Jim
Bramlett
(31 Oct 2008)
"The Obama-Lucifer Connection"
Dear friends:
Many have noticed a kind of demonic, supernatural aura to
Barack Obama and his campaign. One symptom is how his supporters and crowds
seem to be mesmerized totally beyond rationality. That is exactly the way the
antichrist will be perceived. I am not saying that Obama is that person, but we
are seeing how it might happen.
The article below by journalist James P.
Pinkerton gives us some insights in how the devil has subtilely become involved
in this campaign.
_____________________________________________
The Devil
Is In the Details: Another Obama Connection You Ought to Know
About
By James P. Pinkerton
FOX News
contributor
Could Lucifer play a role in this presidential election? It
may sound crazy, but one of the candidates in this race has publicly praised,
even emulated, a writer-activist who himself paid tribute to Lucifer. That’s
right, Lucifer, also known as the Devil, Satan, Beelzebubyou get the
idea.
Do you think that admiring a Lucifer-admirer would make a
difference to some voters?
If you’ve never heard of this true factand
most Americans obviously haven’twell, that might help to explain why John
McCain is behind in the polls.
OK, you might be asking, where is this
Lucifer stuff coming from? It comes from a man named Saul Alinsky, who devoted
his life to left-wing agitation in Chicago. He also wrote two seminal books,
“Reveille for Radicals” and “Rules for Radicals,” still regarded as key how-to
manuals for left-wing activists.
But Alinsky was more than just a
leftist; he was a genuine out-there crazy, someone who loved to shock and stun,
just for the helluvit. And so in the first edition of “Rules for Radicals,”
published in 1971, he offered this astounding dedication: “Lest we forget at
least an over the shoulder acknowledgement of the very first radical, from all
our legends, mythology, and history … the first radical known to man who
rebelled against the establishment and did it so effectively that he at least
won his own kingdomLucifer.”
This dedication is no secret. David
Freddoso wrote about it in his book, The
Case Against Barack Obama: The Unlikely Rise and Unexamined Agenda of the
Media’s Favorite Candidate; and the inimitable Ann Coulter noted it, too, just
last month.
And the connection between Alinsky and Barack Obamaand
Alinsky and the left in generalis real enough. As John Fund, author of a
newly revised book, Stealing
Elections: How Voter Fraud Threatens Our Democracy, observes, Alinsky, who
died in 1972, was a sort of godfather to all the activist groups that emerged in
the 60s and 70s, the most famous (or, if you prefer, notorious) of which today
is ACORN.
Fund notes that young Hillary Rodham was such a fan of Alinsky
that she traveled to Chicago, four times, to interview him for an adulatory
school thesis she was writing.
And Obama is an on-the-record fan too:
Fund quotes The Washington Post’s Peter Slevin, writing in 2007, “Obama embraced
many of Alinsky’s tactics and recently said his years as an organizer gave him
the best education of his life.” Slevin further noted that Obama’s and Hillary
Rodham Clinton’s “common connection to Alinsky is one of the striking aspects of
their biographies.”
OK, so the Alinsky-Obama connection is real. But the
full truth about Alinsky, and whom he admired, is so wacky, or so horrible, that
even the media have been reluctant to get into the story. And so it has
received relatively little play. Oh sure, if John McCain had expressed
admiration for a Lucifer admirer, that would have been news, but as we all know,
there’s a media double standard on such things. That media bias is lamentable,
of course, but for a Republican, it’s part of the strategic landscapeone more
roadblock to factor into any GOP victory strategy.
Speaking of McCain,
he would seem to have the greatest interest in taking Obama down a pegor,
according to the latest calculation from RealClearPolitics,
about seven points in the polls. So why hasn’t he highlighted the
Alinsky-Lucifer connection? Why hasn’t the McCain-Palin ticket raised this
issue, knowing full well that if the candidates say it, reporters have to cover
it? Good questions. Did I mention that the Republican nominee is down seven
points?
In debate and argumentation, there’s a concept called the “rule
of three”that is, if you can come up with three examples to support your
argument, you’ve got a pretty good argument. And so, for example, if one were
to make the argument that Obama has strange radical associations, one could
bring up Bill Ayers. And check, the McCain campaign has done that. And of
course, there’s Reverend Wright, who McCain has stayed away from. So no check
there. And no check, of course, for Alinsky-Lucifer. So McCain is left with
the “rule of one,” which isn’t much of a rule. If McCain won’t bring up Wright,
I guess it’s no surprise that he’s not bringing up Alinsky-Lucifer, assuming his
campaign even knows about it.
The point of the “rule of three” is to
make a sustained argument, to paint a comprehensive picture, to build an overall
narrativeso that nobody can say that any one “hit” is just a cheap shot.
That’s what happened to McCain with Ayers; the Obamans, and their allies in the
media, said that it was just a “one off,” the sort of incidental association
that happens in the course of a public career. And McCain had no good
comeback, no additional opposition-research arrows to pull from his
quiver.
So the Obama-Alinsky-Lucifer connection is left to float around
in the vast soup of the Internetplenty of mentions, here and
there,
but no real impact.
But had McCain really gone after Ayers AND Wright AND
Alinsky-Lucifer, all at once, he would have had a strong argument that Obama
was, and is, well out of the mainstream. And then all the information about
Tony Rezko, Emil Jones, and the scandal-ridden Daley machine, would be all the
more compelling to reporters and voters, because, as they would have to admit, a
“pattern has emerged.”
And, for that matter, let’s talk about the great
state of Illinois, where three governors in the last 40 yearsOtto Kerner, Dan
Walker, and George Ryanended up not only convicted, but imprisoned. And a
fourth, incumbent Rod Blagojevich, may also end up in the clink. That’s quite
a streak of corruption. And what does Obama have to say about any of that? And
what did he know, and when did he know it?
If the McCain campaign had
been on its game, its opposition researchers would have gone through every
single day of Obama’s life since he first set foot in Chicago in 1987. Everyone
he met, everything he did. And then, having amassed all that information, the
McCainiacs would have made the rest of us know about itin a sustained,
organized, and unrelenting volley.
That’s how you win a presidential
campaign, even amidst hard times for your party.