The ones with the “Impeach Obama” signs.
By Will Collette
You may have seen them in Charlestown when they were camped
out for a couple of days near the Post Office. I saw them a few days ago in
Westerly on Route One. There’s usually a pair of them working from a folding
card table with a sign that reads “Impeach Obama” and a poster of Obama with a
Hitler mustache.
Several people asked me who the hell they are and I didn’t
know. Until now. They are part of a new campaign by one of America’s craziest
conspiracy buffs, Lyndon LaRouche.
I had far more frequent run ins with what I
called the LaRouchniks when I worked in DC. I’d get a call from someone
claiming to be a journalist who would do a quick and sloppy interview with me.
Later, I’d get misquoted and then get listed as a “supporter” of some crazy
LaRouche campaign and then had to spend time undoing the mischief.
I got pretty
good at spotting LaRouchniks early in conversations and trained my staff how to
spot them, too. My standing orders were to cut off all conversations as soon as
the caller admitted they were connected with LaRouche.
LaRouche gained fame from two things – wild
conspiracy theories, the most infamous of which was his conviction that Queen
Elizabeth II was running an international drug cartel and, second, an insatiable
push to raise money for murky purposes. LaRouche and 25 of his followers were
convicted in 1988 of fund-raising fraud. He was paroled in 1994 after serving
six years.
Queen Elizabeth: is that drug bling she's wearing? |
He wants Obama impeached largely because of
“Obamacare” but also Obama’s failure to get the Glass-Stegall Act reinstated
(don’t ask) and for violating the War Powers Act.
LaRouche has found reasons to want to impeach
almost every US President since he started his “movement.” In 1973, he wanted
to go after Richard Nixon not because of Watergate but because he claimed
Nixon was aligned with the Communist Party USA
(again, don’t ask).
He opposed Reagan, Bush I, Clinton and Bush
II. I’m not sure if he wanted to impeach Gerald Ford or Jimmy Carter – he
probably did, but I didn’t find any direct evidence.
He has preached that the world is controlled
by an all-powerful conspiracy of bankers, political leaders, Jews and oligarchs
that is centered in the Trilateral Commission, a conspiracy that stretches back to the
medieval Illuminati. After 9/11, he was among those who preached that it was an
inside job and an “attempted coup d’etat.”
He’s been called a fascist, racist and
anti-Semite. There’s more than enough material to support those claims, but
then again, there’s enough material to support almost any claim.
From watching LaRouche and his followers off
and on for around 30 years, I think LaRouche uses any and every angle he can to
hook new cult members. He spins yarns that contain a germ of sense wrapped in a
puzzling mix of nonsense.
It keeps his followers engaged and provokes some public engagement, enough to perhaps raise some money and attract new cult members. He doesn’t need – and probably doesn’t even want – everybody to agree with him. Just enough.
It keeps his followers engaged and provokes some public engagement, enough to perhaps raise some money and attract new cult members. He doesn’t need – and probably doesn’t even want – everybody to agree with him. Just enough.
If you do a scan of the materials on LaRouche
on the web, you’ll find websites devoted to promoting him and lots more than
denounce him. The anti-LaRouche sites are often run by people who used to be
members.
Within the LaRouche organization, there is
his own anti-anti-LaRouche program to try to bring former followers back.
Year after year, LaRouche goes on and on,
denouncing whoever is in power and finding evil conspiracies everywhere.
It seems that the more people challenge him
and his followers on their deranged beliefs, the more it seems to strengthen
their commitment to those beliefs.
So it does little good to try to engage and argue with the people behind the card tables and throw them the finger as you pass by. As the saying goes, “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” and so it is with cults.
So it does little good to try to engage and argue with the people behind the card tables and throw them the finger as you pass by. As the saying goes, “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” and so it is with cults.
On the other hand, if you're one of those folks who hate Obama and find the LaRoucheniks' Obama-as-Hitler posters compelling, by all means, sign their petition.
Be sure to list your home phone and e-mail on it because then you can count on years of pleasant conversations with the LaRouche folks as they add your phone number to their call list.
Don't be surprised to see them publish your name as one of their supporters.
Be sure to list your home phone and e-mail on it because then you can count on years of pleasant conversations with the LaRouche folks as they add your phone number to their call list.
Don't be surprised to see them publish your name as one of their supporters.
And that, dear readers, is the story behind
those people behind the card tables with the “Impeach Obama” posters.