Showing posts with label nutjobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nutjobs. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

The temporary triumph of the Tea Party

Here's an interesting take on the Tea Party movement:

The twist in the Obama-era is that some of the conservative backlash has been directed inward. This is because the right needed a way to explain how a far-left anti-American ideologue like Obama could have won 53 percent of the popular vote and 365 electoral votes in 2008. What they settled on was an indictment of George W. Bush’s big government conservatism; the idea, basically, was that Bush had given their movement a bad name with his big spending and massive deficits, angering the masses and rendering them vulnerable to Obama’s deceptive charms. And the problem hadn’t just been Bush – it had been every Republican in office who’d abided his expansion of government, his deals with Democrats, his Wall Street bailout and all the rest.

Thus did the Tea Party movement represent a two-front war – one a conventional one against the Democratic president, and the other a new one against any “impure” Republicans.

But I have a slightly different take. 

In politics, power is not always about numbers, it's about intensity. At the base level, at the grassroots of the GOP, the Tea Party movement is still the most intense. These folks -- mostly older white men, well off -- are still attending weekly meetings, publishing newsletters, attending local hearings, scrutinizing candidates, etc.  And they are totally supported by talk radio, which sees in them its core audience who is at once an echo and an amplifier of every disproved and crazy conservative idea to come down the pike the past 20 years.  And so big-time Republican politicians ignore them at their peril. 

Way above them, we have big-money, ego-driven right-wing donors like the Koch brothers, Peter Thiel, Sheldon Adelson, et al, who basically subscribe to the Tea Party philosophy of small government with government-enforced Christian morality. 

In the middle are caught the actual majority of Republicans (let's call them fiscally conservative, morally ambivalent) who are hesitant to criticize the Tea Parties whom they mostly agree with and want to defend against unflattering portrayals in the mainstream "liberal" media; and who either don't understand, or don't see anything wrong with, the big-money donors who wildly skew our politics in their favor.

The upshot is that the Tea Parties are stronger in the GOP than their numbers might suggest because they have the hard-core conservative minority supporting the base, and the nutjob, let's-go-Galt, libertarian billionaires at the top throwing silly amounts of money at elections.  

Meanwhile, we all know how well Tea Party-affiliated candidates fared in the November 2012 elections.

The upshot for Democrats is: let this crazy drama play itself out. These are the pathetic death throes of a sick, wounded animal. We shouldn't seek to commiserate with the GOP, or advise it, or even hasten its demise... for who knows what will succeed it? 

Nay, we should relish this last "rage against the dying of the light" in the Republican party, since it's sure to garner us a few more elections and delay the advent of the more libertarian-leaning party that will take the GOP's place in U.S. politics and might possibly be much, much worse....


By Steve Kornacki
December 27, 2012 | Salon

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Poll: Half of GOP believes ACORN stole '12 elections


So... we already knew that dead people all vote Democrat; now we learn that 48 percent of Republicans believe that a dead umbrella organization is helping them to do it.  Oy vey!

I wonder what Zombie Reagan and Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter, have to say about all this undead political activity?


By Jason Linkins
December 4, 2012 | Huffington Post

Friday, October 5, 2012

Rooting against America...and reason

After 8 years of W., Zombie Republicans are tired of cheering U-S-A

Remember when, under President Dubya, Republicans accused Democrats of rooting against America?  As if our psychic energy made all the difference.

Well, now Republicans are clearly rooting against America. One blogger at the conservative American Spectator wrote, "I'm just too angry at the [BLS jobs] report" to write about it.  That's right.  Angry.  At a report. That ostensibly shows good news.  And he's not alone.  

Pickled old One Percenter and ex-CEO of GE, Jack Welch, immediately tweeted that Obama was fixing the data, Chicago-style, (whatever that means), and he refused to take back his accusation when given the chance.  And of course Tea Party favorite, Rep. Allen "Non-Negotiable" West, wasn't buying the report for a second either. It was also no surprise that Rush Limbaugh accused the "Obama regime" of manipulating the BLS data.

Things got absurd with MSNBC's Joe Scarborough & Co. "scratching their heads" over the report, and debating whether the latest unemployment figure shouldn't actually be 8.1 percent instead of 7.8 percent.  Imagine! Debating on live TV a difference of 0.3 percent in the unemployment figures!  Is this what we've come to, folks?  

Finally, there was conspiracy theory nutjobbery. One writer at the conservative Washington Examiner theorized that thousands of unemployed Democrats who were surveyed by the Census Bureau simply lied about being unemployed.  You know, to help Obama.  And something called The Washington Free Beacon did some amazing investigative journalism and uncovered the smoking gun that "at least two" economists at the BLS have donated money to Democrats over the last three elections, although one of them, uh, left the Bureau in July.

This gamut of paranoia to outright disbelief to mild skepticism among Republicans is kind of funny, considering what happened 12 months ago. Cast your mind back. It's a crisp October morning. And Glenn Thrush at Politico, within 45 minutes of the BLS releasing lower than expected jobless numbers, said he "received no fewer than eight GOP press releases blasting away at President Obama for failing to stem the tide of unemployment."

Labor Secretary Hilda Solis pointed out to CNN on Friday: "This is a methodology that's been used for decades. And it is insulting when you hear people just cavalierly say that somehow we're manipulating numbers."

So Republicans have faithfully believed the jobs data based on the exact same methodology up until now, and they have reminded us constantly how bad things were, and when things got a little bit better, suddenly they stopped trusting the Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.  What rank, self-serving hypocrisy!  That's what they get for fixating on one statistic for three years. Now I predict that they'll start saying the unemployment figure doesn't matter, that the economy is still in the pits, or they're not very high-paying jobs anyway, and so on and so forth.

A few reasonable Republicans and all economists agree that there's nothing fraudulent going on here.  

For a very technical explanation of September's labor participation and unemployment data, see this.

Besides rooting against America, against economic growth and jobs, because it hurts their party's electoral chances, Republicans are once again aligning themselves with kooks, and petulantly setting up camp outside the civilized boundaries of the "reality-based community."  

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Mooners and Birthers and Truthers, oh my!

See, the flag is blowing. See? Because on holographic alien moons, there is no wind! BUSTED!

I didn't know that some Moon Landing Truthers (or just Mooners, as I like to call them) don't simply believe Armstrong's moon landing was faked, they believe the entire Moon was faked.  It's an alien hologram, you see?  

Some even believe that Armstrong didn't die of natural causes, he was silenced by Them, because after all these decades he was finally ready to blow the lid off the whole thing.

Anyway, I just wanted to let you Birthers, 9/11 Truthers, and One World Government nuts know that you're in very good company.  I think the Internet was invented especially for you: your little islands of nuttiness are now an archipelago.  If Obama is re-elected, they'll form a small continent.

(RIP, Neil Armstrong.  We know you meant to come clean in the end about aliens conspiring with the Knights Templar to direct world history.)


Monday, August 27, 2012

GOP's 10 psychological defense mechanisms

"Oww... I can't admit I've been wrong all these years and wasted my life!..."

Republicans, know thyself!  

Here's a list of psychological terms for what your brains invent (with examples) to defend your fragile egos when you are presented with incontrovertible facts and arguments from the likes of moi:  


According to experts, the only known cure for these forms of cognitive dissonance is to buy a Chevy Volt and vote for Obama. 


By Paul Rosenberg
August 26, 2012 | Al Jazeera

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Krugman: Right-wing paranoia now mainstream

I can confirm that all the mainstream conservatives I know go in for some or all of the crazy conspiracy theories Krugman lists below. What do you call it when otherwise reasonable, highly-functioning people lose their minds, politically? "The Paranoid Style in American Politics." It's an old phenomenon, so we're still crazy after all these years. The difference is that paranoia among Republicans has gone mainstream.


By Paul Krugman
March 22, 2012 | New York Times

Stop, hey, what's that sound? Actually, it's the noise a great political party makes when it loses what's left of its mind. And it happened — where else? — on Fox News on Sunday, when Mitt Romney bought fully into the claim that gas prices are high thanks to an Obama administration plot.

This claim isn't just nuts; it's a sort of craziness triple play — a lie wrapped in an absurdity swaddled in paranoia. It's the sort of thing you used to hear only from people who also believed that fluoridated water was a Communist plot. But now the gas-price conspiracy theory has been formally endorsed by the likely Republican presidential nominee.

Before we get to the larger implications of this endorsement, let's get the facts on gas prices straight.

First, the lie: No, President Obama did not say, as many Republicans now claim, that he wanted higher gasoline prices. He did once say that a cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions would cause electricity prices to "skyrocket" — an unfortunate word choice. But saying that such a system would raise energy prices was just a factual statement, not a declaration of intent to punish American consumers. The claim that Mr. Obama wanted higher prices is a lie, pure and simple.

And it's a lie wrapped in an absurdity, because the president of the United States doesn't control gasoline prices, or even have much influence over those prices. Oil prices are set in a world market, and America, which accounts for only about a tenth of world production, can't move those prices much. Indeed, the recent rise in gas prices has taken place despite rising U.S. oil production and falling imports.

Finally, there's the paranoia, the belief that liberals in general, and Obama administration officials in particular, are trying to make driving unaffordable as part of a nefarious plot against the American way of life. And, no, I'm not exaggerating. This is what you hear even from thoroughly mainstream conservatives.

For example, last year George Will declared that the Obama administration's support for train travel had nothing to do with relieving congestion and reducing environmental impacts. No, he insisted, "the real reason for progressives' passion for trains is their goal of diminishing Americans' individualism in order to make them more amenable to collectivism." Who knew that Dagny Taggart, the railroad executive heroine of "Atlas Shrugged," was a Commie?

O.K., this is all kind of funny. But it's also deeply scary.

As Richard Hofstadter pointed out in his classic 1964 essay "The Paranoid Style in American Politics," crazy conspiracy theories have been an American tradition ever since clergymen began warning that Thomas Jefferson was an agent of the Bavarian Illuminati. But it's one thing to have a paranoid fringe playing a marginal role in a nation's political life; it's something quite different when that fringe takes over a whole party, to the point where candidates must share, or pretend to share, that fringe's paranoia to receive the party's presidential nod.

And it's not just gas prices, of course. In fact, the conspiracy theories are proliferating so fast it's hard to keep up. Thus, large numbers of Republicans — and we're talking about important political figures, not random supporters — firmly believe that global warming is a gigantic hoax perpetrated by a global conspiracy involving thousands of scientists, not one of whom has broken the code of omertà. Meanwhile, others are attributing the recent improvement in economic news to a dastardly plot to withhold stimulus funds, releasing them just before the 2012 election. And let's not even get into health reform.

Why is this happening? At least part of the answer must lie in the way right-wing media create an alternate reality. For example, did you hear about how the cost of Obamacare just doubled? It didn't, but millions of Fox-viewers and Rush-listeners believe that it did. Naturally, people who constantly hear about the evil that liberals do are ready and willing to believe that everything bad is the result of a dastardly liberal plot. And these are the people who vote in Republican primaries.

But what about the broader electorate?

If and when he wins the nomination, Mr. Romney will try, as a hapless adviser put it, to shake his Etch A Sketch — that is, to erase the record of his pandering to the crazy right and convince voters that he's actually a moderate. And maybe he can pull it off.

But let's hope that he can't, because the kind of pandering he has engaged in during his quest for the nomination matters. Whatever Mr. Romney may personally believe, the fact is that by endorsing the right's paranoid fantasies, he is helping to further a dangerous trend in America's political life. And he should be held accountable for his actions.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Polls show depths of GOP's idiocy

This is what we normal, rational people are up against:


In other words, most Republicans today wear their chauvinism and stupidity like badges of honor. And the smart ones are afraid to speak out for fear of being ostracized from the Clan of the Cave Bear.

What good are facts and sound arguments with such imbeciles? We'd have more luck convincing them by beating our chests and banging sticks on the ground.

Friday, March 2, 2012

Get in early on the hysteria!: Obama had Breitbart 'offed'

The Great Stalinist Purge of Media Critics? On Obamas Reported Enemies List breitbart obama enemies

I hesitate posting this for folks who are really eager and inclined to believe it.

Then again, why should I put it off a few days/weeks until this thing builds on the rightwing internets and inevitably I get the e-mail forward with an anonymous "article" telling me all about how President Obama killed Andrew Breitbart because he "knew too much"? So let's just get it over with. Here you go, fresh meat for you Obama conspiracy nuts.

UPDATE (03.09.2012): This video, which has been around since at least 2008, is apparently the reason Obama was forced to assassinate Breitbart. Behold the scandalous truth that could bring down a presidency! (Courtesy of YouTube):



A bunch of people seem to believe there's a conspiracy behind Andrew Breitbart's death. The theory is that Breitbart had a video from Obama's college years that Obama didn't want released. So he had to die.

By Matt Stopera
March 1, 2012 | Buzzfeed

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Glenn Beck's Goldline forced to refund $4.5 M... What about Beck?


The company Goldline scammed its customers into buying overvalued collectible gold coins instead of real gold bullion. Essentially, they were convincing their clients to pay a risk premium for coins, where the supposed risk was government confiscation of personal gold.

ABC broke this story, and they mention that Goldline used Glenn Beck ("The people I trust are the people at Goldline".... "You see, back in 1933, FDR said, 'OK, we're gonna take all your gold...'"), and other conservative pundits and politicians (Mike Huckabee, Fred Thompson) to sell its overvalued gold coin business.

Goldline has agreed to refund $4.5 million to its customers and set up a fund of $800 K for further claims; in exchange a Santa Monica court dropped 19 criminal charges.

This is actually the second time a gold company advertised by Beck has run afoul of California law. I wonder if Glenn Beck, et al, will donate the revenues they received from Goldline?....

But this is about more than money. Goldline's pitch was based on a paranoid view that even buying gold wasn't safe, because the federal government could come and take it away. (Which is bogus, incidentally.) Without conservative talk radio and FOX, such paranoid beliefs would not be so widespread.

The real crime here is irresponsible talking heads leading millions of Americans to believe their government is fundamentally corrupt and out to get them. Too bad Goldline's celebrity accomplices like Glenn Beck don't have to pay any share of this settlement.


By Matthew Mosk
February 22, 2012 | ABC News

Thursday, September 8, 2011

(YAWN) Another multi-victim shooting rampage

Said one witness who saw the shooter entering the Nevada IHOP: "I had my pistol; [but] I wasn't going up against an automatic rifle. I'm sorry. I wish I would have shot him in the back now as he was going toward IHOP, but I wasn't clear on the situation."

Obviously the answer is for more Americans to carry AK-47s so they're not outgunned by mentally disturbed shooters with AK-47s.

We also need to shoot more people in the back.

Guns keep us safe! Guns don't kill people, people kill people! And some people are just evil and disturbed, and there is absolutely nothing we can do to prevent such shooting rampages except arm all the good people of America to the teeth.


By Mark Memmott and Eyder Peralta
September 7, 2011 | NPR

Monday, August 22, 2011

Shrink: Good presidents are a little screwy

It seems that great leaders don't just think outside the box, they think outside the sane.

Said Dr. Nassir Ghaemi, author of a new book on the advantages of mental illness for leadership:

"Creativity and resilience is higher in people with mania and realism and empathy is higher in people with depression compared to normal subjects. The problem often with mentally healthy, average leaders is — even though they're not weak in the sense of not having any of these qualities — they often don't have enough to meet the very high demands of crises."

Well, if mental illness is desirable in a president then I think Michele "2 dollar" Bachmann is the obvious choice.

Dr. Ghaemi goes on to say that the problem with mentally healthy leaders is that they suffer, like most of us do, from a "mild positive illusion":

"We think that we're slightly more intelligent, slightly better looking, than we really are. We tend to overestimate our control over our environment. And that can be quite fine under normal circumstances. That may actually help us to get more done because of that confidence, but a political leader needs to be realistic rather than just optimistic for the sake of optimism."

Nope, then that disqualifies Michele Bachmann because she's way too optimistic about her chances.

Seriously though, do mentally healthy people pursue the presidency to begin with? These politicians must all be damaged goods in one way or another.


August 20, 2011 | All Things Considered on NPR

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Birthers, rejoice!...or birthers lament? Anyhoo, stay crazy!

A la Trump, you can now have your "team" "examine" Obama's long-form birth certificate for genuineness.

Congratulations, birthers, you got your crazy wish. But there's no rest for the kooky: tamp down your tinfoil hats, dingbats -- it's on to the next conspiracy theory!


April 27, 2011 | FoxNews.com

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Medved: Conservatives dead wrong about Obama's intentions

Usually Medved is a sanctimonious bore who sucks at reviewing movies, wants everything to be rated PG, and simply recycles other conservative two-bit pundits' throwaway opinions, but I have to say Medved hit the crazy nail on its nutty head this time. Listen to one of your own, conservatives!

(Thank goodness it's not just pinko-liberals like me sounding the alarm about the other side calling our rightfully elected President some kind of Manchurian candidate and crypto-Islamist/cypto-Marxist who hates his country which he took an oath to defend! By all means you have the right to disagree with his policies, hate the way he looks, or even call him nasty names, but to sincerely believe that he hates his country... where can we find any common ground if that's what you really think?)


Some conservatives call the president the political equivalent of a suicide bomber: so consumed with hatred that he's willing to blow himself up in order to inflict casualties on a society he loathes.

By Michael Medved
February 14, 2011 | Wall Street Journal

Some conservative commentators may feel inclined to spend Presidents Day [Washington's Birthday! - J] ruminating over Barack Obama's evil intentions, or denouncing the chief executive as an alien interloper and ideologue perversely determined to damage the republic. Instead, they should consider the history of John Adams's White House prayer and develop a more effective focus for their criticism.

On Nov. 2, 1800, a day after he became the first president to occupy the newly constructed executive mansion, Adams wrote to his wife Abigail: "I pray Heaven to bestow the best of blessings on this house and all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise men ever rule under this roof."

More than a century later, Franklin Roosevelt ordered the inscription of these words on a mantel piece in the State Dining Room, inviting serious consideration over the extent to which divine providence responded to the earnest entreaty of our second president.

In terms of wisdom, some of Adams's successors who "ruled" under the White House roof most certainly fell short. James Buchanan comes to mind—or Jimmy Carter.

When it comes to honesty, skeptics might also cite heaven's mixed blessings, reviewing a long history of presidential prevarication. Richard Nixon almost certainly lied about Watergate, as did Bill Clinton about his amorous adventures.

But in the deeper sense that Adams longed for "honest men" to occupy the White House, the nation has fared much better: Those who rose to the highest office worked hard, took their responsibilities seriously, and sincerely pursued the nation's good—in order, if nothing else, to secure a positive verdict on their own place in history.

Even the most corruption-tarred presidents, Ulysses S. Grant and Warren G. Harding, agonized over the demands of the office and drew scant personal benefit from the scandals involving unworthy associates. They both retained the profound affection of the populace while they lived and drew massive outpourings of grief at their funerals. Both (especially Grant) have begun a recent rise in the estimation of historians.

John F. Kennedy may have suffered from sex addiction (and a host of other secret maladies) while Franklin Pierce drank heavily in the White House (in part in mourning for his 11-year-old son who died before his eyes in a train accident two months before the inauguration). But neither man ignored his duties, and both had previously demonstrated their love of country with courageous military service.

In short, the White House record of more than 200 years shows plenty of bad decisions but no bad men. For all their foibles, every president attempted to rise to the challenges of leadership and never displayed disloyal or treasonous intent.

This history makes some of the current charges about Barack Obama especially distasteful—and destructive to the conservative cause.

One typical column appeared on Feb. 5 at the well-regarded [um, that depends who's doing the regarding - J] American Thinker website, under the heading: "Obama Well Knows What Chaos He Has Unleashed." Victor Sharpe solemnly declares: "My fear is that Obama is not naïve at all, but he instead knows only too well what he is doing, for he is eagerly promoting Islamic power in the world while diminishing the West."

These attitudes thrive well beyond the blogosphere and the right-wing fringe. On Jan. 7, Sarah Palin spoke briefly on Laura Ingraham's radio show, saying, "What I believe that Obama is doing right now—he is hell-bent on weakening America." While acknowledging that "it's gonna get some people all wee-weed up again," she repeated and amplified her charge that "what Obama is doing" is "purposefully weakening America—because he understood that debt weakened America, domestically and internationally, and yet now he supports increasing debt."

The assumption that the president intends to harm or destroy the nation that elected him has become so widespread that the chief advertising pitch for Dinesh D'Souza's best-selling book, "The Roots of Obama's Rage," promises to "reveal Obama for who he really is: a man driven by the anti-colonial ideology of his father and the first American president to actually seek to reduce America's strength, influence and standard of living."

None of the attacks on Mr. Obama's intentions offers an even vaguely plausible explanation of how the evil genius, once he has ruined our "strength, influence and standard of living," hopes to get himself re-elected. In a sense, the president's most paranoid critics pay him a perverse compliment in maintaining that his idealism burns with such pure, all-consuming heat that he remains blissfully unconcerned with minor matters like his electoral future. They label Mr. Obama as the political equivalent of a suicide bomber: so overcome with hatred (or "rage") that he's perfectly willing to blow himself up in order to inflict casualties on a society he loathes.

On his radio show last July 2, the most influential conservative commentator of them all reaffirmed his frequent charge that the president seeks economic suffering "on purpose." Rush Limbaugh explained: "I think we face something we've never faced before in the country—and that is, we're now governed by people who do not like the country." In his view, this hostility to the United States relates to a grudge connected to Mr. Obama's black identity. "There's no question that payback is what this administration is all about, presiding over the decline of the United States of America, and doing so happily."

[For the record, I alerted ya'll to Limbaugh's crazy conspiracy rants when they happened. - J]

Regardless of the questionable pop psychology of this analysis, as a political strategy it qualifies as almost perfectly imbecilic. Republicans already face a formidable challenge in convincing a closely divided electorate that the president pursues wrong-headed policies. They will never succeed in arguing that those initiatives have been cunningly and purposefully designed to wound the republic. In Mr. Obama's case, it's particularly unhelpful to focus on alleged bad intentions and rotten character when every survey shows more favorable views of his personality than his policies.

Moreover, the current insistence in seeing every misstep or setback by the Obama administration as part of a diabolical master plan for national destruction disregards the powerful reverence for the White House that's been part of our national character for two centuries.

Even in times of panic and distress, we hope the Almighty has answered John Adams's prayer. Americans may not see a given president as their advocate, but they're hardly disposed to view him as their enemy—and a furtive, determined enemy at that. For 2012, Republicans face a daunting challenge in running against the president. That challenge becomes impossible if they're also perceived as running against the presidency.

Mr. Medved hosts a daily, nationally syndicated radio show.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Poll: Majority of GOP voters is certifiable

This survey reveals that a majority of Republicans are birthers who don't believe Obama was born in Hawaii. And most of them doubt his professed Christian faith; they think he's using it to conceal his true diabolical Muslim faith. Even the GOP Speaker of the House insisted "it's not my job" to inform his deranged Republicans that Obama is a natural-born U.S. citizen, even though Speaker Boehner believes it himself.

These people see multiple (sometimes contradictory), hidden, sinister motives behind everything Obama says or does. His very birth is a source of controversy for them. (Messiah, anyone?) He cannot please these rabid reality deniers except by his total political surrender, and even then they would call him a "pushover" or "too weak!" I know it, you know it.

All this goes to show that Obama should give up on bipartisanship (read: appeasement) and go hard Left on the issues that enjoy popular support from Democrats and Independents, such as: ending the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; preserving Social Security; raising taxes on the top 3-5% of income earners; raising the payroll tax ceiling; investing in roads, bridges, and renewable energy infrastructure; regulating risky financial derivatives; re-instituting Glass-Steagal to separate deposit banks from casinos; and ending tax breaks for companies that export U.S. jobs, just to name a few.

Obama supporter Mary Schaeffer argues with critic Gary Henderson near a birther billboard,  November 2009.
By Frank James
February 15, 2011 | NPR



Birther Poll

By Elyse Siegel
February 15, 2011 | Huffington Post

Sunday, January 30, 2011

FOX analyst: Obamacare, light bulbs leading to Egypt-like tyranny

"...the people have to get their power back. It's God's will," concluded FOX News Medical Contributor Dr. Keith Ablow on the reasons for the protests in Egypt.

Right. So health care reform and energy-saving light bulbs will turn us into Egypt, whereupon it will be God's will for us to violently overthrow our government.

This is definitely not another example of right-wing pundits inciting the angriest and craziest among their followers to violence against our government. Don't spread more blood libel!

[Editor's Note: As of late 2010, Media Matters receives funding from diabolical global puppet master George Soros, therefore any of its opinions expressed or links to factual articles or actual film footage cannot be accepted as real.]



January 28, 2011 | Media Matters




Saturday, January 8, 2011

Shot Congresswoman threatened before, targeted by Palin (literally)

I thought it was going to be Obama first, but I guess a defenseless woman at a supermarket was an easier target.

Shame on Palin and all those who incited this violence. Don't believe me? Check out the link below.

You thought it was all fun and games and Glenn Beck's crocodile tears, but now you have blood on your hands. Enjoy.


http://i.imgur.com/Uw4RS.jpg




Monday, December 13, 2010

Hitchens: Beck's paranoia worse than Birchers'

Forfeiting a both-houses Republican victory, rational conservatives ignored or excused the most hateful kind of populist claptrap (e.g., the fetid weirdness of Glenn Beck's 9/12 Project). The poison they've helped disseminate will still be in the American bloodstream when the country needs it least.

By Christopher Hitchens
January 2011 issue | Vanity Fair

It is often in the excuses and in the apologies that one finds the real offense. Looking back on the domestic political "surge" which the populist right has been celebrating since last month, I found myself most dispirited by the manner in which the more sophisticated conservatives attempted to conjure the nasty bits away.

Here, for example, was Ross Douthat, the voice of moderate conservatism on the New York Times op-ed page. He was replying to a number of critics who had pointed out that Glenn Beck, in his rallies and broadcasts, had been channeling the forgotten voice of the John Birch Society, megaphone of Strangelovian paranoia from the 1950s and 1960s. His soothing message:

"These parallels are real. But there's a crucial difference. The Birchers only had a crackpot message; they never had a mainstream one. The Tea Party marries fringe concerns (repeal the 17th Amendment!) to a timely, responsible-seeming message about spending and deficits."

The more one looks at this, the more wrong it becomes (as does that giveaway phrase "responsible-seeming"). The John Birch Society possessed such a mainstream message—the existence of a Communist world system with tentacles in the United States—that it had a potent influence over whole sections of the Republican Party. It managed this even after its leader and founder, Robert Welch, had denounced President Dwight D. Eisenhower as a "dedicated, conscious agent" of that same Communist apparatus. Right up to the defeat of Barry Goldwater in 1964, and despite the efforts of such conservatives as William F. Buckley Jr. to dislodge them, the Birchers were a feature of conservative politics well beyond the crackpot fringe.

Now, here is the difference. Glenn Beck has not even been encouraging his audiences to reread Robert Welch. No, he has been inciting them to read the work of W. Cleon Skousen, a man more insane and nasty than Welch and a figure so extreme that ultimately even the Birch-supporting leadership of the Mormon Church had to distance itself from him. It's from Skousen's demented screed The Five Thousand Year Leap (to a new edition of which Beck wrote a foreword, and which he shoved to the position of No. 1 on Amazon) that he takes all his fantasies about a divinely written Constitution, a conspiratorial secret government, and a future apocalypse. To give you a further idea of the man: Skousen's posthumously published book on the "end times" and the coming day of rapture was charmingly called The Cleansing of America. A book of his with a less repulsive title, The Making of America, turned out to justify slavery and to refer to slave children as "pickaninnies." And, writing at a time when the Mormon Church was under attack for denying full membership to black people, Skousen defended it from what he described as this "Communist" assault.

So, Beck's "9/12 Project" is canalizing old racist and clerical toxic-waste material that a healthy society had mostly flushed out of its system more than a generation ago, and injecting it right back in again. Things that had hidden under stones are being dug up and re-released. And why? So as to teach us anew about the dangers of "spending and deficits"? It's enough to make a cat laugh. No, a whole new audience has been created, including many impressionable young people, for ideas that are viciously anti-democratic and ahistorical. The full effect of this will be felt farther down the road, where we will need it even less.

I remember encountering this same mentality a few years ago, when it was more laughable than dangerous. I didn't like Bill Clinton: thought he had sold access to the Lincoln Bedroom and lied under oath about sexual harassment and possibly even bombed Sudan on a "wag the dog" basis. But when I sometimes agreed to go on the radio stations of the paranoid right, it was only to be told that this was all irrelevant. Didn't I understand that Clinton and his wife had murdered Vince Foster and were, even as I spoke, preparing to take advantage of the Y2K millennium crisis—remember that?—in order to seize power for life and become the Nicolae and Elena CeauÅŸescu of our day? These people were not interested in the president's actual transgressions. They were looking to populate their fantasy world with new and more lurid characters.

There is an old Republican saying that "a government strong enough to give you everything you want is strong enough to take away everything you have." This statement contains an essential truth that liberals have no right to overlook. But it is negated, not amplified, if it comes festooned with racism and superstition. In the recent past, government-sponsored policies of social engineering have led to surprising success in reducing the welfare rolls and the crime figures.

This came partly from the adoption by many Democrats of policies that had once been called Republican. But not a word about that from Beck and his followers, because it isn't exciting and doesn't present any opportunity for rabble-rousing. Far sexier to say that health care—actually another product of bipartisanship—is a step toward Nineteen Eighty-Four. Ten percent unemployment, on the other hand, is rather a disgrace to a midterm Democratic administration. But does anybody believe that unemployment would have gone down if the hated bailout had not occurred and GM had been permitted to go bankrupt? Why not avoid the question altogether and mutter about a secret plan to proclaim a socialist (or Nazi, or Jew-controlled: take your pick) dictatorship?

Again, there is a real debate about the pace and rhythm of global warming, and about the degree to which it has been caused (or can be slowed) by human activity. But at the first Tea Party rally I attended, at the Washington Monument earlier this year, the crowd—bristling with placards about the Second Amendment's being the correction—was treated to an arm-waving speech by a caricature English peer named Lord Monckton, who led them in the edifying call-and-response: "All together. Global warming is?" "Bullshit." "Obama cannot hear you. Global warming is?" "bullshit." "That's bettah." I don't remember ever seeing grown-ups behave less seriously, at least in an election season.

Most epochs are defined by one or another anxiety. More important, though, is the form which that anxiety takes. Millions of Americans are currently worried about two things that are, in their minds, emotionally related. The first of these is the prospect that white people will no longer be the majority in this country, and the second is that the United States will be just one among many world powers. This is by no means purely a "racial" matter. (In my experience, black Americans are quite concerned that "Hispanic" immigration will relegate them, too.) Having an honest and open discussion about all this is not just a high priority. It's more like a matter of social and political survival. But the Beck-Skousen faction want to make such a debate impossible. They need and want to sublimate the anxiety into hysteria and paranoia. The president is a Kenyan. The president is a secret Muslim. The president (why not?—after all, every little bit helps) is the unacknowledged love child of Malcolm X. And this is their response to the election of an extremely moderate half-African American candidate, who speaks better English than most and who has a model family. Revolted by this development, huge numbers of white people choose to demonstrate their independence and superiority by putting themselves eagerly at the disposal of a tear-stained semi-literate shock jock, and by repeating his list of lies and defamations. But, of course, there's nothing racial in their attitude …

As I started by saying, the people who really curl my lip are the ones who willingly accept such supporters for the sake of a Republican victory, and then try to write them off as not all that important, or not all that extreme, or not all that insane in wanting to repeal several amendments to a Constitution that they also think is unalterable because it's divine! It may be true that the Tea Party's role in November's vote was less than some people feared, and it's certainly true that several of the movement's elected representatives will very soon learn the arts of compromise and the pork barrel. But then what happens at the next downturn? A large, volatile constituency has been created that believes darkly in betrayal and conspiracy. A mass "literature" has been disseminated, to push the mad ideas of exploded crackpots and bigots. It would be no surprise if those who now adore Beck and his acolytes were to call them sellouts and traitors a few years from now. But, alas, they would not be the only victims of the poisonous propaganda that's been uncorked. Some of the gun brandishing next time might be for real. There was no need for this offense to come, but woe all the same to those by whom it came, and woe above all to those who whitewashed and rationalized it.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

SCOTUS scores one for sanity

Monday was a bad day for nutjobs, when the Dubya-stacked conservative Supreme Court refused to hear another one of their crazy birther lawsuits.

Even worse for nutjobs was CNN's Anderson Cooper taking chief birther and Texas state representative Leo Berman out to the woodshed on live TV.

I stand in awe of the total lack of shame of birthers like Berman who claim they "don't know anything about Obama," and at the same time claim to "know" about his real, secret radical agenda, hatred of the U.S., love of socialism, etc. If we don't know anything about him, then he really could be the Messiah -- or a Martian, or the Tooth Fairy. Who knows? Because we don't know anything about Obama. He's a total mystery.


Justices turn aside another challenge over Obama's citizenship
By Bill Mears
November 30, 2010 CNN

URL: http://edition.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/11/29/scotus.birther.appeal/index.html

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Pitt: 'Dog-whistle politics' incite violence

I'm glad Pitt can hear the "dog whistles" like I can. The right wing is clearly inciting some nut job to take up arms and kill our lawfully elected President. Train your ears and listen up!


By William Rivers Pitt
July 23, 2010 | t r u t h o u t

[...]

Dismiss it too easily or too quickly, however, and you'll miss the dog whistle buried in the message. I hadn't heard of the term "dog whistle" until I saw a disturbing post on the web forum DemocraticUnderground, but the term perfectly describes the phenomenon. Wikipedia describes the term thusly:

Dog-whistle politics, also known as the use of code words, is a type of political campaigning or speechmaking employing coded language that appears to mean one thing to the general population but has a different or more specific meaning for a targeted subgroup of the audience. The term is an analogy to dog whistles built in such a way that humans cannot hear them due to their high frequency, but dogs can.

The DU post referring to a "dog whistle" was highlighting a recent broadcast of Pat Robertson's "700 Club." During this particular broadcast, author Eric Metaxas was being interviewed about his new biography of attempted Adolf Hitler assassin Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Metaxas' book paints Bonhoeffer as a prophet of God who was doing holy work through his plot to kill Hitler. Bonhoeffer, a trained theologian who resisted the Nazis based on his Christian faith, has been a revered figure in many religious circles ever since his death, so a book calling him a holy prophet isn't wildly out of line on its face.

But here's the thing. During the interview, descriptions of fascism and tyranny were used extensively. Again, given that the topic dealt with Hitler and Nazi Germany, the use of this language isn't immediately improper...except when it's in the context of the kind of rhetoric used by Pat Robertson, Fox News and bloggers like Andrew Breitbart to describe President Obama. The interview basically stated that it is the holy work of any good Christian to assassinate a fascist tyrant, and given the serial ways these right-wing media people have used those exact terms to describe the president, it is a pretty short leap to realize the "700 Club" was essentially sending the message that whoever puts a bullet in Obama will be considered a saint on the level of Bonhoeffer.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Johns Hopkins: Cat people are schizo

I always knew cat people were nuts. Now here's proof.

You never hear about a "crazy dog lady" with 100 dogs living in her house, do you?


Apparently you can get it through uncooked meats or unwashed veggies, too.


With Guy Raz
June 19, 2010 | NPR

What microorganism can make mice attracted to cats or make humans more likely to have car accidents or even develop a mental illness like schizophrenia? Host Guy Raz talks with infectious disease researcher Robert Yolken about Toxoplasma gondii and how it might affect human behavior.