Is Barack Obama really Irish?
Posted on Thursday, June 02, 2011 at 08:10 AM
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| President Obama received a hurley from Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Enda Kenny in Dublin last week |
Then, all of a sudden, people weren’t feeling so happy and peppy.
“We were just useful props in president's whirlwind electioneering roadshow,” an online headline in the Irish Independent read.
According to the paper’s writer, Carol Hunt, “Obama desperately needs the white working class to believe that he's one of them to regain their support.”
In the U.K.’s Catholic Herald, columnist William Oddie dubbed Obama’s performance in Ireland “fraudulent,” adding, “So Obama was treading on potentially dangerous ground when he seemed to appropriate an Irishness of a kind that would actually induce (Catholic) Irish Americans to vote for him in large numbers.”
What? Say it ain’t so!
You don’t think Barack Obama -- in the end, a Chicago -- – would have certain political realities in mind when he takes a trip halfway around the world, do you?
The basic argument of Obama’s critics -- or critics of the people who loved the positive vibe of the trip -- is that he played to certain stage Irish stereotypes in order to line up Irish American/Catholic votes in 2012.
That line of thinking made it over to the U.S., where righter than-right Rush Limbaugh also questioned Obama’s motives.
_______________________________________
Read More:
US blogger’s mixed comments on Obama’s Irish homecoming
African Americans inspired by Obama tracing their Irish roots in greater numbers
Michelle Obama's Irish roots traced to Irish slave owner
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“We ought to start calling him Paddy Obama -- p-a-d-d-y, Paddy Obama, the Obama of Moneygall,” Limbaugh said.
“But even the U.K. Telegraph today has a fabulous story about how ridiculous it is Obama is trying to pass himself off as an Irish guy. And when he goes to Africa, he tries to pass himself off as a Kenyan.
“And if he goes to the Middle East he tries to pass himself off as Barack ‘al-Obama.’ And if he goes down to Selma he tries to pass himself off as a guy from down the street — totally disingenuous guy.”
Limbaugh then said, “It is a campaign stop for the Irish vote. The Irish vote in this country, particularly in New York City, is plentiful. And he’s got problems. His reelect numbers are down. This is nothing more than a campaign stop for the Irish vote.”
Except that, as Trina Vargo, head of the U.S.-Ireland Alliance argued in a Huffington Post column, “There is no 'Irish vote.' Irish-Americans are Democrats and Republicans, Catholics and Protestants, and there are no galvanizing issues around which a significant number of them rally.”
All of this just makes you shake your head. Probably the most disturbing aspect of this is the suggestion by the likes of Limbaugh, but also Oddie and Hunt, is that Obama isn’t a “real” Irish American, or that he exploited his meager Irish American roots for maximum political gain.
Obama can’t catch a break. He’s not a real American, he’s not a real Irishman, he, apparently, is not a real anything!
Let’s be honest here. It’s as if a guy with roots in Africa also can’t have “real” roots in Ireland.
But don’t forget, it’s not as if JFK’s dad was right off of the boat. If the diaspora has taught us anything it’s that -- like it or not -- our definition of what it means to be Irish American is ever-changing.
Indeed, at the heart of all of this is the deep question -- what does it mean to be Irish?
Consider what Oddie had to say, “No descendant of Irish Protestants in America joins in those overblown St Patrick’s Day parades, or describes themselves as Irish-American.”
I slightly understand what Oddie is saying, in the sense that when most people talk about the Irish in America, they refer to Catholics in Boston or Brooklyn.
That said, Oddie’s statement is patently false.
As for there being no Irish vote in the U.S., again, it is true the days of Tammany Hall are gone.
And yet, there’s no denying that the Catholic vote is at least significant. And, this being America, of course the number of 100% Irish fourth generation Americans is small.
But being Irish -- just as it is for Obama -- is an important part of their heritage. To deny that is to play a really tricky game about who is “allowed” to be Irish and who is not.
In the end, I can almost guarantee Obama is at least as Irish as a good chuck of the folks who, “overblown” as it may be, line Fifth Avenue every March 17.
Can Obama call himself Irish? Yes he can!
(Contact “Sidewalks” at tomdeignan@earthlink.net or facebook.com/tomdeignan)
52 comments
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DrSheilahere | Nov 10, 2011, 10:09 AM EST
"Why I Hate Obama" and other observations of the worst president/man to enter the WH. And, I refuse to believe he is Irish!
http://contributor.yahoo.com/user/1017868/sheila_dunnells_phd.html
read; forward.
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Springfield9 | Aug 04, 2011, 10:00 AM EDT
Do a DNA test ....... there's the answer. If it's done in Chicago he will come up as Native American Irish Eskimo Polish.
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Philaromancatho | Jun 04, 2011, 10:33 AM EDT
Obama is poop.
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djroche | Jun 03, 2011, 11:02 PM EDT
Like most Americans he is a little bit of everything that is what we are all about he had my vote & will have it in 2012 Good God how would you like to be the one to clean up george bush's poop
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JBRAFTREE | Jun 03, 2011, 01:12 PM EDT
Yes, Chesapeake, but we can spell>>>>
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phearne | Jun 03, 2011, 12:03 PM EDT
One more comment then I will hush for the day.I am Choctaw,Irish and English and have the family history to prove it.We also have Cherokee blood somewhere down the line but I don't claim it because I don't have any proof.What I can prove is I am and American with a mix of nationalities that doesn't change with whom I am talking to or where I am visiting.I have a birth certificate to prove I was born in the the U.S.and I wonder why our presidents birth certificate is such a closely guarded secret?
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phearne | Jun 03, 2011, 11:56 AM EDT
President Obama is what most presidents and leaders of a country all are,no better and not much worse."What ever and whomever they need to be to get re-elected."
I have seen few deviations from this practice in the last fifty years and I doubt there will be any changes in the next fifty,because the candidates who don't follow this policy don't get elected.Obama doesn't seem to be able to do this without looking a bit of a pretender. He claims to be part Irish,part African American,part English,part Caucasian, and who knows what other part will be revealed. Apparently it depends on the country he is visiting.I find it surprising he hasn't claimed to have Native American ancestry.I suppose that's because he seems to ignore the plight of the American Indian.The true original Americans. I'm just saying!
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chesapeake | Jun 03, 2011, 10:44 AM EDT
To conside Obama to be Irish flies in the face of reason. Then, again, a liberal is only impreased by another libera; and most of your contributor are as far left as you can get.
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mrkennedy | Jun 03, 2011, 09:50 AM EDT
A member of my family came over from Germany in the last half of the 1800's. Am I German or am I an American who served in the U.S.Navy in WW11 & the Korean War and proud to be an American!!!!!!!!!!
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micky74007 | Jun 03, 2011, 07:03 AM EDT
If anyone in Ireland reads these comments you might have had an inkling of what a jerk this guy is. He might as well be Irish; he won't admit he's African.
And we all know at heart, he isn't an American. I'm surprised he didn't claim to be Polish, too. After all, he says he's from Chicago.
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OmahaSeamus | Jun 03, 2011, 06:52 AM EDT
Why won't he produce an Irish birth certificate for his ancestor, Falmouth Kearney? Was Falmouth Kearney born in Kenya too?
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Niamhaine | Jun 03, 2011, 05:05 AM EDT
Manhattan, unfortunately your nephew bore the brunt of "those who have gone before". The lack of open-mindedness and geniality of those Irish-Americans pouring off the tour bus can be mind-boggling at times. I sit quietly and bow my head in shame at the ones loudly proclaiming to an Irish person "You people.....(fill in your own obnoxious comment)" or "I know it's not my country, but...( again,fill in your own obnoxious comment)". They are right- it's not their country and they know nothing about the Irish people but what they've heard from some uneducated Irish American's comments in some US pub, so how about they shut the hell up!
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roibaird | Jun 03, 2011, 12:37 AM EDT
Mr Obama IRISH??????????He is not as Irish as Paddy's pig! Did he ever make a statement on his being Irish during his pre election days? Very interesting!probably will never ever be Irish again cept on Paddys
Day
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John5319 | Jun 02, 2011, 10:00 PM EDT
If Obama wanted the Irish or Catholic vote don't ya think that he would KNOW what the 10th commandment says "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's goods" !! Yet his has confiscated them by the Billions to pay off his cronies at the Unions, the Autos companies GM & Chrysler, insurance giant AIG, and even "bailout" the EU bankers of Germany, England, France, Greece, and Spain with "the people's" future income earnings. Furthermore, he has abused the future earnings of at least 2 generations of Children and by HIS government BORROWED deficit spending !! He IS A Child molester, in the cloak of an Evil impostor.
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