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  • 2014-01-20 (xsd:date)
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  • Beware the Useful Idiots (en)
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  • Saul Alinsky was the Chicago-born archaeology major who, in the midst of the Great Depression, dropped out of graduate school and became involved first with the labor movement and then with community organizing. It was in the latter field that he made his mark, working from the late 1930s through the early 1970s as a community organizer (first in poor areas of Chicago, and later in various cities across the U.S.) seeking, often through unconventional means, to turn scattered, voiceless discontent into a united protest. Along the way he authored the books Reveille for Radicals and Rules for Radicals to provide counsel to young radicals on how to effect constructive social change, the latter of which opened with the following explanation of its purpose: Critics of President Barack Obama (who also worked as a community organizer in Chicago prior to embarking on his political career) have often linked his name with that of Saul Alinsky, sometimes in ways that suggest the two men knew each other and worked together. However, they never even met: Alinsky died of a heart attack in 1972, when Barack Obama was but a ten-year-old child living in Hawaii. Another prominent Democrat, Hillary Clinton, has also often been linked with Alinsky because she wrote her senior thesis on the topic of An Analysis of the Alinsky Model while she was a student at Wellesley College in 1969. A much-circulated list of steps for How to create a social state is another example of a political attempt to tie the names of Saul Alinsky with those of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton: But this list is not something taken from the actual writings of Saul Alinsky, nor does it even sound like something he would have written (e.g., the line about controlling health care is anachronistic for his era, and the idea of increasing the poverty level as high as possible is the very antithesis of what Alinsky worked to achieve). This list is simply a modern variant of the decades-old, apocryphal Communist Rules for Revolution piece that was originally passed along without attribution until Alinsky's name became attached to it (presumably because someone out there thought it sounded like something Alinsky might have written). The closest analog (in form, if not in content) to the above-reproduced list of How to create a social state to be found in the writings of Saul Alinsky is the following list of power tactics Alinsky outlined in his 1971 book Rules for Radicals. Note that Alinsky's list is devoted solely to tactics (i.e., methods for accomplishing goals) and does not specify any particular targets of those tactics (e.g., health care, religion, gun control): (en)
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