Shalom Chaim
This is a very long question; nevertheless, it is imperative that it is addressed in some meaningful fashion.
It can be said that certain aspects of the JTF ideology are logically unsound because they descend into fallacies of association, specifically the bad company fallacy and the closely related reductio ad Hitlerum (reduction to Hitler or the Nazis).
1. JTF often attempts to delegitimize perceived enemies such as MLK or Barack Obama by emphasizing an association, however tenuous, to controversial groups such as communists, the Congressional black caucus, the Nation of Islam, or other black radicals.
This form of argumentation violates philosophical principles and reasoning. Below is an example of the accurate premises and the faulty conclusion that tends to be expressed over the duration of a show.
The Nation of Islam provided body guards and hosted speeches for MLK.
The Nation of Islam is a black supremacist organization.
Therefore, MLK supports black supremacy.
2. At times, JTF injects 'Hitler' or the 'Nazis' inappropriately in order to derail opposition by adding undue emotion, rhetoric and hyperbole to an argument. Reductio ad Hitlerum was derived by Chicago school thinker Leo Strauss in 1950. Though it often contains fallacies of association, it is more often used as a wrong direction fallacy or an ad hominem.
An example:
Hillary Clinton strongly favors socialist economic policies.
The Nazis strongly held these and similar beliefs that subsequently led to the murder of millions of people.
Hillary Clinton holds dangerous Nazi beliefs.
My overall point is that there are enough valid arguments that can be constructed against Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, or whomever. You inform people of many reasons, such as Hillary's remarks about Jews and her support for bombing the Serbs.
I am not suggesting that you abandon your principles or basic style. I am suggesting that for the sake of honesty, you may have to abandon certain features of argumentation of which you are accustomed if you want to more successfully get the message across. In such a scenario, critics will have to focus on the truthful things you are saying instead of pointing out the apparent flaws in your technique.
Todah