Wikipedia's article on Saul Alinsky cites these rules from his Rules for Radicals, the work generally mentioned in assertions that he was a mentor to President Obama.
1.Power is not only what you have, but what the enemy thinks you have."
2.Never go outside the expertise of your people.
3.Whenever possible, go outside the expertise of the enemy.
4.Make the enemy live up to its own book of rules.
5.Ridicule is mans most potent weapon.
6.A good tactic is one your people enjoy.
7.A tactic that drags on too long becomes a drag.
8.Keep the pressure on. Never let up.
9.The threat is usually more terrifying than the thing itself.
10."The major premise for tactics is the development of operations that will maintain a constant pressure upon the opposition."
11.If you push a negative hard enough, it will push through and become a positive.
12.The price of a successful attack is a constructive alternative.
13.Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.
see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rules_for_RadicalsHmm. Where are the broad themes mentioned by the OP? Where is "control of healthcare?" I don't see any mention of religion, let alone God. National debt? I don't see any mention of that. No mention of guns by Alinsky, he espouses ridicule as a weapon.
Or is this merely another effort to "stir the pot" with bogus, intellectually bankrupt, rabble-rousing assertions? This sounds too much like Glenn Beck, that towering intellect, preaching to the choir, complete with white board and bogus tears, just before a commercial for one of his personal enterprises.
How about some citations, source documents, etc? Primary sources, please, not some whack-job web site.