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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Communist Terrorist and Obama Confident to Speak at Annual Teacher’s Convention

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wanted by fbi - ayers
The later part of the 1960s was a turbulent time in American history.  Anti-war riots were being held in cities all across the nation.  Some say it was a time to promote peace, with the hippy and free love movements, but to others, it was the time of domestic terrorism and violence.
Ayers first rose to any form of prominence when he became head of the socialist organization, Students for a Democratic Society, in 1968.  Note how communists regularly use the term Democratic as being synonymous with socialistic or communistic. Ayers SDS group in Detroit soon took on an air of militancy, becoming the Weather Underground in 1969.
A self-proclaimed communist, Ayers and his colleagues wanted to use the anti-Vietnam War riots as a disguise for the domestic terrorist actions they were about to launch on an unsuspecting America.  The group plotted to set off bombs at the US Capitol Building, Pentagon and various police stations.  Their first act of terrorism occurred in 1969 when Ayers and his fellow Weathermen planted a bomb that blew up a police memorial statue in Chicago.  When the statue was rebuilt a year later, they blew it up again.

In 1970, Ayers girlfriend and two other members of the Weather Underground were killed while building a nail bomb in their Greenwich Village townhouse.  The explosion caused Ayers to go underground, but did not thwart his terrorist activities.  In 1970, he joined in the bombing of the New York City Police Department headquarters buildings.  In 1971, he helped detonate a bomb at the US Capitol Building in Washington DC and the Pentagon in 1972.
The FBI filed charges against Ayers and other members of the Weather Underground.  While in hiding, Ayers changed locations, names, jobs and identity.  During that time, Ayers managed to get master’s degrees in early childhood education and eventually obtained a position as a college instructor. Eventually, he retired as a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Education, where taught courses in social justice, children in trouble with the law, narrative and interpretive speech and urban educational reform. Read More:

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