Retired terrorist
Bill Ayers, a kind of folk hero among today's left, had
a run-in with Washington Times editorial staffer
Kerry Picket.
Picket's encounter with the would-be mass murderer who plotted to
bomb a crowded dance hall at Fort Dix, New Jersey, in
1970, was
captured on video.
The newspaper reported this about the brief interview with the
former associate of President
Obama:
When questioned by The Washington Times during a lecture on
racism, Mr. Ayers went ballistic. "Did you drink the kool-aid
over at The Times or are you okay?" he asked. "What I'm saying
is ... do you actually have a mind of your own?"
Drinking the
kool-aid.
That's an odd choice of words for Ayers. The expression came from
the mass murder-suicide carried out by Jim Jones at Jonestown,
Guyana in 1978 when Jones forced his congregation to drink
poisoned flavored liquid.
Like Ayers, Jones was an America-hating revolutionary
Communist. Jones left the U.S. and created what he hoped
would be a socialist paradise in the Guyanese jungle. When things
went awry, Jones decided it would be better to slaughter his
followers than allow them to leave. More than 900 people
died.
Jones remained a revolutionary Communist to the end. On an
audio
recording of the mass murder in progress, he can be
heard attempting to reassure his followers: "We didn't commit
suicide, we committed an act of revolutionary suicide protesting
the conditions of an inhumane world." (transcript here)
Jones used religion to advance Marxism; Ayers uses the academy to
advance Marxism.
Two different homicidal activists sharing a common ideal.
Maybe Ayers's choice of words wasn't so odd after all.