CHICAGO – The Rev. Jeremiah “God damn America” Wright brought his pro-Marxist, anti-American message on Wednesday to a Chicago Teachers Union-hosted breakfast to commemorate Dr. Martin Luther King’s birthday.

If CTU leaders were hoping Wright would deliver a speech loaded with calls for their idea of “social justice,” they weren’t disappointed.

At one point during his speech – which reporters were barred from covering – the good reverend “called for King’s ‘revolution of values’ and a rejection of the ‘three-headed demon’ of ‘racism, militarism and capitalism’” which in his mind comprise the foundations of Western society, the Chicago Sun-Times reports.

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(Apparently, CTU organizers forgot that some invited guests would use their cell phones to capture the parts of the speech.)

Wright also “questioned how U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan landed his job – after he ‘ruined the school system’ in Chicago as CEO of schools,” the Huffington Post reports.

“A good hook shot playing basketball with … Barack Hussein Obama,” Wright concluded.

That barb must have amused CTU President Karen Lewis, who was caught on tape mocking Duncan over his lisp back in 2011.

But the biggest reaction reportedly came when Wright compared President Obama to Dr. King in an unflattering light: “King said ‘I have a dream.’  Barack said, “I have a drone.’”

Wright developed the point by noting President Obama uses a “kill list” to determine who the U.S. government “is going to kill this week” with drones, reports the Sun-Times.

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It surely wasn’t lost on anyone in the audience – which was comprised mostly of teachers and pastors – that Obama used to attend Wright’s church and that the two men were reportedly close until Obama publicly distanced himself from the fiery preacher during the 2008 presidential campaign.

Wright didn’t linger long after his speech to answer questions from reporters, but CTU’s Lewis defended his remarks.

Most Americans have concluded that Wright is something of a rodeo clown, and don’t take his views too seriously.

The only reason we’re interested in Wright’s words is because they apparently reflect the views of the CTU, which is one of the nation’s most powerful and influential teachers unions. When Wright says capitalism is evil and that America is inherently racist, it’s safe to conclude that most CTU members agree.

As silly and unimportant as Wright’s speech may seem, it actually serves as a window to what the men and women who teach in the nation’s fourth-largest school district are telling their students.

And that’s something that should worry every freedom-loving American.