In defending his  administration's efforts at putative financial reform, President Obama  suggested a ceiling, perhaps government-imposed, for Wall Street  executives. Although he did not begrudge them income that is "fairly  earned," he added ominously, "I do think that at a certain point, you've  made enough money."
The president may be projecting guilt from his own  excellent adventures in greed. A surprising 2006 article for the  American Century Foundation by liberal publisher Peter Osnos sheds  useful light on this subject. As Osnos relates, a 1990 New York Times  profile on The Harvard Law Review's first black president  caught the eye of a hustling young literary agent named Jane Dystel.
Dystel persuaded Obama to put a  book proposal together, and she submitted it. Poseidon, a small imprint  of Simon & Schuster, signed on and authorized a roughly $125,000  advance in November 1990 for Obama's proposed memoir.
With advance in hand, Obama  repaired to Chicago, where the University of Chicago offered him an  office and stipend to help him write. Obama dithered. At one point, in  order to finish without interruption, he decamped to Bali for a month.  Obama was supposed to have finished the book within a year. Bali or not,  advance or no, he could not. He was surely in way over his head.
"Obama had missed deadlines and  handed in bloated, yet incomplete drafts," David Remnick tells us in The  Bridge. Simon & Schuster lost patience. In the summer of 1993,  Simon & Schuster canceled the contract. According to Osnos, the  publisher asked that Obama return at least some of the advance
Not surprisingly, the  Obama-friendly Remnick skips some of the details that Christopher  Andersen includes in his book, Barack and Michelle: Portrait of an  American Marriage, such as how Obama had spent $75,000 of the  advance and could not pay it back. According to Andersen, the publisher  let Obama keep the money only after he pled poverty due to "massive  student loan debt" -- this despite a combined salary for the still  childless Obamas well into six figures, not to mention the trip to Bali  and a trip to Kenya for the couple as well.
As Osnos tells it, Dystel did not  give up. She solicited Times Books, the division of Random House at  which Osnos was publisher. He met with Obama, took his word that he  could finish the book, and authorized a new advance of $40,000.
During this same period, Obama  was working as a full-time associate at the law firm of Davis Miner,  teaching classes at the University of Chicago Law School, and spinning  through a social whirl that would have left Scarlett O'Hara dizzy.  Writes Remnick, "He and Michelle accepted countless invitations to  lunches, dinners, cocktail parties, barbecues, and receptions for right  minded charities." Obama had also joined the East Bank Club, a combined  gym and urban country club, and served on at least a few charitable  boards.
In  addition, Obama, as Remnick admits, was a slow writer. He would later  explain his plodding, 19th-century technique to Daphne Durham  of Amazon. "I would work off an outline -- certain themes or stories  that I wanted to tell -- and get them down in longhand on a yellow pad.  Then I'd edit while typing in what I'd written."
As Andersen tells it, Obama  found himself deeply in debt and "hopelessly blocked." At "Michelle's  urging," Obama "sought advice from his friend and Hyde Park neighbor  Bill Ayers." What attracted the Obamas were "Ayers's proven abilities as  a writer." Noting that Obama had already taped interviews with many of  his relatives, both African and American, Andersen elaborates, "These  oral histories, along with his partial manuscript and a trunkload of  notes were given to Ayers." The result was Dreams From My Father.
Although Dreams did not  do particularly well in 1995, the sales shot through the roof after  Obama's keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic convention. As Osnos  relates, Obama unceremoniously dumped his devoted longtime agent after Dreams  took off and then signed a seven-figure deal with Crown, using only a  by-the-hour attorney.  
Obama pulled off the deal after his election but  before being sworn in as Senator in order to avoid the disclosure and  reporting requirements applicable to members of Congress. Although an  Obama-supporter, Osnos publicly scolds Obama for his "ruthlessness" and  "his questionable judgment about using public service as a personal  payday."
As to the question of income "fairly earned," Obama makes Fabrice 'Fabulous Fab' Tourre look like a lumberjack.
As to the question of income "fairly earned," Obama makes Fabrice 'Fabulous Fab' Tourre look like a lumberjack.
americanthinker.com"... not ... because we begrudge success that is fairly earned."



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