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Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/25/2010 1:01:04 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
I've got to run out. My mom's not doing well. If anyone finds the Eric Cantor video from this afternoon, please post it here.

Thanks!

Tim



To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/25/2010 6:37:38 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
***** I had no idea we're so fracking Eeeeevil!!!!! *****

NOTE: Every one of these articles went up well after Eric Cantor spoke out this afternoon. It was a "news" search with the key words 'Eric Cantor' included.

_____________________________________________________

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, GOP decry threats against members of Congress who voted for health care reform

_____________________________________________________

Bullet that hit Va. congressman's office random
The Associated Press

_____________________________________________________

"All of those who participated in their free expression should not be painted with the same brush" as those who used "unacceptable language," Pelosi said....

Democrats have been raising money off the incidents....

“Please chip in $5 or more to defend health reform — and those in Congress who fought to make it possible,” Mitch Stewart, the director of President Barack Obama’s campaign organization, wrote in a letter to supporters.

Republicans tried to seize at least a piece of the victim mantle Thursday.....

Van Hollen spokesman Doug Thornell countered Cantor, saying the Republican whip had made “false accusations” against Democrats instead of “calling for restraint.”

“This is straight out of the Republicans’ political playbook of deflecting responsibility and distracting attention away from a serious issue,” Thornell said...

_____________________________________________________

Friendly Teabagger Mails Weiner Mysterious Powder [Domestic Terror]

Why is Anthony Weiner forcing crazies to send him terror powder? Eric Cantor demands answers

_____________________________________________________

Tempers flare as reports of anti-Democratic violence mount

_____________________________________________________

Pelosi, GOP, decry threats against Congress

_____________________________________________________

Cantor: Blame the victims for violence against lawmakers

And now, Thursday's lesson in how to give very strange press conferences, courtesy of Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., the number two House Republican leader.

_____________________________________________________

Republican Totally Wants In On This Violent Threat Scare Trend (Updated) [Me Too]

_____________________________________________________

GOP Turns the Tables on Right-Wing Threats

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi addressed the spate of threats Democrats have faced over the past few days. Pressed by reporters on whether Republican lawmakers had incited some of those threats, Pelosi offered a measured response.

_____________________________________________________

The unspeakable Eric Cantor

_____________________________________________________

Two Indiana congressmen report threat calls to offices

The offices of two Indiana Democratic congressmen say they've received threatening phone calls about health care reform.

_____________________________________________________

Nancy Pelosi nudges Republicans to denounce threats, slurs

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-calif.) nudged Republicans on Thursday to denounce the slurs that were directed at her fellow Democrats...

_____________________________________________________

Pelosi: Threats Against Lawmakers Have No Place

On Thursday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said recent threats against Members who voted ‘yes’ on healthcare reform are unacceptable.

_____________________________________________________

Hateful Climate in U.S. Could Lead to Obama Assassination, Farrakhan Says

The 76-year-old Nation of Islam leader pointed specifically to derisive comments, including the "N-word," being allegedly shouted at legislators who supported Obama's health care legislation.

_____________________________________________________



To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/25/2010 6:53:05 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
Republican Whip Eric Cantor Statement On The Issue Of Threats, Civility & Media Coverage

YouTube video

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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/26/2010 8:00:21 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Tea Party Leaders Condemn, Disown Threats Against Lawmakers

FOXNews.com

Tea Party leaders are condemning the rash of threats made against congressional lawmakers, saying violence and vandalism are not what they're about -- and that congressional Democrats are hardly the only ones dealing with intimidation over the health care debate.

The Tea Partiers say they've been enduring threats ever since their movement took off last year
, and that while protesters were said to have shouted slurs at lawmakers on Capitol Hill over the weekend, other conservative protesters were harassed by counter-demonstrators. Virginia Rep. Eric Cantor, the Republican Whip in the House, also said Thursday that his campaign office in Richmond was shot at earlier in the week, though police said the bullet may have been randomly fired.

The Tea Party activists claim the latest threats aimed at lawmakers are, for the most part, coming from lone loons not associated with the Tea Party movement -- though at least one incident has been linked to Tea Party activists in Virginia. And they say they're concerned the intimidation could be used to smear those activists who are behaving responsibly.

"We support peaceful means," said Debbie Dooley, co-founder of the Atlanta Tea Party and a national coordinator for Tea Party Patriots, adding: "There are so many Tea Party groups that are out there. ... It's like herding cats. It's impossible."

Several Florida Tea Party groups released an open letter to Congress and President Obama Thursday night denouncing "all forms of violence."

"We the leaders of the Tea Party movement of Florida stand in stark opposition to any person using derogatory characterizations, threats of violence or disparaging terms towards members of Congress or the President," they wrote.

Reports of new threats continue to emerge, after House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer announced Wednesday that more than 10 lawmakers have been harassed in some way. Cantor's announcement Thursday set off a flurry of finger-pointing, as members of both parties accused each other of trying to exploit the security concerns for political gain.

A senior Senate Democratic leadership aide told Fox News that there have also been threats made against Senate Parliamentarian Alan Frumin. Rep. Betsy Markey, D-Colo., has reportedly requested police patrols around her unoccupied home for fear it might be vandalized, after her office received a threatening message.

And, among other incidents, somebody cut a propane line attached to a grill at the Virginia home of Democratic Rep. Tom Perriello's brother. Tea Party activists had posted the address online, apparently believing it was the congressman's.

Mike Troxel, the blogger who posted the address online, told Fox News' Alan Colmes that he was encouraging voters to go to Perriello's house.

"I think people should have the right to have access to their, um, public officials," he said. When asked if the children of public officials should be harassed at their house just because they're related, Troxel said, "You know, I think that's a burden that comes with being an elected official."

But in the aftermath, both Republican and Democratic officials have condemned such behavior. And Tea Party leaders are being particularly vocal.

"I do not believe we should be encouraging people to visit homes because, although we disagree with their policies and their votes, they do have families," said Dooley, of the Atlanta Tea Party.

Some conservative activists are concerned leaders in Congress are trying to cast blame broadly.

House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., in an interview with MSNBC Wednesday night, said people are getting "signals" from lawmakers on how to behave and that lawmakers need to "disown" the activity before it gets out of control. He suggested his colleagues were culpable.

"If we participate in it, either from the balcony or on the floor of the House, you are aiding and abetting this kind of terrorism, really," Clyburn said.

William Owens, a Tea Party activist from Nevada, said there's no getting around the fact that people are "provoked" because the government is "acting irresponsibly." But Owens said activists need to "be gentlemen" about their anger.

"I think most people are acting independently," he said. "I don't think you're going to find a credible Tea Party group condoning any of this activity."

Brendan Steinhauser, director of federal and state campaigns with the conservative group FreedomWorks, said he will be "reminding" activists to focus on "peaceful political efforts" and that any violence "will only set the movement back."

But he noted that his office received a bomb threat last September before a big protest in Washington, D.C.

"I think there is a double standard when it comes to covering how extremist elements on the left and the right behave," he said in an e-mail. "Both types of extremists should be condemned by the media and the rest of us who do not engage in such acts."


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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/26/2010 8:07:17 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Obama Campaign Arm Appeals for Donations After Threats to Lawmakers

FOXNews.com

President Obama's campaign operation is raising money off the threats made to Democratic lawmakers, appealing to supporters for $25 donations to help "defend health reform."

Though House Minority Whip Eric Cantor said Thursday that his campaign office in Richmond, Va., was shot at, and another Republican lawmaker received a threatening voicemail, the president's campaign operation sent out a fundraising e-mail the same day focusing on the security concerns reported by Democrats.


The message mentioned emerging Republican campaigns to repeal the health care law and challenges from several state attorneys general, before citing the threats as part of its pitch.

"A conservative blogger posted the home address of Congressman Tom Perriello, urging Tea Partiers to 'drop by.' Other members have had death threats. Democratic offices have been vandalized,"
the message from Organizing for America Director Mitch Stewart said. "Can you chip in $25 or more to defend health reform -- and those in Congress who fought to make it possible?"

The e-mail came on top of a fundraising appeal from the Ohio Democratic Party seeking $10 donations to "help us overcome these attacks."

But Republicans say they're fielding threats too, citing one that was directed at Ohio Rep. Jean Schmidt, who received a vulgar voicemail from an anonymous caller this week.

Democrats have reported far more acts of intimidation, ranging from threatening faxes and voicemails to vandalism. At least four Democratic offices have been vandalized, including New York Rep. Louise Slaughter's local office, which was hit by a brick that shattered a window.

Cantor held a press conference Thursday to report that his campaign office had been shot at, and he accused Democrats of trying to exploit the threats they'd received.

"It is reckless to use these incidents as media vehicles for political gain," Cantor said.

That press conference, though, only heightened the partisan tension over the security concerns.


The office of Rep. Van Hollen, D-Md., whom Cantor had accused of "fanning the flames," exchanged accusations with Cantor's office for the rest of the day, as each charged the other with political posturing.

"It's been hours since Rep. Cantor's bizarre and abrupt press conference where he leveled a false accusation that Van Hollen has suggested Democrats use these incidences as a political weapon. We are still waiting for proof to back up this ridiculous claim," Van Hollen spokesman Doug Thornell said in the most recent counter-response Thursday night.

The specific threat referenced in the Obama fundraising message was an incident at the Virginia home of Rep. Tom Perriello's brother, where somebody cut a propane line attached to a grill. Tea Party activists had posted the address online, apparently believing it was congressman's home address.

But top Tea Party leaders from across the country have condemned the threats and said no credible Tea Party group is participating.

"We the leaders of the Tea Party movement of Florida stand in stark opposition to any person using derogatory characterizations, threats of violence or disparaging terms towards members of Congress or the President," several Florida Tea Party groups wrote in an open letter to Congress and Obama Thursday.


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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/26/2010 8:38:03 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
What's in the Air

By: Kathryn Jean Lopez
The Corner

I have no interest in playing a game of who-is-fanning-the-flames more, but when the president continues to mock his critics -- even after he signed his legislation -- can you blame a guy in Iowa for saying: "The government doesn't want to hear us. We have to make them listen"?

The Washington Post's piece this morning is striking for the fact that there is no story to it. People disagree with what just happened in Washington. Guess what? It's a free country. That's still allowed here.

Now can we all go back to our regularly scheduled debating of ideas and the work of democracy without giving unstable people out there ideas? Please?

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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/26/2010 8:41:40 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
Re: What's in the Air

By: Kathryn Jean Lopez
The Corner

An e-mail:


<<< It’s a sad day when the President of the United States uses taxpayer dollars to travel around the country ridiculing and provoking those taxpayers with whom he disagrees, but this is what we get when the “cool” guy wins. How I long for the days of a “cowboy” President I didn’t always agree with, but always respected. >>>



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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/26/2010 9:41:46 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Liberal Threatens Sarah Palin

By John
Power Line

Patterico documents approximately 20 death threats against Sarah Palin and her family that have been made on Twitter by a liberal who expresses admiration for Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow. A sample:


<<< @Palin360 you need 2 b assassinated soon we ll settle 4 one of the family if not u! >>>


You probably won't hear about this anywhere else, but if a Glenn Beck fan threatened to murder Nancy Pelosi, it would be news.


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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/27/2010 1:05:15 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Libtalker Calls For Deaths Of Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Bill O'Reilly

YouTube

radioequalizer.blogspot.com - While the right is under fire for supposedly inciting violence against congressional Democrats, libtalkers have pumped up the rhetoric tenfold. Here, Mike Malloy calls for the deaths of Rush Limbaugh, Bill O'Reilly and Glenn Beck.

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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/27/2010 1:19:44 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Death Threats Against Bush at Protests Ignored for Years

Bin's Corner

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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/27/2010 9:28:48 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
Harry Reid Supporters Attack Tea Party Bus!… Update: Breitbart Attacked!

By Jim Hoft on searchlight nevada
Big Government

The biased writers at the Associated Press said the tea party in Nevada would draw angry protesters today.



They were right.


Supporters of Democratic Senator Harry Reid attacked the Tea Party Express bus today in Nevada.

This statement was just released:


<<< Supporters of Senator Harry Reid have just thrown eggs at the Tea Party Express bus caravan – striking at least one of the three buses (the red Tea Party Express bus) with multiple eggs.


About 35 Reid supporters had lined Highway 95 in front of the Nugget Casino in Searchlight where they were attempting a counter-demonstration the tens of thousands of tea party supporters who are gathering for the “Showdown in Searchlight.”

More details to follow… >>>

Do you suppose the state-run media will be as outraged about this as they were about the bogus hate crimes or coffingate story? Don’t count on it.

UPDATE: Andrew Breitbart was also attacked by the Harry Reid supporters.

Founding Bloggers has details.


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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/29/2010 3:26:11 AM
From: Sully-1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
Andrew Breitbart Describes Unhinged Harry Reid Supporters on the Attack (Audio-Video)

By Jim Hoft on Tea Party
Big Government

“I can just say that the irony could not be greater. The press is barking up the tree that the tea party movement is the one that is unhinged, that is frothing at the mouth, that is violent… I could just say that the irony could not be greater.”

Andrew Breitbart

Andrew Breitbart Describes Harry Reid Supporters on the Attack
Searchlight, Nevada

Andrew Breitbart witnessed first hand today the cunning manipulation and violence of the unhinged left. Harry Reid supporters stood on Highway 95 outside of Searchlight, Nevada and held signs steering tea party protesters heading to the Tea Party Express Showdown in Searchlight Rally in the wrong direction. Andrew also witnessed these violent leftists attacking the Tea Party Express bus with eggs as it drove by. The Harry Reid supporters then swarmed him, harassed him, threatened him and made false statements to the police.

And, yet the state-run media wants you to believe that the tea party protesters are the violent ones. Don’t look for this protest story to make the front page of The New York Times or be the lead story on CNN like other bogus protest reports.


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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/29/2010 4:03:33 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
Shocking Violence

By: Jonah Goldberg
The Corner

Disturbing! Troubling! I demand the Democratic Party disavow their hate-filled rhetoric! This is America:


<<< CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) -- Police are investigating vandalism at the Albemarle County Republican headquarters.

The Daily Progress of Charlottesville reports that someone threw bricks through the headquarter's windows, breaking three of them. The vandalism was discovered Friday morning.

Earlier this week, someone cut a propane line leading to a grill at the Charlottesville home of Democratic Rep. Tom Perriello's brother after the address was posted online by activists angry about the health care overhaul.

Albemarle County Republican Chairwoman Rachel Shoenewald says people are angry on both sides of the political spectrum.

In November, someone glued the county GOP headquarters' doors shut on Election Day. >>>


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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/29/2010 5:19:34 AM
From: Sully-1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
More Thoughts On Liberal Political Violence

By John
Power Line

The Democrats have tried to change the subject away from their health care debacle by claiming that conservatives are threatening violence against them. Their complaints are pathetic where they are not out-and-out lies (e.g., Clyburn and Lewis), and they have taken a lot of well-deserved criticism. It is liberals, not conservatives, who rely on ad hominem attacks, outrageous allegations and violent imagery. We talked about this on our radio show today, and several callers reminded us of a particularly sorry episode of liberal violence that, for some reason, has not gotten much attention: the 2008 Republican convention in St. Paul.

I attended the convention and remember the terrorist acts that were carried out by anti-Republican protesters very well. They threw bricks through the windows of buses, sending elderly convention delegates to the hospital. They dropped bags of sand off highway overpasses onto vehicles below. Fortunately, no one was killed.

These were anti-Bush and anti-Republican protesters. Is it a stretch to think that some of them, at least, may have been inspired by over-the-top, hateful attacks on the Bush administration by Democratic Congressmen, DNC Chairman Howard Dean, Michael Moore, who was a guest of honor at the Democrats' own convention, various show business personalities, and many other leading liberal figures? I don't think so. We haven't seen that sort of hate campaign since the Democrats went after Abraham Lincoln. It seems unlikely that none of the "protesters" who tried to commit murder were inspired by those liberal voices.

Yet, hardly anyone seems to be aware of the violence that took place in 2008. At most, the story was treated with a ho-hum attitude in the press. For some reason, political violence was not a concern less than two years ago. Yet today, we can hardly imagine what would happen if a group of tea partiers were to drop sandbags off a highway overpass, trying to kill motorists below. Liberal reporters' heads would explode. But this is exactly what anti-Republican Party protesters did in 2008, and no one cared. To my knowledge, not a single Democratic politician condemned this anti-Republican violence or attempted in any way to distance the Democratic Party from it.

Keep that in mind next time you hear a Democrat whining about the Republican effort to "fire Nancy Pelosi."



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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/31/2010 2:51:47 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Code Pinkertons Force Rove Offstage

By: Daniel Foster
The Corner

Karl Rove was forced offstage by Code Pink activists at a book signing in Beverly Hills:

<<< About 100 Rove supporters watched Monday as Code Pink co-founder Jodie Evans walked toward him with handcuffs, calling him a war criminal and saying she was making a citizen's arrest.

Ten protesters in all repeatedly interrupted Rove's talk at the Saban Theatre as he promoted his memoir, "Courage and Consequence: My Life As a Conservative in the Fight."

Rove says the allegation that the Bush administration lied about weapons of mass destruction "is a pernicious political attack launched by cynical and hypocritical individuals."

There were no arrests. >>>


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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/31/2010 3:14:31 AM
From: Sully-1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
The Hostility Follies

So what if some nutcases happen to have right-wing politics? I thought liberals rejected guilt by association as McCarthyism.

Jonah Goldberg
National Review Online

Apparently there’s a self-proclaimed militia leader named Mike Vanderboegh who runs an obscure, low-traffic blog out of Pinson, Ala. (population 5,007). Mr. Vanderboegh recently called on his fellow “sons of liberty” to break the windows of Democrats to protest health-care reform.

Let’s start with the obvious: Vanderboegh is an idiot, and anyone who followed his advice is an idiot, too. These people are buffoons, not just because such tactics help Democrats but because such behavior is simply wrong, reprehensible, and clownish.

Equally wrong, reprehensible, and clownish: the reaction to Vanderboegh and his alleged ilk.


The Daily Beast’s John Avlon insists that Vanderboegh’s rallying cry, combined with some threats and broken windows, make “the parallels, intentional or not, to the Nazis’ heinous 1938 Kristallnacht . . . hard to ignore.”

Actually, it’s really, really easy to ignore the parallels. During Kristallnacht, Nazi goons destroyed not just 7,000 store windows but hundreds of synagogues and thousands of homes. Tens of thousands of Jews were hauled off to concentration camps by the Nazis, who had been in total power for half a decade.

This combination of state power and murderous, genocidal intent is nowhere on display in America today, not in the Obama administration
(contrary to what some overheated right-wingers claim) and certainly not among out-of-power conservatives and “tea partiers.” It’s amazing anyone needs to point this out, but a few fringe libertarians’ throwing bricks to beat back an expansion of government is not the same thing as the tightening fist of the National Socialist Third Reich. Indeed, it’s an anti-American slander to suggest anything like it is going on here, and it cheapens the moral horror of the Holocaust.

Don’t tell that to the Democrats and their media transmission belt, who largely turned a blind eye to partisan vandalism and extremist rhetoric against Republicans for eight years but now express horror at what they claim to hear from the right.

Columnist Paul Krugman, who encouraged liberals to hang Sen. Joe Lieberman (I., Conn.) in effigy, is concerned about right-wing “eliminationist rhetoric.” The Washington Post’s Courtland Milloy can’t stand the incivility of the tea partiers, which is why he wants to “knock every racist and homophobic tooth out of their Cro-Magnon heads.” Frank Rich says the mantra “take our country back” is now code for a white racist backlash — though it was an apparently fine Democratic applause line when George W. Bush was president.

So what’s the evidence for this new reign of terror? Those broken windows, some nasty voice and e-mail messages
(not counting those aimed at Republicans, naturally), a coffin “left” at a Missouri congressman’s home, a few repugnant signs at rallies, and allegations from Reps. Emanuel Cleaver II (D., Mo.) and John Lewis (D., Ga.) that they were spit on and insulted with the “N-word,” respectively.

But wait. The coffin was part of a protest over the death of “our freedoms” and was toted by the protesters, not left anywhere. And videos make it clear that what Cleaver called spitting was a protester spraying too much saliva while talking, the racist pig.

As for the epithet aimed at Lewis, if it happened, it’s disgusting. But going by the video, there’s nothing to back it up, and the claim by Rep. Andre Carson (D., Ind.) that the N-word was chanted 15 times is pure dishonesty.

Let’s assume it is true. I thought liberals rejected guilt by association as McCarthyism. Or are we to believe that every opponent of Obamacare is a racist?

On March 3, Politico broke a story about a leaked PowerPoint presentation delivered at a GOP retreat in Florida. It laid out, in cartoonish terms, a fundraising strategy exploiting “fear” of President Obama’s “socialist” agenda. Ranking Republicans immediately condemned and repudiated the presentation.

Now, Obama’s political arm, Organizing for America, is fundraising based on fear, sending out e-mails insinuating that Republicans are unleashing a lynch mob to repeal Obamacare. Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D., Md.), chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, insists we all should be very scared.

Heaven forbid anyone suggest a coordinated strategy is at work here. That would be distracting us from the Kristallnacht unfolding before our eyes.


— Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. © 2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/31/2010 3:24:29 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
Tennessee Man Pleads Guilty in Plot Against Obama

AP

JACKSON, Tenn. -- A Tennessee man authorities say is a white supremacist has pleaded guilty to plotting to kill then-presidential candidate Barack Obama and dozens of other black people in 2008.

Twenty-one-year-old Daniel Cowart of Bells, Tenn., pleaded guilty Monday to eight of 10 counts in an indictment accusing him of conspiracy, threatening a presidential candidate and various federal firearms violations. Under a plea agreement, he faces 12 to 18 years in prison, but a federal judge could choose a longer sentence.

Co-defendant, 19-year-old Paul Schlesselman of Helena-West Helena, Ark., pleaded guilty in January and will be sentenced April 15.

Authorities have described the two as skinheads who planned a cross-country robbing and killing spree that would end with an attack on Obama.

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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/31/2010 3:51:31 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
Defending Against Enemies Domestic

IBD Editorials
Posted 03/30/2010 06:52 PM ET


Homeland Security: Forget about foreign jihadists getting nukes or planting bombs in their underwear. The real enemies, some say, are domestic militia groups who play at war and those nasty Tea Party racists.

The raid on a Michigan militia group accused of plotting war against the government will no doubt feed into the arguments of those who claim in the wake of health reform that the vast right-wing conspiracy is not only angry, but armed and dangerous.

According to an Associated Press report, "Authorities said the arrests underscored the dangers of homegrown right-wing extremism of the sort seen in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people."

We do not minimize the threat of domestic terror, whether it's a Tim McVeigh blowing up a federal building or eco-terrorists using violence to deter the use of animals in medical experiments and otherwise protecting the Earth. Apparently there are no left-wing extremists.

We do object when political opponents of the liberal agenda are lumped in with these loonies, painted with a broad brush as dangerous right-wing extremists. Violent and mindless opposition to the government is to be fought and condemned; mere political dissent should not be.

Rush Limbaugh was accused by many on the left of being a motivating force behind McVeigh's decision to bomb the federal building in Oklahoma City in 1995 by fomenting anti-government sentiment on his radio show. Today, Tea Party activists and opponents of health care reform are accused of doing the same thing. No one knows if the Michigan militia oppose health care reform.

During the presidential campaign, we were warned of "small towns" where people "get bitter (and) cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment" to vent their frustrations. If you ask those on the left, the Michigan militia group is a classic example of those bitter townsfolk.

According to a report released in April 2009 by Janet Napolitano's Department of Homeland Security
, "Rightwing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment," conservatives and the unemployed represent a clear and present danger. "The economic downturn and the election of the first African American president present unique drivers for right-wing radicalization and recruitment," the report warned.

On Page 2 of the report is this ominous warning: "Right-wing extremism in the United States can be broadly divided into those groups, movements, and adherents that ... are mainly anti-government, rejecting federal authority in favor of state or local authority, or rejecting government authority entirely. It may include groups and individuals that are dedicated to a single issue, such as opposition to abortion or immigration."

So if you are pro-life, support secure borders and tough immigration laws, and believe the 10th Amendment to the Constitution is being shredded as we speak, you are a threat and will be lumped in with the genuine crazies. Especially if you believe the Second Amendment guarantees an individual right to keep and bear arms. Just ask Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post (see column next page) or Frank Rich of the New York Times.


Rich explains opposition to national health care this way: "The conjunction of a black president and a female speaker of the House — topped off by a wise Latina on the Supreme Court and a powerful gay congressional committee chairman — would sow fears of disenfranchisement among a dwindling and threatened minority in the country no matter what policies were in play." Oh.

In a recent fundraising solicitation from the president's political arm, Organizing for America, which used to be Obama for America, director Mitch Stewart warned that "Democratic offices have been vandalized" and "members have had death threats" from opponents of health care reform stirred up by conservative bloggers, congressional Republicans and right-wing talk radio.

Never mind the arrest of a Philadelphia man charged with threatening to kill House Minority Whip Eric Cantor, R-Va., and his family. A bullet recently hit Cantor's Richmond, Va., campaign office. Said Cantor: "It is reckless to use these incidents as media vehicles for political gain."

Yet many on the left are.


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To: Sully- who wrote (78647)3/31/2010 4:48:06 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
      I don't know how dangerous they were, but one thing we 
can say for sure is that they were not Christians. What
they were, is crazy.

Nuts

By John
Power Line

Coincidentally, three of yesterday's major news stories bear directly on recent controversies over the threat (real or imagined) of political violence. First, nine members of a "Christian militia" were arrested, following an FBI investigation, for plotting to murder police officers. The arrest was accompanied by much hoopla, with Eric Holder calling the group, Hutaree, "a dangerous organization that today stands accused of conspiring to levy war against the United States." I don't know how dangerous they were, but one thing we can say for sure is that they were not Christians. What they were, is crazy.

The second story is that of Norman Leboon, arrested for threatening to murder House Republican Whip Eric Cantor in a YouTube video. By the end of the day it had emerged that Leboon is an Obama donor, a left-wing-activist--he was one of the plaintiffs in a lawsuit against Verizon for cooperating in the government's anti-terror efforts--and, reportedly, a Muslim convert. As a conservative, I find it tempting to speculate that Leboon could be an excitable liberal who was roused to violence by Barack Obama's exhortation that "if they bring a knife, we'll bring a gun." But that would be a cheap shot. Leboon, like the Michigan militia group, is bonkers.

Insanity is randomly distributed across the political spectrum. There is no cause so pure but what a crazy person (or several) can fasten onto it and purport to be acting in its name. It is wrong to try to make political hay out of such random nutcases, as the Democrats have been doing of late--without even waiting for the nutcase to appear!

The third relevant story is the bombing of Moscow's subways by Muslim terrorists. Not coincidentally, this was the only one of the three that involved actual rather than hypothetical violence. And, while the perpetrators have not yet been identified specifically, in all likelihood they were not crazy, at least not in the sense that we associate with people like Norman Leboon. Rather, these terrorists were no doubt members of a movement--a real movement that commits real terrorist acts.

It is important not to blur the distinction between organized, persistent and deadly political violence such as took place in Moscow and the random but always-possible violence that can be perpetrated by a single nut, or small group of nuts. It might make some of us (Eric Holder, perhaps) feel better to pretend that the threat of Islamic terrorism is no different from, and little greater than, the danger posed by the Hutarees and Norman Leboons of the world. Unfortunately, it isn't true.


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