Notice on Obama Advocacy Site Pulls Sept. 11 Attacks Into Health Care Debate

President Obama's grassroots advocacy group is coming under fire for a supporter who pulled the Sept. 11 attacks into the health care debate.

The controversy stems from a notice on the Organizing for America Web site urging reform advocates to use the anniversary of the terror attacks to call on lawmakers to pass health care reform.

"All 50 states are coordinating in this -- as we fight back against our own Right-Wing Domestic Terrorists who are subverting the American Democratic process, whipped to a frenzy by their Fox Propaganda Network ceaselessly re-seizing power for their treacherous leaders," the notice said in part. It has since been scrubbed from the Organizing for America site.

Following criticism from the conservative Heritage Foundation, a spokesman for the Democratic National Committee told FOX News in a statement that anyone can post on the site and condemned the language.

"We certainly don't agree with these comments, nor do we condone them, just as I'm sure the Heritage Foundation or FOX don't agree or condone some of the things posted in sections of their Web site," the statement said.

But the Heritage Foundation's Rory Cooper said the call to action was actively distributed.

"This was distributed to people in Illinois, Michigan and North Carolina. So yeah, the original posting was just an independent person who went too far. But when Organizing for America took the next step and invited people to the event, they became complicit in the language," Cooper said.

Cooper criticized Obama for pushing his message through both the official White House Web site and Organizing for America's BarackObama.com.

"Barack Obama needs to quit the perpetual campaign ... he needs to choose which one he's going to communicate with the American public through," Cooper said.

The Sept. 11 reference comes after both sides of the debate employed accusations of Nazism just a few weeks ago. In another sign that the health care debate is getting overheated, New York Rep. Charlie Rangel was quoted in The New York Post as suggesting race and bias are fueling popular resistance to health care reform.

"Some Americans have not gotten over the fact that Obama is president of the United States. They go to sleep wondering, 'How did this happen?'" he said at a town hall meeting, according to the newspaper.

FOX News' Catherine Herridge contributed to this report.