Not only that, but there was obviously a conscious attempt to find a Tea Party protester making the same gestures that Bill Ayers was making in the photo that includes him (2nd from right). This actually has so many convoluted levels to it, those who make these comparisons should be checking into an institution soon unless they wake up.
Think of how Bill Ayers must feel! He's being compared with Tea Partiers. Perish the thought. Ayers is on record as saying that he not only doesn't regret setting bombs and that his group didn't do enough. To think that he's being compared to a group that hasn't even come close to his emotional investment when it came to confronting the government. Ayers used bombs. Tea Partiers are using the Constitution.
In likely the most egregious paragraph in this piece of dreck in the New York Times, by Benedict Carey - what a first name, huh - he also attempts to tie a Muslim terrorist / domestic enemy that infiltrated the U.S. Army as well as the communist sympathizing whack job Joe Stack, who slammed his plane into an Austin, TX IRS building as being motivated by the kind of "rhetoric" heard on talk radio.
Most experts agree that such rhetoric probably raises the remote risk of lone-wolf violence — acts of individual terrorism like the shooting at Fort Hood last November, or the attack last month in Austin, Tex., in which a man flew his plane into the building housing an Internal Revenue Service office, killing himself and an office worker.If Carey wants to tie talk radio to those two, he might want to point to Islamic talk radio and Liberal talk radio as the culprits.
h/t to Gateway Pundit
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