Murrietta, CA protest against dumping of illegal aliens by feds |
The U.S.
began with protests that evolved into a full scale rebellion we call the
Revolution. Throughout our history, there have been many protests and those
against slavery evolved into the Civil War. War—whether for or against it—has
been a prime generator of protests.
On the
evenings of Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday Megyn Kelly of Fox News interviewed
Bill Ayers, the leader of the Weather Underground, a group he cofounded in 1969
as a self-described communist revolutionary group. These days he calls himself “a Communist with
a small ‘c’”
During the
early 1970s the group engaged in bombings to protest the war in Vietnam. During
the interview, Ayers insisted that he and others only bombed property and did
not kill anyone, although at one point a group he described as breakaway was planning
to kill officers, their wives and girlfriends attending a dance at a military
base, but instead they were killed when their bombs went off in a New York
townhouse. Neither Ayers nor his wife, Bernadine Dohrn ever served time for their
bombings. Both entered academia. Ayers taught at the University of Illinois for
many years.
As Jerome
R. Corsi reported in his 2008 book, “The Obama Nation: Leftist Politics and the
Cult of Personality”, he noted that when Alice Palmer, an Illinois state
senator decided to run for Congress, “she went out of her way to name Obama as
her handpicked successor.” Palmer was a dedicated Communist and admirer of the
then-Soviet Union. In 1995, “To get Obama’s state senate race off to a good
start, Palmer arranged a function for a few influential liberals in the
district, at the Hyde Park home of Weather Underground activists, Ayers and
Dohrn.”
Corsi
wrote, “Palmer would never have introduced Obama to the Hyde Park political
community at the Ayers-Dohrn home unless she saw an affinity between Ayers and
Dohrn’s radical leftist history, her own history of far-leftists politics, and
the politics of Barack Obama.” Ayers and Obama would serve together on the
board of the Woods Fund for three years, beginning in 1999, the year Obama
joined it.
Megyn
Kelly did not explore the Obama-Ayers relationship. When he campaigned in 2008,
it was brushed off as their just being “neighbors” in Hyde Park and it was
pointed out that Obama was about eight years old when Ayers was bombing in the
name of his leftist revolution. Between then and when he met Ayers in 1995
Obama had grown up in a family of far-leftists and had been mentored in Hawaii
by Frank Marshall Davis, a card-carrying member of the Communist Party
USA.
It did not
surprise me to hear Bill Ayers say on Wednesday evening that he was not proud
to be an American and did not consider it an exceptional nation. In both cases,
he was reflecting the result of a recent Pew Research poll that indicated that
self-described liberals expressed these views.
I recall
the bombings of the 1970s. There were lots of them, along with massive marches
in Washington, D.C. to protest the Vietnam War. I recall the Civil Rights
movement that used marches and other non-violent means to achieve their goals.
Earlier the suffrage movement and secured the vote for women.
It strikes
me that the present generation of both young and older Americans seem to be devoid of much, if any, rebellion against an intrusive government, except for expressions
of it on their blogs and in their tweets. We surely do not need bombings, but
only the protest against Obamacare in 2009 managed to evoke a significant
turnout in Washington. D.C. Since its passage it has proven to be a nightmare
for everyone.
Much has
changed from the era of the 1970s and the resistance to the war in Vietnam. The
wars that followed 9/11, first in Afghanistan and later in Iraq, did not evoke
much protest. Initially they were popular. The first Iraq conflict, 1990-91,
drove the Iraqis out of Kuwait and was so swift and successful that the troops
were welcomed home with parades. The 2003 invasion, however, devolved into a
sense of weariness as 4,500 casualties and over a trillion dollars seemed to
achieve nothing
substantive.
substantive.
What was
different? In the 1960s the leftist teachers unions had begun to exercise
increasing control over the curriculums being taught. By 1979, Jimmy Carter
signed off on a Department of Education that began operations in 1980. Earlier,
conscription for military service was replaced by an all-volunteer military in
the 1970s. Those of us that served prior to that understand the value of the
draft and the service it required because it forged a bond between a man and
his nation. These days, of course, it is a very different military with
females, as well as openly gay members.
Throughout
the 1980s and 1990s the economy was robust. The generations being born and
coming of age received a relatively poor, but thoroughly liberal education
regarding U.S. history and civics. On graduation they could focus on jobs,
family, and “the good life.” There was little to protest and even less
initiative to do so. Even Bush 43’s Iraq war generated little by way of an
organized protest.
The 2008
financial crisis left no room for protest in the lives of Americans because the
economy left millions unemployed and/or dependent on a government welfare
program. It was a perfect time for Obama to suddenly emerge as a candidate for
President. He had a celebrity’s personality and he was black, affording
generations of liberals the opportunity to fulfill the promise of equality that
had begun in the 1960s. He promised “hope and change.” He delivered years in
which one scandal after another occurred.
Still, so
many Americans devoted so little time to news of the Obama administration and
received such a biased version of it from the mainstream media that they
reelected him in 2012. That is indifference to the welfare of the nation. That
is an apathetic approach to national politics. That is the failure to
distinguish between character and celebrity.
It is a
very different America today and one which is sharply divided between liberals
and conservatives. It is an America being led by a President who has tossed
aside the Constitution and announced his intention to govern with “a pen and a
phone.” Such an intention would have
been greeted with a huge outcry of rage in the past.
The one
issue that is evoking protests these days is illegal immigration and the
protest in Murrieta, California that turned away buses filled with illegal
aliens may lead to larger and more numerous protests to end this practice and
reform immigration starting with more and higher walls on the southern border.
Today
protest, except for signing a petition or participating on an Internet chatroom,
is all that too many of today’s Americans can manage to perform. We don’t want
to see a return to the bombings of the Ayers’ era and we may not fill the
streets, but it would be nice if more serious-minded Americans would show up to
vote in the November midterm elections.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
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