How do you go about taking over an institution that is millions of times bigger than you can wrap your arms around? What you do is try to set the society in which the institution exists against it. You do that by accusing the institution of failing to fulfill the mandate for which it was established.
This can be tricky to accomplish because
anything you say will be checked and verified. If it proves to be false, you’ll
lose your credibility, and the matter will end here. But if what you say stands
as probable, you’ll be given the benefit of the doubt, and allowed to proceed
with your plan, whatever it may be.
To make a falsehood sound probable, you speak as
if you were an authority on the subject. You talk about trivial realities
concerning that subject as if they were substantive points, while ignoring to
mention what is truly substantive. The audience may or may not know about those
points but, like a magician, you distract the audience by making it believe that
the points are not important given that you, who are the authority on the
subject, is ignoring them.
You can see how this devious game is played successfully
when you study the article that came under the title, “2021: The left’s radical
indoctrination of students,” and the subtitle: “We’re all just walking up to
it.” The article was written by Scott Walker, who is founder and current
president of Young America Foundation (YAF), and published on December 31, 2021
in The Washington Times.
Without defining either of the words “left”,
“radical” or “indoctrination”, Scott Walker proceeded to discuss the subjects
of education, communication, culture and freedom in America with such fake authority,
he was able to paint a scary picture of the current situation. This made it
possible for him to close his argument with the paragraph that follows, and
sound believable. Here is that paragraph:
“Radicals understand that if they control all means
of communication during the formative years, they can dominate their opinions
for the rest of their life. All the more reason, we must engage in a Long Game
plan to take back our schools, campuses, communications and culture in the new
year. We must persist for freedom”.
But starting his article with a sentence that
reads: “Last year started with the disturbing discovery…” how was Scott Walker
able to close his argument with the above paragraph? Well, he was able to do it
by telling the audience that his organization discovered ten incidences during
the year that should disturb the audience and motivate it to want taking back
the schools, thus safeguard freedom in America.
Here are the ten incidences that Scott Walker
says scared him, and should scare the audience:
One: Among the ideas forced on students were
queer affirming, transgender affirming, globalism and disruption of Western
nuclear family dynamics.
Two: The editor-in-chief of the student newspaper
at a university was forced to resign because she wrote a column that was
skeptical of the masking and COVID-19 protocols.
Three: Students, teachers and families were urged to
campaign and vote for candidates fighting for social justice, join protests
sponsored by BLM and help bail out rioters.
Four: A student ran up to a pro-life YAF activist,
punched through the sign and hit the club member.
Five: Students and administrators held an event
to erase Thanksgiving.
Six: American English upholds white supremacy
masquerading as objective but marginalizing communication used by people of
color.
Seven: Students were segregated based on their race
during an anti-racism training.
Eight: A webinar featured a speaker who warned
against the teaching of American exceptionalism.
Nine: Each year, YAF helps students put up 2,977
flags. Each flag represents a victim killed by terrorists on Sept. 11,
2001. A student was caught destroying the display on his campus.
Ten: YAF helped students bring in Matt Walsh to
speak on campus. The church said he could not speak there because his views
were inconsistent with the Catholic Church. His topic was the pro-life movement.
So then, you had 10 such incidents in a 12
months period, an average of less than one incident per month. This happened
during a time period when there were 150 shootings in nearly 140,000 schools,
colleges and universities. They resulted in 32 students and teachers killed,
and 94 injured. All that from among 52 million students, teachers and
professors who live in terror, not knowing whether they’ll go home or go to the
morgue at the end of the day.
And Scott Walker believes that 10 idiotic
incidents have threatened freedom in a deteriorating America whereas butchery
in schools have preserved freedom in a glorious America.
What can turn a former politician into such a
lowlife, murderous, know-nothing imbecile? Well, there is only one thing that
can have such a macabre hypnotizing effect on the out-of-the-grave braindead
zombies. It would be the teaching of the rabbis whose current assignment is to
take control of America’s system of education, thus turn the superpower from the
regular Jewish plantation it is now, into a storehouse of natural fertilizers full
of stinky Scott Walkers and other rotting materials.