Obama camp Slam satirical "New Yorker" Magazine cover
Aides to Barack Obama are blasting a magazine The New Yorker cover that is the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate and wife Michelle Obama engaged in the sense described by an implacable struggle against the Obama e-mail campaign.
The July 21 cover shows the candidate and his wife in the Oval Office to do a punch similar to a couple exchanged before a speech by Obama, after receiving the appointment last month. He wears a Muslim-style while holding a camouflage with an automatic rifle slung over his back. A picture of Osama bin Laden plane above the mantel of the fireplace, which has an American flag burning in. The parody, titled "The Politics of Fear" is an attempt to show how "fear tactics and misinformation" are used in an attempt to derail the Barack Obama campaign, said cover artist Barry Blitt. "I think the idea that the Obamas are branded as unpatriotic [and even less as terrorists] in some sectors is absurd. It seemed to me that represents the concept show that fears it is ridiculous," Blitt has wrote in an e-mail to the Huffington Post. But the Obama campaign had to fight intensive e-mail spam while pretending to be a Muslim Obama Manchurian Candidate his wife to be a black radical. Campaign spokesman Bill Burton parody called on the summit. "The New Yorker May believes, as one of their staff told us that their coverage is a satirical pamphlet of the caricature of Senator Obama right critics have tried to create. But most readers see themselves as tasteless and offensive. And we agree, "said Burton. Obama has not responded to a question on the cover when he responded to journalists questions on Sunday in San Diego. John McCain campaign has also slammed the door "tasteless and offensive." |
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