Barack Obama’s Confession Of Gay Sex Fantasy Revealed In Unredacted Letter To Ex: ‘I Make Love To Men Daily, In Imagination’
Former President Barack Obama’s gay sex fantasy has been exposed in a newly redacted 1982 letter to his ex-girlfriend.
The then 21-year-old Obama wrote a letter in November 1982 to Alex McNear, with whom he had been in a relationship during his time at Occidental College in Los Angeles.
He delved into the subject of homosexuality and confessed that he “likes to make love to men daily, but in the imagination,” according to the previously redacted portion of the letter, which was obtained by the New York Post.
Obama described homosexuality as a way to detach from the present and possibly avoid the recurring theaters of earthly existence.
“As for homosexuality, I must say I believe this is an attempt to step out of the present, perhaps a refusal to continue the endless farce of earthly life.”
Former President Barack Obama’s gay sex fantasy was revealed in a newly obtained 1982 letter to his ex-girlfriend, reproduced by The New York Post
Obama, then 21, wrote in November 1982 to Alex McNear, whom he had dated during his time at Occidental College in Los Angeles
He delved into the subject of homosexuality and confessed that he “likes to make love to men daily, but in the imagination,” according to the redacted portion of the letter.
He admitted to having a daily intellectual connection with men, but claims it was solely within the realm of the imagination.
“You see, I make out with men on a daily basis, but in the imagination,” he said in the letter reported by the Post.
The letter, more than 40 years old, was addressed to an ex-girlfriend and has resurfaced thanks to the extensive interview with biographer David Garrow.
Obama explored the concept of an androgynous mindset, expressing his desire for a perspective that encompasses people as a whole, rather than separating them into gender categories.
“My mind is androgynous to a large extent and I hope to become even more so until I can think in terms of people, not women as opposed to men,” he said.
Obama described homosexuality as a way to detach from the present and possibly avoid the recurring theaters of earthly existence.
The letter, more than 40 years old, was addressed to an ex-girlfriend and has resurfaced thanks to the extensive interview with biographer David Garrow.
After their relationship ended, McNear chose to edit the more explicit parts of the letter
Despite these admissions, Obama admitted in the letter that he has accepted his identity as a man and chooses to live by it.
“But in returning to the body, I see that I have become a man, and physically in life I choose to accept that contingency,” he added.
Once their relationship was over, McNear chose to edit the more explicit parts of the letter, but she did explain that Obama had detailed same-sex desires.
However, the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Garrow managed to locate these passages and include them in his biography entitled ‘Rising Star’.
The letter is currently held by Emory University, which does not allow photography or removal.
But Harvey Klehr, a friend of Garrow’s, was able to hand-transcribe the edited segments and share them with the author.
Klehr provided the hidden portion of the letter to The Post for publication.
Obama, now a father of two, has been married to his wife Michelle since 1992 and has also spoken out against same-sex marriage in the past.
In 2004, Obama stated, “I don’t think marriage is a civil right,” and said he believed homosexuality is “not a choice.”
He changed his mind while in the White House and helped celebrate the federal legalization of same-sex marriage in 2015.
Obama, now a father of two, has been married to his wife Michelle since 1992 and has also spoken out against same-sex marriage in the past
Garrow, who exposed Barack Obama’s gay fantasies years ago, has also labeled the former president as “as insecure as Trump” — saying he’s too “lazy” to serve on the Supreme Court in an early August bombshell interview
In response to the revealed contents of the letter, Garrow claimed there was nothing atypical about Obama’s childhood sexual fantasies.
In response to the revealed contents of the letter, Garrow claimed there was nothing atypical about Obama’s childhood sexual fantasies.
On the matter, Garrow said, “As a historian and not a psychologist, I find that it is common knowledge that a significant majority of people have their share of sexual fantasies.”
Garrow, who exposed Obama’s alleged gay fantasies years ago, has labeled the former president as “as insecure as Trump” – saying he is too “lazy” to sit on the Supreme Court in a bombshell interview earlier this month.
Historian David Garrow sat down for a lengthy Q&A with Tablet on Aug. 2, also renewing the claim that Obama’s first memoir was fabricated — calling it “fictionalized” and an attempt to “invent a racial identity battle that never happened.”
In 2004, Obama stated, “I don’t think marriage is a civil right,” and said he believed homosexuality is “not a choice.”
Garrow addressed the issue, saying, “As a historian and not a psychologist, I note that it is common knowledge that a substantial majority of people have their share of sexual fantasies.”
Previously, in the 1,078-page biography Rising Star: The Making of Barack Obama, Garrow exposed how a young Obama contemplated a gay relationship while in college, and cheated on Michelle with his ex during their first year of dating.
It also revealed how the ex-head of state – who made a career out of speaking engagements and several book deals – once called America a “racist society” in an unpublished manuscript from his time at Harvard Law.
The 70-year-old Garrow, who has been on the air for some six years, addressed many of these revelations in the 16,000-word interview, while also offering a new insight into the man widely regarded as the Democratic Party’s most influential figure. Side.
“He has no interest in building the Democratic Party as an institution,” he told Tablet. “I think that’s clear.”
“I don’t think he had any really deep, meaningful policy commitments other than the need to feel and be seen as victorious, as triumphant,” he said of the two-year president, who was succeeded by Trump in 2016.
He added, “I’ve said to people at times that I think Barack is actually just as insecure as Trump, but in a way that isn’t readily noticed by the vast majority of people.