Might want to rethink that. I have studied propaganda extensively, and fail to see several of the key features therein. Demonizing, stereotyping, as examples.
The propaganda seems very clear, the movie after all aspires to be something Michael Moore-esque. The movie is not about evidence that led the author to a conclusion, but a conclusion that sent him on a mission to find evidence to support that conclusion.
I could probably give numerous examples. He clearly attempted to blame Obama for not 'supporting' a half brother in Africa, and then attempted to elicit an admission that Obama was a hypocrite because he did not take care of his family while saying that family was important... and then laid a false foundation that Obama did not help his distant half brother because they had differing views about colonialism. He then built on that assumption later when it suited his conclusion. That is the kind of fallacious reasoning I mean. Only
bad propaganda is lying, good propaganda uses selectively truthy things to promote conclusions already reached.
My impression was that the guy was trying to point out the Bamster's thinking as neo colonialism rather than primarily socialist or marxist influenced.
Well, I think he tried to get the audience to drink deeply from all three wells. Obama was portrayed as an anti colonialist, (which was essentially anti American Socalism), and as if that were not enough - he might have been inspired by violent radical Marxists or Islamists. Finished up with a large world map of the Mideast with barbed wire around a unified Muslim arena all made possible by Obama's hatred of Israel and lack of willingness to do more to Iran about Nuclear weapons.
Quite frankly, the imagery of a potential evil world dictator clucking over a global conquest map seems almost campy.
So anyway, I think that any of those might easily qualify as demonization. I not only stand by my categorization that the movie is propaganda, maybe it is good enough propaganda that people who share its opinions do not perceive it as being that. So, job well done?
As for your comments about Hawaii, they rather baffle me - there certainly is a distinctive set of ideas and sentiments among Hawaiian natives. Which obviously neither Obama or his grandparents were.
It just seemed like so much nonsense to add in. I have a vaguely better first hand knowledge of how the US treats Native Americans because I live in Arizona, but it is fallacious to extrapolate my entire outlook from that. He only does so because it suited his purposes. I would call it begging the question, fallacious reasoning from someone billed as a scholar from a prestigious school. So, maybe also argument from authority too.