Joy Tiz
says:
I can’t get a bead on Larry Sinclair. I’ve read his book, Barack
Obama & Larry Sinclair: Cocaine, Sex, Lies & Murder? I’ve
watched his videos on YouTube. My normally dependable women’s
intuition is not sending me conclusive cues about Sinclair’s veracity.
On the other hand, I have no question about Barack Obama’s mendacity.
Sinclair is conspicuously candid about his
ignominious narrative. He conceded his copious incarcerations
early on. Sinclair has been in and out of jail on assorted charges
of bamboozlement -- including passing bad checks; about which he has
been forthright.
Obama, however, has yet to release his college
records, medical records, law school records, Illinois State Bar
application, early school records, his passport or his birth
certificate.
It is plausible that Sinclair
suffers from some form of psychological disorder. That alone does
not make him a liar, nor does it mean he is delusional. In
his book, Sinclair cites times spent in custody being denied his
medications. I would conjecture that some of his medications were
for a psychological condition. If that was the case, the anxiety
about his meds could suggest he is a patient who is intending to be well
and is being medically managed. We can’t know for certain.
But we have far more knowledge about Sinclair’s past than we do about
Obama’s.
Sinclair asserts that he met Obama twice in 1999.
Their rendezvous was orchestrated by limo driver, Jagir Multani.
Sinclair avers that Multani may have been in the United States
illegally. Sinclair alleges that Obama smoked crack cocaine and
directed Sinclair to administer a Lewinsky -- which Sinclair obliged.
According to Sinclair, the following day Obama materialized at
Sinclair’s hotel to solicit supplementary Lewinskyization. That
was the entirety of their affair, per Sinclair. Expecting to be
serviced with no impulse to reciprocate is certainly consistent with
Obama’s consummate narcissism.
Sinclair has made capacious efforts to get his story
out and his narrative has been unchanging. It would seem the sole
witness who could corroborate the limo story would be the missing
Multani.
There is a plethora of grounds on which to discount
Sinclair’s chronicle of events. As a witness, he would be facilely
impeached. But he is manifestly more frank about his life story
than Obama has been. As with the birth certificate matter, Obama’s lack
of candor cannot but lead to supposition.
If Obama habitually enjoyed these sorts of trysts, we
would presume others witnesses would surface. To date, no one else
has gone public with comparable reports. Maybe the late Donald
Young, choir director at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago
could have confirmed that Obama didn’t indulge in this type of conduct.
Sadly,
Young was murdered on December 23, 2007.
The forty-seven-year old choirmaster had attended
Obama’s church since the age of twelve.
Obama has confessed to using illegal drugs his
younger days (Dreams, Pg. 93). Much of Dreams is
unadulterated fabrication, thus, we have no way of knowing how
profligate Obama’s drug abuse was, nor has he released his medical
records. John McCain made public more than a thousand pages of
medical records during the 2008 campaign. Obama produced a letter
from his physician pronouncing the candidate in excellent health.
Doctors routinely query their patients about the use
of alcohol, tobacco and drugs, both legal and otherwise. They
customarily infer that their patients are under-reporting.
Non-Obamanutz should find
Sinclair’s book a worthy read. Though I could have lived without
yet another detailed description of a president’s private parts.
Nature abhors a vacuum. The dearth of fundamental
details about most of Obama’s life, leads to supposition. Some of
it will be cogent, some of it outlandish. Alternatively, Obama
could simply liberate his records and show us who he really is.