Cliff Kincaid
How Frank Marshall Davis transformed America
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By Cliff Kincaid
March 5, 2015

When Rudolph Giuliani mentioned that President Barack Obama, as a young man, was under the influence of Communist Party member and suspected Soviet espionage agent Frank Marshall Davis, Giuliani struck a nerve. In contrast to his claim that Obama didn't love America, his remarks about the Davis-Obama relationship were not opinion, but fact. That is why a Washington Post fact-checker has been assigned to investigate Giuliani's claim. We shall see whether the Post, at this late date, covers a story that could have been Pulitzer Prize-winning material more than seven years ago.

As the former New York City mayor noted, Obama's grandfather turned him over to Davis for mentoring. His black father had taken off and his mother was mostly spending her time elsewhere. But the question remains: what kind of influence are we talking about? Paul Kengor's book The Communist: The Untold Story of Barack Obama's Mentor explains Davis's influence on Obama's economic views. Rusty Weiss and I quoted Kengor in a piece we did on how Davis's anti-white racism also influenced Obama.

Less well-known is how Obama adopted Davis's outlook on sexual matters.

Davis, who died in 1987, was a heavy drinker and marijuana user who wrote a pornographic novel, Sex Rebel, disclosing that he had sex with children, including a 13-year-old girl.

The Davis view, according to his friend, Kathryn Waddell Takara, incorporated a "world of sexual pleasures, multiple partners, and erotica." Takara writes about the Davis obsession with bizarre sexual practices and pornography in her book Frank Marshall Davis: The Fire and the Phoenix.

Davis mentored Obama for as many as eight years of his young life, before Obama left Hawaii to attend college. Obama, however, only referred to Davis as "Frank" in his book Dreams from My Father. Obama refers to "Frank" as giving him advice on subjects such as race relations, but not sex.

However, Takara confirms that Davis wrote a pornographic novel, Sex Rebel, which was "largely autobiographical," and that he became "anti-Christian," even writing a poem speaking of Christ irreverently as a "nigger." An atheist, Davis "exposed the irony and hypocrisy of Christianity," she said.

Davis was a pornographer himself and specialized in photographs of nude women. Some of these are still on display in the Frank Marshall Davis Collection at Washington University in St. Louis. Takara writes about Davis having "an ample supply of African American women models" for his work. However, the FBI took note of his habits when agents found him taking photographs of the Hawaii coastline, apparently for espionage purposes. This development is mentioned in Davis's 600-page FBI file. Davis was on the FBI's "security index" and was considered a potential national security threat.

Much controversy over the years concerned a poem Obama wrote about "Pop." Sympathetic Obama biographer David Maraniss noted its strange lines about stains and smells on shorts, and confirmed that the subject was Davis. Writer Jack Cashill says the poem has definite "sexual overtones."

Whatever the ultimate truth about Obama's own sexual proclivities and inappropriate personal relationship with Davis, it cannot be denied that the President's "fundamental transformation" of America has also occurred in the sexual realm. And even the Pentagon has not gone unscathed.

Defense Department officials have said that hormone treatment for gender reassignment has been approved for Bradley/Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligence analyst convicted of espionage for sending classified documents to WikiLeaks.

Almost three years ago, in our May 14, 2012, column "How Our 'Gay President' Learned About Sex," we noted that the media's love affair with Obama had been heightened by his embrace of same-sex marriage. Rather than resist, important figures in the media, including the conservative media, have embraced the Obama/Davis revolution.

As traditional conservatives prepare to "March for Marriage" on April 25, within days of the Supreme Court debating cases that will decide the legal status of marriage, the news broke this week that billionaire David Koch, who pours millions of dollars into conservative and libertarian groups, is backing a legal challenge to state laws that protect traditional marriage.

Jennifer Rubin, who writes the Right Turn blog for The Washington Post, has already embraced the Obama position and hopes that the Supreme Court will "put the issue to rest as a legal matter."

Joining Rubin in the surrender to the Obama/Davis cultural transformation of America is Ana Navarro, a CNN political commentator who says she is joining the brief before the court. Navarro was the National Hispanic Co-Chair for Senator John McCain's Presidential Campaign in 2008.

Other signatories from the media world on the pro-homosexual brief include:
  • David Frum, a senior editor at The Atlantic

  • Richard Grenell, an openly homosexual Fox News contributor

  • Alex Castellanos, a Republican media advisor and CNN contributor

  • Margaret Hoover, a self-described gay rights activist and CNN contributor

  • Nicolle Wallace, the so-called "conservative" on ABC's "The View"
The National Organization for Marriage disagrees, saying, "One thing the U.S. Supreme Court won't be able to do is redefine marriage, because marriage was created by God himself as the union of one man and one woman, and no judge or politician has the power to change it."

Concerned Women for America continues to affirm that "marriage consists of one man and one woman," and that "We seek to protect and support the Biblical design of marriage and the gift of children." The group objects to the "disrespect for family and for the unique contribution of fathers and mothers," and the "attempt to eliminate natural distinctions between men and women."

Conservative leader Phyllis Schlafly, the founder of Eagle Forum, told a Huffington Post writer during the recent Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) that the battle for the traditional family will continue. She said, "I'm extremely disappointed that the Republican Party, the conservative movement, even the Democratic Party and the churches, have been saying, 'Well soon the court will decide, and that will be it.' But a lot of people thought that about Roe v. Wade, and we've seen the whole abortion issue turned around in the last ten years."

Schlafly's latest book, Who Killed the American Family?, laments how advocates of traditional marriage "retreated into ominous silence" after the Supreme Court overturned the Defense of Marriage Act in the 2013 case of United States v. Windsor.

One possible factor in a coming backlash to the homosexual rights movement was highlighted in a CPAC speech by Phil Robertson of the "Duck Dynasty" television show. Describing the epidemic of sexually transmitted diseases, which affect homosexual men more than any other group, he said, "You want a godly, biblical, medically safe option? One man, one woman – married for life."

Robertson was presented at CPAC with the Second Annual Andrew Breitbart Defender of the First Amendment Award by Citizens United and the Breitbart News Network. Homosexual militants and their "progressive" allies tried to force his "Duck Dynasty" show off the air after Robertson made comments affirming traditional values and describing homosexuality as unnatural.

Citizens United President David Bossie said, "Having Phil Robertson and his family as a part of American culture has changed this nation for the better. Week after week, millions of Americans see a family living out their faith and their values boldly and without reservation. Despite the best attempts of the mainstream media and Hollywood liberals, the Robertson patriarch and his family are still on television and they are as popular as ever."

Matt Schlapp, Chairman of the American Conservative Union, the main sponsor of CPAC, said, "Robertson personifies the importance of holding tight to that which gives our lives meaning. For Phil Robertson, that includes his family, the Lord above, and of course creating havoc in the Louisiana countryside. We are honored to have him at this year's CPAC."

It appears that there is resistance to the Frank Marshall Davis "vision" of America. But how long will CPAC and the traditional conservatives be able to resist?

One fact is certain: the major cable channels, including Fox News and CNN, are dominated by "conservatives" who embrace the Obama/Davis sexual revolution.

© Cliff Kincaid

 

The views expressed by RenewAmerica columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of RenewAmerica or its affiliates.
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