Let's explore. Now I am not a psychologist but I see a lot of things in his history that are very disconcerting. Not so much because I care about him, but because it has become the "norm" in our society.
1.Born to a young, flaky rebel and not so sure who is father really is.
2. If he really is the son of the person he is named for, then he only met him once.
3. Moved to Malaysia with yet another man, who may or may not have treated him well. Who knows how many men she was with before she married Soetoro?
4. Transsexual nanny, who knows how much his mother was actually around and engaged with him?
5. At the tender age of 10, shipped off to Grandparents who are white and old, who already raised a strange child. He could not have known them very well.
6. Not much known accept his alcoholic grandfather hung around with Frank Marshall Davis, who was a communist and possible child molester.
7. Does not appear that he had an actual real normal person in his life.
8. Sent off to college and he hooks up with more radicals and lefties. etc.
My point in all this is it appears to me that Obama never fit in any where accept with freaks and even there he really did not fit in.
Now we have more of these kids coming up. Fatherless kids, with multiple men in and out of the "home" if they have one. There is gay agenda all around them, this diversity crap, propaganda in the schools, drugs, tattoos, self absorbed and chemically altered adults "raising" kids. Now add a bunch of poorly educated, poverty stricken young people who are of a totally different culture to the mix and we have a disaster that is coming, that makes me glad I am 50.
As for the next American generation, so very, very sad. They simply cannot imagine what a luxury a high standard of everyday, commonsense, Ten Commandments-based morality was like. We didn't have a lot of money, but we had a lot of public trust.
As one example, the Tylenol scandal took place only in 1982 -- some evil person put cyanide into some bottles of Tylenol and placed them back on a drugstore shelf, and several people were injured or died. From that point onwards, almost all products started having to be sealed at the factory, driving prices up. Imagine -- for the first 206 years since 1776, an American could buy a container of most any consumer product and just open it up and pour some out.