New Ad Points Out Obama’s Links To Ayers
From the McCain campaign and the an outraged Associated Press:
McCain TV ad raises Obama’s links to ex-radical
By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON – Republican John McCain, trailing in polls and searching for a way to gain ground, assailed Democratic rival Barack Obama on Friday in a sharply worded TV ad that said: “When convenient, he worked with terrorist Bill Ayers. When discovered, he lied.”
It’s McCain’s toughest commercial yet using Obama’s association with Ayers, a Chicago college professor who was an anti-Vietnam war radical in the 1960s, to assert that Obama has “blind ambition” and “bad judgment,” and, thus, can’t be trusted during an economic catastrophe. “In crisis, we need leadership” — the ad says and implies that Obama doesn’t offer any.
With little more than three weeks before the election, the GOP presidential candidate is seeking to turn his campaign around by steadily escalating his attacks on his Democratic foe and raising questions about his associations with Ayers, who in 1969 helped found the violent Weather Underground group blamed for bombing government buildings in the early 1970s.
The Associated Press and other news organizations have reported that Obama and Ayers are not close but that they live in the same Chicago neighborhood and worked together on two nonprofit organization boards from the mid-1990s to 2002. Ayers also hosted a small meet-the-candidate event for Obama in 1995 as he first ran for the state Senate.
During the campaign, Obama has denounced Ayers’ radical actions and views.
In an interview with Philadelphia-based radio talk show host Michael Smerconish, Obama said Thursday that when he met Ayers in the mid-1990s Ayers was teaching education the University of Illinois. “I was sitting on this board with a whole bunch conservative businessmen and civic leaders and he was one of the people who was on this board,” Obama said of the Annenberg Challenge, a nonprofit educational group. “Ultimately I ended up learning about the fact that he had engaged in this reprehensible act 40 years ago, but I was eight years old at the time and I assumed that he had been rehabilitated.”
In response, McCain campaign spokesman Tucker Bounds asked: “Does Barack Obama continue to believe William Ayers has been ‘rehabilitated’? Or has Barack Obama changed his mind now that William Ayers is a liability, rather than an asset, to his political ambition?” …
During a Democratic primary debate in April, Obama called Ayers “a guy who lives in my neighborhood, who’s a professor of English in Chicago, who I know and who I have not received some official endorsement from. He’s not somebody who I exchange ideas from on a regular basis.”
To back up its claim that Obama lied about his relationship, McCain’s campaign juxtaposed that debate comment with a CNN report in which a reporter asserted that “the relationship between Obama and Ayers went much deeper, ran much longer, and was much more political than Obama said.”
But McCain’s campaign provided no other evidence that Obama “lied.” …
Over the past week, McCain’s campaign resurrected Ayers and other associations of Obama’s that were first raised during the Democratic primaries. McCain’s advisers have signaled that they believe the 72-year-old four-term Arizona senator’s best chance to win rests with stoking voter unease about the 47-year-old first-term Illinois senator who would be the country’s first black president…
“Ex radical”? Bill Ayers? “McCain’s campaign provided no other evidence that Obama “lied.”"?
What media bias?
Anyway, it’s about time McCain got serious.
Keep it up.



Great job on the ad. I hope people get to see this at last.
There is an interesting article on the web suggesting the improbability that Obama could have written his two “autobiographies”, and with a little further literary analysis, strongly suggests that it was Ayers who did so. This suggests that the ties to Ayers are not as superficial as Obama wants to claim, nor as long ago. At the RNC they commented that it was very interesting that he had time to write two autobiographies, but not one piece of legislation. Perhaps he didn’t even write the autobiographies!
In a very interesting article, author Jack Cashill does a critical analysis of Dreams From My Father and suggests fairly convincingly that the ghost writer is none other than Bill Ayers. While not conclusive, the literary evidence is strong.
See the article at: http://www.americanthinker.com.....the_1.html Accessed 10/09/08