With the announcement that few Asian carp--the flying fish of freedom--had made their way to colonize Minnesota, Bluestem had begun to fear that the United Nations Agenda 21 key word battle against invasive species had been victorious.
Without the bottom dwellers of the aquatic world churning up our walleye habitat, making it unsustainable, who or what would protect our liberty?
Fear not: 1980s culture warrior and anti-sodomy crusader Allen Quist and John Birch Society barbershop quartet princeling Rollie Neve will celebrate Earth Day with a "Hunger Games for Real? Agenda 21 Forum" sponsored by the SW Metro Tea Party at the Chanhassen Rec Center on April 22.
And here we thought, like author Suzanne Collins, that the inspiration for the popular novel and film was the ancient Greek myth of Theseus and the Minotaur.
Oh snap! The hep title of the program--borrowing as it does from pop culutre--will so help the Republican Party rebrand itself as not the scary party of stuffy old men.
Sadly, the notion that "The Hunger Games" is analogy for Agenda 21 isn't original to the spry gentlemen leading the discussion on Tuesday night. No sirree, Bob; cultural scholar Alex Jones first posited last year that the movie was something to make us get used to human sacrifice and the other goals of Agenda 21.
Here's the video:
Can't wait until Earth Day? On Monday, April 8, the SW Metro Tea Party will screen "Runaway Slave," a movie about black conservatives. Memphis reviewer John Beifuss noted in 'Runaway Slave' - A Review: Black Like Tea:
What Memphians will find is a movie that wastes only three minutes before linking Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to Glenn Beck, via footage of Beck's 2010 "Restoring Honor" celebration at the Lincoln Memorial.
Okay then.
Photo: Rollie Neve.
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