The NCDAS Editorials

 

Obama 10/04/08

 

Hello,

Once again Obama practiced poor judgment regarding International affairs, fostering the loss of American influence in a strategic part of the world while supporting a radical Muslim agenda.  Of course one could argue his decisions are calculated and purposeful.  Either way, these are actions on his part that bring into question his true religious beliefs.

 

The complete article can be found at:

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=76861

 

Key individuals identified in the article:

 

Mr. Kibaki:  The current President of Kenya, who currently governs a Christian Majority.
Mr. Odinga: A radical Muslim who Obama campaigned for while in Kenya.

 

The following are significant passages from the article.


US Congressman Fauntroy – an African-American noted as the first congressman to represent the District of Columbia in 100 years and a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus – said an Obama victory would make Kenya the most important nation in the world, as the place where the first U.S. black president "is to come from," elected "to teach the world how to live in the 21st century."


Obama supported Odinga's challenge to Kibaki for the presidency when the Illinois Democrat visited Kenya on a U.S. Senate "fact-finding" mission in 2006.

 

Many Kikuyu politicians quietly express concerns that an Obama win in the 2008 U.S. presidential election could reverse power in Kenya, in favor of Luo tribesman such as Odinga, a perennial presidential challenger of Kikuyu presidential candidates.


Luo politicians openly fear an Obama presidency would add impetus to Raila Odinga's continuing drive to become Kenyan president in the country's scheduled 2012 election, if not sooner.  Christian missionaries in Kenya fear an Obama presidency would encourage Odinga to fulfill campaign promises by pushing to alter the country's constitution to specify the application of Islamic Shariah law in regions dominated by Muslims.


Odinga was appointed prime minister last February after he lost the December 2007 election to Kibaki, and Odinga encouraged his Luo tribe supporters to protest alleged voter fraud engineered by the Kibaki government to steal victory.  Odinga signed a memorandum of understanding with Muslims in Kenya prior to the December 2007 election in an effort to win Muslim support of his candidacy. 

 

About 85 percent of all Kenyans are considered Christian, with fewer than 10 percent Muslim

 

In Eldoret, a group of some 50 Christians sought refuge in a Christian church, trying to escape from a rampaging Luo mob that ultimately set fire to the church and burned the refugees to death, including women and children.  In the post-election violence, an estimated 800 Christian churches were damaged by mobs, while not a single mosque was harmed

 

 

Wayne S. Richard
President/Founder
NCDAS

NCDAS