W Bush. America was unified as never before. Right. So we've gone from there to now where the Obamas produce a movie basically telling us that we're going to fall amongst each other on race. The minute a crisis happens. And I would point to a kind of midpoint between this, which is the Fort Hood shooting, if you'll remember. That was, you know, a crisis situation, and you had a, jihadist who happened to work his way into the army, shoots up an army base. And the response from the Obama administration, which had just taken office, was that it would be a true tragedy if we lost our diversity in the military, not our unity. Right. Because that definitely went away. And here we are now, where we're making movies about the end of the world. And the first thing that happens is that the black people and the white people are going to fall out amongst each other. And that is, I think, a pretty good summation of where we are. Yeah. Thanks to Barack Obama and his 15 to 18 years as a American political behemoth, if you will.
Tucker And he still is, because, I mean, he's the driving force behind the policies of the current administration, the Biden administration. Absolutely. And in fact, it's been reported recently that he's driving the message for the Biden reelect, which is, of course, hating white people. White supremacy is our biggest problem. Really? Okay. White people are our biggest problem. That's what they're saying. But it's interesting, and I don't really know the answer. Maybe you do, since you just wrote a book on it. How did this happen? Obama's half white. He won't admit it, but he is. His mom was white. He grew up in a white household. He went to white schools, benefits, middling intellect. Went to an Ivy League school because of affirmative action thanks to guilty white people. Same with his wife, who's dumb and still went to, you know, Ivy League school, Princeton. Like, why are they mad at whites? They live in all white areas. Like I'm confused. Is it real or is it just a political tactic? What is this?
Scott McKay Well, what I would say is, if you look at the thing, of course most people were not really able to vet Obama prior to his becoming President. Right. But if you look at the four people who were the most prominent mentors of Barack Obama. Okay, number one was Frank Marshall Davis. You also had, Bill Ayers. You had, Derrick Bell, who was his professor at, in Harvard Law School. And you had, Jeremiah Wright, all four of them had as a central thesis of the things that they said that America was a profoundly, fundamentally, irredeemably racist country. That, you know, the entire system ultimately needed to be thrown out in favor of something that would be more equitable. You know, and I mean, these are all people that when Obama ran for president initially should have been out front as, hey, this is who this guy is. We were not allowed to say that. I mean, when you had people like Stanley Kurtz had done the research and tried to present it to the public. You know, they did something that we weren't even familiar with at the time. They canceled him. They called him every name in the book. And that happened to a whole bunch of people. And it got to the point where the McCain campaign got really scared of informing the American public about who their opponent was. And, you know, Sarah Palin talked about it a little, but only in sort of soft terms. And so there was a lot of Jeremiah Wright. But it was like the same three clips that everybody had heard over and over again. What was not done was digging on Bill Ayers, for example, because Obama said, well, he's just a guy from my neighborhood. Yeah. About that. It was a little bit more going on there. Bill Ayers is actually turns out to be one of the most important thinkers when it comes to American education. And Bill Ayers wrote the book on the critical race theory piece that's in schools, the transgenderism piece that's in schools, things like these constructive conversations that are supposed to replace discipline in the classroom. All of these different things have turned a lot of our schools in a woke indoctrination centers. And it's the guy from my neighborhood that he doesn't share ideas with. We were not allowed to know about that. It turns out Bill Ayers may very well have ghostwritten Obama's, initial autobiography, Dreams From My Father, and created an origin story of Barack Obama that doesn't actually check out. So we were given a colossal bait and switch by the Obama campaign and Barack Obama himself as he became President. And we had, as a result, very little idea of what was coming. Right. If you'll remember, the value proposition of the Obama campaign back in 2008, and this happened at a time. Tucker, you'll remember this. Our race relations in America in 2007, let's say we're at an absolute zenith of, you know, blacks and whites getting along. People actually saw the end of race as a major issue in American politics and society. And the value proposition Obama brought was, hey, I'm the guy that's going to finish this problem off once and for all. This is going to be great, right? People didn't want to vote for John McCain. So okay, fine. Let's solve the race problem. And no sooner did he take office than it was like, hey, let me drop the plunger on race relations on this country, and we're going to see what happens. You went from the new Black Panther case to the Skip Gates, situation at Harvard, you know, the beer summit. And then you went to Trayvon when we really got a good dose of what was coming. And that was in, you know, February of 2012. And ever after that, it was one of these racial incidents after another. And Barack Obama took every chance he could to inflame those and turn the country against itself on racial lines. And, of course, that really paid off in the George Floyd case a few years later when he was out of office, but his team was trying to get back in.
Tucker Do you think? Well, that's I mean, I'm going to just pause and, ask you to stop right there. How was he involved in the George Floyd case?
Scott McKay Well, what I would say is that he set all of it in motion, right? Black Lives Matter, if you'll remember, that got started after Trayvon. And you know, that was all about Eric Holder and those people in the Department of Justice that, you know, turned that case into a big racial, situation. And if you'll remember, there were no, like, white people involved in the Trayvon case, right. Like George Zimmerman was Colombian, right? This was like a Hispanic thing and a black thing, right? Well, it shouldn't have really even been a race case. And they made it one. And then they, you know, then they weaponized Black Lives Matter. I mean, all those years later that this thing was a hundreds of millions of dollars flowing through an organization dedicated to create race riots in America for political purposes. Yeah. So this is art. This was something that he already set in motion, and they were just looking for cases they could exploit to make this happen. And, you know, the George Floyd case, let's face it. I mean, you know, you had, Derek Chauvin's attorney on. And you talked about the fact that George Floyd died of a fentanyl overdose.
Tucker Yeah. He wasn't.
Scott McKay Chauvin just happened to be there. This was yeah. This was not one of these situations where, you know, where you had this racist white cop that, you know, took it upon himself to, you know, kill some innocent black. Nothing like that happened in the George Floyd case. But we had been so torn apart racially. And all of the, you know, events had been set in motion that all it needed was a spark. And you would have this, you know, I mean, you took down a President with the George Floyd riots in, in very large measure. So, I mean, this was this is the Obama, Obama America that had already been set in place starting really before 2012, but, you know, metastasizing into something that would change American politics. And they were ready as soon as that case happened. You know, the way the left was mobilized to create political advantage out of the George Floyd case. That doesn't happen organically. It doesn't happen overnight. This was something that had been built for years. And, you know, everybody was blown away. Corporate America all of a sudden was giving money to Black Lives Matter and changing all of their messaging to beat people over the head on the on the, you know, the notion that America is some systemically racist country. Right. And we just had eight years of a black President and somehow we're irredeemably racist as an as a nation, right? Yeah, it was a totally but bizarre situation.
Tucker What's interesting is that the country put up with it. I mean, Black Lives Matter is explicitly anti-white. Obama's explicitly a hater of white people. It's very, very obvious. It was obvious, right? I would say right at the beginning of his of his first term, it became obvious. It was shocking, but it was obvious. Is it that of all the groups in America, whites are just can't be convinced that people dislike them? Maybe is it that they don't want to think that they want to be just like there's no other group in America who put up with that President is supposed to be the President of all Americans, but the President and this current President, same thing. Singles out one racial group and says, it's all your fault. You're uniquely evil. We hate you. We're going to hurt you. Different standard of justice for you. You can't get a job, you can't go to school, whatever. I mean, oppressing people on the basis of their race, which they are doing, and people kind of put up with it. Why do you think they put up with that? No. What nobody else would put up with that. But they do.
Scott McKay Right. Well, you know, I think so much of this is bound up in, what the media has done, what cultural institutions have done. You know, I like I could drag you all the way back to, like, Antonio Gramsci back, you know, 100 years ago when he talked about to to destroy a Western capitalist nation, you have to get rid of Christianity, nationalism and charity. And once you've taken down those by corrupting, commercial interests or cultural institutions, then you set the stage for the great proletarian revolution. I think the cultural Marxists said at, at hand in America today have read all their Gramsci. I mean, you'll notice Christian nationalists are like the worst people in America. It's like, well, you just nailed two out of the three, right? So, you know, I think that this has been coming for a very long time.
Tucker But I would like to ask you to pause. So I agree with you completely. You know, the rest of us ignored it, and now it's it's wrecked the country. But I still can't get over the response of the majority. I mean, it was a majority white country. I don't know if it still is, but it was for its entire history. And those people who are non-ideological, who were not, you know, aficionados of obscure Italian communists, like they all went along with it. Why did they do that?
Scott McKay It's a tough question to answer, right? I feel the same as you. Just like well, why? I mean, what what what did we get out of this? I mean, do you really want to feel that good about yourself? That you gave away the store? You know, to people who clearly are not going to reciprocate. And I think that was, you know, that was the thing is, so much of our culture has been about through the years, hey, we have this original sin of slavery and so forth. Without recognizing that slavery was a constant in the pre-industrial age across the world. Everybody had slaves. Well, it's still white. America actually spent 600,000 lives getting rid of slavery. Where is our credit for that? And, you know, of course, they're not willing to give us, that as Americans. The credit that, you know, for the amount of suffering and the amount of effort it took to get us to where we are, we're the least racist country on earth Tucker. Every other country on the on the planet has was founded, in some measure on racism. Turkey was founded for the Turks. Germany was founded for the Germans. France was founded for the French. We were founded on an ideal that said everybody's equal in opportunity. God created us all and gave us inalienable rights that we needed. You know, we should have the the ability to use that. That's a radical notion. And the fact that we were able to found ourselves on that, and the fact that we built the greatest society in the history of the world on those ideals ought to be something that makes us bulletproof against accusations from somebody like Barack Obama. And yet it didn't happen.
Tucker No, the opposite happened. And it said so much destruction, very little gain. Last question. Like, what's Obama's future? He's relatively young. He's clearly still motivated by the hate that's driven him all these years. And he's kind of running the the White House. So what what does he do next?
Scott McKay Right. Well, and and if you read Racism, Revenge and Ruin, you will get a really good dose of how much control Obama actually exercises. And of course, it has lots of news, folks, because you get more evidence of this all the time, right? But we also talk about in the book what's next, because once what's very clear is that Team Obama will not lose. They refuse to lose. They will escalate rather than lose. The George Floyd situation was a good example of that. You're starting to see it in the things that they've done with the lawfare against Donald Trump. And of course, you know, as we record this, there's the Fani Willis thing in Atlanta that's comically collapsing. And they knew this stuff was going on when they got involved in this. Right. They had an eight hour meeting with this guy. I don't want to belabor it, but the whole point is it's like there's no shame here. There's no limiting principle. And so if you really want to understand Barack Obama, obviously read this. But if you really want to understand Barack Obama, that's the answer. It's power. It's nonstop pursuit of power and control in order to wreck a country that he grew up hating and still hates, even after everything it's done for him.
Tucker Boy, that's that's a dark summation, but it's hard to argue with you. Scott McKay, author of Racism, Revenge and Ruin, It's All Obama. And it's obvious now. Thanks for joining us, I appreciate it.
Scott McKay Thank you. Tucker.
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