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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend....

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To: Sully- who wrote (30096)2/19/2010 8:59:38 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (52) of 35834
 
It’s all the Tea Party’s fault

by Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate

Remember “Not Me?” He was the famous invisible cartoon gremlin in the newspaper cartoon strip “Family Circus.” Whenever toys were left on the floor or other school-age disasters struck, the kids in the cartoon pointed their fingers at “Not Me.” Today, “Tea Party” is the juvenile Left’s new “Not Me” – an all-purpose scapegoat for every crime and disaster.

On Thursday morning, a disturbed pilot flew a stolen small plane into an Austin, Texas, office complex that contained an Internal Revenue Service office. Several workers in the building were injured and Joseph Andrew Stack, the pilot, was killed in the crash. Local authorities suspect he set his house on fire – from which his wife and daughter escaped — before taking off on his deadly journey. Investigators found a Web posting identified as Stack’s “suicide manifesto” in which he railed against tax laws, inequity, government, and crony capitalism. He also targeted “puppet” George W. Bush and murderous health care insurers and the pharmaceutical industry.

The “manifesto” ended:



The communist creed: From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.

The capitalist creed: From each according to his gullibility, to each according to his greed.



This nutball had deadly grudges that transcended partisan lines. But within minutes of the story breaking, a furious, left-wing blogger at the popular Daily Kos website – where countless Democrat leaders have guest-posted – fumed: “Teabagger terrorist attack on IRS building.”
The article immediately cast blame on the anti-tax Tea Party movement:

<<< “After months of threats on the United States government, and government institutions, the Anti-Government forces known as the teabaggers have struck with their first 911 (sic) inspired terrorist attack.” >>>

At the eponymous mega-website of Arianna Huffington, a 2,000-plus comment thread was filled with allusions to “teabaggers:”


I would bet he has a membership card to teabag nation and the Glenn Beck fan club !

Tea bag bomb

Good to see natural selection still works! Tea party Unite!

This guy sounds just like a teabagger.

Oh please. This has tea bags dripping all over it.

I hope teabaggers are proud!! …. Great opening day for CPAC [the Conservative Political Action Conference] isn’t it??

This guy sounds like a Tea Partier first class! Maybe that movement is more DANGEROUS to our freedoms than they let on! Be afraid America, BE VERY AFRAID!

He was a Tea Party Terrorist.


In the early aftermath of the suicide pilot’s attack, there was no evidence that Stack belonged to a Tea Party group. In any case, no law-abiding Tea Party group would ever condone what he did. But it didn’t stop the haters from immediately smearing advocates of limited government. And it’s just the latest in a long line of calculated attempts to paint the vast majority of peaceful Tea Party activists as terrorist threats to civil society.

This week, absurd liberal pundits and bloggers also tried to connect the tragic University of Alabama-Huntsville murders to the Tea Party movement. No matter that the alleged killer, Amy Bishop, was an Obama-worshiping academic who repeatedly got a soft-on-crime pass. Or that Democrat Rep. William Delahunt of Massachusetts was the former prosecutor involved in dropping charges against Bishop in the deadly shooting of her teenage brother. Or that liberal-dominated campus officials apparently looked the other way at Bishop’s several red-flag flashes of violence leading up to the U of A shootings.

Tea Party-bashers claimed that the murders were a manifestation of racist conservative influence on the American landscape.
CNN commentator Roland Martin pointed out that all the victims were non-white and wrote: “One can imagine that as Amy Bishop continued to shoot, bomb and kill people with impunity, eventually this obsession (with Obama) might have played itself out with some horrific results.” Reuters Foundation Fellow Jonathan Curiel picked up the theme: “The ‘results’ that the Tea Party movement envisions include less government — and less of Obama.”

Curiel bemoaned the rejection of a post-racial society by tying together the Alabama massacre and the rise of the Tea Party movement even more explicitly. Proof of anti-Obama bigotry he wrote could be found in “last week’s shooting in Alabama, where a disgruntled white professor murdered three minority professors; and the growing success of the Tea Party movement, which is overwhelmingly white and increasing vocal in its violent dislike of the nation’s first black president."

The same warped worldview blamed Tea Party conservatives for Kentucky census worker Bill Sparkman’s insurance-scam-inspired suicide and for Holocaust Museum shooter James Von Brunn’s rampage (despite his published rantings against Fox News).

The smear merchants, of course, are simply following Rahm Emanuel’s advice to exploit every crisis. Pointing fingers at the Tea Party gremlin demonizes the Left’s most potent political opponents. This is the blame-gamers’ ultimate agenda: Criminalizing dissent.


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