http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=178929
Unrepentant terrorist lauded, freedom sought for convicted killer of 2 agents
July 14, 2010
By Bob Unruh
The website for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which is
assigned to protect the United States and enforce its laws, links to
sites that laud the work of unrepentant terrorist Bill Ayers and
promote freedom for convicted agent-killer Leonard Peltier.
The issue was highlighted by researcher and writer Phil Kent, who
heads a communications company in a lengthy career that includes a
stint as a press secretary to a U.S. senator, years of writing for
the Augusta, Ga., Chronicle, the presidency of the American Research
Foundation and serving as spokesman for Americans for Immigration Control.
His report was documented by WND, which confirmed that the FBI
website page discussing hate crimes lists as a "resource" the
Southern Poverty Law Center, a radically liberal organization that
according to its own site "is dedicated to fighting hate and bigotry
… using litigation, education and other forms of advocacy."
A project of the SPLC, its "Tolerance" website, features a laudatory
profile of Ayers from 1998 titled "An Unconditional Embrace."
The website calls Ayers "a civil rights organizer, radical
antiVietnam War activist, teacher and author." Ayers was responsible
for bombings of the New York City police headquarters in 1970, the
U.S. Capitol in 1971 and the Pentagon in 1972 and later was quoted as
saying he didn't think he did enough.
The profile tells how Ayers co-founded the Small Schools Workshop to
reform education systems "by restructuring large, factory-model
schools into teacher-directed, intimate learning environments" and
how he "helps aspiring teachers recognize and tap the potential of
every child."
As WND reported, the Workshop was founded by Mike Klonsky, who served
with Ayers and Ayers' wife, former Weathermen terrorist Bernardine
Dohrn, in the Students for a Democratic Society group, a major
leftist student organization in the 1960s that later splintered, with
Ayers and Dohrn leading a more activist approach with the Weathermen.
Klonsky reportedly favored less aggressive tactics, promoting the
philosophy that young workers possessed the potential to be a
revolutionary force to overthrow capitalism.
WND also reported that Obama and Ayers worked together on an
education foundation, the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, which provided
startup capital to the Workshop.
In 1995, with Obama as its chairman, the newly formed Chicago
Annenberg Challenge, a school-reform organization, gave the Workshop
a grant of $175,000. The Challenge provided another $482,662 to the
Workshop over the next few years.
Ayers was one of the original grantees of the Challenge and was
co-chairman of the Chicago School Reform Collaborative, one of the
two operational arms of the Challenge.
The report doesn't include the fact that Ayers' Weather Underground
faced accusations in the bombings.
Ayers, a onetime full-time leader for Students for a Democratic
Society, also helped launch Barack Obama's political career with a
fundraiser in his home and worked alongside Obama at a Chicago
nonprofit. He then hired Obama to serve as chief of the Chicago
Annenberg Challenge.
WND columnist Jack Cashill also has produced a series of columns
arguing it was Ayers who ghostwrote Obama's award-winning
autobiography, "Dreams From My Father."
Ayers, along with his wife, Bernardine Dohrn, were the main founders
of the Weather Underground, which splintered from the SDS. The terror
group ultimately was assigned responsibility for some 30 bombings
aimed at destroying the defense and security infrastructures of the U.S.
Ayers characterized the Weather Underground as "an American Red Army"
and said the ideology was to: "Kill all the rich people. Break up
their cars and apartments. Bring the revolution home. Kill your parents."
In a 2001 memoir, he wrote, "Everything was absolutely ideal on the
day I bombed the Pentagon. The sky was blue. The birds were singing.
And the bastards were finally going to get what was coming to them."
In a 2001 interview with The New York Times, he said, "I don't regret
setting bombs. I feel we didn't do enough." Accompanying the article
was a photograph of him stepping on an American flag.
The SPLC, linked by the FBI, also features on its Tolerance site an
article called "Thanksgiving Mourning." The piece urges teachers to
ask students to write letters "mourning" Thanksgiving Day on behalf
of those for whom it serves "as a reminder of colonization's
devastating impact on indigenous peoples."
It refers teachers to the United American Indians of New England
site, which on the home page promotes the defense of Leonard Peltier,
who was convicted of shooting and killing two FBI agents in South
Dakota in 1975.
The United website also features Peltier's letter to Mumia Abu-Jamal,
who was convicted of killing Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner.
Kent's video questions the FBI's Web links in light of its official
mission to "protect and defend the United States against terrorist
and foreign-intelligence threats, to uphold and enforce the criminal
laws of the Untied States, and to provide leadership and
criminal-justice services to federal, state, municipal and
international agencies and partners."
"Is the FBI showing leadership to other law-enforcement agencies when
it recommends 'resources' that promote a terror bomber and the
defenders of cop killers?" he asks.
"Why is the FBI recommending a website that tells children to go
visit the defenders of these cop killers?"
And, "Should American taxpayers subsidize the promotion of
organizations that defend domestic terrorist and cop killers?"
The FBI media office, contacted by WND and asked for comment,
transferred a reporter to an answering machine and then declined to
return the call.
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