Should be six feet under.
Bill Ayers, the 1960s radical who went on to become a college
professor and associate of President Obama, said Saturday the bombings
he helped the Weather Underground carry out to protest the Vietnam War
bear no resemblance to the deadly Boston Marathon attack - and glossed
over the fact that his group's bombs killed three fellow terrorists and
have been linked to the murder of a San Francisco police officer.
“How different is the shooting in Connecticut from shooting at a
hunting range?” Ayers told a reporter who asked him to compare the
incidents after Ayers spoke at a commemoration of the 1970 incident at
Kent State University, where Ohio National Guard members killed four
students during a protest. “Just because they use the same thing,
there’s no relationship at all.”
Ayers went on to accuse Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who spent five
years in a POW camp, of murdering civilians in the war, lament the
deaths of two fellow Weather Underground members – skipping over the
fact that they blew themselves up while trying to make bombs – and
painted his actions as a heroic bid to end U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
Ayers was the keynote speaker at the event, which drew an estimated 350
people on the university’s Commons, according to the
Akron Beacon Journal.
But it was after Ayers made his prepared remarks that he bristled over a
possible comparison of terrorist acts separated by more than four
decades.
At the very least in Leavenworth or Gitmo, with Jane Fonda.
ReplyDeleteI'd settle for that.:)
DeleteWhy is it, that this piece of crap communist has not assumed room temperature?
ReplyDeleteBob
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