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About Dr. Warren Throckmorton

Warren Throckmorton, PhD is Associate Professor of Psychology and Fellow for Psychology and Public Policy at Grove City College (PA). He is the producer of the critically acclaimed documentary, I Do Exist, regarding sexual orientation. His academic articles have been published by journals of the American Psychological Association and he is past president of the American Mental Health Counselors Association. Over 60 newspapers have published his columns and he is co-author, along with David Blakeslee of the monograph, Health Education as Social Advocacy. He can be reached at ewthrockmorton@gcc.edu.

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Dr. Warren Throckmorton

Columnist, Speaker, Professor of Psychology and Fellow for Psychology and Public Policy at Grove City College

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Barack Obama: Cultural anthropologist

Crosswalk published my article regarding Barack Obama and his opinions about why Pennsylvanians turn to religion and other traditional views. Here is the lead, hit the link to read the rest...

Barack Obama has a way with words. They trip lightly from his tongue, and some onlookers have swooned during his oratory. No one doubts his speechmaking ability. When opining off-the-cuff, however, he can get into trouble. Case in point: At a recent fundraiser among wealthy donors in San Francisco, some in the audience were preparing to join the Pennsylvania campaign and wondered aloud what questions Pennsylvanians might ask them. In taped remarks, Mr. Obama rightly noted that Pennsylvania is quite diverse and dismissed racism as a barrier to his campaign. However, he offered this preparation for his volunteers:

But the truth is ... our challenge is to get people persuaded that we can make progress when there's not evidence of that in their daily lives. You go into some of these small towns in Pennsylvania, and like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing's replaced them. And they fell through the Clinton administration, and the Bush administration, and each successive administration has said that somehow these communities are gonna regenerate and they have not. So it's not surprising then that they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.

Posted on the Huffington Post website, these comments brought quick criticism. Seeing an opening, opponents Hillary Clinton and John McCain pounced on Mr. Obama as elitist and “out of touch” with working folk in the heartland.

To read the rest, hit the link above...

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Most Recent User Comments
throckmorton
4/16/2008 8:07 PM
I cannot find where I said Obama's comment were an attack. I think he is off-based and lapsed into an aloof, anthropological analysis. The reactions of small town folks have been all over the place. Some say they are bitter, some are offended and some don't care what he thinks.

He claims he can unite the nation but he has never done that. He votes almost perfectly with his party and has the most liberal voting record in the Senate. If there is skepticism out there about Obama, it is at least about the disconnect between his rhetoric and his record.
psgold
4/16/2008 5:09 PM
Hi, Part One

This article seems to confirm my belief that cognitive dissonance theory is alive and well in this country. Especially with people who claim to be academics with a clear view of the truth.

It is clear that the professor is not fan of the Senator, and, like a lot of people, he is just looking for excuses to confirm his all ready established beliefs. The world is complicated and the search for the truth is even more so. God granted us the ability to reason, which is a gift that requires a constant struggle to earn and enjoy.

I actually find Senator Obama’s struggle to find the truth more refreshing then those who believe they know the truth or confuse faith with facts. His struggle to gain understanding is punished by some, because of his honesty and desire to struggle with it openly.
psgold
4/16/2008 5:06 PM
Part Two:

I actually find Senator Obama’s struggle to find the truth more refreshing then those who believe they know the truth or confuse faith with facts. His struggle to gain understanding is punished by some, because of his honesty and desire to struggle with it openly.

You defined what he said as an attack, which it is not. But a dialogue that is not complete and needs responses that are not attacks. It needs forces us into the types of conversations the scholars profess to want to have, but find blocked by their own parochial views.

This is Senator Obama is a breath of fresh air; since it brings to light the struggles he has and continues to have to define his values and perceptions. Treating that struggle with sarcasm demonstrates what is lacking on our pursuit of truth and honoring the gift that God has given us. We were not granted ultimate truth, but the ability and command to pursue the ultimate questions.

Opinions that are reactions and are not questions, but demonstrations of narrow analysis.