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Why Obamanoids thrive on chaos

Why Obamanoids thrive on chaos


''Charges of rampant anti-Muslim bigotry and hate-crimes in the U.S., leveled by groups like the Council on American-Islamic Relations and the ACLU, constitute a totally fake crisis. Actually, Americans have demonstrated extraordinary restraint and magnanimity toward Muslims since the September 11 terror attacks'' The Obama administration's primary mode of governance is literally to create crises where none actually exist. As I have explained previously, "Big Lies" transform people and entire societies, and the most powerful form of "Big Lie," at least when it comes to government, is the manufactured crisis.
Before we turn our 10,000-watt spotlight on the outrageous turmoil Obama and company have promoted in America, let's take a few moments to understand what a manufactured crisis really amounts to.
As I explain in my new book
"How Evil Works," anyone even superficially familiar with the history of the political left has heard references to the strategy of creating crises as a means of transforming society. You've probably heard of the "Hegelian dialectic," a key Marxist technique whereby an idea ("We need more gun control laws!") generates its opposite ("No, we don't need more gun laws, we just need tougher sentencing of criminals!") which leads to a reconciliation of opposites, or synthesis ("OK, we'll compromise by passing new gun-control laws, but watering them down somewhat").
Likewise, maybe you've heard of the "Cloward-Piven Strategy" – inspired by leftwing radical organizer Saul Alinsky, whose methods Barack Obama adopted – which openly advocates the creation of crises to destroy capitalist society. This is how socialist progress is achieved "peacefully" – through conflict or crisis – and always in the direction of greater socialism.
The problem is, this "crisis-creation" talk just sounds so crazy, so foreign to us, that it's hard to believe our fellow human beings, no matter how confused or deluded, could actually engage in such a practice. But it's not only true, it's actually a common part of everyday life.
Find out why Sean Hannity says of David Kupelian's latest blockbuster "How Evil Works": "This is a powerful book ... I couldn't put it down." Order your autographed copy today from WND's Superstore!
Consider this non-political example and note how it illustrates the power of a crisis to mold people to the deceiver's will: In one child-abduction case, a little girl was approached after school by a man she didn't know. He claimed her house was burning down, that her parents were busy putting out the fire, and that he was a friend of the parents who had asked him to pick up their daughter and take her to them. The crisis – and the emotional upset the girl experienced over the thought of her house being on fire and her parents in danger – drowned out her normal caution about getting into a car with a stranger. You guessed it: The stranger was a predator who had concocted the lie for the sole purpose of upsetting and thereby tricking the girl into going with him so he could brutalize and murder her. (This "classic" child-predator technique was recounted in the film "Changling" starring Angelina Jolie, a true story in which the serial child murderer enticed youngsters into his car using this exact "your-house-is-on-fire" ruse.)
Tragic as this scenario is, it makes an important point: A crisis throws us off our guard, upsets us and inclines us to make decisions and accept "solutions" we normally would reject.
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