While details from President Barack Obama’s college years are scant, with the exception
of a few acquaintances’ recollections, in 2008 one of his Harvard Law
classmates offered a few seldom-heard remembrances of the president’s
time at Harvard.
Conservative commentator Carol Platt Liebau, author of “Prude: How the Sex-Obsessed Culture Damages Girls (and America, Too!),” guest hosted Hugh Hewitt’s February 22, 2008 radio show and described her relationship with Obama during her law
school years. Despite his liberal slant, she said Obama was respectful
of the conservative perspective when he was president of the Harvard Law
Review.
“I knew him reasonably well — as well as most people knew him, if not
better — because quite in contrast to this image that Barack tries to
project, as someone who is warm and all-embracing and all that kind of
stuff,” Liebau said.
“I mean, I will tell you I’ve written a piece that has praised Barack
for certain things and I stand by that piece: He was color-blind in the
way he chose, staffed the law review when he was president. He did give
both sides a fair hearing. He always went with the far-left side, but
he did give both sides a respectful hearing, which was fairly atypical
at Harvard Law School at that time.”
The essay she referred to was published by Townhall.com in 2007. It described President Obama as a listener but “a liberal’s liberal.”
At the time of Liebau’s radio broadcast, Obama was being portrayed as a great unifier, which inspired bizarre reactions from the likes of MSNBC’s Chris Matthews. But Liebau said that was hardly the way he was viewed at Harvard.
“Quite in contrast to this all-embracing kind of ‘earth father’ image
— this sort of messianic blaze of glory with which he’s deemed to
envelope our television screens — he was a pretty cold fish,” she said.
“He was not a warm person. He was not the type of person that gave
you a warm and fuzzy [feeling]. And you got the sense that he even
wasn’t even terribly fixated or focused on what he was doing.”
Liebau also describe Obama as a guy “whose eyes were always looking over your shoulder to see if anyone more important is in the room” and that he was always looking for “bigger and better things.”
Her longest one-on-one communication with Obama, she said, came when she was managing editor of the Harvard Law Review.
“So I guess it caused a lot of rumbling that I didn’t know about, and
so we were all impressed with a return visit by our retired president,
the former president, Barack Obama, who took me out on the back steps of
Gannett House, which is where the review was housed and wanted to have a
little one-on-one with me,” she said.
Liebau said his advice started off sound, but ultimately came off as disappointing.
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