A University of Washington poll of 1,695 registered voters in the state of Washington reported that 73% of Tea Party supporters disapprove of Obama's policy of engaging with Muslim countries, 88% approve of the controversial immigration law recently enacted in Arizona, 82% do not believe that gay and lesbian couples should have the legal right to marry, and that about 52% believed that "lesbians and gays have too much political power".
Quote from: Gerald Lively on January 29, 2012, 11:29:32 AMA University of Washington poll of 1,695 registered voters in the state of Washington reported that 73% of Tea Party supporters disapprove of Obama's policy of engaging with Muslim countries, 88% approve of the controversial immigration law recently enacted in Arizona, 82% do not believe that gay and lesbian couples should have the legal right to marry, and that about 52% believed that "lesbians and gays have too much political power". Oh, my, but that last bit made me laugh. Tea Party, let me introduce you to my good friend reality. You two have some things to discuss....
Quote from: cariad on January 30, 2012, 07:35:45 AMQuote from: Gerald Lively on January 29, 2012, 11:29:32 AMA University of Washington poll of 1,695 registered voters in the state of Washington reported that 73% of Tea Party supporters disapprove of Obama's policy of engaging with Muslim countries, 88% approve of the controversial immigration law recently enacted in Arizona, 82% do not believe that gay and lesbian couples should have the legal right to marry, and that about 52% believed that "lesbians and gays have too much political power". Oh, my, but that last bit made me laugh. Tea Party, let me introduce you to my good friend reality. You two have some things to discuss.... It's true to them - since any political power held by gays and lesbians at all, on any level, is too much in their eyes!
It's true to them - since any political power held by gays and lesbians at all, on any level, is too much in their eyes!
Seems like the first article was only the bad and the second only the good......I noticed the second didn't mention the thefts and assaults, or the crapping on a police cars hood, or having sex in public.....and the first didnt mention that the people who were being racist and yelling the n word were not representative of all the teapartiers, which was reported over and over- they were a few of the many sincere people- just like the scumbags stealing and crapping in public might not represent all the sincere occupiers.......
I’ve had enough. I went to Wikipedia and drew their content, then presented it here. Fair? Some people can’t read. Perhaps one organization is not so good. We might all consider that thought.Civil disobedience is rarely pretty. The right-wing is fond of isolating individual behavior to condemn a movement they do not favor, then they can ignore the message. I have been around too long behind the scenes in government and the military, and in business in the public sector to not recognize the potential (I erased the word I meant to use) for skullduggery. I am amazed at the thought of people who ignore the lessons of Watergate, September 2008, and the self-righteousness of the people who brought America to its financial knees. Listen to yourselves; all others are wrong and I am right, you say. Where the hell have you people been?You have a candidate that wants to do away with the Civil Right Act of 1964 and I hear you people saying this guy and that guy isn’t racist. BS!!!!! Enough is enough! How can so many people be so blind to the obvious. The right has absolutely no sense of good economics. The Tea Party is racist. Long ago, during WWII, our government recognized that the partnership between corporate power and the government in policy making is fascism. Now we have the Tea Party that claims they want to adhere to the Constitution, but they don’t. Witness the Patriot Act. Where did that come from? What about those TPers that want to eliminate this amendment and that one? And, gee whiz, wasn’t that the Tea Party that wouldn’t let people speak at the healthcare town halls? Hey, wasn’t that a group of TPers that knocked the lady reporter down and stomped on her head? And didn’t they justify that by claiming she “didn’t belong”?I am done. No more! Wanna vote for those righties, well, stick it in your ear. I’ll be dead before the full effects of that group is felt – assuming they get anywhere. I cannot get my head around the notion that so many people by that propaganda.glI am not going to respond. Auggie, get you butt over here, we’re gonna play!
Quote from: Gerald Lively on January 30, 2012, 06:15:30 PMHemodoc doesn't have a lot of views I agree with, but this one I do heartily!gary
HD;There are many issues in contemporary America that ought to be addressed. The rise of the Tea Party is very much like any fringe movement that has risen during difficult times. (see the Great Depression) Yes, you and Glenn Beck sound much like Father Coughlin.Dissent isn’t a bad thing. We can agree that the destruction of property is not a good thing. But, the great civil rights leaders have said of such social upheavals, “Riots are the voice of the oppressed trying to be heard.” (Jesse Jackson/Martin Luther King Jr.)The Tea Party began as an unfocused complaint on taxation, but the facts are that today’s taxes are the lowest in decades. FOX News gave voice to the Tea Party, using it to promote a conservative agenda. Glenn Beck faded and the GOP co-opted the TP. Now, there is the baggage of TP misdeeds. Forever seared into my mind is the so-called leader of the Oklahoma Tea Party appearing on the Evening News to explain his request of the Oklahoma Legislature; that his group be declared the official militia of that state, and that the state should provide weapons to the group. His justification was to keep the Federal Government from “interfering in state business.” All the signs of an extremist fringe group are there.Where in all this, are the solutions – or even some identifications of the problems? I submit that the Occupy Movement has identified one problem and that is the growing distance between the middle class and the wealthy, as well as the taxation problems associated with that. The problem isn’t the fact that the Occupy group wouldn’t move from a park in New York or that they didn’t have a permit to march in Oakland, it is the unfair practices of a skewed economy. Citizens of these United States can only vote, but under the circumstances of modern election practices, that doesn’t give voice to the complaints that afflict us all. Let the voice of the people be heard. Even the Tea Party is an expressed discontent. Reasonable people would see these protest groups as symptoms of something larger.Yes, vote to change our congressional membership, then cross your fingers and hope. Yes, care for the poor and the elderly, and show compassion to our children. In the meantime, who will correct the corruption, breakup the overly large corporations, raise taxes for the needed revenues, and who will prepare us to confront world commerce? Well, the Tea Party is going to do that and the Occupy group has but one issue; how about less complaints and more ideas on solutions?gerald
Quote from: Gerald Lively on January 31, 2012, 06:26:42 PMHD;There are many issues in contemporary America that ought to be addressed. The rise of the Tea Party is very much like any fringe movement that has risen during difficult times. (see the Great Depression) Yes, you and Glenn Beck sound much like Father Coughlin.Dissent isn’t a bad thing. We can agree that the destruction of property is not a good thing. But, the great civil rights leaders have said of such social upheavals, “Riots are the voice of the oppressed trying to be heard.” (Jesse Jackson/Martin Luther King Jr.)The Tea Party began as an unfocused complaint on taxation, but the facts are that today’s taxes are the lowest in decades. FOX News gave voice to the Tea Party, using it to promote a conservative agenda. Glenn Beck faded and the GOP co-opted the TP. Now, there is the baggage of TP misdeeds. Forever seared into my mind is the so-called leader of the Oklahoma Tea Party appearing on the Evening News to explain his request of the Oklahoma Legislature; that his group be declared the official militia of that state, and that the state should provide weapons to the group. His justification was to keep the Federal Government from “interfering in state business.” All the signs of an extremist fringe group are there.Where in all this, are the solutions – or even some identifications of the problems? I submit that the Occupy Movement has identified one problem and that is the growing distance between the middle class and the wealthy, as well as the taxation problems associated with that. The problem isn’t the fact that the Occupy group wouldn’t move from a park in New York or that they didn’t have a permit to march in Oakland, it is the unfair practices of a skewed economy. Citizens of these United States can only vote, but under the circumstances of modern election practices, that doesn’t give voice to the complaints that afflict us all. Let the voice of the people be heard. Even the Tea Party is an expressed discontent. Reasonable people would see these protest groups as symptoms of something larger.Yes, vote to change our congressional membership, then cross your fingers and hope. Yes, care for the poor and the elderly, and show compassion to our children. In the meantime, who will correct the corruption, breakup the overly large corporations, raise taxes for the needed revenues, and who will prepare us to confront world commerce? Well, the Tea Party is going to do that and the Occupy group has but one issue; how about less complaints and more ideas on solutions?geraldThe Tea Party isn't an expression against taxes, it is instead an expression against a president out of touch with the people of America. Without Obama, we would not have a Tea Party. It ain't about taxes my friend.
Quote from: Hemodoc on January 31, 2012, 06:29:52 PMQuote from: Gerald Lively on January 31, 2012, 06:26:42 PMHD;There are many issues in contemporary America that ought to be addressed. The rise of the Tea Party is very much like any fringe movement that has risen during difficult times. (see the Great Depression) Yes, you and Glenn Beck sound much like Father Coughlin.Dissent isn’t a bad thing. We can agree that the destruction of property is not a good thing. But, the great civil rights leaders have said of such social upheavals, “Riots are the voice of the oppressed trying to be heard.” (Jesse Jackson/Martin Luther King Jr.)The Tea Party began as an unfocused complaint on taxation, but the facts are that today’s taxes are the lowest in decades. FOX News gave voice to the Tea Party, using it to promote a conservative agenda. Glenn Beck faded and the GOP co-opted the TP. Now, there is the baggage of TP misdeeds. Forever seared into my mind is the so-called leader of the Oklahoma Tea Party appearing on the Evening News to explain his request of the Oklahoma Legislature; that his group be declared the official militia of that state, and that the state should provide weapons to the group. His justification was to keep the Federal Government from “interfering in state business.” All the signs of an extremist fringe group are there.Where in all this, are the solutions – or even some identifications of the problems? I submit that the Occupy Movement has identified one problem and that is the growing distance between the middle class and the wealthy, as well as the taxation problems associated with that. The problem isn’t the fact that the Occupy group wouldn’t move from a park in New York or that they didn’t have a permit to march in Oakland, it is the unfair practices of a skewed economy. Citizens of these United States can only vote, but under the circumstances of modern election practices, that doesn’t give voice to the complaints that afflict us all. Let the voice of the people be heard. Even the Tea Party is an expressed discontent. Reasonable people would see these protest groups as symptoms of something larger.Yes, vote to change our congressional membership, then cross your fingers and hope. Yes, care for the poor and the elderly, and show compassion to our children. In the meantime, who will correct the corruption, breakup the overly large corporations, raise taxes for the needed revenues, and who will prepare us to confront world commerce? Well, the Tea Party is going to do that and the Occupy group has but one issue; how about less complaints and more ideas on solutions?geraldThe Tea Party isn't an expression against taxes, it is instead an expression against a president out of touch with the people of America. Without Obama, we would not have a Tea Party. It ain't about taxes my friend.If the right worried more about what is good for Americans than just getting Obama out of office this country would be in much better shape.
I don't think Obama gets the sole bad mark on being out of touch with the American people. Honestly, what president has ever been in touch with the majority of people in America? The presidents as a group are wealthy, well-educated, and have no experience of what it is like to grow up in a lower middle class home, let alone in the poverty that so many Americans are currently experiencing. Most of the rest of our elected officials in Washington can't claim to be much better. We keep electing the people who can afford to run for office, and we are getting out of it exactly what they paid for - power but not progress.
jbeany, I think there is definitely something important in your last line, but I have to disagree that presidents as a whole have "no experience of what it is like to grow up in a lower middle class home". That may be true of recent, Republican presidents (in other words, the Bushes), but Clinton quite famously grew up in Backwater, Arkansas and I think Obama is also self-made. Reagen might have had more modest beginnings but I wouldn't know.
I have read you many and various posts and am staggered by your misrepresentations. I can’t answer them here. I should say that you seem to want argument, not debate. You are very defensive and not creative. And one more things, you trained to be a doctor, I trained to be a politican and was one – at the top of my chosen profession.You are not the great political intellect you seem to portray, you are an ideologue. And there is no flexibility in an ideologue’s thinking. Indeed, Congress’ new members proudly announced “no compromise” during the 2011 session. It seems that this tyrannical minority, members of an organization that you support, are behaving as if legislation is their entitlement. They have no goals, no identified problems to resolve; just a pronouncement that they want Obama to be a one term president.That is malfeasance. Their job is legislation. If they do not like Obama, impeach him.Meanwhile, the problems of America languish. I see nothing in all of your diatribes that solves any issue the US faces today. I see complaints about members, politicians, and the behavior of some citizens. Anti-change. Anti-intellectualism.As for the corporations that have grown too large and should have been broken up via anti-trust law, look at AIG. They brought down the entire US economy on September 19, 2008 under George W. Bush’s watch. (Derivatives and multiple insurance policies that could not be supported). Or, take ENRON, the corporation that cleaned out California’s treasury then went bankrupt before the court action was final. California still suffers financial troubles caused by that and the GOP sponsored Prop 13. How many other examples do you need? Elections are now swamped with money, the result of the US Supreme Court ruling that corporations are essentially people and can contribute unlimited funds to Super PACS. Get the point? No?Corporate and Government power combined? We have it. Patriot Act? Abandonment of our civil rights? You betcha! Isamophobia in the GOP? Yep! Afraid of Iran’s nuke capacity? Sure. Racism? See Ron Paul, Newt Gingrich. Well, Doctor person, you and I, and all Americans are on the road to fascism. I don’t think you get it. Go your merry way. I’ll be dead before too long and you’ll have it all to yourself. And remember this if you can’t get your head around coming events; pay your debts when you have prosperity, skate when times are lean: a principle of government budgeting.Come November we shall see. By the way, I never said you were anti-semitic. You just love to misinterpret, don’t you?Gerald