WE BELIEVE
IN
SOLUTIONS!
Our children
deserve
nothing less
and you can
help make a
difference!
Need some
inspiration?
NEWS
FLASH!!
In 1916
while
self-proclaimed
Communists
were
plotting
the take
over of
labor
unions
in
America
and
Canada,
John
Dewey's
Democracy
and
Education
emerged
on the
American
landscape:
An
Introduction
to the
Philosophy
of
Education.
Dewey's
views
advance
the
ideas of
the
"progressive
education
movement,"
an
outgrowth
of the
progressive
political
movement,
progressive
education
seeks to
make
schools
more
effective
agents
of
democracy.
Just a
scant
three
years
later in
1919,
the
Progressive
Education
Association
is
founded
with the
goal of
reforming
American
education.
Reform
or
Transform
and to
what?
Teacher Covered up Burning Flag in
Front of Class Days After 9/11
The
teacher accused of burning an American flag in front of a sixth
grade class has been fired thanks to an organized effort by
PDN's volunteers, a Sacramento police officer and talk radio.
Source
Kory Clift was teaching at Del Paso Heights Elementary School
when the incident occurred. It came to light when a student told
his parents Clift burned part of the flag. According to the
student, Clift commented, "Babylon is burning," then said "I
can't burn the entire thing because it's illegal." The motive
for the incident is unclear.
HOW DO WE DEFEAT
THEM? CLICK HERE
Coming in
2010 - The
Founding
Father's
America:
The Designed Demise
of our Schools
Khrushchev
said. "Your
children
will live
under
communism."
"You
Americans
are so
gullible.
No, you
won't accept
Communism
outright;
but we'll
keep feeding
you small
doses of
Socialism
until you
will finally
wake up and
find that
you already
have
Communism.
We won't
have to
fight you;
we'll so
weaken your
economy,
until you
fall like
overripe
fruit into
our hands."
On August
24, 1963,
speaking in
Yugoslavia,
Khrushchev
quipped, "I
once said,
'We will
bury you,'
and I got
into trouble
with it. Of
course we
will not
bury you
with a
shovel. Your
own working
class will
bury you,"
This message
is a
reference to
the Marxist
saying, "The
proletariat
is the
undertaker
of
capitalism",
based on the
concluding
statement in
Chapter 1 of
the
Communist M
manifesto.
Patriots, I
have been an
anti-communist
for over 50
years. Now
we have
avowed
Communists
in the White
House and
key staff
and czars
that look to
Mao Tse-Tung
for guidance
and
inspiration.
These same
Communists
are now
GOING TO OUR
SCHOOLS and
picking up
where
"Operation
Abolition"
left off.
Napoleon
said: "Let
China sleep.
When she
awakens, the
world will
be sorry."
Anita
Dunn is a
veteran
Democratic
strategist
and was a
top adviser
on Barack
Obama’s
presidential
campaign.
She has now
taken over
as White
House
communications
director.
Anita Dunn's
"confession"
starts 4:07
minutes into
the video
above as she
addresses a
group of
High School
Students.
Okay.. so if you
don't like Glenn
Beck...
On October 14th, Lord Christopher Monckton, a noted climate change skeptic, gave a presentation at Bethel University in St. Paul, MN. In this 4 minute excerpt from his speech, he issues a dire warning.
All Doom and Gloom you say?
Where did it begin?
Your Webmaster's
personal brush with
Communists.
"You don't want the
class to see my
movie Mrs. Beard...
Why not?"
And so it would
begin... a
teeter-totter ride
for the kid that
wore an "I like Ike"
campaign button in
1952. I was a fan of
the weekly
adventures of
"Herbert A.
Philbrick, who for
nine frightening
years lead three
lives--average
citizen, member of
the Communist Party,
and counterspy for
the F.B.I." (Yeah, I
know. It was Lee
Harvey Oswald's
favorite show in
1953)
In the mid 1950's I
would become pals
with Congressman
Clyde Doyle who
could never find the
20 acres of land he
owned just to the
southwest of our
1,800 acre ranch. He
would become my pen
pal in Congress as a
senior member of the
infamous House Un
American Activities
Committee. I
happened to be a fan
of WWII Marine
"Tail-Gunner Joe"
McCarthy a
Republican Senator
from the state of
Wisconsin too. I
would get my first
bad impressions of
the news media from
Edward R Morrow.
I would learn that
the birth date of
the plan to take
over higher
education in
California was
hatched by the
Communist party on
September 27, 1957.
Between McCarthy,
godfather to Robert
F. Kennedy's first
child and Doyle,
they would light a
fire in me to
campaign for a
junior Senator from
Massachusetts, John
Kennedy in 1960.
Most of the Kennedys
were avowed
anti-communist. I
was troubled by my
candidate's weak
position on Quemoy
and Matsu in the
debates. Being soft
on the potential of
a Communist invasion
by Red China, I had
my first doubts
about Democrats because of
those two little
islands.
With a Kennedy
victory under my
belt, it was time to
take a stand with my
other two friends,
Doyle and McCarthy,
who were taking a
beating in the press
and by Hollywood.
Congressman Doyle
sent me a print of
the highly
controversial film,
Operation Abolition
to play for my sixth
grade Civics class.
David met Goliath
the minute I stepped
foot on my Liberty
Elementary School
property with film
in hand.
Liberty... has a
nice ring to it, no?
"Give me
Liberty or give me
Death - if we're not
here to learn, what
good is life?"
I'll spare you the
details but I was
able to show the
film to my grammar
school class,
smuggle it into
Central Junior High
and have a friend
show it to several
more classes before
we got busted. Herb
Philbrick would have
been proud.
Here we are, 57
years later,
questioning how
America is
endangered by its
enemies, foreign and
domestic. As if the
world was not
already full of
enough evidence of
the evil of
Communism, the fall
of the Soviet Union
led to the opening
of the KGB archives
in Moscow to
researchers, and
guess what?
At the direction of
the Soviet Union,
there were Communist
agents and
sympathizers in the
US Army, the
Manhattan Project,
the State
Department, many
labor unions, and
other strategic
targets. The
archives show that
the Communist Party
USA received
millions of dollars
each year from the
Soviet Union for the
purpose of
undermining America,
with Hollywood being
specifically
targeted for
infiltration.
The
Investigation:
Operation Abolition
In the weeks and
months ahead, your
webmaster will
chronicle the lives
and successes of the
Communist seen in
Operation Abolition.
You will find them
at the end of this
page, starting with
the Obituary of
Archie Brown who
died this month!.
Time Magazine -
Friday, Mar. 17,
1961
By the slick
technical standards
of Hollywood,
Operation Abolition
is one of the least
likely film hits
since nickelodeons
first started to
charge a dime. The
movie is an abrupt,
badly edited
45-minute short. Its
eye-jolting camera
work is murky, its
sound track raucous
and shrill. But its
impact is pure boffo.
Prints of Operation
Abolition are booked
months in advance by
Army camps, student
groups, American
Legion posts,
political meetings,
churches and
corporations.
Pennsylvania
Democrat Francis E.
Walter, chairman of
the House Committee
on Un-American
Activities,
estimates that more
than 10 million
people have seen the
film since its
release last July.
Its main, heavily
accented points: the
"riots" were a clear
example of Communist
crowd tactics ; the
students were either
Communists or "Red
dupes." As if in
proof, much of the
camera work zooms in
on verbose
Longshoreman Archie
Brown, California's
No. 2 Communist, who
was summoned as a
witness, finally got
tossed out of the
hearing room for
misbehavior.
Largely because of
such blunt
accusations,
Operation Abolition
stirs up some kind
of trouble nearly
everywhere it goes.
Last week Narrator
Lewis, who has
spoken on behalf of
the film at some 75
U.S. colleges,
appeared with
Operation Abolition
at Wesleyan
University in
Middletown, Conn,
and the University
of Connecticut at
Storrs. As usual,
well-organized
campus liberals
picketed the
showing, jammed the
hall to heckle, boo,
fire loaded
questions at the
narrator.
Clyde Gilman Doyle,
was a Representative
from California
Born in Oakland,
Alameda County,
Calif., July 11,
1887; attended
public schools in
Oakland, Calif.,
Seattle, Wash., Los
Angeles and Long
Beach, Calif.; was
graduated from the
College of Law of
the University of
Southern California
at Los Angeles in
1917; was admitted
to the bar in 1916
and commenced
practice in Long
Beach, Calif.;
member and president
of the Board of
Freeholders, Long
Beach, Calif., in
1921 and 1922;
member of the
California State
Board of Education;
elected as a
Democrat to the
Seventy-ninth
Congress (January 3,
1945-January 3,
1947); unsuccessful
candidate for
reelection in 1946
to the Eightieth
Congress; elected to
the Eighty-first and
to the seven
succeeding
Congresses and
served from January
3, 1949, until his
death in Arlington,
Va., March 14, 1963
Sunday,
October 18, 2009
Archie Brown,dead at 79, Union
Leader In Landmark
Case on Communists
Archie Brown, the West Coast longshoremen's union leader who won the 1965 Supreme Court decision upholding the right of Communists to serve as union officials, died Friday at his home in San Francisco. He was 79 years old.
His wife, Esther, said he died of lung cancer.
In 1962 Mr. Brown, a staunch Communist, was sentenced to six months in prison after being convicted of serving as a party member and a member of the executive board of the San Francisco local of the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union. His membership violated an anti-Communist provision of the Federal Landrum-Griffin Act of 1959, and it was his appeal that brought Justice Earl Warren's landmark decision striking down that provision.
Mr. Brown's defense was that the provision was an attack on the union's consitutional right to select its own officers without regard to race, religion or political affiliation.
Archie Brown was born in Sioux City, Iowa, in 1911. He completed ninth grade and then, at the age of 13, went with a friend to Oakland, Calif., where he found work hustling newspapers. In 1928, he helped organize a newsboys' strike, and it was then that he became a committed Communist. He joined the Young Communist League in 1929.
Eventually he became a longshoreman in San Francisco, and after a maritime strike in 1934, he joined the waterfront union movement. The following year, he was charged with the murder of a fellow unionist and spent 81 days in prison before being acquitted. Fought in Spain, and at Bulge
In 1938 he joined the Republican forces in the Spanish Civil War, serving eight months as a machine gunner with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. In World War II, he served with the 76th Infantry Division and took part in the Battle of the Bulge.
After the war in 1946, he was named the Communist Party's state trade union director in California and later became a member of the party's national committee.
Mr. Brown gained national prominence in 1960 during hearings of the House Un-American Activities Committee in San Francisco. He and other Communists were accused of organizing demonstrations against the committee and committing acts of violence against police officers trying to restore order. He was arrested in 1961 on a charge of violating the Landrum-Griffin Act.
He retired from the longshoremen's union in 1976 but remained an active supporter of causes like the Sandinista movement in Nicaragua and the opposition to Gen. Augusto Pinochet, the former Chilean President.
He is survived by his wife; a sister, Minnie, and a brother, Frank, both of Berkeley, Calif.; another brother, Abe, of Alameda, Calif.; three daughters, Susan, of Sebastopol, Calif., and Stephanie and Betsey, both of San Francisco; a son, Doug, of Berkeley, nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.