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Alex
09-18-2009, 10:26 AM
But, if I read this correctly, only ONE out of the five offices did anything wrong. At the other four, the sting didn't work, yes? Am I wrong here? (I haven't got any research time available to me at the moment.)

I haven't watched this one closely but I believe Jon Stewart the other night showed clips of it happening in three offices.

innerSpaceman
09-18-2009, 10:30 AM
So when Michael Moore's movie comes out next week (no less a partisan filmmaker than those who stung ACORN), and he catches and illustrates all sorts of unethical and loathsome shenanigans at Wall Street investment banks, what will you recommend Congress do, sceagles?

scaeagles
09-18-2009, 11:01 AM
Well, hopefully they aren't funding those banks. Right now all that is happening is removing the funding from ACORN, which I think is appropriate.

Also, Congress is already in process of throwing more regulations at the industry. The problem is, that for the unscrupulous (of which there are many on Wall Street), there is always some creative way around regulations. OI've heard wise financial advisors say the biggest problem with regulation is they are always regulating the last problem, with not real way to anticipate the next one.

flippyshark
09-18-2009, 11:05 AM
Well, hopefully they aren't funding those banks. Right now all that is happening is removing the funding from ACORN, which I think is appropriate.

Also, Congress is already in process of throwing more regulations at the industry. The problem is, that for the unscrupulous (of which there are many on Wall Street), there is always some creative way around regulations. OI've heard wise financial advisors say the biggest problem with regulation is they are always regulating the last problem, with not real way to anticipate the next one.

Depressing but I bet you're on to something here.

scaeagles
09-18-2009, 11:05 AM
Yawn. Dismissive.

Are you really denying that the right is afraid of more minorities voting?

I can't speak to anyone except those I know. I do know exactly two racists, one of which is a union member, so I'm really not sure which way they vote. I'm pretty sure the non union member is a republican, and one of the most offensive people I know (a relative by marriage....he hates watching basketball because there are too many black people on the court).

So regarding myself and the people I know, I can say that no, I do not believe the right is afraid of more minorities voting (as long as those minorities are here legally and voting legally). I have no doubt there are some.

flippyshark
09-18-2009, 11:07 AM
I haven't watched this one closely but I believe Jon Stewart the other night showed clips of it happening in three offices.

Hmm, then it may indeed be a problem. Yeesh. Pretty appalling even once.

But still, neither Obama's fault, nor relevant to his performance as pres.

JWBear
09-18-2009, 11:14 AM
I can't speak to anyone except those I know. I do know exactly two racists, one of which is a union member, so I'm really not sure which way they vote. I'm pretty sure the non union member is a republican, and one of the most offensive people I know (a relative by marriage....he hates watching basketball because there are too many black people on the court).

So regarding myself and the people I know, I can say that no, I do not believe the right is afraid of more minorities voting (as long as those minorities are here legally and voting legally). I have no doubt there are some.

Again, you frame it in terms of racism. It is not racism to recognize that most minorities vote democratic; and that increase in minority voters decreases republican candidates' chances.

JWBear
09-18-2009, 11:17 AM
I haven't watched this one closely but I believe Jon Stewart the other night showed clips of it happening in three offices.

One or three, still doesn't make the whole orginization corrupt. Again, should we close down an entire company for the mistakes made in a few offices?

innerSpaceman
09-18-2009, 11:19 AM
Well, hopefully they aren't funding those banks. Right now all that is happening is removing the funding from ACORN, which I think is appropriate.

Not funding those banks?!?!? How would you define handing them $750 billion dollars such that they have gone from brim-of-bankruptcy to healthily-profitable? Is that not "funding?" It's not grants, yeah. But it was voted by Congress just the same.

Alex
09-18-2009, 11:28 AM
One or three, still doesn't make the whole orginization corrupt. Again, should we close down an entire company for the mistakes made in a few offices?

Congratulations! You've successfully refuted something unsaid by me. You even knocked senseless an argument I didn't even attempt to slyly imply. And in the process you assume that which is (though not by me) being argued--which is just an empty rhetorical trick.

Let me see how this works.

One or three, still doesn't make the whole orginization corrupt. Again, should we close down an entire company for the mistakes made in a few offices?

Surely you'd agree that raping young girls is not nearly so fun as it sounds! And should we allow a thoroughly corrupt organization continue unpunished and unblemished access to the government teat?

Nah, I just don't have the knack for it.

scaeagles
09-18-2009, 11:44 AM
Not funding those banks?!?!? How would you define handing them $750 billion dollars such that they have gone from brim-of-bankruptcy to healthily-profitable? Is that not "funding?" It's not grants, yeah. But it was voted by Congress just the same.


Well, crap, yeah. I'm with you on that one. Brain fart. I think once a corporation accepts that kind of help from the government then they need to submit to whatever as the price they pay.

scaeagles
09-18-2009, 11:46 AM
Again, you frame it in terms of racism. It is not racism to recognize that most minorities vote democratic; and that increase in minority voters decreases republican candidates' chances.

well, in terms of fewer people voting the democrat party line, I'm all in favor of that! But I don't care what color of skin they have.

innerSpaceman
09-18-2009, 12:43 PM
Can anyone figure out what Alex's last post was supposed to mean?

Alex
09-18-2009, 01:14 PM
I can!

JWBear
09-18-2009, 01:16 PM
Congratulations! You've successfully refuted something unsaid by me. You even knocked senseless an argument I didn't even attempt to slyly imply. And in the process you assume that which is (though not by me) being argued--which is just an empty rhetorical trick.

Let me see how this works.



Surely you'd agree that raping young girls is not nearly so fun as it sounds! And should we allow a thoroughly corrupt organization continue unpunished and unblemished access to the government teat?

Nah, I just don't have the knack for it.

WTF????

Alex
09-18-2009, 01:18 PM
Exactly.

innerSpaceman
09-18-2009, 02:31 PM
Well, then, um, continuing in my previous line of thought ...

Yesterday, the South Carolina Supreme Court upheld a trial court judgment against Fortis Insurance for Ten Million Dollars. Fortis rescinded the insurance policy of 18-year-old Jerome Mitchell when they discovered he had contracted HIV/AIDS in the year since he started coverage with them.

The Supreme Court stated Fortis' acts were "reprehensible" and "demonstrated an indifference to Mitchell's life and a reckless disregard of his health and safety."


For the sake of a hypothetical, Mr. scaeagles, let's assume this sort of thing was done, oh say 5 times by Fortis. Do those represent the policies of Fortis or the acts of 5 bad apples within Fortis?

JWBear
09-18-2009, 02:39 PM
Since Fortis supported and defended those acts in court, then yes, it would appear to be their policy.

If ACORN had defended the actions of its employees, then I would agree that it is a bad orginization.

Alex
09-18-2009, 02:48 PM
Unrelated to the Fortis example. Listened to an hour of Michael Moore on local NPR this morning and while I'm sure Capitalism: A Love Story will present many very valid criticisms of capitalism (capitalism--though this is true, in my opinion, of any of the alternatives as well--is very much the definition of evil) in general and example of corporate malfeasance (people frequently get to suck and it scales up quickly when people have money and power) specifically I must say I found his professed view of a utopian economic structure mostly bat**** insane in that he seemed less than willing to admit that it was unobtainable without complete central control of the economy (though even if that were accomplished I don't agree with him it would work the way he thinks).

But hopefully the movie makes his case better than he did on the radio.

innerSpaceman
09-18-2009, 03:14 PM
I don't think his movies, going by past examples, make a case for something so much as against something.

Even on the good guys' side, it's always been easier to destroy than to create.

Alex
09-18-2009, 03:20 PM
That may be, though as presented by him today he seems to think (though of course what the creator of something thinks s/he's doing and what s/he's really doing are frequently divergent) it is making a case for his vision of how things could be. His closing remarks were that he hopes at the end of the movie everybody is so fired up that they go out and get involved and make it happen.

innerSpaceman
09-18-2009, 03:27 PM
I wouldn't mind if audiences were fired up enough to light fire to torches and grab some pitchforks. What happens afterwards will likely be the same (meet the new boss) ... but I've always wondered what kind of society would result if greedy and corrupt fvckwads were annually tarred and feathered and run out of town on a razor wire. Would the new boss continually be same as the old boss ... or would a niche eventually develop for ungreedy and noncorrupt people in positions of power?

Alex
09-18-2009, 03:42 PM
Well, the first problem is that it generally isn't the ungreedy upset by the greedy--I'm sure someone will say "not true" but I don't think "greed" and "self interest first" can be separated--and the losers are upset at the winners and simply want the tables turned.

I come from poor people. They aren't sitting around saying "oh how terrible it is that there are poor people and we aren't all socioeconomically equal." Generally it is "how do I get myself a bigger piece of the pie." I'd say that's why people are so often amazed at the poor and powerless seeming to vote against their interests. It isn't that they want the separation between the powerful and the powerless removed, they just want to change categories.

The unusual thing about America is the general belief (right or more often wrong) that they will do just that.

scaeagles
09-18-2009, 04:20 PM
Breifly (as I have not much time right now), if those are the policies of Fortis, then I would regard them as a "bad" organization. And fortunately, they are paying the price. Sadly, legal actions take a long time and the loss of life could occur, which is reprehensible. Which is why I wish the judgement had been 100 million rather than 10 million. If it is certainly not worth their financial interest to violate their agreements perhaps they will stop doing so.

JWBear
09-18-2009, 05:04 PM
I just found out that my Representative (a Democrat) voted to defund ACORN. I'm going to send her a very strongly worded email. I'm pissed.

Alex
09-18-2009, 05:54 PM
press the Bill of Attainder argument.

€uroMeinke
09-18-2009, 07:16 PM
My friend Andrew was in a band called Acorn. I think they were big in Italy for awhile. I don't think they had anything to do with child prostitutes or denying insurance claims.

Betty
09-18-2009, 08:05 PM
My friend Andrew was in a band called Acorn. I think they were big in Italy for awhile. I don't think they had anything to do with child prostitutes or denying insurance claims.

How about squirrels?

€uroMeinke
09-18-2009, 10:24 PM
How about squirrels?

That was another band

3894
09-20-2009, 06:50 AM
Dumping Bush's border fence would buy a whole lot of public option insurance.

innerSpaceman
09-20-2009, 09:25 AM
So, um, what's all this about Cloves prohibition??? Huh?

Ghoulish Delight
09-20-2009, 10:08 AM
It's a law that was signed in June giving the FDA authority to ban "flavored cigarettes" ostensibly because they are attractive to children. It's been in the works in Congress for years. One of the reasons it's taken so long is that Indonesia has cried foul since as written it covered cloves but not American-made mint/menthol cigarettes, so Congress has been trying to figure out if they can pass it without completely pissing Indonesia off. Apparently they decided so.

I have not yet found any source that says exactly when cloves will be off the shelves, if they will. Though I have read that the importer of Djarum, Kretek, has started making a filtered cigar that apparently looks and tastes a whole lot like a clove cigarette to get around it since the bill doesn't cover cigars.

ETA: Apparently Sept 22 is the date source (http://www.jointogether.org/news/headlines/inthenews/2009/cloves-other-flavored.html)

scaeagles
09-20-2009, 12:54 PM
Dumping Bush's border fence would buy a whole lot of public option insurance.


It wouldn't even pay for the illegals that would pour in.

3894
09-20-2009, 02:09 PM
It wouldn't even pay for the illegals that would pour in.

Oh, scaeagles, you kidder! You know that fence is going to work every bit as well as Reagan's Star Wars project.

Alex
09-20-2009, 03:13 PM
Regardless of whether it will work the, the fence is expected to cost about $400 million per year. While that could certainly go other things it wouldn't buy a whole lot of health care (let alone a "public option" which as is currently being pursued would be self-funded).

3894
09-21-2009, 07:51 AM
Regardless of whether it will work the, the fence is expected to cost about $400 million per year. While that could certainly go other things it wouldn't buy a whole lot of health care (let alone a "public option" which as is currently being pursued would be self-funded).

And your point is? Okay, you're right about the self-funding.

Gemini Cricket
09-21-2009, 12:30 PM
Oh yes. There is a reason why I love this man in so many ways.

CNN: President Carter said he thinks that a lot of the animosity directed toward President Obama is race related.

Dave Matthews: Of course it is! I found there's a fairly blatant racism in America that's already there, and I don't think I noticed it when I lived here as a kid. But when I went back to South Africa, and then it's sort of thrust in your face, and then came back here -- I just see it everywhere. There's a good population of people in this country that are terrified of the president only because he's black, even if they don't say it. And I think a lot of them, behind closed doors, do say it.

Maybe I'm paranoid about it, but I don't think someone who disagreed as strongly as they do with Obama -- if it was Clinton -- would have stood up and screamed at him during his speech. (Shakes his head) I don't think so.

CNN: Everything has gone to such a frenzied pitch.

Matthews: I think a lot of it has to be on the press. We give the podium to a lot of people who shouldn't have the podium. The message that's delivered the loudest and in the most entertaining way is the one that we're going to put on because that's what we want. We want ratings more than we want to deliver information. That's just where the culture's gotten.
There's no way that Walter Cronkite, as a young journalist, no way Ed Murrow would be hired to do news today. Not a chance.

CNN: Because they're too low-key? Because they're not bombastic?

Matthews: Because they're thoughtful, and they're patient, and they're tying to tell you a truly balanced story. They're trying to impart information. I don't think that's the goal [now] because it's not a good business plan. ...
Everyone's outraged all the time. Why are you outraged? There's war -- there's always been war, as long as most of us have been alive. There have always been people being abused, there's always been horrible things in the world. Why are we outraged? We should just be quiet and figure it out, and work it out together. ... There's no solution in Washington as long as people are shouting like that.
Source (http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Music/09/21/qa.dave.matthews/index.html)

innerSpaceman
09-21-2009, 12:50 PM
Props to Gemini Cricket's boyfriend, er, um, hero.

Ghoulish Delight
09-21-2009, 12:53 PM
Though I have read that the importer of Djarum, Kretek, has started making a filtered cigar that apparently looks and tastes a whole lot like a clove cigarette to get around it since the bill doesn't cover cigars.
No such luck according to the guy at the cig store I was just at, that got nixed. I bought his last carton of specials. At the rate I smoke 'em, combined with the handful of partial packs I have in random places at home, that should last me a while.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 01:11 PM
Of course it is! I found there's a fairly blatant racism in America that's already there, and I don't think I noticed it when I lived here as a kid. But when I went back to South Africa, and then it's sort of thrust in your face, and then came back here -- I just see it everywhere. There's a good population of people in this country that are terrified of the president only because he's black, even if they don't say it. And I think a lot of them, behind closed doors, do say it.

What a crock. There are racists, certainly. To claim that opposition to his agenda is largely racially motivated is ignorant.

Even Obama has said he does not believe the opposition is racially motivated. Good for him.

Gn2Dlnd
09-21-2009, 01:32 PM
To claim that opposition to his agenda is largely racially motivated is ignorant.

Correct. It's opposition to him that's racially motivated. These yahoos at the health care townhalls are practically brandishing torches and pitchforks. Who the hell carries a gun strapped to their leg to a townhall meeting? Crazy racists, that's who.

Our first Gay president will get the same treatment, tenfold.

Strangler Lewis
09-21-2009, 01:39 PM
What a crock. There are racists, certainly. To claim that opposition to his agenda is largely racially motivated is ignorant.

Even Obama has said he does not believe the opposition is racially motivated. Good for him.

As somebody said during the campaign, Obama is forced to be the least aggrieved black man in America. Thus, regardless of what he might think, he can't call a spade-caller a spade-caller.

alphabassettgrrl
09-21-2009, 01:41 PM
Cricket, that's awesome. I agree with him that the media hypes things that shouldn't be hyped. They want hysteria, panic, fear. At the very least they want shock.

I don't want shocking or panicking from my news. I want to know what's going on- I'll panic if I deem it worthy of panic. Don't tell me I ought to panic.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 01:42 PM
Gn2 - Aren't those being equated, though? Opposition to the agenda is opposition to Obama himself. That's how I read many of the portrayals of the current political climate.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 01:44 PM
As somebody said during the campaign, Obama is forced to be the least aggrieved black man in America. Thus, regardless of what he might think, he can't call a spade-caller a spade-caller.

So it's OK for him to lie about it because of political perception?

I'm not naive and I know that this is what politics is. It just seems as if you are admitting Obama is a liar because he can't tell the truth about it because of political perception.

Alex
09-21-2009, 02:06 PM
I honestly don't know if I believe Obama. I think it is likely he recognizes what I said earlier in that regardless of how much racism is involved in the vocal protest, except for instances where it can quite explicitly be exposed as racist it is politically inapt to say so.

For example, most of those people opposing Obama's policy proposals would have even if they'd been proposed by a boring middle-aged white guy. But maybe it is latent racism that takes many people's opposition and bumps it up to anger that gets them out to rallies and town halls, etc.

It is not false to say racism is contributing significantly to the atmosphere. However, it does no good to say so since the individual acts of racism generally can't be identified and it is a measurement of the group average and nobody believes it applies to them (and it won't apply to a lot of people). So, to use a phrase of trade, everybody has plausible deniability ("I'm sure some people are racist but surely not me!").

And, from one perspective it is a sign of improvement that, in general, we've advanced to passive racism of a nature that I suspect is unrecognized in even the people altered by it. Moving to intangible is good, and I'd say it is intangible because they (also subconsciously) recognize that overt is not at all acceptable. And intangible is a lot harder to pass on to the children.

wendybeth
09-21-2009, 02:07 PM
He's rising above it and trying to not add fuel to the conflagration. He knew the level of racism out there- he's lived his life dealing with it. I also think he knew that many of us did not realize how pervasive it is. I'd like to see any President handle the crap he's had to handle, not to mention handle it with the grace that he has, but I think the last time the vitriol was this bad was probably when Lincoln was in office.

Alex
09-21-2009, 02:12 PM
I'm not naive and I know that this is what politics is. It just seems as if you are admitting Obama is a liar because he can't tell the truth about it because of political perception.

Yes. It is a lie (if my suspicion is correct, just because I think he is motivated by X doesn't mean I'm right; though I always am). But it is both a politic and a political lie.

In the same category as how you answer "do these pants make me look fat?".

BarTopDancer
09-21-2009, 02:17 PM
No such luck according to the guy at the cig store I was just at, that got nixed. I bought his last carton of specials. At the rate I smoke 'em, combined with the handful of partial packs I have in random places at home, that should last me a while.

Oh crap. I better go pick up a pack or two.. if I can get lucky enough to find them. :(

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 02:22 PM
I don't know, WB.....it seemed pretty vitriolic when Bush was accused of being behind the 9/11 attacks as justification for war. It seemed pretty vitriolic when Gore said the Bush betrayed our country. It seemed pretty vitriolic when Reagan was accused of wanting to starve poor people. There's all sorts of vitriol out there and it always seems worse when it it pointed at the person you find yourself supporting.

Gn2Dlnd
09-21-2009, 02:23 PM
I want to hear Emily Litella do a rant on "What's all this about banning clothes?!"

innerSpaceman
09-21-2009, 02:24 PM
To which I will add only ... how do we know the opposition to Obama and/or the policies he represents is not due to racism? I can't answer that, and neither can scaeagles.



But from the interviews I've seen of the teabaggers who protested in D.C. on 9/12, racism seems the only logical reason outside of stupidity. Take your pick. Most of them said they were freaked out about runaway spending. Where were they during the Bush years when a zero deficit when to a $500 trillion deficit?

Granted, they weren't losing their jobs and their homes at alarming rates back then, and so they weren't motivated so much by terror. But these people who equate Obama with Stalin and The H. Word because "suddenly" spending is out of control while there was nary a teabag in sight during Dubbya Days, racism is just as likely a supposition as any for the overblown animus.


Alex is correct in that racism has gone undercover, and that's a good thing. But undercover does not mean gone. Not by a long, long, long, long shot. And yes, like it or not, you're going to have to go Out Of Your Way to make arguments that are reasonable and logical if you don't want it generally ASSUMED that your beef with the black president is the color of his N.word skin.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 02:31 PM
You can't prove racism or a lack there of in the opposition. Agreed.

It is true that there were not the huge protests over spending in the Bush years, though there damn well should have been. And while 500 billion is no small deficit in the Bush years, this year's projection of 1.6 trillion is significantly larger. And the perspective of the economy adds a lot to it, as you point out ISM. However, to protest spending now in the lack of protests earlier does not mean those that are protesting now are stupid.

Gn2Dlnd
09-21-2009, 02:32 PM
Gn2 - Aren't those being equated, though? Opposition to the agenda is opposition to Obama himself. That's how I read many of the portrayals of the current political climate. They are, and I think Alex's point of normal opposition being bumped up into frenzied opposition is why. I naively hoped that people would be so afraid of being labeled racist that they would choose to cooperate with the president more. Now they just rely on being defended by their supporters, and act offended when any of their detractors call them on it.

"No, your fat ass makes you look fat." < Why I never ask that question.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 02:41 PM
I naively hoped that people would be so afraid of being labeled racist that they would choose to cooperate with the president more.

So you endorse using cries of racism as a political tool?

innerSpaceman
09-21-2009, 02:42 PM
However, to protest spending now in the lack of protests earlier does not mean those that are protesting now are stupid.

To me it might mean they are hypocritical. But I rather think they are just acting out of fear, now that the recovery from the economic collapse seems not to be including any non-rich Americans.

But yeah, I think they're also mostly stupid. Not a peep of mass protest or guns wielded at presidential events while tax cuts to the wealthy and a war of imperialism sold by pure lie ballooned the deficit in the first place. And yet now that someone wants to use it to bring jobs, energy independence, health care and environmental sustainability, folks are up-in-arms.

I don't think these bozos who couldn't articulate a decent idea are really objecting the finer points of the policy proposals aimed at restoring economic and moral vitality to America. I think they're angry sheep.

Such people have always acted against their self-interest. They don't want a better world for everyone, so they can enjoy a better world as part of it. Instead, they dream of being among the ultra-few who enjoy the better world through wealth and power, and so work to protect the privileges of that segment while they hope and pray (but do little else) to join their ranks.

Such people are deluded, plain and simple - - and act on that delusion against their own self interest. Definition of stupidity, if you ask me.

Alex
09-21-2009, 02:44 PM
I read that as hoping that mildly racist people would bend over backwards to avoid getting outed.

Of course, that assumes that most mildly racist people are aware of it. Which I doubt.

That said, if you can identify the specific racism then of course you should cry it as a political tool.

innerSpaceman
09-21-2009, 02:46 PM
So you endorse using cries of racism as a political tool?

I suppose you're claiming none of these people are lying when denying they are racist? Because, of course, racists never lie. :p


Yeah, this puts us in the difficult position of proving a negative. That's tough. But, like I said, you're gonna have to put a lot more effort into NOT seeming a racist when virulently opposing our first, ya know, colored president.

Gemini Cricket
09-21-2009, 02:46 PM
In the same category as how you answer "do these pants make me look fat?".
"Oh, honey, it's not the pants that makes you look fat. It's the fat that makes you look fat."*


*I can't take credit for this one. It's something an ex said. And now we know why he's an ex.
:D

JWBear
09-21-2009, 02:47 PM
I don't know, WB.....it seemed pretty vitriolic when Bush was accused of being behind the 9/11 attacks as justification for war. It seemed pretty vitriolic when Gore said the Bush betrayed our country. It seemed pretty vitriolic when Reagan was accused of wanting to starve poor people. There's all sorts of vitriol out there and it always seems worse when it it pointed at the person you find yourself supporting.

Yes, there was vitriol directed at Bush. But, as I have pointed out before, they were mostly directed at what he had actually done. The vitriol directed at Obama is of a whole different order. Not only are they protesting over things that Obama hasn't done or has no intention of doing (Sending conservatives to concentration camps?! WTF?), but they are doing so in near violent paranoid delusional manner.

Most of the silly claims against Bush just caused me to roll my eyes. The things these birthers and teabaggers come up with truely frighten me.

Delude yourself that these are merely mild mannered conservatives protesting Obama's "spendthrift" policies all you want. Their signs and shouts tell a different story.

Gemini Cricket
09-21-2009, 02:51 PM
The people that act like there's no racism in our country tick me off. And if one has never experienced something it doesn't mean that something doesn't exist.
My 2 cents.

Gn2Dlnd
09-21-2009, 02:56 PM
So you endorse using cries of racism as a political tool?

I do?

I thought I simply expressed a desire to see the political discourse in the country become a little better mannered. Racist me, keepin' down the white man.

JWBear
09-21-2009, 03:20 PM
I do?

I thought I simply expressed a desire to see the political discourse in the country become a little better mannered. Racist me, keepin' down the white man.

Remember... If a Republican does something bad, it's a Democrat's fault.

innerSpaceman
09-21-2009, 03:32 PM
I used to assume most Californians were not homophobes, because I never encountered any. A certain election proved me wrong.


Don't let your limited personal experience persuade you racism in America is dead. Pfft.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 03:54 PM
I do?

I thought I simply expressed a desire to see the political discourse in the country become a little better mannered. Racist me, keepin' down the white man.

It was a genuine question.

You had said you hoped people were so afraid of being called racists they wouldn't oppose the President. The only reason they would have that fear is if a charge of racism was a used and accepted political tool when no racism exists.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 03:55 PM
Remember... If a Republican does something bad, it's a Democrat's fault.

And when a democrat does something wrong, it's right wing conspiracy.

JWBear
09-21-2009, 04:36 PM
And when a democrat does something wrong, it's right wing conspiracy.

Damn right! ;)

wendybeth
09-21-2009, 05:35 PM
Yes, there was vitriol directed at Bush. But, as I have pointed out before, they were mostly directed at what he had actually done. The vitriol directed at Obama is of a whole different order. Not only are they protesting over things that Obama hasn't done or has no intention of doing (Sending conservatives to concentration camps?! WTF?), but they are doing so in near violent paranoid delusional manner.

Most of the silly claims against Bush just caused me to roll my eyes. The things these birthers and teabaggers come up with truely frighten me.

Delude yourself that these are merely mild mannered conservatives protesting Obama's "spendthrift" policies all you want. Their signs and shouts tell a different story.

JW summed up my intended response perfectly. The Great Deciderer and his cronies pushed the war, deregulation, changed the rules on enemy combatants, denied due process to citizens of this country, and........bloody hell, the list goes on forever. Most of the people who are so angry right now are angry at the wrong person, but Obama knew when he took office this would happen. I don't remember too many elected officials disrespecting the President when he addressed the House, or inciting people to violence or talk of secession. They also manipulated terror warnings for political gain- That was the reason for the Goering statement by Byrd, and if you have a problem with that, then go talk to Tom Ridge. People are so pissed at what Obama might do, when they should be furious at what GW did do.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 06:58 PM
I'm angry at a 787 billion dollar stimulus. So yeah, there's anger at things he has done. And anger at things he says he wants to do.

I find it a bit scarier that people accused Bush of planning 9/11 than anything anyone has accused Obama of thus far. And last I checked....Bush didn't plan it.

Strangler Lewis
09-21-2009, 07:45 PM
Yes. It is a lie (if my suspicion is correct, just because I think he is motivated by X doesn't mean I'm right; though I always am). But it is both a politic and a political lie.

In the same category as how you answer "do these pants make me look fat?".

In short, it's a white lie.

JWBear
09-21-2009, 07:56 PM
I'm angry at a 787 billion dollar stimulus. So yeah, there's anger at things he has done. And anger at things he says he wants to do.

I find it a bit scarier that people accused Bush of planning 9/11 than anything anyone has accused Obama of thus far. And last I checked....Bush didn't plan it.

The difference is that the people who accuse Bush of planning 9/11 didn't interrupt town hall meetings to scream their delusion, or assemble in large numbers to march on Washington, or carry guns to a presidential events. Nor did they have their own "news" channel that gave legitimacy to their paranoia.

If you are angry at the stimulus bill, then you must also be really pissed about Bush's TARP bill.

Alex
09-21-2009, 08:00 PM
The difference is that the people who accuse Bush of planning 9/11 didn't interrupt town hall meetings to scream their delusion, or assemble in large numbers to march on Washington, or carry guns to a presidential events.

While the last thing certainly is true, the truther movement was surprisingly large and established. And they most certainly did interrupt events with protests. Hell, one of them (Cynthia McKinney) was elected to congress after leading one of the major groups in the movement.

They may not have been as successful at doing so, but why pretend they were just an insignificant annoyance?

If you are angry at the stimulus bill, then you must also be really pissed about Bush's TARP bill.

If you go back, I believe you'll find he was.

scaeagles
09-21-2009, 08:04 PM
Indeed I was. If I am consistent on anything politically, it is fiscal conservatism. I have been a very vocal opponent of Bush and his spending.

Gn2Dlnd
09-22-2009, 04:32 AM
It was a genuine question.

No, it was baiting.

You had said you hoped people were so afraid of being called racists they wouldn't oppose the President.

No I didn't. I said, "I naively hoped that people would be so afraid of being labeled racist that they would choose to cooperate with the president more."

The only reason they would have that fear is if a charge of racism was a used and accepted political tool when no racism exists.

Or if they were racist. But apparently, no one can be called racist because racism suddenly ceased to exist. No one's racist anymore, and all accusations of racism are politically motivated. Unlike, of course, accusations that Barack HUSSEIN (has to be in caps!) Obama wasn't born in this country and is a secret Muslim sleeper cell who is going to have his death panels drag grandma and Sarah Palin's ever-so-special-needs baby out to a field and shoot them dead. THAT'S not an accepted political tool (though Glenn Beck is), that's just flowers and light and the love of Jesus don'cha know.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 04:54 AM
Oh good lord. How is what I said that much different than your exact quote? Sheesh. Baiting? Absolutely not.

I guess this is where we vary (amongst many other things). It seems to me that you believe racism is prevalent. I don't. I do not deny it exists....speaking of baiting. I also don't believe I ever claimed that politicians don't play politics.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 05:50 AM
In the interests of full disclosure, it does appear as if one of the five ACORN vidoes is NOT quite as bad as it appears. Apparently one of the workers on the videos did contact police. Story (http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,553423,00.html)

JWBear
09-22-2009, 10:00 AM
So where is the ourage over Halliburton, Blackwater, and that company that was hired to guard the embassy in Afganistan? Billions of dollars of government money paid to companies that do far more illegal things every day than what ACORN has been accused of. Where is the right-wing outrage over that?

Oh... that's right... they are Republican owned and supported companies. My bad.

Alex
09-22-2009, 10:18 AM
The straight dope on prostitutes and filing taxes (http://www.slate.com/id/2229094/).

Interesting to learn that you can list your profession as Prostitute and the IRS wouldn't do anything about it since the IRS is not able to share tax returns with law enforcement on their own but rather only when it is requested as part of an existing law enforcement investigation.

Though the article should have mentioned what is put on the form by legal prostitutes in Nevada.

BarTopDancer
09-22-2009, 10:21 AM
I touched on this earlier but I'm not sure what I was trying to say came out right.

Racism is alive in this country (if anything needs a "death panel" it's racism and bigotry in general). We're lucky we live in areas that it is not experienced to the blatant extent that it is elsewhere.

Do I think everyone who opposes Obama is a racist? Absolutely not.

Do I think some people are opposing Obama based solely upon his race? Yup.

Do I think they are in the majority? No.

Do I think the extremists who oppose him based upon fear mongering are in the majority? Sort of. They are the vocal majority but I don't think they are the true majority of opposition. I wish that the non-extremists who oppose Obama's plan would speak up in a rational manner and silence the vocal extremists.

Extremists hurt causes on both sides of the fence.

I really fear we are going to be a country divided, forever. Acting like children when our candidate doesn't win, throwing a vocal tantrum, counting down until the next election forever. Behavior like this doesn't help anyone, or the country. I completely believe that if a Republican wins the next election the "left" will be behaving just as bad as the "right" is now.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 10:22 AM
So where is the ourage over Halliburton, Blackwater, and that company that was hired to guard the embassy in Afganistan? Billions of dollars of government money paid to companies that do far more illegal things every day than what ACORN has been accused of. Where is the right-wing outrage over that?

Oh... that's right... they are Republican owned and supported companies. My bad.


My oh my! I get lambasted here if I dare point out something done on the left (when the discussion is what is bad on the right) because I'm told that I'm saying "well, your guys do something worse!". Is that where you are taking this? Shocked.

Where's your outrage over the tax cheats in the administration? Or Charles Rangel? We can play this game all day.

Ghoulish Delight
09-22-2009, 11:34 AM
Wow, if this doesn't sound like someone in serious closeted denial, I don't know what does.

All porn is gay porn and it makes you gay (http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/09/coburn-aide-if-boys-knew-porn-will-turn-them-gay-they-wont-want-playboy.php).

Lemme guess what "logic" was used here:

"I looked at porn, I liked seeing the penises in porn, I became gay. Therefore, porn made me gay!"

Alex
09-22-2009, 11:42 AM
If you're getting penis with your Playboy you bought the wrong magazine.

I think the logic is that the raison d'etre of pornography is masturbation which, apparently, is a form of homosexuality or moves you down that road. Since onanism is frowned upon by many religious groups I wouldn't be surprised if such a connection has been made ("we think masturbation is bad and we think homosexuality is bad therefore there must be a connection between the two.")

For me as a youngish boy, though, pornography (I was in 6th grade when I traded a VHS copy of Wrestlemania for some Playboys) mostly made me realize that it might be a good idea to head to bed earlier than I otherwise might have.

The Lovely Mrs. tod
09-22-2009, 11:57 AM
Does this mean that masturbation means you're gay, or masturbation makes you gay? Or does porn make you gay? Because I really enjoyed "Flesh Gordon" and I'm wondering if I should continue to wait for the gay thing or if I can just carry on as usual?

BarTopDancer
09-22-2009, 12:00 PM
"I looked at porn, I liked seeing the penises in porn, I became gay. Therefore, porn made me gay!"

They're obviously looking at the wrong porn then.

Or is lesbian porn still acceptable?

Alex
09-22-2009, 12:03 PM
I would assume that the view is it is a step down the slippery slope towards homosexuality.

Though it is unclear from the full comments whether he would consider this true only of boys and not girls. The comments were specifically about how to take advantage of young boys not liking gay stuff (except the gay ones, presumably). I'm sure he considers women and porn to be a good thing, so long as it his mistress and not his wife or daughter.

JWBear
09-22-2009, 12:04 PM
My oh my! I get lambasted here if I dare point out something done on the left (when the discussion is what is bad on the right) because I'm told that I'm saying "well, your guys do something worse!". Is that where you are taking this? Shocked.

Where's your outrage over the tax cheats in the administration? Or Charles Rangel? We can play this game all day.

I'm not denying that both Democrats and Republicans do immoral and illegal things; it's just that the Republicans seem to do a much better job of getting away with it.

sleepyjeff
09-22-2009, 12:14 PM
I'm not denying that both Democrats and Republicans do immoral and illegal things; it's just that the Republicans seem to do a much better job of getting away with it.


Where's the - ;) -....surely you jest.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 12:36 PM
I don't see how lesbian porn can make one gay.

I will offer to be the test subject to see if watching lesbian porn can have such an effect.

innerSpaceman
09-22-2009, 12:42 PM
Where's the - ;) -....surely you jest.

No, I'm pretty sure he's not.

Go on and name me any of the large scale corruption matters on the Democratic side. I'm pulling a blank.

Of course, most large corporations are de facto Republican supported, so that's not a fair standard I suppose. The banking industry leans Democrat supported. Lots of bad business there, but pretty much all of the corruption cases were on individuals, not corporations.

The Telecom industry is heavily Democrat supported. I can't think of any corruption scandals there. I believe those are the two industries more supported by the Dem party than the Republican.


On the political side, sorry but again all the big corruption scandals seem to be on the Republican side. I've got to be missing something, because I'm sure the Dems are not averse to corruption. But examples??? I'm again drawing a blank.

Alex
09-22-2009, 12:48 PM
Except that by getting caught they are no long in the category of being better at getting away with it.

The examples I read JWBear as using are the wiretapping, lying to get us into war, torture, disenfranchisement of minorities and the poor, etc.

But that runs into the issue I mentioned earlier of assuming that which is being debated. The problem is that for the opposition those things didn't happen or aren't bad in the way JWBear's side views it as bad.

I would agree with a statement that Republicans have been better at accomplishing their agenda on large issues than Democrats over the last 30 years. Whether those agendas is evil will be in the eye of the beholder.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 12:54 PM
ISM, do you want individuals or dems as a group? Individuals on both sides are a dime a dozen. Party wide....Keating 5 comes to mind, with 4 of the 5 senators involved being dems.

Or are you specifically interested in business corruption involving democrats?

innerSpaceman
09-22-2009, 02:21 PM
Keating 5 goes a way back, don't ya think? Funny, tho, that if only 1 of the Senators was Republican, that's the only one that people remember as being involved, oh these many decades later.


Alex, I disagree with your contention that discovery equates to getting away with it. Shame among circles you hold contempt for anyway is not punishment. Criminal charges, civil judgments, where are these?

The only instance I can recall is Scooter Libby's conviction.



Scaeagles, yes - examples would have to be by individuals. I don't think it's either Republican or Democrat official policy to be corrupt.

To be fair, Dems haven't been in overwhelming power for a long time. So perhaps the big corruption scandals are yet to come. There were indeed, however, a dime a dozen during the Bush Years, and pretty serious during the Reagan years (um, Iran/Contra anyone?) and during the administration of that Nixon guy.

I don't recall any corruption scandals during the Carter presidency. The Clinton presidency had its sex scandal ... but, um, no one got hurt.



I'm not claiming innocence on behalf of anyone. I'm sure there's enough corruption to go around, at every level of government from dog catcher on up.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 02:46 PM
Elliot Spitzer was getting hookers.

Barney Frank admitted to paying a male prostitute.

Gov of Illinois....drawing a blank....selling Obama's senate seat.

Rostenkowski went to prison for misuse of public funds.

Torricelli was taking illegal gifts from lobbyists.

Sandy Berger was removing classified docs from the National archives.

Then there's John Edwards.

Governor of Arkansas Tucker was convicted of Fraud in the Whitewater deal.

That's just off the top of my head in about 30 seconds. With research I'm sure I could find a whole bunch more.

Please note I post these things only because of a direct inquiry from ISM. In no way am I saying that republicans do not have similar moral, legal, and/or ethical failings.

BarTopDancer
09-22-2009, 03:09 PM
If you're going to bring sex-scandals into it (and really, unless it's sex with lobbyists or something direct like that I don't care if they are having an affair) How many Democrat officials and how many Republican officials in the last 2 years have been caught in sex scandals? For some reason, it seems that a lot more Republicans than Democrats have been caught with sex-scandals.

The only reason they stick out to me more is because of their "pro-family values" hypocrisy, so I'm truly curious.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 03:22 PM
The only real sex scandal there was Edwards. The others involve prostitution, which (though most here don't think it should be) is illegal.

And I just can't stand Edwards, so I'll throw him out there even if it was just sex. And a kid. The man makes me ill. But wait.....he's white. How can I dislike him so much?

Alex
09-22-2009, 04:08 PM
Let's see, sex-related scandals from Clinton years onward (some were more criminal than others). Or at least until I get bored of looking things up.

This proves absolutely nothing about anything. Just got curious.

Brock Adams (Sen. D-WA) - Retired rather than risk losing election after allegations of sexual assault were published in Seattle newspaper.
Sam Adams (Mayor - D-Portland, OR) - Sexual relationship with 18-year-old intern.
Bob Allen (Florida State Legislator, R) - Offered a blowjob to a policeman in a bathroom. Later claimed it was race panic.
Gary Becker (Maror, D-Racine) - Charged with child sexual assualt.
Ken Calvert (Rep. R-CA) - found by police naked in his car with a prostitute.
Henry Cisneros, Clinton HUD Secretary - Pled guilty to lying to FBI about payments he'd made to a former (pre-Clinton) mistress.
Bill Clinton, Governor/President - Jenifer Flower/Monica Lewinsky
Gary Condit (Rep. D-CA) - Affair with Chandra Levy revealed when she goes missing.
Larry Craig (Sen. R-ID) - Caught in police sting and accused of lewd conduct in an airport restroom.
Brian Doyle (Deputy Press Secreatary, Homeland Security) - Child pornography and child sexual assault.
Mike Duvall (CA State Assembly, R) - Caught on microphone bragging about affairs.
John Edwards (Sen, NC; presidential campaigner) - Had affair, likely fathered child.
John Ensign (Sen. R-NV) - Affair with campaign staffer.
Mark Foley (Rep. R-FL) - sent sexually explicit text messages to aides. Resigned.
Vito Fossella (Rep. R-NY) - Affair and child with mistress.
Newt Gingrich (Rep. R-GA) - Ongoing affair with aide and future wife
Samuel B. Kent (Federal District Court Judge) - Convicted for lying about sexually harrassing employees. Refused to resigned, impeached by Senate.
Kwame Kilpatrick (Mayor, D-Detroit) - Among many scandals, affair with his chief of staff.
Steve LaTourette (Rep. R-OH) - Wife accused him of having an affair with chief of staff. Denied. Later married his chief of staff.
Bob Livingston (Rep. R-LA) - Resigned in midst of Clinton impeachment when it was revealed he was having an affair.
Tim Mahoney (Rep. D-FL) - Replaced Mark Foley who is also on this list. Has admitted to affairs and buying off campaign staffer.
James McGreevey (Gov. D-NJ) - Affair with person he'd put on payroll.
Gavin Newsom (Mayor, D-SF) - Affair with wife of one of his staffers.
Bob Packwood (Sen. R-OR) - Sexaul harrassment, resigned when ethics committee voted to expel him.
Mel Reynolds (Rep. D-IL) - convicted of sexual assault, child pornography. Waited until he was sentenced to resign. Later pardoned by Bill Clinton.
Jack Ryan (Sen. candidate; R-IL) - Withdraw from campaign after claims of sexual proclivities from divorce records were released.
Mark Sanford (Gov. R-NC) - Affair with an Argentinian, abandoned office for a little while.
Don Sherwood (Rep. R-PA) - Admitted to sexual affair after police record from an abuse complaint were released by campaign opponent.
Eliot Spitzer (Gov. D-NY) - Involved with prostitutes.
Randall L. Tobias, Deputy Secretary of State (Bush) - DC Madam.
revealed during divorce with current wife.
Antonio Villaraigosa (Mayor, D-LA) - Affair with reporter.
David Vitter (Sen, R-LA) - Prostitution

mousepod
09-22-2009, 04:11 PM
Thanks for the list, Alex. The one thing that's missing from your list is a politician with a vagina.

innerSpaceman
09-22-2009, 04:18 PM
And I don't equate sex scandals with corruption. Unless, as BTD points out, it's sex with lobbyists or some such.


So, nice lists and all, but not at all what I was asking about. CORRUPTION. Not moral failing or hypocrisy.

BarTopDancer
09-22-2009, 04:30 PM
Thanks Alex!

13 Republicans
11 Democrats

Very few (from either side) with anyone campaign or directly political related. My brain is scrambled, I tried to count but the people being me keep yakking and I can't concentrate.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 04:43 PM
Ummmm....of my quick list:

Rostenkowski, corruption.
Blogojovich, corruption.
Tucker, corruption.
Torricelli, corruption.
With Berger, I suppose you can't claim corruption, but stuffing classified documents down ones pants and saying it was an accident? Um, no.
Spitzer and Frank, illegal activity, not just sexual.

So except Edwards, I listed nothing based totally on sex. 4 had nothing to do with sex. Do you want me to do some research and find others?

innerSpaceman
09-22-2009, 04:53 PM
No, that's good. Thanks!

Ugh, corruption everywhere, all the time!!

Alex
09-22-2009, 05:04 PM
Like I said my list was not intended to make any kind of point. Sex scandals were mentioned and I got curious so went looking.

The party count isn't relevant at all since I have no reason to think it is a complete list.

Mousepod. Only one woman politician was mentioned in anything I found and it was in the '80s. Though of course Hillary was having a lesbian affair with Vince Foster forcing Bill to have him killed.

Alex
09-22-2009, 05:07 PM
Mike Espy (Clinton ag secretary) could also make the list. He may have been acquitted of taking inappropriate gifts but a lot of people were fined or convicted of giving them.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 06:36 PM
Henry Cisneros (Clinton HUD Secretary) was indicted on several counts of conspiracy, false statements, and obstruction of justice, but pleaded guilty to lesser misdeanor charges. That one came to mind after Alex listed a Clinton secretary.

Alex
09-22-2009, 08:08 PM
Yes, but he was lying about a purely sexual affair (it was on my list above); in meeting with the FBI about for his background check to become HUD Secretary he lied about how much money he'd given to a mistress.

There were allegations that the Clinton administration abused power at the IRS and other agencies in a cover up but the 10-year Independent Council investigation (ending in 2005, 6 years after Cisneros's guilty plea) never resulted in any indictments beyond Cisnero's initial plea about lying and his $10,000 fine.

It wasn't one of the shining examples of the Independent Council law.

scaeagles
09-22-2009, 08:24 PM
Oh, OK....I didn't remember the details....just the cabinet member reference reminded me that he had come under indictment for the above and had pleaded out.

flippyshark
09-22-2009, 08:54 PM
Dullest sex thread ever.

PanTheMan
09-22-2009, 08:55 PM
Elliot Spitzer was getting hookers.

Barney Frank admitted to paying a male prostitute.

Gov of Illinois....drawing a blank....selling Obama's senate seat.

Rostenkowski went to prison for misuse of public funds.

Torricelli was taking illegal gifts from lobbyists.

Sandy Berger was removing classified docs from the National archives.

Then there's John Edwards.

Governor of Arkansas Tucker was convicted of Fraud in the Whitewater deal.

That's just off the top of my head in about 30 seconds. With research I'm sure I could find a whole bunch more.

Please note I post these things only because of a direct inquiry from ISM. In no way am I saying that republicans do not have similar moral, legal, and/or ethical failings.

and this is the GOP for just 9 months of 2007...

http://www.democrats.com/republican-scandals-2007

But the GOP Sex Scandals are the BEST!

http://www.dkosopedia.com/wiki/Republican_Sex_Scandals

Alex
09-22-2009, 09:12 PM
If you're going to go down to Republican county treasurers (as that first list does) I suspect that Detroit, New Orleans, Chicago, and most of New Jersey would be willing to go tit for tat with Democrats.

Alex
09-22-2009, 10:25 PM
Got to thinking about the general nature of public corruption and found that the Department of Justice's Public Integrity Section handles federal, state, and local corruption charges and reports to congress every year (http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/pin/docs/arpt-2007.pdf).

That link includes information on the departments porfolio in 2007. It really confirms just how boring and petty most of it is.

In 2007 838 federal, state, and local officials were charged with crimes with 739 convictions. Convictions (federal, state, local, and private citizens mixed up in one of them) by year below.

No breakdown by party affiliation. Though there was a law professor a couple years back who showed that the Bush DoJ was 7 times more likely to be investigating Democrat officials than Republican. They're study, though, did not include any information from before 2002 to show if that was a massive change from before (and of course we've all heard the accusations of a politicized DoJ).

1988 - 1067
1989 - 1149
1990 - 1084
1991 - 1194
1992 - 1081
1993 - 1362
1994 - 969
1995 - 878
1996 - 902
1997 - 853
1998 - 1014
1999 - 1065
2000 - 938
2001 - 920
2002 - 1011
2003 - 868
2004 - 1020
2005 - 1027
2006 - 1030
2007 - 1014

Alex
09-23-2009, 10:17 AM
The Bush administration completely overused the state secrets privilege (it was misused to some extend before but I'm of the opinion that the Bush administration extended it to a ridiculous extent).

There seemed to be some expectation that Obama would decline to use it altogether, which is self-evidently (again in my opinion) ridiculous as well.

However, today a new policy on state secrets (http://legaltimes.typepad.com/files/ag-memo-re-state-secrets-dated-09-22-09.pdf) has been announced by the Attorney General and it seems like a very good position to me. The hurdle is significantly raised, many people have to sign off and judges will generally have the ability to review for themselves the evidence the government is attempting to exclude.

So far, most of the observers I've read from both ends of the spectrum seem to think it is a good change.

BarTopDancer
09-23-2009, 11:13 AM
I really don't have a problem with the UN meeting with Gaddafi and Ahmadinejad. At least then when we blow them up... er I mean invade their countries we can say we did everything we could to communicate with them first.

I do find it amusing that Gaddafi won't stay in a hotel and brings a tent/homestead everywhere. He's currently trying to set up shop on some land that the Trump organization owns and "was leased on a short-term basis to Middle Eastern partners, who may or may not have a relationship to Mr Gaddafi"."

scaeagles
09-23-2009, 05:06 PM
Going to have to bring something back to the forefront here....can't imagine why anyone would be afraid of political indoctriantion at school. Check this (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0aqMTD5UFmU) out.

I want it to be known I found this link on the Drudge report. I have no idea what school it happened at or how long ago.

Alex
09-23-2009, 05:14 PM
If that was done as part of a public school exercise then I agree it probably isn't appropriate (I can't understand any of the lyrics beyond "Barack Hussein Obama" but I'll assume for arguments sake that they're some version of "we wish you were a religion so we could kill people in your name").

That said, this video and nothing I see in the comments identifies the context in which it is being done. For all I know those are all the children of the local Democrats for Pissing Off Republicans getting ready to perform at a $1,000/plate Obama fundraiser. Still annoying to see children put through that but of a different type.

So, any information out there on the actual specific context of what is going on?

ETA: Though whether this particular video is an example of indoctrination the fear I hear from you really reminds me of this (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylLFoD5ZGDk) (the Bush part is about 1:40 in).

I'll admit I fear what was in that video much more than the possibility of politically indoctrinating our children and producing a new Hitler (not that I'd like that to happen). At least Obama will eventually die.

scaeagles
09-23-2009, 05:30 PM
That's creepy indeed. I would suppose the difference is that I am making the assumption that the one I posted was at a public school. It looks like a public school auditorium with an elementary school music teacher.

I have looked for the context of that video, but haven't as of yet been able to find any.

Alex
09-23-2009, 05:39 PM
I haven't either. And I'll be happy to say up front that if it turns out to actually be a school music class at a public school that I'll agree with you it is almost certainly* inappropriate.

I agree it is obviously a school auditorium of some sort. There's just nothing in the video that confirms it is a public school and that what is happening is a school related activity.

* Need a little bit of wiggle room since i can't make out the lyrics and I can imagine extenuating circumstances that would ease my discomfort even if this is an official public school activity. Could aslo be that it was inappropriate and official action had already been taken by the school administration in response.

Ruthie
09-23-2009, 05:41 PM
I have just been reading quietly but whoa, that video Alex linked is scary crap!

The one with the kids singing about Obama something or other does seem out of line for school but I get the feeling it was done by some overly happy to have Obama as President music teacher that didn't think the whole thing through. I could be totally wrong, just my reaction as I watched it. I didn't see it as so intently trying to convert/indoctrinate the little children.

Strangler Lewis
09-23-2009, 05:44 PM
I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that today in the public schools of America, more children were molested or had inappropriate advances made to them by teachers than were asked by teachers to sing a dangerous song about the president bringing the people together.

Unless Obama was going to be visiting that school, I think the school time could have been better spent. Still, it does pose the question about how much unanimity there has to be around a political viewpoint--or figure--before it is acceptable to "indoctrinate" our grade school children with the typically broad generalizations that are appropriate for that age? Would you like to see schools stop with nice lessons about Lincoln and Martin Luther King?

Alex
09-23-2009, 06:13 PM
True, we did sing songs in elementary school about how wonder Andrew Jackson was (the Battle of 1812) and that was pretty much a lie.

I'm going to go with the post office policy. You want to be on a stamp or have schools make children sings song about you? Die first.

scaeagles
09-23-2009, 06:43 PM
I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that today in the public schools of America, more children were molested or had inappropriate advances made to them by teachers than were asked by teachers to sing a dangerous song about the president bringing the people together.

Unless Obama was going to be visiting that school, I think the school time could have been better spent. Still, it does pose the question about how much unanimity there has to be around a political viewpoint--or figure--before it is acceptable to "indoctrinate" our grade school children with the typically broad generalizations that are appropriate for that age? Would you like to see schools stop with nice lessons about Lincoln and Martin Luther King?


The molesting thing is sadly true. AZ seems to have those cases all the time.

However, the reason that I posted that video is that I was pretty much mocked by many here for even suggesting that there could be political indoctrination taking place in the public education system.

bewitched
09-23-2009, 06:59 PM
And here my cynical first thought was that the video was staged by some right wing group. The way the video pans in on the individual kids like, "look how this poor baby is being brainwashed!" looks totally staged to me.

JWBear
09-23-2009, 07:58 PM
The molesting thing is sadly true. AZ seems to have those cases all the time.

However, the reason that I posted that video is that I was pretty much mocked by many here for even suggesting that there could be political indoctrination taking place in the public education system.

I'd like to know the full story behind the song before we start taring and feathering.

innerSpaceman
09-23-2009, 08:49 PM
How 'bout just feathering?

Ghoulish Delight
09-23-2009, 09:40 PM
The molesting thing is sadly true. AZ seems to have those cases all the time.

However, the reason that I posted that video is that I was pretty much mocked by many here for even suggesting that there could be political indoctrination taking place in the public education system.
Umm, no, you were mocked for suggesting that political indoctrination would a likely and widespread result of watching Obama's spech and bieng asked questions about it, and that political indoctrination was the real underhanded goal of the exercise.

JWBear
09-23-2009, 10:26 PM
And so it begins... (http://gawker.com/5366498/census-workers-death-the-next-generation-of-lynching)

BarTopDancer
09-23-2009, 10:38 PM
And so it begins... (http://gawker.com/5366498/census-workers-death-the-next-generation-of-lynching)

Can you be any more dramatic?

I believe it happened, but I can't find anything in the MSM on it. Got any links that are a bit more factual and less dramatic?

I seriously doubt it's a new generation of lynching. Just some very f'ed up people who did a very f'ed up thing.

JWBear
09-23-2009, 10:44 PM
Can you be any more dramatic?

I believe it happened, but I can't find anything in the MSM on it. Got any links that are a bit more factual and less dramatic?

I seriously doubt it's a new generation of lynching. Just some very f'ed up people who did a very f'ed up thing.

Here you go (http://news.google.com/news/more?pz=1&ned=us&cf=all&ncl=dBHLR2IglmG7FYM_9aw0kDGIv4tvM)

With the likes of Michelle Bachman stirring up fear of of the upcoming census, why is this surprising? With everything going on, and an important mid-term election coming up, I predict we will be seeing a surge of violence next year.

JWBear
09-23-2009, 10:48 PM
If you can't come up with any viable ideas to actually help the people you represent, then you do... Well... This (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/16/ant-czar-bill-gets-100-co_n_288859.html).

JWBear
09-23-2009, 10:55 PM
Interesting (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bob-cesca/the-impeachment-of-presid_b_297330.html)... I find that I agree with him completely.

And throughout the Bush years -- no matter how accurate the left's "fringe" attacks might've been -- liberals were marginalized and laughed off by the establishment press, ignored by certain leaders in our own party and attacked as unpatriotic by the Republicans. Sean Hannity, Tom DeLay and Bill O'Reilly, who are all busily ripping the current president an array of new holes, actively accused the left of undermining the troops because we were criticizing the commander-in-chief during wartime. Ah yes. They abandoned that one faster than Newt Gingrich abandons sick wives, didn't they?

scaeagles
09-24-2009, 04:52 AM
Umm, no, you were mocked for suggesting that political indoctrination would a likely and widespread result of watching Obama's spech and bieng asked questions about it, and that political indoctrination was the real underhanded goal of the exercise.

Perhaps by some. Others were certainly mocking for me for the very suggestion that it could happen. I was ripped on for doubting the professionalism of public school teachers. I certainly did imply it could be wide spread, but was mocked for much more than that.

Ghoulish Delight
09-24-2009, 06:58 AM
Perhaps by some. Others were certainly mocking for me for the very suggestion that it could happen. I was ripped on for doubting the professionalism of public school teachers. I certainly did imply it could be wide spread, but was mocked for much more than that.
Sorry, but one video with unitelligible lyrics that may or may not be a public school teacher does nothing to impugn the professionalism of public school teachers as a whole. It impugns the professionalism of THAT alleged public school teacher.

I will continue to mock you for suggesting that the viewing of one speech by the President of the United States and being asked some questions about it is evidence of a conspiracy toward liberal indoctrination in public schools.

scaeagles
09-24-2009, 07:24 AM
I completely agree that it does not mean all teachers are looking to indoctrinate children. I think the disagreement comes from how widespread it is. I posted a link to a different video in this thread of a teacher berating a student for preferring McCain to Obama.

I think this, just like anything made public, is just an example. Kind of like **** roaches. For every one you see there are 100 more. Very little of what really happens comes to light. On the conservative side, I have no doubt that Dick Cheney has told more than one senator (it was a senator if I recall correctly) to f*** off, or whatever exactly it was. He just got caught on tape once.

ETA: How funny. That was supposed to say C0CK roaches, but apparently that word is filtered. Context is everything.

scaeagles
09-24-2009, 07:33 AM
Oh, apparently the video was shot at B. Bernice Young Elementary School in Burlington, NJ in June. That makes me wonder, though, if this was actually school or some form of summer program. If a state funded summer program, though, it's still a problem.

Ghoulish Delight
09-24-2009, 07:56 AM
I completely agree that it does not mean all teachers are looking to indoctrinate children. I think the disagreement comes from how widespread it is. I posted a link to a different video in this thread of a teacher berating a student for preferring McCain to Obama.
To which I again ask, if it's such a danger, if it's so widespread as to actually be likely to happen under your nose in such a cunning way that you wouldn't be able to notice it, report it, and stop it, how can you possibly allow your children near these people unsupervised ever? You brushed the question off before as ridiculous, but you're painting a picture here of a system brimming with people looking for just the right opportune moment to start brianwashing your children.

scaeagles
09-24-2009, 08:13 AM
I do not think teachers look for opportunities on a broad scale basis. To reiterate, I had two problems originally. One, the speech itself, which after I read it, I said in this thread I had no problem with it. The other problem was the lesson plans provided by the dept of education.. That provided an opportunity for bias (either way, but I make no secret that I think the education system and teachers lean left) to come through in the discussion. I don't think that teachers on a broad scale look for chances to input their political leanings while putting together their lesson plans. However, as with all of us, our biases can and do come through depending in the subject matter, just as with supposedly objective journalists.

Alex
09-24-2009, 08:15 AM
So the information coming out about the video is this:

Filmed at B. Bernice Young Elementary School in Burlington New York on June 19, 2009.

Part of a father's day tribute to Barack Obama by children's author and literacy advocate Charisse Carney-Nunes in association with her "interactive digibook" I Am Barack Obama (here (http://www.brandnuwords.com/), click "books" then "i am barack obama" in left column). So it was not a teacher leading the children in this song. Of course that does not mean it wasn't a school activity.

I have not yet found anything about the specific context of this song but looking at her appearance calendar she frequently speaks at school related events but not as part of the curriculum. Can't find a 2008-09 school calendar but in 2010 the last day of school is June 18, so it is quite possible that Friday, June 19, was still a school day (though quite possibly the last day of school).

BarTopDancer
09-24-2009, 08:16 AM
Hey Alex, if you're bored can you do some research on the history of fear mongering and violence around census time?

I would, but frankly you're way better at that than I am.

scaeagles
09-24-2009, 08:18 AM
Here's what I found on the lyrics when it was to the tune of the Battle Hymn of the Republic -

Hello, Mr. President we honor you today!
For all your great accomplishments, we all [do? doth??] say "hooray!"
Hooray Mr. President! You're number one!
The first Black American to lead this great na-TION!
Hooray, Mr. President something-something-some
A-something-something-something-some economy is number one again!
Hooray Mr. President, we're really proud of you!
And the same for all Americans [in?] the great Red White and Blue!
So something Mr. President we all just something-some,
So here's a hearty hip-hooray a-something-something-some!
Hip, hip hooray! (3x)

Alex
09-24-2009, 08:19 AM
Census takers have long been viewed with suspicion by certain segments.

That said, there is historically a completely separate reason for people in back country Kentucky to be less than accommodating to any representatives of the federal government so I'm not particularly willing to jump to the conclusion that the killing was prompted by fear of the census.

BarTopDancer
09-24-2009, 08:34 AM
Here (http://voices.washingtonpost.com/federal-eye/2009/09/eye_opener_census_worker_hange.html?hpid=moreheadl ines) is a non-dramatic "so it begins..." article from the Washington Post on it.

BarTopDancer
09-24-2009, 08:35 AM
That said, there is historically a completely separate reason for people in back country Kentucky to be less than accommodating to any representatives of the federal government so I'm not particularly willing to jump to the conclusion that the killing was prompted by fear of the census.

That's what I was thinking, but I couldn't find info (didn't look that hard last night) on the dominant race of the area.

Alex
09-24-2009, 08:45 AM
In case I was too oblique, the historic reason the back country of Kentucky wasn't necessarily safe for federal representatives was because of territorial moonshine makers.

Not quite the source of violence it was in the past but still real.

Not saying that was the reason, it just strikes me as equally likely (and there are many other possibilities) on the currently available information as it being someone inspired by Michele Bachman's comments on the census itself.

Ultimately, unless there is direct evidence found one way or another, it may not be possible to assign one murder to one cause. And jumping to conclusions isn't particularly useful except as a rhetorical club. It is something to watch and investigate, of course.

Strangler Lewis
09-24-2009, 09:43 AM
Then it wouldn't have said "fed," it would have said "revenooer."

At any rate, the guy was obviously murdered by Obama's people. You can tell because a real lynching would have had a black victim.

Strangler Lewis
09-25-2009, 08:51 AM
Heard my first "Meg Whitman for governor in 2010" ad yesterday. It's very exciting.

Alex
09-25-2009, 08:54 AM
I wonder if she'll allow you to leave negative/positive feedback on her eBay profile.


A+++++++ WOULD VOTE FOR AGAIN!!!!!!



(Note: That comment does not necessarily reflect the views of the typist.)

Snowflake
09-25-2009, 10:09 AM
I wonder if she'll allow you to leave negative/positive feedback on her eBay profile.


A+++++++ WOULD VOTE FOR AGAIN!!!!!!



(Note: That comment does not necessarily reflect the views of the typist.)

VAM!

Brilliant! :snap:

If she loses the election, can she relist as a buy-it-now?

DreadPirateRoberts
09-25-2009, 10:39 AM
VAM

JWBear
09-25-2009, 09:44 PM
School children sang in praise of Bush in 2006 (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/25/flashback-students-sang-b_n_300372.html)

Where was the right-wing outrage then?

scaeagles
09-25-2009, 10:09 PM
Our country's stood beside us People have sent us aid. Katrina could not stop us, our hopes will never fade. Congress, Bush and FEMA People across our land Together have come to rebuild us and we join them hand-in-hand!

How absolutely hysterical that you equate the lyrics in the above with the lyrics from what was sang. Also, I don't give a rats ass if children want to gather at the white house lawn and do whatever the hell they want. The video of discussion here was done in...um....school. Public school. Draw whatever equivalencies you want to try to.

wendybeth
09-25-2009, 10:40 PM
Don't your kids go to private school, Scaeagles? Why all the concern for public school kiddies? Believe me, they have bigger problems than this stupid, paranoid nonesense Beck and Rush are pushing. They need all the role models they can get. Those guys are just pissed that they haven't been able to bust Obama being anything other than his skin color. Sorry for the anger, but I'm getting sick of all this crap. With all the problems we face in this world, all anyone gets pissed about is a bunch of manufactured innuendo and outright racist, slanderous, delusional lies. The past eight years have been the ruin of our country, with some of the very worst behavior by our elected officials and business leaders in probably a century, and you're all up in arms about a stupid school sing-a-long. Do you get as upset when all the kids stand up, place one hand over their hearts, and recite the pledge allegience to our flag?

flippyshark
09-25-2009, 10:44 PM
Several dozen pages ago, there seemed to be a fairly broad consensus that "but look what YOUR party did" is a tiresome and pointless game. I'd love it if y'all could get back to debating and defending actual policy. I'll check back later.

JWBear
09-25-2009, 11:03 PM
How absolutely hysterical that you equate the lyrics in the above with the lyrics from what was sang. Also, I don't give a rats ass if children want to gather at the white house lawn and do whatever the hell they want. The video of discussion here was done in...um....school. Public school. Draw whatever equivalencies you want to try to.

Right... Because it was about a Republican president, it was ok.

JWBear
09-25-2009, 11:04 PM
Several dozen pages ago, there seemed to be a fairly broad consensus that "but look what YOUR party did" is a tiresome and pointless game. I'd love it if y'all could get back to debating and defending actual policy. I'll check back later.

(I posted it just to see Leo sputter. It worked. :evil: )

JWBear
09-25-2009, 11:06 PM
Business community at odds with GOP over health care (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125383674980139461.html)

scaeagles
09-26-2009, 05:58 AM
The past eight years have been the ruin of our country, with some of the very worst behavior by our elected officials and business leaders in probably a century, and you're all up in arms about a stupid school sing-a-long. Do you get as upset when all the kids stand up, place one hand over their hearts, and recite the pledge allegience to our flag?

What???? No, no, no! I'm not letting you get away with that! You NEVER let me get away with pointing at anything, no matter how related, that happened in the past with different administrations hen people would rag on Bush (and as a reminder, I agreed with some of the ragging). And the absolutely hysterical thing is that this has NOTHING to do with Obama. It has to do with a stupid teacher and administration at the school in question. Talk about manufactured outrage. You don't talk about the point of the criticism, you talk about how people don't like Obama. Please tell me where I criticized Obama in any post about that song at that school.

I have not even bgeun to criticize Obama.

Kids are allowed to opt out of the pledge.

Yes. My kids go to private school, but isn't that kind of like me suggesting to you that you don't live in poverty so why are you concerned about those that do?

scaeagles
09-26-2009, 06:02 AM
(I posted it just to see Leo sputter. It worked. :evil: )


Hmmm..isn't that admitting to being a troll?

Alex
09-26-2009, 06:27 AM
I said this before the details of the video were known:

I haven't either. And I'll be happy to say up front that if it turns out to actually be a school music class at a public school that I'll agree with you it is almost certainly* inappropriate.

Now that the details are pretty much known I am of the opinion that it wasn't really appropriate. Is it the most inappropriate thing ever done on school grounds? Not at all. Should heads roll? Not at all.

Was it inappropriate? Yes. Should it not be done again? Yes.

Can you find hypocrisy in people being upset now that weren't when roughly correlating things happened in the past to people of the opposite party? Yes. Can you find hypocrisy in people not being upset now that were (or would have been had they known of it) when roughly correlating things happened in the past to people of the opposite? Does that type of hypocrisy pretty much define political discourse for most people? I'd say the long history of this thread says yes. Everybody thinks their farts smell like flowers, as I say frequently.

Strangler Lewis
09-26-2009, 06:54 AM
Everybody thinks their farts smell like flowers, as I say frequently.

Interesting conversational gambit.

But if you listen closely, you can hear the children singing:

"Bush sent soldiers to their tomb.
Obama farts, and flowers bloom.
Kill the white man.
Kill the white man."

Alex
09-26-2009, 08:34 AM
Oh, I thought they were being indoctrinated. But so long as they were simply singing the truth...

wendybeth
09-26-2009, 08:58 AM
What???? No, no, no! I'm not letting you get away with that! You NEVER let me get away with pointing at anything, no matter how related, that happened in the past with different administrations hen people would rag on Bush (and as a reminder, I agreed with some of the ragging). And the absolutely hysterical thing is that this has NOTHING to do with Obama. It has to do with a stupid teacher and administration at the school in question. Talk about manufactured outrage. You don't talk about the point of the criticism, you talk about how people don't like Obama. Please tell me where I criticized Obama in any post about that song at that school.

I have not even bgeun to criticize Obama.

Kids are allowed to opt out of the pledge.

Yes. My kids go to private school, but isn't that kind of like me suggesting to you that you don't live in poverty so why are you concerned about those that do?

Oh, excuse me- my bad. I sincerely thought all this outrage had to do with Obama's Master Plan to indoctrinate the children into the cult of liberalism. I read about how angry you are, wonder at the intensity of the anger, then after a few clicks on the comp I find out that Rush and Drudge and Hannity, blah, blah, blah, are just as darned mad as you, and in fact much of what they are saying matches up with your statements. Maybe I'm not as angry because I don't listen to that crap- I'm a bit irritated by the poor choices a school made, but it largely because it gave fodder to the agitators who want so desperatly to make Obama out to be evil personified. Again, with all the truly horrible things happening in our country (and the world), why waste so much time on this? It shows me that there is little else to fixate on as far as tabloid mud slinging, which assures me (thus far) that we have a pretty damned decent man in office. I'm glad you care about the public schools, but I guess I just didn't realize how very much you do.

scaeagles
09-26-2009, 11:58 AM
Please show me where I was angry when I pointed this video out. The reason I pointed it out, as I did with another video I posted a while back, was to show that it perhaps wasn't so paranoid as many here accuse me of being in saying that educators, when given the chance, often time project their own political leanings onto students.

And WB, you sure sound a lot angrier than I do.

JWBear
09-26-2009, 02:50 PM
...perhaps wasn't so paranoid as many here accuse me of being in saying that educators, when given the chance, often time project their own political leanings onto students.

An individual educator projecting his or her political leanings does not mean there is a plot by Obama to create a brainwashed army of American school children. I reserve the right to still refer to that bit of delusion as "paranoia".

wendybeth
09-26-2009, 06:24 PM
Please show me where I was angry when I pointed this video out. The reason I pointed it out, as I did with another video I posted a while back, was to show that it perhaps wasn't so paranoid as many here accuse me of being in saying that educators, when given the chance, often time project their own political leanings onto students.

And WB, you sure sound a lot angrier than I do.

Damned right I am. When the President is insulted by a member of Congress in an entirely disrespectful, embarrassing and defamatory manner, I get pissed. I get pissed when children sing 'Assassinate Obama' on a school bus, and politicians start talking about seceding from the Union. (Which is treason, btw). I get pissed when people say "there's just something about him I don't like/trust/respect, without having any examples to back their stance up. (It's NOT racism, though- just.........something, something so apparantly intangible they can't put it to words, but the vehemence with which they proclaim their dislike is telling enough). As far the educators leaning left- I know plenty who don't. However, many realize that any funding they're going to get to relieve the drain on their own pocket books (and every teacher pays for stuff out of pocket, because the parents and districts can't or won't, but the kids still need the supplies, etc) is going to be more of a priority for the liberal lawmakers. Most of all, I get pissed at all the lies. If the truth doesn't work, spread lies. Throw enough mud, and it will stick. Guess what, Scaeagles? The Right aren't the only ones capable of getting angry. They've ruined this country, and all they can do is bitch about things that either haven't happened, are blown out of proportion, or are flat-out misrepresentations.

I'm also pissed off at a lot of religious groups, but that's for another vent.

JWBear
09-26-2009, 06:56 PM
Don't worry, WB. It's a dying party, and won't be around much longer. We just need to make sure they don't do any more damage until that happens.

scaeagles
09-26-2009, 07:41 PM
Be angry then, WB. But get the hell off the back of others that are angry about the health care plan, 787 billion dollar spending bills, 1.6 trillion dollar deficits, and whatever else, and being called racist because of it.

And JW, I'd be willing to guess that the republicans pick up a whole lot fo seats in 2010. It is the norm, and even the dems are sweating how many they'll lose.

wendybeth
09-26-2009, 08:16 PM
Scaeagles, you pull something off of Drudge you know is going to be inflammatory, then act all 'who said I was angry?' about it. You're being disingenuous, and you know it. That is what sets me off- you put something out there designed to help prove your idea that America's schoolchildren are being brainwashed into a Maoist cult (which is ridiculous, IMHO) and then out comes the righteous indignation.........sigh. I give up- we should rename this thread 'Groundhog Day', because it's the same runaround time and time again.

I'm with Flippy- wake me up when intelligent discourse makes an appearance around here.

scaeagles
09-26-2009, 08:22 PM
How dare I post something to support a position I had.

I agree, WB. It is the same thing over and over in here sometimes.

tod
09-27-2009, 09:43 AM
Be angry then, WB. But get the hell off the back of others that are angry about the health care plan, 787 billion dollar spending bills, 1.6 trillion dollar deficits, and whatever else, and being called racist because of it.

I find it amusing that the same people who were all in favor of shoveling $1 billion a week into Halliburton to wage Geo. W. Bush's Great Big War To Avenge Daddy's Honor suddenly are born-again deficit opponents when the money is used to help people in the United States who need healthcare.

I am somewhat less amused by people who can take President Carter's statement (http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2009/09/15/2070242.aspx)

I think an overwhelming portion of the intensely demonstrated animosity toward President Barack Obama is based on the fact that he is a black man. I live in the South, and I've seen the South come a long way, and I've seen the rest of the country that share the South's attitude toward minority groups at that time, particularly African Americans.

And that racism inclination still exists. And I think it's bubbled up to the surface because of the belief among many white people, not just in the South but around the country, that African-Americans are not qualified to lead this great country. It's an abominable circumstance, and it grieves me and concerns me very deeply.

and deliberately misinterpret it into "opposition to Obama is racist" -- and then take offense at what was never said in the first place.

This is almost as transparently fraudulent as claiming that the signs presenting President Obama as an African witch doctor and claiming he is not a U.S. citizen at Sept. 12 rally (brought to you by Fox "News") were based on policy differences.

--t

JWBear
09-27-2009, 09:54 AM
Thank you, Tod. You do realize, though, that to be a "good patriot" one must always remember that everything Republicans do is good, and everything Democrats do is bad. And always listen to Fox News, 'cause they know whats best for you. See how easy that makes everything? You don't have to do any thinking for yourself anymore!

Kevy Baby
09-27-2009, 10:13 AM
...one must always remember that everything Republicans do is good, and everything Democrats do is bad. And always listen to Fox News, 'cause they know whats best for you. See how easy that makes everything? You don't have to do any thinking for yourself anymore!Paybacks (http://www.loungeoftomorrow.com/LoT/quotes.php?do=view&quoteid=1488) are a bitch (http://www.loungeoftomorrow.com/LoT/quotes.php?do=view&quoteid=1549)
:evil: :)

scaeagles
09-27-2009, 10:41 AM
Love the tired old arguments. Like I said above, some things never change around here.

BarTopDancer
09-27-2009, 11:03 AM
Thank you, Tod. You do realize, though, that to be a "good patriot" one must always remember that everything Republicans do is good, and everything Democrats do is bad. And always listen to Fox News, 'cause they know whats best for you. See how easy that makes everything? You don't have to do any thinking for yourself anymore!

Neither do the liberals who drink the liberal kool-aid. They just go along thinking "Republicans are bad, evil, trying to destroy the country, insight riots and lynchings".


JW, Wendy, Sca, aren't you guys tired of going round and round and round poking at each other yet? You're never going to see eye to eye. This thread is now little more than JW poking at Sca who is poking at Wendy who is poking at Leo who is poking at JW. And frankly, it's tiresome of this same damn beating taking over every single conversation.

If you're not part of the solution you're part of the problem.

JWBear
09-27-2009, 11:15 AM
BTD,

I am not a liberal. One does not need to be one, nor does one need to "drink the liberal kool-aid" to recognize hypocrisy and point it out.

I have a healthy distrust of both political parties. It's just that the last (almost) nine years have taught me to distrust the Republicans a hell of a lot more than the Democrats.

BarTopDancer
09-27-2009, 11:21 AM
The point I am trying to make still stands. The three of you just go round and round and round. It has to be tiresome to keep poking at each other. It is tiresome that nearly every page of this thread has derailed into it.

tod
09-27-2009, 11:24 AM
Love the tired old arguments.

Simple solution: Stop making them. Don't lie about what people say, then pretend to be outraged by what wasn't said.

Like I said above, some things never change around here.

I'll take your word for that right now.

--t

BarTopDancer
09-27-2009, 11:36 AM
Tod,

With all due respect, unless you have read all 104 pages in this thread, you really don't know what is actually going on.

scaeagles
09-27-2009, 12:01 PM
Simple solution: Stop making them. Don't lie about what people say, then pretend to be outraged by what wasn't said.

Are you talking to JW and WB? Nothing like jumping in, having no idea what's going on, and hopping on a self righteous pedestal.

Anyway, you know BTD, you're mostly right. I'm done in here. It is ridiculous, tiresome, old, and has really caused this board to head in the direction of others that I stopped posting at long ago.

tod
09-27-2009, 12:05 PM
Tod,

With all due respect, unless you have read all 104 pages in this thread, you really don't know what is actually going on.

Excellent point. I took "the old tired argments" to mean the old tired right-wing arguments.

Please excuse my ignorance of the 100+ pages that preceded this one.

--t

BarTopDancer
09-27-2009, 12:08 PM
Excellent point. I took "the old tired argments" to mean the old tired right-wing arguments.

Please excuse my ignorance of the 100+ pages that preceded this one.

--t

You really have no idea what you're talking about. Your assumption as to what I am referring to is completely wrong. The fact that you are hardly around is enough for me to say you shouldn't form opinions about things you don't understand.

I used to think LoT was awesome because we could have political discussions without people trolling or name calling. But it seems that it was all an illusion.

I'm taking my own advice. When an actual political discussion can be had without the same people beating the same dead horse I'll come back and play.

JWBear
09-27-2009, 01:23 PM
You really have no idea what you're talking about. Your assumption as to what I am referring to is completely wrong. The fact that you are hardly around is enough for me to say you shouldn't form opinions about things you don't understand.

I used to think LoT was awesome because we could have political discussions without people trolling or name calling. But it seems that it was all an illusion.

I'm taking my own advice. When an actual political discussion can be had without the same people beating the same dead horse I'll come back and play.

Please quote where I have called anyone names in this discussion.

Some of us are simply tired of our right leaning friends here defending the Republican party at all costs - especially with what is going on right now. It seems to me that most Republicans (include most of my family) seem incapable of criticizing their party and fellow Republicans, or even recognizing that there is something to criticize. This attitude of "party first, before country" is something I am just unable to fathom. It boggles my mind.

And yes, I know that there are some Democrats with that attitude, and I have just as much disdain for them. But it is far less prevalent on that side of the fence. Blind obedience to party seems to be a much more right-wing thing.

Ghoulish Delight
09-27-2009, 01:27 PM
Please show me where I was angry when I pointed this video out. The reason I pointed it out, as I did with another video I posted a while back, was to show that it perhaps wasn't so paranoid as many here accuse me of being in saying that educators, when given the chance, often time project their own political leanings onto students.
"Often"? Nope, still paranoid.

tod
09-27-2009, 02:31 PM
Excellent point. I took "the old tired argments" to mean the old tired right-wing arguments.

Please excuse my ignorance of the 100+ pages that preceded this one.

You really have no idea what you're talking about. Your assumption as to what I am referring to is completely wrong. The fact that you are hardly around is enough for me to say you shouldn't form opinions about things you don't understand.

My apology was sincere. I stepped in the middle of an ongoing 100+ page discussion and misinterpreted what "old tired arguments" meant.

I apologized and retreated. That's all I can do.

Sorry about that. I'll tread more carefully in future.

--t

bewitched
09-27-2009, 04:51 PM
You really have no idea what you're talking about. Your assumption as to what I am referring to is completely wrong. The fact that you are hardly around is enough for me to say you shouldn't form opinions about things you don't understand.

I used to think LoT was awesome because we could have political discussions without people trolling or name calling. But it seems that it was all an illusion.

I'm taking my own advice. When an actual political discussion can be had without the same people beating the same dead horse I'll come back and play.

I have to say I find this petty and offensive. I am here, then I disappear for a while and then I'm back. Do you seriously mean that if someone hasn't been around much that their opinion and/or insight is any less valid and by implication, yours is superior? And if they are wrong they are attacked even if they apologize? Really? Because excuse me, you don't always know what the hell you're talking about either and I have never seen someone essentially say, "go away, we don't give a f**k what you think." I may not be around enough in your eyes to have a valid opinion but I'll give it to you anyway. This was incredibly rude (and before you say so, I don't give a s**t if he was mistaken, my statement stands). Wow.

I'd also point out that in this post you are perpetuating that which you claim to despise. You might want to think about that.

Tref
09-27-2009, 05:03 PM
I'll tread more carefully in future.

Take that back!

BarTopDancer
09-27-2009, 09:39 PM
I have to say I find this petty and offensive. I am here, then I disappear for a while and then I'm back. Do you seriously mean that if someone hasn't been around much that their opinion and/or insight is any less valid and by implication, yours is superior? And if they are wrong they are attacked even if they apologize? Really? Because excuse me, you don't always know what the hell you're talking about either and I have never seen someone essentially say, "go away, we don't give a f**k what you think." I may not be around enough in your eyes to have a valid opinion but I'll give it to you anyway. This was incredibly rude (and before you say so, I don't give a s**t if he was mistaken, my statement stands). Wow.

I'd also point out that in this post you are perpetuating that which you claim to despise. You might want to think about that.

26 posts, vs over 1k. Huge difference. Jumping in to the middle of a board dynamic discussion vs. a political (or other) discussion. Huge difference. Reread what I said. I'm not saying what you think I'm saying and I stand by it. Be offended if you want. I'm tired of the same damn horse being beaten in this thread. It's nearly impossible to have a poltiical discussion because the poor horse is dragged out by someone sooner rather than later and we are back to where we started.

bewitched
09-27-2009, 09:55 PM
26 posts, vs over 1k. Huge difference. Jumping in to the middle of a board dynamic discussion vs. a political (or other) discussion. Huge difference. Reread what I said. I'm not saying what you think I'm saying and I stand by it.

You are saying that if you don't have a high enough post count you have no right to form opinions/comment on board dynamics. In this thread, you don't have to be rocket scientist to figure the general dynamics out. But that's immaterial. My point is your statement was incredibly rude.

I stand by that.

bewitched
09-27-2009, 10:01 PM
Oh, and I agree with one thing; the same dead horse is dragged out time and time again...only for me that dead horse is the inevitable bitching about said dead horse.

wendybeth
09-27-2009, 10:20 PM
Scaeagles, you pull something off of Drudge you know is going to be inflammatory, then act all 'who said I was angry?' about it. You're being disingenuous, and you know it. That is what sets me off- you put something out there designed to help prove your idea that America's schoolchildren are being brainwashed into a Maoist cult (which is ridiculous, IMHO) and then out comes the righteous indignation.........sigh. I give up- we should rename this thread 'Groundhog Day', because it's the same runaround time and time again.

I'm with Flippy- wake me up when intelligent discourse makes an appearance around here.


For BTD: I actually said much the same earlier in the thread, but stupidly bit again. Still, I actually do not remember a time when we didn't all bicker and argue over politics here at the LoT. :D
Btw- when a person apologizes in a sincere manner, it's common courtesy to accept the apology, or ignore it. Tod, as a fellow member of the LoT, I welcome your input and I am not totally sure I understand why your original apology was apparantly not sufficient (especially when I'm not sure it was needed), but please continue to contribute to any conversations we have going. Lord knows I don't read everything around here, yet I jump in and out of conversations all the time.

We're all friends- believe it or not, as much as we argue, I like Scaeagles- mainly because I know it irritates him. ;):p

wendybeth
09-27-2009, 10:31 PM
Oh, and I'm going to rename this the "JW, Wendybeth and Scaeagles Poking Thread'. Uhm, on second thought..... maybe not. Sounds kind of dirty.

3894
09-28-2009, 05:49 AM
1. 26 posts, vs over 1k. Huge difference. Jumping in to the middle of a board dynamic discussion vs. a political (or other) discussion. Huge difference. Reread what I said. I'm not saying what you think I'm saying and I stand by it. Be offended if you want. I'm tired of the same damn horse being beaten in this thread. It's nearly impossible to have a poltiical discussion because the poor horse is dragged out by someone sooner rather than later and we are back to where we started.

I get what you're saying, BTD... I think. From my perspective, it depends on whether LoT is a local, Los Angeles area-based club for people in their 20's and 30's who socialize with each other IRL or whether it's a message board open to everyone. If it's a message board open to everyone, some nuances are going to slip through the cracks and that's going to have to be okay.

As long as I've been hanging around the fringes, my jury's still out on what the LoT is, you enigmatic darlings.

2. The Wall Street Journal is a damn fine newspaper but only if you ignore the editorials.

flippyshark
09-28-2009, 06:04 AM
These guys are in their twenties and thirties? Wow, I feel old.

3894
09-28-2009, 06:18 AM
These guys are in their twenties and thirties? Wow, I feel old.

I could be 10 years out of date. It's happened once or twice before.

Strangler Lewis
09-28-2009, 06:28 AM
Tod must be a king.

innerSpaceman
09-28-2009, 07:26 AM
I saw Michael Moore's "Capitalism: A Love Story" yesterday. It was really depressing and not quite funny enough. I don't think it was his best film, but it's his best-timed one. (His last film about health care was a little too prescient, coming out a year or so before the current big brouhaha).


Anyway, lot's of food for thought, and perhaps a new wrinkle to the discussion. If scaeagles is still hanging around, I welcome any cites to inaccuracies. Moore is always accused of them, and there have indeed been a few. Most, though, turn out in his favor. I think the opposition would do better to cite the 4 things that are really incorrect than have only 4 out of 50 accusations prove inaccurate.

Moore seems to have a pretty good track record to me.



So, like democracy, is capitalism really the worst possible system .... except for all the others??

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 07:32 AM
Btw- when a person apologizes in a sincere manner, it's common courtesy to accept the apology, or ignore it.

1st - I took his apology to be full of sarcasm - that one can jump right in and have an opinion about the dynamics in a 100+ page thread when they are hardly around. If it was not then I also apologize for my 2nd post.


2nd - I'm pretty sure Leo isn't coming back anytime soon.

innerSpaceman
09-28-2009, 08:00 AM
BTD, please knock it off.

The length of a thread has NOTHING to do with whether one may be allowed to participate. YOU do not get to decide who says what around here.

I suppose you want Tod to read the entire SOoooo thread?




Also, please recall this omnibus political thread was created by default when it became impractical to create a new thread for every political thought. There's no such thing as a coherent dynamic among the 100 or so pages of this mammoth thread that someone has to review and adhere to in order to participate.


And in fact I think it's rather easy for someone to come in and cut right through the bullsh!t of the usual suspects around here and their typical banter.

Whether that's true or not, you are not the Post Police and it's really rude to make people feel unwelcome.

Strangler Lewis
09-28-2009, 08:33 AM
Whether that's true or not, you are not the Post Police and it's really rude to make people feel unwelcome.

Oh, I don't know. I can see how allowing anyone to come in and post whatever they're inclined to post would interfere with good order and discipline.

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 08:51 AM
Simple solution: Stop making them. Don't lie about what people say, then pretend to be outraged by what wasn't said.
--t

BTD, please knock it off.

The length of a thread has NOTHING to do with whether one may be allowed to participate. YOU do not get to decide who says what around here.

What I quoted is what I am referring to. How can someone who just came in just jump on the bandwagon of so and so is just making up lies (even if he is).

Imagine if someone who is hardly around did that saying Wendy or JW is lying about what people say then pretend to be outraged by what wasn't said.

I could care less where he posts. I was calling out something I felt was not cool. Just like you guys think that it's cool that he randomly jumps in and starts attacking people, I don't.

Like I said, we used to be a board where we could discuss politics civilly. But not anymore, not if you disagree with the majority.

I'm done with this portion of the discussion. If a real political topic appears again perhaps I'll join.

3894
09-28-2009, 09:03 AM
tod is my friend. I hope he doesn't give up on this board.

innerSpaceman
09-28-2009, 11:16 AM
Not only am I not going to re-read a hundred pages, I won't even read four. So please show me where things got "uncivil." I follow this thread pretty faithfully, and I just wasn't aware it went off the rails in the last 4 pages any more than it did in the previous 96. Feathers sometimes get a little ruffled and that's all it ever amounts to. Where's the big change where things got nasty? I haven't seen it.

Snowflake
09-28-2009, 11:27 AM
Oh, and I'm going to rename this the "JW, Wendybeth and Scaeagles Poking Thread'. Uhm, on second thought..... maybe not. Sounds kind of dirty.

Bwahaaaaaaaaaaa :snap:

wendybeth
09-28-2009, 11:31 AM
I thought things were going along pretty much as they always do- which may or not be the point of whoever is cranky about whatever (and by that I mean the 'Always the same thing' crowd, the 'Read everything and then maybe you can post' crowd, and the 'Why is everyone always picking on me?' crowd), but I don't really care. We could go all the way back to MP and see the same rhythm- it's the nature of message boards, discussions in general, and absolutely not worth hurt feelings, rudeness, or potential loss of friendship. I like everyone on the LoT, and even if I don't agree with you or you with me, I don't see that as a barrier to continuing our friendships.

Scaeagles is still wrong, though. ;)

(Kidding!!!)

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 12:20 PM
B. Clinton says the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy is still present. (http://voices.washingtonpost.com/44/2009/09/28/bill_clinton_on_the_vast_right.html?wprss=44)

So there is a right-wing conspiracy to destroy Obama's administration and a left-wing conspiracy to indoctrinate children into the left-wing arena.

Everyone is out to get everyone.

I think the entire country needs anti-paranoia drugs.

Or, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you.

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 12:22 PM
Iran lies about their missiles and nuclear program (big surprise!). (http://www.reuters.com/article/newsMaps/idUSTRE58R4AI20090928)

I think we can all agree that Iran with these types of missiles is not a good thing. And it seems like most of the international world agrees.

"There has never been a stronger international consensus to address Iran and its nuclear program than there is right now,"

wendybeth
09-28-2009, 12:32 PM
I feel Iran is more of a danger to the world than Iraq ever was. We even sided with Iraq during the Iran/Iraq war- Rummy went on a 'goodwill' mission, had his picture taken with Saddam, and when asked later about WMD's in Iraq he said he knew they had them because the U.S.A. gave them some.

Alex
09-28-2009, 12:39 PM
Iran should have every right to pursue nuclear weapons if they want. Of course, they should first withdraw from whatever agreements they've entered into saying they wouldn't.

But if they did so then I'd strongly argue for them being left alone do nuke up to their hearts consent. Same answer if it were Tonga, North Korea, Brazil, Canada, etc.

That said, while I have no doubt that Iran would like to see Israel be gone, I find the idea that they'd launch a missile attack directly on them. Or anybody else in the area. They'll get them and then they'll be a great big negotiating stick with which to say "**** off, we're going to do what we want and you're not going to do much more than huff and puff about it." Just like for everybody else who has them.

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 12:45 PM
If Iran and North Korea had leaders who weren't batsh*t crazy I'd feel differently.

I'm also more concerned about them aiming them at oh you, know, us than Israel and the environmental fallout if they nuke anyone.

Alex
09-28-2009, 01:23 PM
Oh, how I feel about them having nuclear weapons has absolutely nothing to do with how I think about their right to get them.

And I find the idea that Iran would launch an aggressive strike against us to be more laughable than them doing it against Israel. There's "insane" as in not caring a lick what the rest of the world thinks and then there's "insane" as in willing to risk your very existence. Kim Jong Il may be the latter (though there's not been any real evidence of that) but Ahmadinejad definitely isn't.

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 02:12 PM
Oh, how I feel about them having nuclear weapons has absolutely nothing to do with how I think about their right to get them.

And I find the idea that Iran would launch an aggressive strike against us to be more laughable than them doing it against Israel. There's "insane" as in not caring a lick what the rest of the world thinks and then there's "insane" as in willing to risk your very existence. Kim Jong Il may be the latter (though there's not been any real evidence of that) but Ahmadinejad definitely isn't.

If they launch against Israel (which I think is more likely then launching against us, though I'm more worried about them launching against us) wouldn't they still be risking their very existence based upon our relationship with Israel?

Alex
09-28-2009, 02:16 PM
Yes it would just be slightly less direct and conceivably (not at all likely, but conceivably) a situation could be engineered that would give us pause before joining in.

And also, to launch an attack on Israel would require either shooting the missiles over our army in Iraq or through the airspace of a NATO member.

All of which is to say that I have very little fear of Iran launching a missile attach on either the US or Israel (there are other things that Iran may do that are less remote, in my opinion).

If you mean them launching missiles against us as in the mainland United States then you can stop being worried. Iran is very far away from having a delivery mechanism that could do that.

JWBear
09-28-2009, 02:28 PM
[QUOTE=BarTopDancer;300581]B. Clinton says the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy is still present. (http://voices.washingtonpost.com/44/2009/09/28/bill_clinton_on_the_vast_right.html?wprss=44)

So there is a right-wing conspiracy to destroy Obama's administration.../QUOTE]

No conspiracy at all, imo. They're not trying to hide it; it's rather blatant.

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 03:32 PM
If you mean them launching missiles against us as in the mainland United States then you can stop being worried. Iran is very far away from having a delivery mechanism that could do that.

Actually ya, this was a concern. Same thing with N.Korea being able to reach HI with their weapons.

Moonliner
09-28-2009, 03:40 PM
If you mean them launching missiles against us as in the mainland United States then you can stop being worried. Iran is very far away from having a delivery mechanism that could do that.

I'm not sure that I agree with that statement but I suppose it depends on your definition of "delivery mechanism"

http://www.british-shipping.org/uploaded_images/84_20071107145421.jpg

Alex
09-28-2009, 03:56 PM
I'm talking about missile attacks since that is what is in the news. As I said there are other things that would be of more concern. That said I really have no fear of Iran making any kind of direct attack on the US. More like a fear of them giving or selling something to someone who would.

Unless you mean they'll launch a long range missile from a container ship. Which I also don't consider worth worrying about

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 04:02 PM
I really need to turn off the news again. I end up worrying about stuff like this.

Moonliner
09-28-2009, 04:09 PM
I'm talking about missile attacks since that is what is in the news. As I said there are other things that would be of more concern. That said I really have no fear of Iran making any kind of direct attack on the US. More like a fear of them giving or selling something to someone who would.

Unless you mean they'll launch a long range missile from a container ship. Which I also don't consider worth worrying about

Humm, ya know... A medium range missile launched from a container ship could actually work. The cost guard does not check until the ships approach the US coast line...

Morrigoon
09-28-2009, 04:10 PM
Yeah, but the ship responsible can't possibly travel out of range of our bomber jets (post-firing of said missile)

wendybeth
09-28-2009, 04:13 PM
If either country tried anything like firing a missile at us, they'd only do it once. After that, they'd be back to lobbing rocks. Radioactive ones.

BarTopDancer
09-28-2009, 04:24 PM
Yeah, but the ship responsible can't possibly travel out of range of our bomber jets (post-firing of said missile)

Won't matter if it's full of martyrs (of any religion/country).

And I suspect delivering a package like that would be a huge draw to those drawn to anti-West/anti-America martyrdom.

Alex
09-28-2009, 04:54 PM
Well, assuming you could somehow launch a missile of some value from a container it may not even be entirely necessarily for anybody on board the ship to know it is there.

But I'd say this particular category of attack is pretty much in James Bond territory. If you have martyrs and bomb stuff there are much simpler and likely more effective routes to take.

bewitched
09-28-2009, 06:16 PM
If they launch against Israel (which I think is more likely then launching against us, though I'm more worried about them launching against us) wouldn't they still be risking their very existence based upon our relationship with Israel?


If it were anything other than a nuke I'd say that they would have a lot to fear from us. Israel is more than capable of responding in kind to a nuke attack and I think it is far more likely that we would let Israel suffer the world-wide consequences of using a nuke (even in defense) than to go anywhere near that particular tar baby.

There have been rumors around for quite some time (especially under Bush) that if there was "proof" of Iran making nuclear weapons, Israel would have our tacit (and very secret) approval (http://www.thejerusalemgiftshop.com/israelnews/israel-news/83-israeli-news/1084-israel-stands-ready-to-bomb-irans-nuclear-sites.html) to bomb the **** out of the production sites. The US has always denied this. Personally, I think it is highly unlikely that the Obama administration is on board with this since they seem to be much more amenable to the carrot over the stick approach.

On another note, I think that sheer tactical barriers (such as transporting a nuke past satellite surveillance to get it to a ship) bar the US from being a realistic target anytime in the foreseeable future.

BarTopDancer
09-29-2009, 08:50 AM
http://punditkitchen.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/political-pictures-republicans-nazis.jpg

JWBear
09-30-2009, 12:34 PM
For those who claim that extremist right-wing violence isn't a threat, and that Republican leaders aren't encouraging it, read here (http://mediamatters.org/research/200909300003).

Chilling.

Gemini Cricket
09-30-2009, 01:47 PM
I didn't know where else to post this but I thought this art piece (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/30/chen-wenlings-bernie-mado_n_304945.html) was done quite well. I like the placement of the shoe... :)

SFW.

Alex
09-30-2009, 02:02 PM
Well, it certainly is big.

But shouldn't it be a bear and not a bull? It was a bear market that killed him and a bull market that allowed him to get away with it.

flippyshark
09-30-2009, 02:15 PM
Wow - now THAT is a good fart joke.

BarTopDancer
09-30-2009, 02:48 PM
http://punditkitchen.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/political-pictures-mark-sanford-traditional-marriage.jpg

BarTopDancer
09-30-2009, 02:50 PM
For those who claim that extremist right-wing violence isn't a threat, and that Republican leaders aren't encouraging it, read here (http://mediamatters.org/research/200909300003).

Chilling.

I'd really like to read an article that isn't so left-wing extreme. I Googled and only got MediaMatters. Never heard of it but it seems to incite the "everybody panic they're out to get us" agenda of the anti-right-wing extremists.

Can you provide something that is more MSM?

innerSpaceman
09-30-2009, 02:51 PM
Actually, I believe that's far more in line with the traditional marriage than some fantasy about men being "faithful" to their wives. I think the tradition for centuries of male-dominated society around the globe was for men to routinely have mistresses, and for women to be killed if they dare took a lover.

Ghoulish Delight
09-30-2009, 02:57 PM
I'd really like to read an article that isn't so left-wing extreme. I Googled and only got MediaMatters. Never heard of it but it seems to incite the "everybody panic they're out to get us" agenda of the anti-right-wing extremists.

Can you provide something that is more MSM?
Newsmax has pulled the column. source (http://tpmlivewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/09/newsmax-columnist-military-coup-may-be-needed-to-resolve-the-obama-problem.php)

BarTopDancer
09-30-2009, 03:05 PM
Newsmax has pulled the column. source (http://tpmlivewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/09/newsmax-columnist-military-coup-may-be-needed-to-resolve-the-obama-problem.php)

The whole thing sounds like something from the Onion.

SacTown Chronic
09-30-2009, 03:41 PM
Good to know I'm in a traditional marriage.


(Assuming that in a traditional marriage there is some question occasionally as to who actually gets the mistress.)

JWBear
09-30-2009, 04:12 PM
I'd really like to read an article that isn't so left-wing extreme. I Googled and only got MediaMatters. Never heard of it but it seems to incite the "everybody panic they're out to get us" agenda of the anti-right-wing extremists.

Can you provide something that is more MSM?

The problem is that the MSM never reports on these things when Republicans do it.

The whole thing sounds like something from the Onion.

If only it were, but I'm afraid that it is far too true.

BarTopDancer
09-30-2009, 04:23 PM
The problem is that the MSM never reports on these things when Republicans do it.

I give as much credit to the left-wing extremist omgeveryonepanic links as I do to the right.

If only it were, but I'm afraid that it is far too true.

And removed by the site... See what Greg posted.

JWBear
09-30-2009, 04:49 PM
And removed by the site... See what Greg posted.

You're point?

That was just one of several things listed in the article I linked to.

Ghoulish Delight
10-02-2009, 09:29 AM
Son of a bitch. Obama better jump on this bullsh!t and not let "School sex clinics (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/01/bachmann-sex-clinics-will_n_306292.html)" become the new Death Panels.

BarTopDancer
10-02-2009, 09:53 AM
I think they think this is what class schedules look like:

Period 1 - Indoctrination
Period 2 - Science (aka trashing organized religion)
Period 3 - History (how organized religion is evil)
Period 4 - lunch
Period 5 - sex-ed (how to have the OMGbestsexever)
Period 6 - abortions for all (including boys and non-pregnant girls)
Period 7 - Math (which somehow trashes organized religion)

JWBear
10-02-2009, 10:27 AM
Bachman, of course. Gotta love her.

Her doctor needs to adjust her meds again.

Strangler Lewis
10-02-2009, 10:34 AM
Now . . . sex. Where were we? (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTMlZSKEu-Y)

BarTopDancer
10-02-2009, 10:46 AM
Bachman, of course. Gotta love her.

Her doctor needs to adjust her meds again.

Or she needs to have sex.

bewitched
10-06-2009, 05:59 PM
For the last 8 years the Republicans have stood around farting while the Democrats stood around saying, "ooooo, let me smell that." ~Louis Black

HAHAHAHAHA! So true!

Alex
10-06-2009, 07:41 PM
Fox News once again exposes its bias with this ranting about health care reform.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMlQlOt_LI0

Gemini Cricket
10-07-2009, 03:17 PM
Jon Stewart Pummels Obama for Not Repealing DADT (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/07/stewart-pummels-obama-for_n_312235.html)

The president and his team have said he still plans to do so, but that he has too much on his plate. Stewart's response? "It's f**king chow time, brother."

BarTopDancer
10-08-2009, 12:30 PM
I heard on Conan (of all places) that Obama is going to repeal DADT. But I can't find anything more on it.

innerSpaceman
10-19-2009, 02:21 PM
Calling Sactown, Calling Sactown

The U.S. Justice Dept. just announced their new policy to stop pursuing criminal cases against people who obey state laws re medical marijuana possession and sale in those 14 states which have legalized medical marijuana.



W00t!

BarTopDancer
10-19-2009, 03:33 PM
The "War Against Fox News". Pick your source link here (http://news.google.com/news/more?pz=1&cf=all&ned=us&ncl=dUVvWX4hVp0GokM8AH5M2gGdFQV4M&topic=h).

I think it's stupid for the White House to take on a media outlet. CNN is biased to. They have Freedom of speech protection. If Fox is slandering r then take that up the proper channels. But to take on a media outlet for their biased reporting... well there's nothing illegal about being biased.

Huge waste of time, and money that should be focused elsewhere. If they want to take people on, take on Glen Beck and Rush.

bewitched
10-19-2009, 03:43 PM
The "War Against Fox News". Pick your source link here (http://news.google.com/news/more?pz=1&cf=all&ned=us&ncl=dUVvWX4hVp0GokM8AH5M2gGdFQV4M&topic=h).

I think it's stupid for the White House to take on a media outlet. CNN is biased to. They have Freedom of speech protection. If Fox is slandering r then take that up the proper channels. But to take on a media outlet for their biased reporting... well there's nothing illegal about being biased.

Huge waste of time, and money that should be focused elsewhere. If they want to take people on, take on Glen Beck and Rush.

I didn't read those links but in earlier releases, the WH said it considered FOX to be on par with Beck (whom, incidentally happens to be on FOX) and Rush. They consider FOX to be a political opponent, not a credible news source and intended to treat them as such. Personally, I agree with them. FOX probably sways more people against the Obama WH than any politician (or, arguably, pundit) out there today and if they are going to go up against politicians who are against them, why wouldn't they do the same with FOX?

As an aside, I'm not sure how much money or time the WH itself is wasting on this. What are they effectively doing other than bashing them in press conferences and interviews, which they would be doing anyway FOX or no FOX. It's not like they're holding a specific press conference to bash FOX and even if they did, what's the cost?

Freedom of speech is a non-issue since the WH isn't trying to legally force FOX to stop bashing them. In scanning one of the articles I see nothing that indicates the WH is taking any legal action against what they perceive to be FOX's bias.

JWBear
10-19-2009, 04:29 PM
It's about time someone stood up to Fox (and the media in general).

SacTown Chronic
10-23-2009, 07:39 PM
Calling Sactown, Calling Sactown

The U.S. Justice Dept. just announced their new policy to stop pursuing criminal cases against people who obey state laws re medical marijuana possession and sale in those 14 states which have legalized medical marijuana.



W00t! A lot of people up here breathing huge sighs of relief. The Dark Age featuring George Bush and John Ashcroft is ov-ah!


/sparks totally non-medicinal joint
//what? my day will come

innerSpaceman
10-24-2009, 11:29 PM
I bet that's not all they'll be breathing.











I'm here through Thursday, folks.