Wednesday, September 29, 2010
"Requiem For Billy Ayers"
Hopefully, this is an indication of "what goes around, comes around".
In the realm of protesting, peaceful protesting is an American staple; however, killing innocent people to make a point or get attention, is just not tolerable.
We don't want Muslim extremists to do it, do we?...
In the realm of protesting, peaceful protesting is an American staple; however, killing innocent people to make a point or get attention, is just not tolerable.
We don't want Muslim extremists to do it, do we?...
Cliff Kincaid writes about it at Academia.org:
"Christopher G. Kennedy, chairman of the University of Illinois Board of Trustees, led the effort to deny Bill Ayers the title of professor emeritus because Ayers had written a book dedicated in part to the killer of his father, Robert F. Kennedy. But this 'book,' titled, Prairie Fire: The Politics of Revolutionary Anti-Imperialism, had been written back in 1974. Let’s hope that Christopher Kennedy’s expression of disgust can not only lead to a review of what Ayers said but what he did—in the form of eyewitness testimony that Ayers had knowledge of a bombing plot that took the life of San Francisco Police Officer Brian V. McDonnell back in 1970. The case is still open and will be the subject of an October 21 conference at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.
One of the speakers will be Larry Grathwohl, a former FBI informant in the Weather Underground who has talked in detail about how Ayers and his wife Bernardine Dohrn specialized in making bombs deliberately designed to kill people with deadly shrapnel. Ayers told Grathwohl that Dohrn planted the bomb that killed McDonnell. And yet Ayers claims they never hurt anybody and didn’t intend to. This is the claim that gets prominent media attention, while Grathwohl’s testimony to the contrary, delivered under oath before grand juries and before a congressional committee, gets mostly ignored or dismissed."