Latest Entry: The Crushing of Sarah Palin     Latest Comments: Talk Back Here

« Will McCain Use The Odinga Video? | Main | GOP Puts Out Portfolio On Obama-Ayers Relationship »

October 6, 2008

Camp Obama -- Indoctrinating Youth To Impact The Election

Topics: Political News and commentaries

David Hinz at The Minority Report points to Investors Business Daily Editorials that have a chilling account of emails that are going out to our youth, searching for volunteers to attend "Camp Obama" and become indoctrinated in leftist philosophy. From the emails (emphasis mine):

Quote:

"By participating in Camp Obama you'll get the kind of experience that Barack got as a community organizer on the South Side of Chicago, where he learned that real change happens from the bottom up."

The IBD article points out that the email provides a website, complete with photos of the camp, that links to the Obama campaign. One of those photos:

Quote:

Underneath a "Welcome to Camp Obama" banner, a trainer at Obama headquarters in Chicago is seen speaking next to a wipe board with the words "Saul Alinsky" scrawled across it.

Of particular note is another photo showing Barack Obama's Chicago community organizer mentor Mike Kruglik.

Quote:

Another slide of a camp trainer identified as Mike Kruglik is equally telling. Kruglik happens to be the Alinsky disciple who first taught Obama hardball organizing tactics on the South Side. He was Obama's boss in the '80s. Kruglik now works for the Chicago-based Gamaliel Foundation, which trains and deploys radicals across the country.

Kruglik once declared Obama "the undisputed master of agitation," according to David Freddoso, author of the best-seller "The Case Against Barack Obama."

Obama learned well from the master agitator. Alinsky taught future radicals that bad things are often done for the right reasons, love without power is sentimental mush, power must be taken, and all change comes about as a result of threat and pressure.

Obama calls his Alinskyite experience "the best education I ever had."

As David Hinz points out, "Historically, campaigns have looked at young people as the hardest demographics to mobilize," according to Hans Reimer, the campaign's national youth vote director. "In reality, if you know what you're doing, they can be one of the easiest to mobilize." Read more of David's commentary here.  Read all of the IBD piece here.




Posted by Hyscience at October 6, 2008 11:28 PM


Articles Related to Political News and commentaries:

Trackback Pings

TrackBack URL for this entry:

Comments

Post a comment




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)

;