Obama's "Propaganda Village" on Display in D.C.
By Cliff Kincaid
The
Washington Post front-page photo shows Park Service employees shutting
down access to the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial on the mall. I have
visited the memorial several times in the past and have never seen any
Park Service employees. Where did they come from?
The "shutdown" is a show.
All
of a sudden, these Park Service employees have appeared—with gates and
police tape—to prohibit access, in the name of blaming congressional
Republicans and causing inconvenience to tourists. Our media go along
with the façade.
This
is even more of a show than "Propaganda Village," a fake "town" built
by the North Koreans in the North's half of the Korean Demilitarized
Zone to fool people in the south. I visited the DMZ and saw the place
from afar. It was designed to entice South Koreans to defect to the
north. It looks real, but nobody lives there.
The
photo on the front-page of the print edition of the Post shows one Park
Police officer and four Park Service employees putting down gates and
waving people away. In my many years of coming to D.C. for visits to
national park service properties, I have never seen this many federal
employees at one memorial. The Post put this on the front-page under the
headline, "Bracing for a long battle."
The fact
is that people can easily climb over or through the gates in order to
see the memorials anyway. That is what they did on Tuesday at the World
War II Memorial.
In
this case, which has received some national publicity, the Post
reported, "Suddenly, in the bright sunshine, cheers and applause
erupted. The barricades had been moved—by whom it was not clear. And the
column of veterans poured through the gap in the lines and into the
memorial." The paper added, "It was a chaotic scene from the first day
of the shutdown: frail-looking men—at least one of whom hadn't been to
Washington since the war—led by jubilant Republican Congress members and
television crews as a bagpiper played 'Shenandoah.'"
This was
a show as well, but it was intended to prove that we don't need federal
employees holding our hands in order to appreciate the memorials.
Closing them down doesn't serve any legitimate purpose.
Many
of us in the Washington, D.C. area who visit these parks and memorials
understand the "shutdown" game that is being played. I have been to the
World War II Memorial several times in the past and never encountered
Park Service employees. All of a sudden, they mysteriously showed up to
deny access to the public.
The
Post, a major voice of the Democratic Party, plays along with the idea
that a budget impasse has something to do with this. If so, why are
there so many employees still working to close down these memorials.
Where have they been?
"Effective
immediately upon a lapse in appropriations, the National Park Service
will take all necessary steps to close and secure national park
facilities and grounds," is what the signs say.
Park
Service spokeswoman Carol Bradley Johnson told the paper that the
agency is worried about the security of the memorials and the safety of
visitors at unstaffed sites. But these sites are usually unstaffed. In
any case, would metal barricades and signs stop vandals from getting in?
This is how big government works, with the collaboration and cooperation of the media.
The
federal government supposedly doesn't have any money to keep the parks
and memorials open. But the White House recently "found" $300 million
for bankrupt Detroit. Our media claimed it was "technically" not a
bailout, since the money was already in the budget somewhere. Congress
never voted for this expenditure, which has been called "aid." According
to various news reports, some of the money was "unlocked" from an
account with the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The
term "unlocked" has not been defined.
Gene
Sperling, the head of Obama's National Economic Council, said, "We are
going to do everything that we are capable of" for Detroit, a city
bankrupted by the policies of Democratic mayors, including the communist
Coleman Young.
Some
federal funding has already been committed to the demolition of
Detroit's Brewster-Douglass public housing complex, which was itself
federally-funded.
But this same federal government can't keep memorials open. Who do they think they're kidding?
The answer is the public. And the media are part of the con game.
- Again, don't miss our show tonight, Wednesday night, at 9:00 pm EST. Click on that box or tune in via Roku.
Send me your thoughts at Kincaid@comcast.net
For America's Survival,
Cliff Kincaid, President
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