Showing posts with label Barack Obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barack Obama. Show all posts

Sunday, July 27, 2025

Obama’s Goldyn Glow-Up: The Truth Behind the Spin

Like television serial killer Dexter Morgan in yet another improbable reboot, Barack Obama keeps
getting resurrected by the legacy media—not as he was, but as the character they need him to be.

With their full cooperation, he has carefully crafted a public image tailored to middle-of-the-road sensibilities—one that conceals the more radical and uncomfortable truths about his early life. His latest reflections on his relationship with Lawrence Goldyn, his gay college professor at Occidental, are no exception.

According to Obama, Goldyn was a kind-hearted intellectual who helped broaden his perspective on gay people. But I knew both men during that era, and I can say with confidence: this is not the full story—not even close.

When I met Barack Obama during his sophomore year at Occidental College in December 1980, he struck me as a quiet, intensely self-conscious young man. Unlike most of the male students I encountered, he showed no apparent interest in women. In fact, my immediate impression was that he was gay.

It’s no surprise to me that Obama chose Lawrence Goldyn as his academic advisor. Goldyn, openly gay and politically active, was known on campus as a trusted figure among gay and lesbian students. He wasn’t just a professor—he was part of a broader network of support for students wrestling with their sexual identity.

Unlike the other professors in young Obama’s orbit, Goldyn was not a Marxist. Although Occidental employed him as an assistant professor of political science, his most memorable role was that of an in-your-face sexual revolutionary. For that very reason, I remember thinking Occidental made the right call when it denied him tenure in 1981.

Obama’s recent comments suggest that Goldyn enlightened him on gay identity. But this spin is merely a gentle pirouette designed to distract us from a more substantial pattern.

Obama didn’t need anyone to explain gay culture to him—he was already immersed in it. According to Mia Marie Pope, who claims she knew Obama while he was a student at the exclusive Punahou School in Hawaii, he was frequently in the company of older white gay men and seemed completely at ease in that world.

Obama’s mentor back then, Frank Marshall Davis—a known Communist Party member—authored a book under a pseudonym that included graphic bisexual scenes. These were the kinds of influences Obama had before he ever stepped foot on Occidental’s rose-covered quad.

We also have Obama’s bizarre poem “Pop,” published in 1981, full of unsettling references to “amber stains” and “smell his smell” connectivity—an earthy piece some have interpreted as a veiled account of sexual intimacy with an older man.

Thanks to presidential historian David Garrow, we’ve learned that Obama wrote letters to his then-girlfriend Alex McNear in which he openly discussed his same-sex desires. Former classmates also recall his metrosexual style, soft-spoken voice, and emotional distance from women. This wasn’t a guy discovering gay identity through a class—it was someone already deep in the experience, possibly trying to make sense of it all.

The Goldyn story is just one more example of Obama rewriting his past to fit a more electable narrative. Just as he has airbrushed his Marxist sympathies, blurred his religious convictions, and replaced real individuals with fictional “composites” in Dreams from My Father, here he repackages an advisor-student relationship to appear as a moment of enlightened tolerance—when in fact it may have been something far more personal.

Let me be clear: I’m not interested in shaming Obama for his sexuality, whatever it may be. I am simply done with the absurd, unrepentant, self-curated mythmaking.

If a conservative candidate had maintained this level of personal obfuscation—on issues of sexuality, ideology, or even basic biography—the press would have diced them up into nine pieces as quickly as Dexter Morgan logs a souvenir blood sample. Meanwhile, the legacy media lets Obama escape the truth of his past the same way the law enforcement officers do in Dexter: Resurrection—by misreading every clue that points to guilt, simply because the show must go on and the franchise must be protected.

The real Obama chose Lawrence Goldyn for the same reason other gay and questioning students did—because he felt a personal connection, not because he needed an education in tolerance. That’s not a crime. But pretending otherwise is part of a larger deception—the effort to protect Obama’s personal credibility and to prevent any alteration in how he is portrayed in U.S. history—as America’s first post-racial technocrat, rather than someone who intentionally rebranded to achieve power.

This article originally appeared in American Thinker on July 23, 2025.


Sunday, November 10, 2019

Three Courageous Williams College Profs Push Back Against Cancel Culture


WILLIAMS COLLEGE, MA - I was pleased to see a letter to the editor in the most recent Williams Record which featured three Williams College professors protesting against extremist students promoting a “cancel culture” in which they have demanded the immediate resignation of Suzanne Case ’78. Case is under attack for her role as the chairperson of the Hawaiʻi Board of Land and Natural Resources and her support for the construction of a Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT).

The professors wisely cited Barack Obama who inexplicably came out against cancel culture last week stating: “This idea of purity, and you’re never compromised, and you’re politically woke, and all that stuff — you should get over that quickly… The world is messy. There are ambiguities. People who do really good stuff have flaws.” 

The permanently enraged campus left is worked up over the construction of this telescope because they argue it will be built on a historical sacred site. The trio of responsible college professors point out the silliness of this claim. They assert it was already ruled by the Hawaiʻi Supreme court (Oct. 2018 decision), that there "...is no actual evidence that the site and Access Way area was ever used by Native Hawaiian practitioners." The telescope itself sounds outstanding
The Thirty Meter Telescope is a new class of extremely large telescopes that will allow us to see deeper into space and observe cosmic objects with unprecedented sensitivity. With its 30 m prime mirror diameter, TMT will be three times as wide, with nine times more area, than the largest currently existing visible-light telescope in the world. This will provide unparalleled resolution with TMT images more than 12 times sharper than those from the Hubble Space Telescope. When operational, TMT will provide new observational opportunities in essentially every field of astronomy and astrophysics. Observing in wavelengths ranging from the ultraviolet to the mid-infrared, this unique instrument will allow astronomers to address fundamental questions in astronomy ranging from understanding star and planet formation to unraveling the history of galaxies and the development of large-scale structure in the universe.
It is hard for me to figure out if these professors are joking when they suggest that a failure to build this wonderful telescope might exacerbate the state’s reliance on non-sustainable, low-paying, “colonializing” industries such as tourism. Really? At any rate, I'm glad to see there are faculty members at Williams College willing to point out that demanding people get fired because you disagree with them is getting to be a negative, self-destructive habit for too many Williams College students. 


The professors who authored the letter include Luana S. Maroja, an associate professor of biology, who has been at the College since 2010. Steven Miller, a professor of mathematics, who has been at the College since 2008. From my time at Williams College, I still remember the third professor from my face-to-face contact with him. He is Jay M. Pasachoff, the Chair and Field Memorial Professor of Astronomy, has been at the College since 1972. 

The Williams Record was also kind enough to provide space for two other pieces which pushed back against the unreasonable student protesters including a letter from David Y. Ige the Governor of Hawaiʻi and from Suzanne Case ’78 herself. All in all, it was a good weak for the opponents of cancel culture.

The full letter from these role-model scholars is below the break.

John C. Drew, Ph.D. is an award-winning political scientist and a former Williams College professor. He is an occasional contributor at American Thinker, Breitbart, Front Page, PJMedia and WND.