The Communist: Frank Marshall Davis
when Davis launched the communist Chicago Star newspaper in 1946 he called for a "new Declaration of Independence" in his first column.
Davis wrote that history teaches, alluding to the Marxist dialectic, that "any fundamental change advancing society is spearheaded by strong radicals."
Davis's communist activities in Chicago put him on the radar of the FBI and Congress in the 1940s and 1950s before he moved to Hawaii in the 1960s and began frequently receiving Obama in his Honolulu home in the 1970s.
Obama's most-trusted aide, Valerie Jarrett -- the president describes her as "like a sibling to me" -- is the daughter-in-law of Vernon Jarrett, who worked as a communist activist with Davis in the 1940s.
Valerie Jarrett is also the granddaughter of Robert R. Taylor, who was head of the infamous Chicago Housing Authority and cited in a 1944 report by the Special Committee on Un-American Activities.
Obama's top campaign adviser and the chief crafter of his image and life narrative, David Axelrod, was mentored in his journalism career by David Cantor, a lifelong communist and alleged "paid Soviet agent" who was educated in Stalin's Soviet Union, and Don Rose, a member of suspected communist front organizations.
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