Those who are familiar with the history of the SPLC know that thisorganization does not seek honesty. Like its other counterparts, it isdetermined to remain entrenched in its self-appointed role as caretakerand guardian of Americans’ thoughts and social habits.
The term “social engineering” never fit an entity better than it does the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). This intrusive, tenacious organization has spent years attempting to recast and transform American society to fit its own peculiar ideals. Its directors are missionaries in the full sense of the word, in that they relentlessly work to stamp onto the hearts and minds of the public a distinctive belief system, which teaches what is evil and what is not.
This month, the Federation for Immigration Reform (FAIR) has published an excellent analysis of the SPLC’s attack on FAIR and other immigration reform groups, entitled, Guide to Understanding the Tactics of the Southern Poverty Law Center in the Immigration Debate. It offers much-needed insights. Besides giving the ordinary citizen an opportunity to view the insides of this “watchdog” group, the report should become a reference guide for members of the media, who generally take the easy way out when covering stories about race and/or immigration.
Reporters, editorialists, and feature writers are notorious for accepting, without further investigation, reams of data and materials disseminated to them by a cluster of self-appointed overseers of American society, among the most prominent, the B’nai B’rith Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the NAACP, and the Southern Poverty Law Center. Thanks to the fawning acceptance granted them by the establishmentmedia, these groups, and several more like them, have acquired analmost quasi-governmental status in the public mind. When they spreadlies, there are few people who will risk inevitable public denigrationand stand up to challenge them. In regard to the SPLC, FAIR’s newreport does just that.