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Burning, shooting, oh what fun
On this made-up holiday!
Coincidentally, the seven principles of Kwanzaa are the very
same seven principles of the Symbionese Liberation Army, another
charming invention of the Least-Great Generation. In 1974,
Patricia Hearst, kidnap victim-cum-SLA revolutionary, posed next
to the banner of her alleged captors, a seven-headed cobra. Each
snake head stood for one of the SLA's revolutionary principles:
Umoja, Kujichagulia, Ujima, Ujamaa, Nia, Kuumba and Imani -- the
same seven "principles" of Kwanzaa.
With his Kwanzaa greetings, President Bush is saluting the
intellectual sibling of the Symbionese Liberation Army, killer of
housewives and police. He is saluting the founder of United
Slaves, who were such lunatics that they shot Panthers for not
being sufficiently insane -- all with the FBI as their covert
ally.
It's as if David Duke invented a holiday called "Anglika," and
the president of the United States issued a presidential
proclamation honoring the synthetic holiday. People might well
take notice if that happened.
Kwanzaa was the result of a '60s psychosis grafted onto the
black community. Liberals have become so mesmerized by
multicultural nonsense that they have forgotten the real history
of Kwanzaa and Karenga's United Slaves -- the violence, the
Marxism, the insanity. Most absurdly, for leftists anyway, is
that they have forgotten the FBI's tacit encouragement of this
murderous black nationalist cult founded by the father of
Kwanzaa.
Now the "holiday" concocted by an FBI dupe is honored in a
presidential proclamation and public schools across the nation.
The only principle Kwanzaa promotes is liberals' unbounded
capacity to respect any faith but Christianity.
A movement that started approximately 2,000 years before
Kwanzaa leaps well beyond collectivism and litter removal to
proclaim that we are all equal before God. "There is neither Jew
nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one
in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28). It was practitioners of that
faith who were at the forefront of the abolitionist and civil
rights movements. But that's all been washed down the memory
hole, along with the true origins of Kwanzaa. |