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So, today I got to drive by the usual weekend brunch crowd of people flag-waving on the corner by the library. I realize this particular faction is all about going it alone, with no structured societal support of any kind, but really, the signs need work. If it's in small print - and bad penmanship, no less - people in cars can't read it. All I could read on one guy's sign, because the letters were big enough and it was underlined, was "NO HEALTH CARE". Since I'm pretty sure the group wasn't in favor of government involvement in anything, I'm confident he wasn't protesting any lack of personal health care.
Also, I'm predisposed to turn against any group that encourages honking. |
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I think Dowd nails it in this op-ed. |
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Good Lord, GC....all criticism of Obama is NOT racism, and while that was not the appropriate place to yell it out, it is getting incredibly tiresome.
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I would say there is definitely criticism of racism that is fueled or augmented by outright racism or simple disquiet (that is, they'd never overtly do anything particularly racist but have some unconscious tendencies) with having a black president.
Saying that, though, I further say that while it may be true, unless an individual instance of criticism or disrespect can clearly be tied to a racist idea it is politically disadvantageous to bring it up. |
I also think the racist card is being played far too often by those criticizing the conservatives. Sure, it's justified in some cases, particularly with some of the more virulent protesters, but I think it's best to respond to the challenges that can actually be addressed with facts. Slinging a charge of racism is always a conversation ender, and the person who plays that card is essentially saying, eh, you're not even worth talking to. (that is true in the case of some of the most virulent protesters, of course.) But it's a lot more useful to keep the conversation focused on facts, especially since both sides appear to have their own sets of facts.
Just for starters, I think an awful lot of the tea party faction need to consult some good dictionaries and history books. Judging from their signs, they don't have very good working definitions of fascism, socialism, communism or nazism, and seem to find them all interchangeable. I know a few libertarians who are part of these protests, all educated and very smart. I'm surprised that they seem to be cool with the nonsense, jingoism and sometimes threatening rhetoric coming from the more (*ahem*) rural participants in these events. ("We didn't bring guns ... THIS TIME") Strange bedfellows. |
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