Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

Tea partiers vow revenge over health overhaul

<!-- end .byline --> <cite class="vcard"> By BRENDAN FARRINGTON, Associated Press Writer Brendan Farrington, Associated Press Writer </cite> <abbr title="2010-03-23T09:24:50-0700" class="timedate">Tue Mar 23, 12:24 pm ET</abbr>

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. ? If you thought Tea Party activists were mad before, you ain't seen nothing yet.

Instead of being discouraged by passage of health care reform, tea party activists across the country say the defeat is a rallying cry that makes them more focused than ever on voting out any lawmaker who supported the measure.

"We're not going to stop. Obviously, the whole tea party movement started because we're about smaller government and less spending and less taxes. There is absolutely no way we can pay for this," said Denise Cattoni, state coordinator for Illinois Tea Party, an umbrella group for about 50 groups from around Illinois.

Cattoni says the health care defeat doesn't deflate tea party activists. "We couldn't stop it because of the shenanigans that went on in Washington," Cattoni said. "People are definitely more driven today than they were yesterday without a doubt."

A group of mostly Republican attorneys general were girding for a legal fight, filing a lawsuit Tuesday in federal court in Florida within moments of the landmark health care reforms being signed into law by President Barack Obama.

Within hours of its passage, conservative commentators Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh ? darlings of the tea party movement ? were venting their anger, vowing a bloodbath at the polls on Election Day.

"We need to defeat these bastards. We need to wipe them out," Limbaugh said. "We need to chase them out of town. But we need to do more than that. We need to elect conservatives. If there are Republican primaries, elect conservatives and then defeat the Democrats ? every last one of them ? and then we start the repeal process."

Tea party activists said they do not see passage of the reforms that usher in near-universal medical coverage as the end of the debate. Instead, they're looking to push for its repeal on several fronts: in the courts and during this year's elections.

So far, the nascent movement has almost reveled in its rebellious and grass roots nature and has avoided becoming as much a part of the establishment as the Republican and Democratic parties. But some tea party organizers see the health care debate as a galvanizing force that could stir its followers to greater action and something to rally around with midterm elections this year.

"There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught," said Michael Caputo, a public relations consultant who works with tea party activists on the national level, as well as in Florida and New York. "The health care process has been an incendiary issue for the tea party organizations since Day 1. Losing that vote is going to inflame them more."

The number of tea party groups has been growing for a little more than a year. Many in the movement were previously not politically active and have a strong independent streak, making organization sometimes difficult.

Most share a common belief that government spending and influence should be limited and they're angry about the policies under the Obama administration and the Democratic-controlled Congress including last year's $787 billion federal stimulus package and health care.

In a conference call with tea party activists Monday night, Eric Odom of the Patriot Caucus mapped ambitious plans to set up state chapters, organize voters online and raise money to oust incumbents who supported the health care overhaul.

He predicted the vote would increase support for the movement across the country.

The government "has declared war on our way of life," Odom from Nevada told listeners.

"It's now time to boot them from office," said Odom, who chairs the Liberty First PAC, a fundraising arm of the group. "We absolutely must have your help."

In Florida, about 85 tea party groups encompass about 100,000 people, according to Everett Wilkinson, a leader in the state's movement. A small rally is being planned in Boca Raton on Tuesday with more likely the rest of the week in response to the vote, he said.

There are similar reactions elsewhere.

"We will be more determined than ever to see that this country is governed the way the constitution intended," said Brenda Bowen, a tea party organizer in Greenville, Ala. "We are all getting our second wind. When we do, you'd better watch out."

Even though they didn't stop the bill, Tim Dake, organizer of the Milwaukee-area group GrandSons of Liberty, said he and others intend to push for a state constitutional amendment that would prohibit forcing people to buy health insurance. The amendment has been introduced by Republicans in the Democratic-controlled Wisconsin Legislature, but there are no plans to hold a hearing on it.

The Republican-controlled Legislature is pushing a similar measure in Florida.

If lawmakers put it on the ballot, at least 60 percent of voters would have to approve it.

Christen Varley, head of the Greater Boston Tea Party Organizers, said the House health vote was both "heartbreaking" and a wake-up call.

"I think we all went to bed a little dejected last night, but from the communication I received this morning, people are energized," said Varley. Sarah Palin is scheduled to headline a tea party rally on historic Boston Common on April 14.

Massachusetts already has a form of universal health care, yet the state made passage of the bill more difficult when voters elected Republican Scott Brown to replace the late Sen. Ted Kennedy ? who spent nearly his entire career pushing for health care for all. Brown's election took away Democrats' filibuster-proof majority in the Senate.

Whether or not tea partiers will be able to turn anger into organization may vary from state to state.

"People in the Tea Party movement are fiercely independent. They don't like being told what to do. It's like herding cats," said Chad Capps, strategy coordinator for a Huntsville, Ala., group.

While tea party activists have made themselves heard, University of North Florida political science professor Matthew Corrigan said the movement alone won't be enough to oust incumbents.

"Do they have energy? Yes. Have they been getting into the media? Yes, but they still haven't sold me on the fact that they can swing elections," Corrigan said.
___
Associated Press writers Deanna Bellandi in Chicago, Steve LeBlanc in Boston, Scott Bauer in Madison, Wis., Phillip Rawls in Montgomery, Ala., and Michael Blood in Los Angeles, contributed to this report.
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

Tea Partiers to Congressional Democrats: You'll Pay in November

Monday , March 22, 2010


WASHINGTON ?

It's payback time. Tea Party leaders, livid over the passage of health care reform on Sunday night, say their next step will be to turn from fighting the bill to running the people who voted for it out of Congress.

The bill's narrow passage was inarguably a victory for President Obama and a blow to those who opposed it. Though Tea Partiers joined with Republican officials to rally in Washington and across the country against the package up until judgment day, Democrats were able to assuage skeptical lawmakers and muster the votes needed to send the sweeping overhaul of the nation's health care system to the president's desk.

Now those lawmakers have to go, Tea Partiers say, and they're planning to sustain their fight into November by registering voters, pumping money into ad campaigns against Democratic incumbents and supporting their challengers.

Some want to elect lawmakers with the ultimate goal of repealing the bill; but with repeal a heavy lift, at the minimum the groups are out for vengeance.

And while the Sunday vote was a defeat for the cause, it was potentially a boon for membership.

"I am deluged with phone calls this morning (from) people wanting to join the Tea Party," said Gina Loudon, a founder of the St. Louis Tea Party, which campaigned against the bill during Obama's stop there two weeks ago. "I literally cannot even return the phone calls quickly enough. ... This has absolutely awoken a giant." :houra

Loudon said she and other activists ? who met up at a pub in downtown St. Louis Sunday night to mourn the passage of the bill ? are already drafting a game plan for the months ahead. She said getting involved in congressional campaigns will be a big part of that.

Expect Tea Party political action committees (PACs), to gain a lot more prominence in the months ahead. Loudon said the Ensuring Liberty PAC, the political group announced last month at the Tea Party Convention in Nashville, is going to be raising money and influencing targeted races ? her husband is a board member of that group.

Debbie Dooley, co-founder of the Atlanta Tea Party and a national coordinator of Tea Party Patriots, agreed that the focus will be on voting out health care reform bill supporters.

"Yesterday, they chose not to listen to what the people want," she said. "We, the people, will have our say in November."

She said lawmakers like Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich. ? who had been a holdout against health care reform over abortion funding concerns but who switched to a yes vote after striking an agreement with the White House ? are top targets. She said Tea Party groups plan to continue holding rallies and showing up at lawmakers' town hall meetings and congressional offices to protest the bill.

"This health care vote was not the end. It is just the beginning of the fight," she said.

The House on Sunday passed the Senate-approved health care bill along with a package of changes that House Democrats want the Senate to approve next. The bill is being considered under reconciliation rules, which would allow Democrats to pass it with just 51 votes, as opposed to the 60 that would otherwise be needed to avoid a filibuster.

Dooley said Tea Party groups will do what they can to fight the reconciliation bill as well ? not out of any particular objection to its contents but out of concern about the reconciliation process and a desire to hold House members accountable for the vote on the Senate bill.

They argue that preventing the reconciliation bill from passing could make some House Democrats even more vulnerable in November.

"We want to make this election a referendum on the bill," said Brendan Steinhauser, director of federal and state campaigns for FreedomWorks, the conservative organization that's closely aligned with Tea Party groups across the country.

Tea Party Express, a separate group of conservative activists, is also planning to kick off a nationwide tour Saturday in Searchlight, Nev.
Levi Russell, spokesman for the group, said the tour will focus on health care and on highlighting the "worst offenders" in bringing the bill over the finish line. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will be the top target at the Tea Party Express kickoff, which former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is expected to attend.

Though health care reform may continue to be the overriding issue for Tea Party groups in the months to come, the activists say they're ready to divide their attention among whatever issues Obama chooses to pursue ? immigration reform or cap-and-trade or something else.

"We are as passionate about those as we are about health care," Loudon said.
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

More Teabagger Tomfoolery. . .Comedy Gold Writ Large; from one of Saint Reagan's people, of all things. . .:LMAO
_____________________________________________





Notations
The Misinformed Tea Party Movement
Bruce Bartlett, 03.19.10, 12:01 AM ETOn March 16 the Tea Party crowd showed up for yet another demonstration on Capitol Hill in Washington. Curious about the factual knowledge these people have regarding the issues they are protesting, my friend David Frum enlisted some interns to interview as many Tea Partyers as possible on a couple of basic questions. They got 57 responses--a pretty good-sized sample from a crowd that numbered between 300 and 500 people. (Survey results are here.)
The first question that was asked concerned the size of government. Tea Partyers were asked how much the federal government gets in taxes as a percentage of the gross domestic product. According to Congressional Budget Office data, acceptable answers would be 6.4%, which is the percentage for federal income taxes; 12.7%, which would be for both income taxes and Social Security payroll taxes; or 14.8%, which would represent all federal taxes as a share of GDP in 2009.
Not everyone follows these numbers closely, and Tea Partyers may have been thinking of figures from a few years ago, before the recession when taxes were higher. According to the CBO, the highest figure for all federal taxes since 1970 came in the year 2000, when they reached 20.6% of GDP. As we know, after that George W. Bush and Republicans in Congress cut federal taxes; they fell to 18.5% of GDP in 2007, before the recession hit, and 17.5% in 2008.
Tuesday's Tea Party crowd, however, thought that federal taxes were almost three times as high as they actually are. The average response was 42% of GDP and the median 40%. The highest figure recorded in all of American history was half those figures: 20.9% at the peak of World War II in 1944.
To follow up, Tea Partyers were asked how much they think a typical family making $50,000 per year pays in federal income taxes. The average response was $12,710, the median $10,000. In percentage terms this means a tax burden of between 20% and 25% of income.
Of course, it's hard to know what any particular individual or family pays in taxes, but according to IRS tax tables, a single person with $50,000 in taxable income last year would owe $8,694 in federal income taxes, and a married couple filing jointly would owe $6,669.
But these numbers are high because to have a taxable income of $50,000, one's gross income would be higher by at least the personal exemption, which is $3,650, and the standard deduction, which is $5,700 for single people and $11,400 for married couples. Owning a home or having children would reduce one's tax burden further.
According to calculations by the Joint Committee on Taxation, a congressional committee, tax filers with adjusted gross incomes between $40,000 and $50,000 have an average federal income tax burden of just 1.7%. Those with adjusted gross incomes between $50,000 and $75,000 have an average burden of 4.2%.
Even though the Tea Partyers were specifically asked about federal income taxes, it's possible that they were thinking about other federal taxes as well, such as payroll and excise taxes. According to the JCT, when all federal taxes are included, those earning between $40,000 and $50,000 have an average tax rate of 12.3%, and those earning between $50,000 and $75,000 pay a rate of 14.5%.
<hr class="pagebreak"> In short, no matter how one slices the data, the Tea Party crowd appears to believe that federal taxes are very considerably higher than they actually are, whether referring to total taxes as a share of GDP or in terms of the taxes paid by a typical family.
Tea Partyers also seem to have a very distorted view of the direction of federal taxes. They were asked whether they are higher, lower or the same as when Barack Obama was inaugurated last year. More than two-thirds thought that taxes are higher today, and only 4% thought they were lower; the rest said they are the same.
As noted earlier, federal taxes are very considerably lower by every measure since Obama became president. And given the economic circumstances, it's hard to imagine that a tax increase would have been enacted last year. In fact, 40% of Obama's stimulus package involved tax cuts. These include the Making Work Pay Credit, which reduces federal taxes for all taxpayers with incomes below $75,000 by between $400 and $800.
According to the JCT, last year's $787 billion stimulus bill, enacted with no Republican support, reduced federal taxes by almost $100 billion in 2009 and another $222 billion this year. The Tax Policy Center, a private research group, estimates that close to 90% of all taxpayers got a tax cut last year and almost 100% of those in the $50,000 income range. For those making between $40,000 and $50,000, the average tax cut was $472; for those making between $50,000 and $75,000, the tax cut averaged $522. No taxpayer anywhere in the country had his or her taxes increased as a consequence of Obama's policies.
It's hard to explain this divergence between perception and reality. Perhaps these people haven't calculated their tax returns for 2009 yet and simply don't know what they owe. Or perhaps they just assume that because a Democrat is president that taxes must have gone up, because that's what Republicans say that Democrats always do. In fact, there hasn't been a federal tax increase of any significance in this country since 1993.
One other possibility is that taxpayers are operating on the basis of a sophisticated economic theory called "Ricardian Equivalence." According to this theory, budget deficits have no stimulative effect on the economy because taxpayers implicitly discount the future tax increase that will be necessary to pay off the additional debt. People increase their savings now, the theory posits, in order to prepare for this future tax increase, thus offsetting all of the stimulative effect of the deficits with an equal and contractionary increase in saving.
While Ricardian Equivalence is a legitimate economic theory that economists continue to debate, one often hears a variation of it on talk radio shows and such, where it is said that deficits are a tax on the economy. The problem is that many people conclude from this arguably true statement that raising taxes to reduce the deficit would in effect constitute a double tax. We're being taxed once by the deficit, people think, so why should they have their taxes raised to reduce it?
Of course, this is a non sequitur. People can't be taxed twice by the expectation of a tax and again by the actual tax itself. But more important, the underlying assumption of Ricardian Equivalence--that taxes will eventually rise to pay off the debt--is now seriously in doubt. Perhaps once it was true when people genuinely cared about a balanced budget. But today's Republicans and Tea Party members oppose all tax increases for any reason, no matter how big the deficit is. I really believe that many would rather default on the debt than raise taxes by a single penny. If this is true, then Ricardian Equivalence is a dead letter--to the extent that it ever existed at all.
Probably the simplest motivation the Tea Partyers have is the one that Howard Beale (actor Peter Finch) gave in the 1976 movie Network. "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not gonna take it any more!" he said to cheering crowds. In other words, tea parties just represent unfocused anger at current economic conditions. Those who feel this way have latched on to the Tea Party movement not because they really believe that their taxes are too high, that taxes are rising or that taxes are at the root of our economic problem. Rather, they have joined because it's the only game in town; the only organized force with at least the potential of bringing about change that might make things better.
<hr class="pagebreak"> In this sense, the tea parties are simply the latest manifestation of populism, which has arisen periodically throughout American history. In the 19th century populist anger was based in rural America and directed at the banks and railroads as well as government. Populists thought that free coinage of silver, an inflationary policy that would have raised prices for farm commodities, was the solution to their problems in the same way that today's Tea Party crowd thinks that the Federal Reserve, bailouts to big businesses and a looming government takeover of the health industry are at the root of our economic malaise. Tax cuts are like free silver--a one-size-fits-all policy response.
Unfortunately for the Tea Party populists, there is no evidence in American history that populism has ever had a meaningful effect on policy. Even when the movement had a charismatic and articulate leader in William Jennings Bryan, the populists only elected a handful of members to Congress and never achieved the presidency. One reason is that the major parties co-opted populist issues and leaders, which bought time until the populist impulse burned itself out like a brush fire.
Whatever the future of the Tea Party movement in American politics, it's a bad idea for so many participants to operate on the basis of false notions about the burden of federal taxation. It only takes a little bit of time to look at one's tax return to see what one is actually paying the Treasury, calculate the percentage of one's income that goes to taxes, and compare it with what was paid last year and the year before. People may then discover that their anger is misplaced and channel it into areas where it is more likely to bring about positive change.
Bruce Bartlett is a former Treasury Department economist and the author of Reaganomics: Supply-Side Economics in Action and Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy. Bruce Bartlett's new book is: The New American Economy: The Failure of Reaganomics and a New Way Forward. He writes a weekly column for Forbes.


http://www.forbes.com/2010/03/18/te...opinions-columnists-bruce-bartlett_print.html
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")


REPEAL AND REFORM!
REPEAL AND REFORM!
REPEAL AND REFORM!
REPEAL AND REFORM!
REPEAL AND REFORM!
REPEAL AND REFORM!
REPEAL AND REFORM!

 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

More Teabagger Tomfoolery. . .Comedy Gold Writ Large; from one of Saint Reagan's people, of all things. . .:LMAO

As always, our resident faux intellectual, faux lawyer doesn't disappoint quaffing the Kool Aid by the bucketful!

Other than serve the most successful president in the last hundred years, what has this Keynesian pawn actually accomplished in his life? :+clueless
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

Haha. . .I will recognize your seemingly lack of dignity by always leading with your panties. Your "faux" ridiculousness would be merely funny if it didn't continuously raise the specter of your cowardice; now it's simply pathetic. . .
 

brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

And in another totally unrelated story
:doh1



Frances Fox Piven Joins Board of Project Vote ? What Could Go Wrong?

by Kyle Olson <!-- Article Start -->
While ACORN has earned much of the scorn of the press and public in recent months, its voter registration arm, Project Vote, is actually the entity that has been conducting the questionable voter registration drives.
Project Vote has been accused of voter registrations fraud in more than a dozen states. Its parent group ACORN, along with a staff member, are scheduled to be tried for fraud in Nevada in a matter of days. Recently, ACORN was nailed under the RICO Act in Ohio and ordered to never come back to the state. More importantly, the settlement also said ACORN couldn?t simply morph into another organization and cause the same type of trouble in Ohio.
In short, Project Vote is at the root of ACORN?s voter registration fraud problems.
So as ACORN is transforming, Project Vote is transforming, too. According to a new article in The Nation, Frances Fox Piven of ?Cloward-Piven Strategy? fame, recently joined the Project Vote board of directors.

On their face, Piven?s views seem harmless ? registering low-income people to vote is how it?s framed publicly. But it was Piven?s strategy that served as the impetus for the creation of the National Welfare Rights Organization, led by the radical George Wiley. Wiley had a young prot?g?, named Wade Rathke, who was eventually dispatched to Arkansas to establish a beachhead in the South for the social justice movement. He founded, of course, ACORN.
The strategy put forward by Piven and Richard Cloward, to overwhelm the welfare system in the late 60s and early 70s, bankrupted New York City.
It was Piven who suggested that people losing their homes to foreclosure should simply refuse to leave. ACORN had been following this strategy to a T with its Home Defenders program.
And now Piven is going to have a direct influence over the policy and direction of Project Vote.
Perhaps Piven?s strategy of overwhelming the system will now be applied to registering people to vote. As we saw in Indiana, Florida, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Nevada, Ohio and many other states, Project Vote created chaos for elections workers to sift through. With Piven now guiding this ship, her success at overwhelming the welfare system will now be applied to voter registration. What could possibly go wrong?
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

A person who uses his brain has compiled this hilarious "dictionary" for the Teabaggers. . .
_____________________________________________

The Illustrated Tea Party Dictionary

<!-- google_ad_section_start --> Ever wondered what "Real America" means? Or how precisely Sarah Palin defines communism and fascism? Look no further. Using misspelled Tea Party placards, from this excellent Flickr gallery, we've compiled the first comprehensive dictionary for this new dialect.
Here are 24 key words, and their associated misspelled placards, that are now charged with the fevered, dog-whistling undertones of Fox News and the new right.
Click on the images to enlarge.
(Further suggestions for the Illustrated Tea Party Dictionary are welcomed in the comments or by email.)
ACORN: Is a sinister organization which operates from a network of underground lairs to undermine democracy, and freedom through various nefarious means like getting poor people to vote. They were rightfully revealed as being... nice to very white people who try and trick them by Tea Party hero James O'Keefe.


America, the real America, Americans: this is code for white, conservative people who dwell within 49 of the 50 United States (Hawaii is suspicious), but preferably away from the coasts. Especially the east coast. America, the real America and Americans all love guns and God and hate abortion. Activities such as shooting things are American. Activities such as helping other people to do anything are un-American.


Birth Certificate: This is a code phrase often applied to the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama, and is meant to indicate that he is not really American and cannot prove that he is by showing his birth certificate. The phrase continues to be used despite conclusive evidence that the President was born in Hawaii (see America, the real America, Americans).


Border, Borders: The borders define the edges of America, but not of the real America which is a more nebulous concept. It is at these borders that 'illegals' get into America and undermine America by working extraordinarily hard with no help at all from the Government or their neighbors, who all hate them.


Communism: Is used to define any plan or program, usually put in place by the government, that has any aspirations to help the poor. The word 'red' and the phrase 'redistribution of wealth' are also regularly applied. All are meant to imply that the ordinary business of a capitalist government, to provide the things that the free market does not, is sinister and evil. Draws on mythology created in the 1950s and 1960s.


Constitution, Constitutional: The constitution is a document that must be used to define and defend only right-wing actions. Anything liberal or progressive is 'unconstitutional', no matter how desperate the logic used to arrive at this conclusion. Torture, for example, is constitutional though 'cruel and unusual punishment', is specifically forbidden in the document. But the rescue of the financial sector was unconstitutional.


English: The Tea Party does not like immigrants with their filthy foreign ways and their unintelligible gibbering in their filthy foreign tongues. They want everyone to follow their example and echo the peerless use of language that figureheads like Sarah Palin demonstrate.


Fascism: Any decision that does not agree with a right-wing perspective, approved by democratically elected lawmakers in various arms of Government and signed into law by the democratically elected President, is Fascism. Obama is thus Hitler. Both men were apparently known for their moderate views and hosting of seders.


Freedom: Is defined as the rights of any individual to do anything, without government interference, as long as those things do not include falling in love with a member of one's own gender, or deciding to get an abortion.


Government, big Government, takeover by: The Government, like ACORN, is a sinister organization with secret aims to enslave all Americans by providing them with cheap, easy-to-access healthcare, helping students get reasonable loans and many other such disgusting ploys.


Hope: Is a universally bad thing, used to lure people into voting for a communist government that will eventually enslave them.


Kenya: Is a mysterious place where monsters roam, and devilish people plot to put one of their own into the White House and thus take over the world. It is a little like Mordor. But with black people in.


Liar: Anyone who does not completely agree with the Tea Party, and produces "evidence" of their contrary views, is a liar.


Mainstream Media: Like ACORN and the Government, the Mainstream Media is a nefarious cabal who, unbeknownst to most of the nation, meet in smoky dens to deliberately play down conservative ideas and promote liberal ones by using 'journalism' and 'objectivity'. Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and a select few others eschew these tools and are safely above the conspiracy.



Marriage, Sanctity of: Any mention of this phrase is code for 'I don't know what's right, but I know that gay people freak me out and and make me feel funny, and it just ain't right and it shouldn't be allowed'.


Maverick: Anyone who has read Ayn Rand and studiously applies conservative dogma and ideology to any situation by rote, however ludicrous the results in the real world, is a maverick.


ObamaCare: Is the evil tool by which Government, the Mainstream Media and ACORN will take over the country and turn it into a filthy, foreign place like Europe where people have access to medical care even if they cannot afford it and are almost never pushed into abject poverty by the misfortune of getting sick.


Patriotic: Any American, preferably a Real American, who supports all wars, decries all foreigners and attempts to help the poor, even if poor themselves, is patriotic.


Politicians: Are tools of the Government, ACORN and the Mainstream Media. Many of them are in on the conspiracy to take over America, and subjugate the Real America. Some Mavericks like Eric Cantor, Jim DeMint and John Boehner are fighting this conspiracy with the raw power of idiocy.


Plumber, Joe the: Code for any American who works in an average, blue-collar job and earns an average living doing so. Unless that American is swarthy of skin, in which case it does not.


Responsibility: Means spending whatever you like, screwing everyone you can over and refusing to perform even the meanest kindness towards anyone that is not you.


Socialism, Socialized: A sinister political system in which any consideration at all is given to anyone except the wealthiest and most privileged in society.


Taxes: Are an evil system of control used to pay for evil things like police forces, the army, street lighting and roads. Thus tax is a tool to help the Government, ACORN and the Mainstream Media turn America socialist or communist.


Your, You're: A totally arbitrary, communist, socialist, fascist distinction that is used to help hope-mongering, gay, liberal elites without birth certificates, Politicians, the Government, ACORN and the Mainstream Media take wealth, taxes and freedom and responsibility away from mavericks, Joe the Plumber, Patriots, America and the Real America and away to some post-ObamaCare Kenya.
<!-- google_ad_section_end -->
Send an email to Ravi Somaiya, the author of this post, at ravi@gawker.com.



http://gawker.com/5506871/the-illustrated-tea-party-dictionary
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

40% of Tea Partiers are Dems and Independents, How Will Media Report the News?

For almost a year, the mainstream media have depicted members of the Tea Party movement as racist, right-wing extremists.On Sunday, a survey was released finding 40 percent of Tea Partiers are Democrats and Independents.

Given the media's hatred for everyone involved in this growing movement, how will they react to and report this startling revelation released hours ago by The Hill (h/t Pat Dollard):
The national breakdown of the Tea Party composition is 57 percent Republican, 28 percent Independent and 13 percent Democratic, according to three national polls by the Winston Group, a Republican-leaning firm that conducted the surveys on behalf of an education advocacy group. Two-thirds of the group call themselves conservative, 26 are moderate and 8 percent say they are liberal. [...]
The group is united around two issues ? the economy/jobs and reducing the deficit. They believe that cutting spending is the key to job creation and favor tax cuts as the best way to stimulate the economy. That said 61 percent of Tea Party members believe infrastructure spending creates jobs. Moreover, given the choice Tea Party members favor 63-32 reducing unemployment to 5 percent over balancing the budget.​
Here are some findings media might find agreeable:
The group also vehemently dislikes President Barack Obama ? even more so than those who called themselves Republicans in the survey. Over 80 percent of Tea Party members disapprove of the job he?s doing as president, whereas 77 percent of Republican respondents said they disapprove of Obama. The Tea Party members are also strongly opposed to the Democrats? healthcare plan, with 82 percent saying they oppose it -- only 48 percent of respondents overall were opposed. [...]

Almost half the members of the group reported getting their news about national issues from Fox News, 10 percent of respondents said that talk radio is one of their top two sources, which is seven-points higher than average voter.
Yeah, the Fox and talk radio-haters in the press will surely like those findings, assuming this gets much attention at all.

How will they report it?

Stay tuned.

:3dgros13:
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

In other surprising news, it has been determined that 100% of the members of the Ku Klux Klan do not approve of any black person's existence. . .Stay tuned for updates on this developing newsflash. . .:LMAO
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

In other surprising news, it has been determined that 100% of the members of the Ku Klux Klan do not approve of any black person's existence. . .Stay tuned for updates on this developing newsflash. . .:LMAO

Three words for you, Mr. Faux Lawyer:

OUT OF TOUCH

New Taxes Crushing Small Businesses

For all the blather from Obama the other day that we're "turning the corner" from the recession with the addition of temporary government jobs, the reality is more and more small businesses are in danger of going under due to the onerous taxation being piled on top of them.
America's jobs growth engine is being choked to death.

A record 25 percent increase in the taxes against US small businesses -- from costs associated with new health care law, to an increased Medicare tax, increased capital gains taxes and higher state and city taxes -- is repealing any ability of these entrepreneurs to add jobs to their payroll.

And the numbers for New York's small- to medium-sized business are just as harrowing.

By one estimate, the effective tax rate on the 26 million small businesses across the country -- which in the past have accounted for more than half of the job growth in the US -- has jumped to 50 percent from 40 percent, sucking valuable cash from the businesses.
But I thought taxes weren't going up? Well, if you get your information from Obama's lapdog media you probably won't know any of this.
The 26 million small businesses in the US — like Eneslow Shoes, headed by CEO Robert Schwartz—are getting buried under an avalanche of new taxes, which include:

* An increase of 4.6% in federal taxes from 35% to 39.6% (expiration of Bush tax cuts)

* An increase in capital gains taxes from 15% to 20% (expiration of Bush tax cuts)

* A new tax of 3.85% on investment income, dividends, rents, royalties mandated in the new health care bill

* An increase in the Medicare payroll tax to 2.35% as mandated in the new health care bill

* In states like New Jersey and others, state and municipal taxes have been raised by the average of almost 2%
So before any of the joys of ObamaCare are so graciously bestowed upon the great unwashed, everyone is already getting crushed by the tax burden.

No wonder tea partiers are more popular than Congress and why the Democrats and the media are in overdrive trying to discredit them!
 

tank

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

Three words for you, Mr. Faux Lawyer:

OUT OF TOUCH

New Taxes Crushing Small Businesses

For all the blather from Obama the other day that we're "turning the corner" from the recession with the addition of temporary government jobs, the reality is more and more small businesses are in danger of going under due to the onerous taxation being piled on top of them.But I thought taxes weren't going up? Well, if you get your information from Obama's lapdog media you probably won't know any of this.So before any of the joys of ObamaCare are so graciously bestowed upon the great unwashed, everyone is already getting crushed by the tax burden.

No wonder tea partiers are more popular than Congress and why the Democrats and the media are in overdrive trying to discredit them!
Yep it looks like they are worse off now than ever.
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf

Funny how all the corporate media and right wing bloggers want to talk about is the 48k Census jobs that were added but do not want to say anything about the other 100k jobs that were added. Hmmm???What happens if it is just as good next month??
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

In other surprising news, it has been determined that 100% of the members of the Ku Klux Klan do not approve of any black person's existence. . .Stay tuned for updates on this developing newsflash. . .:LMAO

heh...40% eh?

So what we know now is that there's at least 100,000 TPs who are registered Democratic or other Indy parties.
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

And at least one who is a Canadian who lives in Toronto.....lmao
 

ironmike67

EOG Senior Member
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

Great get rid of all those bums who voted for this farce.

We need jobs jobs jobs
 

Spytheweb

EOG Addicted
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

I wanted single payer myself. Kill private insurance dead. With the state amendment, states can now start their own health care system, welcome single payer.

"It's called the "Empowering States to be Innovative" amendment. And it would, quite literally, give states the right to set up their own health care system -- with or without an individual mandate or, for that matter, with or without a public option -- provided that, as Wyden puts it, "they can meet the coverage requirements of the bill."
 

brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

Im proud to be a Tea Bagger

<EMBED src=http://www.youtube.com/v/8zsUNnFVMsE&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xd0d0d0&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&fs=1 width=640 height=385 type=application/x-shockwave-flash allowScriptAccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></EMBED>
</IF>
 

tank

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

Im proud to be a Tea Bagger

<embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/8zsUNnFVMsE&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xd0d0d0&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="385">
Hopefully they will do better than they did down in Florida yesterday.:smoking2:
Those dudes in that clip do look like teabaggers.
 

brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

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Liberal WaPo Columnist Attends Tea Party Rally; Discovers Refreshing Rationality :doh1

By P.J. Gladnick (Bio | Archive)


Sun, 04/18/2010 - 20:39 ET
  • Robert McCartney, the liberal Washington Post columnist, has done something that Chris Matthews and his fellow leftist MSNBC hosts have yet to do: attend a tea party rally without being confrontational and/or snarky. McCartney went to a tea party with an open mind last week and this is what he discovered:
I went to the "tea party" rally at the Washington Monument on Thursday to check out just how reactionary and potentially violent the movement truly was.
Answer: Not very.
Based on what I saw and heard, tea party members are not seething, ready-to-explode racists, as some liberal commentators have caricatured them.

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So did McCartney suddenly become a conservative? Not really but he came away from the experience with some very positive observations about the tea party people:
...I differ strenuously with the protesters on about 95 percent of the issues.
Nevertheless, on the whole, they struck me as passionate conservatives dedicated to working within the system rather than dangerous militia types or a revival of the Ku Klux Klan.
Although shrinking government is their primary goal, many conceded that the country should keep Medicare and even Social Security. None was clamoring for civil disobedience, much less armed revolt.

...The rally, estimated in the tens of thousands, also displayed a wacky, irreverent spirit that I found endearing. I can't help but smile when paunchy small-business owners aged 50 and older don three-cornered hats and hoist rattlesnake flags in exercising their First Amendment right to peaceably assemble.

McCartney should be congratulated on the open minded spirit with which he interviewed the participants in order to find out about their attitudes instead of attempting to be confrontational:
At the protest, I mostly ignored the speakers so I could probe what the participants wanted and how they viewed the world. I interviewed 19, picked at random, in three hours.
I found that I agreed heartily with the tea partiers on what is perhaps their single biggest concern: that America's swelling government debt seriously threatens our long-term prosperity.

As to those in the mainstream media, particularly MSNBC, McCartney has this comment:
Commentators on MSNBC and elsewhere have called the movement racist and likened it to the Klan.
...I didn't see evidence of racism at Thursday's rally. A sign read: "Not prejudiced. Not racist. Not violent. Not disenfranchised. Not silent anymore."

Can one even imagine Chris Matthews or Keith Olbermann attending a tea party event without becoming confrontational or belligerent? McCartney went in with an open mind and, as a result, came away with an overall positive view of the participants.
?P.J. Gladnick is a freelance writer and creator of the DUmmie FUnnies blog.




Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/p-j-gladnick/2010/04/18/liberal-wapo-columnist-attends-tea-party-rally-discovers-refreshing-ra#ixzz0lW56HyNP
 

willie99

EOG Member
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

there are some posts in this thread pertaining to the "intelligence" of tea party members.

I would like to point out that there is one party and only one party that dominates the following voting demographics

1) high school drop outs or no high school at all

2) people earning below 15k

3) people earning 15-30k

that would be the Democratic Party

so if one wants to speak to the intelligence of a particular demographic, I might suggest it's really not that hard to figure out where the "less intelligent" congregate.

I'm not speaking to the successful and well informed Democrats, I'm just mocking an argument made about intelligence in this thread
 
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

Willie is right.

Democrats pander and cater to losers. That's why the country is on the verge of bankruptcy.

Too many losers who don't have a financial stake in the franchise fabricating rights and spending money that doesn't belong to them.

"Community organizer" is codeword for M-A-R-X-I-S-T L-O-S-E-R! 2938u4ji23
 

brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party Patriots vow revenge over Obamacare ("There's going to be a whole, all-out effort for an Election Day onslaught")

 
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