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Saturday, June 21, 2014

New Meme: Liberty Movement More Dangerous Than Al-Qaida

New Meme: Liberty Movement More Dangerous Than Al-Qaida
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Is the liberty movement more dangerous than al-Qaida? CNN national security analyst Peter Bergen thinks so.
“According to data collected by the New America Foundation, right-wing extremists have killed 37 people in 16 violent incidents, in the United States since the 9/11 attacks. That number is more than the 21 people killed by militants motivated by al-Qaeda’s ideology in the United States in the post-9/11 era,” Bergen recently wrote for CNN.com.
Apparently, so do Hillary Clinton and Harry Reid, neither of whom have found time lately to denounce either al-Qaida or the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the group that instigated the attempted takeover of Iraq. But they have found time to call gun rights supporters “terrorists.”

The source of Bergen’s data, the New American Foundation, is a George Soros- and CIA-funded, globalist-backed misinformation disseminating think tank. Other sources of Bergen’s disinformation piece include the Southern Preposterous Lie Center. Of course, it may just be a coincidence that al-Qaida was created, funded and equipped by the CIA and that ISIS leaders were trained by agents of the U.S. government.
Since 2009, the regime has been working overtime in attempting to sway public opinion against those who oppose the growing tyranny of the U.S. government. In 2009, the Department of Homeland Security issued a report titled “Rightwing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recuitment.” In 2013, the Combating Terrorism Center at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., came out with a new report titled “Challengers from the Sidelines: Understanding America’s Violent Far Right.” The report lumps limited government activists into three categories it claims are responsible for 350 “attacks initiated by far-right groups/individuals” in 2011: racist/white supremacists, anti-Federalists and fundamentalists. The report did not define what makes an attack a “far-right” action, nor did it list specific events except to compare them to the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City (a likely false flag attack exploited by President Bill Clinton to bolster his sagging Presidency) and the Atlanta abortion clinic bombing by Eric Robert Rudolph.

The report links the mainstream conservative movement and the violent “far right” and describes conservatives as living in the past and liberals as being “future oriented.”
In 2012, the FBI in Colorado issued a report telling businesses to be suspicious of people who: are concerned about identity privacy; pay with cash; alter their appearance by changing their hairstyle or growing (or shaving) facial hair; have missing fingers and hands; make religious statements; and make bulk purchases of food, ammunition and high-capacity magazines.
The truth is, attacks on police officers — whether by so-called “right wing extremists” or simply criminals doing what criminals do –are down. According to the Officer Down Memorial Page website, only 30 died by gunfire in 2013. In 2012, 48 were shot. In 1990. that number was 60.
Yet it is the government that is militarizing local police forces by giving them military surplus equipment and training. And police are becoming more violent by the day, as we show with multiple accounts in our Power of the State section. And it is government that is fomenting wars and arming terrorists around the globe while it attempts to disarm Americans. And it was Barack Obama who considered deploying the military on supporters of Cliven Bundy.
So is the liberty movement more dangerous than al-Qaida? To the statists in government, probably so. But not because it’s violent.

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