http://tinyurl.com/4ay3or

- - -
It looks like Jeremiah Wright was just the tip of the iceberg. Not only did
Barack Obama savor Wright's sermons, Obama gave legitimacy - and a whole lot
of money - to education programs built around the same extremist
anti-American ideology preached by Reverend Wright. And guess what? Bill
Ayers is still palling around with the same bitterly anti-American
Afrocentric ideologues that he and Obama were promoting a decade ago. All
this is revealed by a bit of digging, combined with a careful study of
documents from the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, the education foundation
Obama and Ayers jointly led in the late 1990s.

...

Carruthers's key writings are collected in his book, Intellectual Warfare.
Reading it is a wild, anti-American ride. In his book, we learn that
Carruthers and his like-minded colleagues have formed an organization called
the Association for the Study of Classical African Civilizations (ASCAC),
which takes as its mission the need to "dismantle the European intellectual
campaign to commit historicide against African peoples." Carruthers includes
"African-Americans" within a group he would define as simply "African." When
forced to describe a black person as "American," Carruthers uses quotation
marks, thus indicating that no black person can be American in any authentic
sense. According to Carruthers, "The submission to Western civilization and
its most outstanding offspring, American civilization, is, in reality,
surrender to white supremacy."

Carruthers's goal is to use African-centered education to recreate a
separatist universe within America, a kind of state-within-a-state. The
rites of passage movement is central to the plan. Carruthers sees enemies on
every part of the political spectrum, from conservatives, to liberals, to
academic leftists, all of whom reject advocates of Kemetic civilization,
like himself, as dangerous and academically irresponsible extremists.
Carruthers sees all these groups as deluded captives of white supremacist
Eurocentric culture. Therefore the only safe place for Africans living in
the United States (i.e. American blacks) is outside the mental boundaries of
our ineradicably racist Eurocentric civilization. As Carruthers puts it:
"...some of us have chosen to reject the culture of our oppressors and
recover our disrupted ancestral culture." The rites of passage movement is a
way to teach young Africans in the United States how to reject America and
recover their authentic African heritage.

America as Rape
Carruthers admits that Africans living in America have already been shaped
by Western culture, yet compares this Americanization process to rape: "We
may not be able to get our virginity back after the rape, but we do not have
to marry the rapist...." In other words, American blacks (i.e. Africans) may
have been forcibly exposed to American culture, but that doesn't mean they
need to accept it. The better option, says Carruthers, is to separate out
and relearn the wisdom of Africa's original Kemetic culture, embodied in the
teachings of the ancient wise man, Ptahhotep (an historical figure
traditionally identified as the author of a Fifth Dynasty wisdom book).
Anything less than re-Africanization threatens the mental, and even
physical, genocide of Africans living in an ineradicably white supremacist
United States.

Carruthers is a defender of Leonard Jeffries, professor in the department of
black studies at City College in Harlem, infamous for his black supremacist
and anti-Semitic views. Jeffries sees whites as oppressive and violent "ice
people," in contrast to peaceful and mutually supportive black "sun people."
The divergence says Jeffries, is attributable to differing levels of melanin
in the skin. Jeffries also blames Jews for financing the slave trade.
Carruthers defends Jeffries and excoriates the prestigious black academics
Carruthers views as traitorous for denouncing their African brother,
Jeffries. Carruthers's vision of the superior and peaceful Kemetic
philosophy of Ptahhotep triumphing over Greco-Euro-American-white culture
obviously parallels Jeffries' opposition between ice people and sun people.

...

Given the precedent of his earlier responses on Ayers and Wright, Obama
might be inclined to deny personal knowledge of the educational philosophy
he was so generously funding. Such a denial would not be convincing. For one
thing, we have evidence that in 1995, the same year Obama assumed control of
the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, he publicly rejected "the unrealistic
politics of integrationist assimilation," a stance that clearly resonates
with both Wright and Carruthers. (See "No Liberation.")

And as noted, Wright had invited Carruthers, Hilliard, and like-minded
thinkers to address his Trinity congregants. Wright likes to tick off his
connections to these prominent Afrocentrists in sermons, and Obama would
surely have heard of them. Reading over SSAVC's Annenberg proposals, Obama
could hardly be ignorant of what they were about. And if by some chance
Obama overlooked Hilliard's or Carruthers's names, SSAVC's proposals are
filled with references to "rites of passage" and "Ptahhotep," dead giveaways
for the anti-American and separatist ideological concoction favored by
SSAVC.

We know that Obama did read the proposals. Annenberg documents show him
commenting on proposal quality. And especially after 1995, when concerns
over self-dealing and conflicts of interest forced the Ayers-headed
"Collaborative" to distance itself from monetary issues, all funding
decisions fell to Obama and the board. Significantly, there was dissent
within the board. One business leader and experienced grant-smith
characterized the quality of most Annenberg proposals as "awful." (See "The
Chicago Annenberg Challenge: The First Three Years," p. 19.) Yet Obama and
his very small and divided board kept the money flowing to ideologically
extremist groups like the South Shore African Village Collaborative, instead
of organizations focused on traditional educational achievement.

As if the content of SSAVC documents wasn't warning enough, their proposals
consistently misspelled "rites of passage" as "rights of passage," hardly an
encouraging sign from a group meant to improve children's reading skills.
The Chicago Annenberg Challenge's own evaluators acknowledged that
Annenberg-aided schools showed no improvement in achievement scores.
Evaluators attributed that failure, in part, to the fact that many of
Annenberg's "external partners" had little educational expertise. A group
that puts its efforts into Kwanzaa celebrations and half-baked history
certainly fits that bill, and goes a long way toward explaining how Ayers
and Obama managed to waste upwards of $150 million without improving student
achievement.

However he may seek to deny it, all evidence points to the fact that, from
his position as board chair of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, Barack Obama
knowingly and persistently funded an educational project that shared the
extremist and anti-American philosophy of Jeremiah Wright. The Wright affair
was no fluke. It's time for McCain to say so.
- - -

Stanley Kurtz is the only American who has taken the time to research what,
exactly, Obama did on the board of the Annenberg Challenge, to which Ayers
got him appointed, and with whom he worked closely, and what they funded. He
fought all kinds of legal battles to get this information.

That many Americans, including some on this list, wish to turn a blind eye
to this reality is tragic.

But no one can claim "I didn't know" when America becomes a giant permanent
slum of race riots, instability and economic distress after Obama, and a
super-majority of Dems in Congress, are done "changing" it.

You just didn't want to know.

- Bob



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