A vast, deep collection of bile...
Oct. 11th, 2008 09:43 am
He did, however, get booed for it when he said it. And I was curious to see how this turn of events has gone down with the fringe right. The results are telling. First, the freepers:
- "McCain SHUT UP! You are Pissing in your Cheerios!"
- "Obama is NOT HONORABLE We SHOULD be scared with him!"
- "His campaign and refusal to TELL THE TRUTH is PROOF that he is unwilling to do what is necessary to win."
- "It is a shame he has to ruin [Sarah Palin's] career too."
- "What a dolt."
- "Three weeks before the election McCain dismisses the most basic beliefs of patriotic conservatives and endorses Barak Hussein Obama."
- "He's a jack ass. This guy couldn't be a bigger idiot. "
- "Mccain makes me sick. Everytime I am fired up he throw some cold water."
- "I'm starting to hate him."
- "My respect can never be earned by criminal Muslim terrorists."
- "Can you respect your voters Mr. McCain?"
- "WE'RE NOT TURNING THE WHITE HOUSE KEYS OVER TO BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA!"
- "Thanks John, for being a spineless, limp-wristed, RINO imbecile. And please keep that bitch you hired off the air too."
- "Yes we are SCARED and NO this is NOT someone we want to have in the White House!"
- "Bully for the crowd!!!! John needs to figure this one out!!!!"
- "Barack Hussein Obama, Jr. is NOT a decent man. He can never be president."
- "McCain we're ready to fight, where the hell are you?"
- "Nothing wrong with McCain/Palin being inline with KKK mentality because they are white like most of us."
- "We just want McCain to embrace and magnify our anger."
- "The United States is the most important country in the world, and cannot afford an Obama presidency."
- "I feel it is a sad day for all veterans. I thought we finally had found a fighter."
- "there's nothing about obama that doesn't scare me, wtf?"
- "I think I am going to go cling to my FN-FAL."
- "I'm voting for Palin."
- "Let's hope Sarah pulls him to the back of the plane over the weekend and smacks some sense into him."
- "This is what happens when we let the country club "compassionate" conservatives control the republican party."
- "Palin/SomeOldGuy '08"
- "he should not have said that."
- "BHO SCARES THE SHIT OUTTA' ME. He's a freakin' commie who plans on fucking up this nation"
- "I don't care what McCain says. . . Maybe I don't "have to" be scared of Obama as President, but I am anyway."
- "The tree of liberty..."
no subject
Date: 2008-10-11 05:27 pm (UTC)He's also still running the ads that play up the Ayers connection, and I doubt that Palin will tone down her hateful rhetoric, since it's just about the only thing she's good at. McCain's show of "decency" was just a calculated sound bite to take some of the pressure off in the media.
There's a Simpsons episode where Homer gets a saltwater lobster and puts it in his aquarium with a freshwater fish, then gets a box of salt and adds a little bit at a time until both of them are just barely clinging to life, and walks away whistling happily. That's what McCain reminds me of right now. Thanks to some massively poor campaign decisions early on, he has a very tenuous hold on both the extremists and the moderates, and his latest antics are just him adding a tiny bit of salt to try to stop the hemorrhaging.
Anonymous Blog Reader #127
Still...
Date: 2008-10-11 05:55 pm (UTC)When was the last time you saw conservative protesters in black masks?
When was the last time you saw Obama expressing righteous dismay over the statements and activities of MoveOn or repudiating the evil that permeates comment threads on the Daily Kos?
And did any Republican protesters sneak into the Democratic National Convention and attempt to disrupt it? If so, I didn't notice them.
Hell, most of the people trying to disrupt BOTH conventions were anarchists and communists.
. png
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-11 06:28 pm (UTC)And the lesson I learned as a child at my mother's metaphorical knee still holds true: two wrongs do not, in fact, make a right. That some people act like jackasses in the name of the Democratic Party doesn't make the jackassery of Republican supporters less relevant, or less worthy of comment. A personal blog isn't required to maintain any sort of "fair and balanced" ratio of "liberal/conservative" criticism; Elf writes about whatever interests him. This did.
Besides, the point I took from this wasn't that "TEH CONSURVATIVS ARR TEH EBIL!!!!11!", but that John McCain's attempt at being a decent person were rejected by his own supporters... in large part because it flies in the face of the very strategy the McCain/Palin campaign has been using up to this point.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 12:08 am (UTC)Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-11 06:35 pm (UTC)Which is why they hire police to find something on them and arrest them before the convention. (http://dncrnc.wordpress.com/2008/09/05/anti-war-protesters-arrested-before-mccain-speech/)
When was the last time you saw conservative protesters in black masks?
Well, considering how safe it's become for people to protest anything in this country, it probably won't take long. (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/10/07/AR2008100703245.html)
When was the last time you saw Obama expressing righteous dismay over the statements and activities of MoveOn or repudiating the evil that permeates comment threads on the Daily Kos?
He gave up. It's kind of redundant to complain about such things when your opponent REALLY IS guilty of the things you're simply accusing him of. (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/27057346#27057346)
And did any Republican protesters sneak into the Democratic National Convention and attempt to disrupt it? If so, I didn't notice them.
No, but if they did, I doubt they've have been beaten. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Republican_National_Convention_protest_activity#Protest_from_within_the_convention)
Why did they even have to sneak in? Isn't this America? Aren't we supposed to be able to see and say what we like before the respective candidates? Shouldn't we be permitted to hold up a sign that says, "Bush Lied, My Son Died" at a convention in a public venue? "Sneaking in" presumes they were otherwise forbidden.
Why?
Hell, most of the people trying to disrupt BOTH conventions were anarchists and communists.
Really? Why not take that as a sign of a problem, instead of trying to beat it down with a truncheon?
See, anarchists are nothing but punk kids-grown up or otherwise-who are just looking to piss in somebody's cornflakes. They're the physical representation of /b/ from 4chan.org, and about as intelligent. As such, they're only attracted to places where they know they can tweak someone.
If our society has become so attractive to these people, and they feel that they can find fertile ground for trolling ANY SIDE of the argument, then our nation is in desperate trouble.
Silencing the voice of an asshole is the best way to give it legitimacy.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-11 07:36 pm (UTC)No, not at the Republican National Convention. Or the Democratic National Convention. Or the Vulcan National Convention. These are (surprise!) private events, paid for with private funds, in which the parties themselves, in the forms of their members, duly vetted by other members of the party, get together to decide who among them will be put forward to the public.
The renters of the halls get to decide who goes in and who goes out. It amazes me to this day that nobody understands this: the Republican and Democratic parties are not government entities. They're private institutions which people of like mind join to reap the benefits of aggregate political (rather than governmental) power.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-11 08:44 pm (UTC)I'll just show that Clownhall commenter #5 seems to prefer his masks white and pointy.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 01:36 am (UTC)The Klan was the militant wing of the Democratic Party. The Republican Party was, you know, "the party of Lincoln."
Republicans-- proper Republicans-- oppose the enslavement of blacks by whites and the enslavement of the rich by the poor. They believe that the proper role of government is to protect our freedom, not to force some people to work for the benefit of others.
There are certainly many improper Republicans, including the demonstrators McCain was trying to talk down, but most Republicans are pretty well behaved and the Republican Party just doesn't have as much of a militant faction as the Democratic Party has had for decades now. Fortunately, most communists are as dysfunctional as their philosophy.
. png
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 03:30 am (UTC)Since you seem to be fond of hitting the easy targets, I'm going to lay a challenge upon you that I laid upon another "conservative", and they have yet to get back to me. They're still out there, spouting the party line, but they weren't able to answer my challenge.
Perhaps you might be different?
Find me a "liberal" commentator out there in the Mainstream Media that is calling for people to
kill, maim, execute, torture and/or burn at the stakedo anything illegal to conservatives.C'mon. One! Just one! Don't reach for the peanut jar, either, so that eliminates Earth First, PETA, and Michael Moore, as well as the rest of the whackjobs. Same thing for Geraldo and Jerry Springer, they're tabloid pushers. And no has-beens that died more than five years ago. (God, if we used that rule more often, we'd never hear of You-Know-Who-From-Germany and have no need for Godwin's Law.) Find me someone that's mainstream, like Keith Olbermann, or...uhmmm...hmmmm. Wow. There really aren't that many out there, are there? Oh well, I'm sure you can find one.
So yeah. Just one, main-stream, nightly news reporter, commentator, spokesperson, talk-show host or other big-name person who is generally accepted to be a "liberal", who has, at any time in their professional career, called upon the general public and/or their viewers, listeners, readers, to actively go out and harm another human being based upon their religious or political ideology.
One! You only have to find one, so it can't be too hard?
I mean, there's so very many conservatives who are calling upon people to commit acts of violence upon liberals? Bill O'Riley for one. Sean Hannity, there's a decent example. Ooooh, Anne Coulter! Ooooh, wow, she's a rich choice? Debates with liberals should be done at the end of a baseball bat, eh? Or Rush Limbaugh? How could we forget-or miss-his largess of preaching violence against the Liberal Left? And hey, let's take a look at conservative religious figures! Gosh, too many to name...okay, howabout people who bomb abortion clinics? Naaaah, can't use those, you'd counter with people who assault animal researchers. They're BOTH criminals of course, but just as with the "alleged assassins", its not criminal behaviour when Republicans do it.
Anyway, there's a WEALTH of conservatives who've actively called for human beings to harm other human beings because of their political and religious views. And hey? It's been nearly two weeks since I laid this challenge upon my previous opponent, and WOW, have things ever changed! I mean, look at the slavering crowds around McCain and Palin! Whoo! Some premium, Grade-A hatred there! Still, it can't be all that hard? After all, we liberals are overrunning the whole world, right?
So find me one "liberal" who advocated we do the same to conservatives.
It should be easy? I mean hey?
Your Guy, the J-Man was a pacifist and certainly not the attack-dog type, y'know? And boy oh boy, but people suuuuuure have been having a reeeeeaaly hard time trying to actually...y'know...be like J. and not be mean to each other.
To be fair, I don't know if you're the religious type. My previous opponent was, and often used their faith as a strawman, a logical fallacy cannon and a logic shelter. I'll give you the benefit of a doubt.With all those people trying so hard to be the way Jesus wanted us to be and failing hard, there's gonna be at least ONE big name jerk out there who's not turning the other cheek and giving as good as they get.
C'mon. Just one.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 04:19 am (UTC)The situation here is simple:
You don't consider the "whackjobs" to be liberals in the same sense that you think of yourself as a liberal. They don't believe in the things you believe in, so you say they don't count. I agree, they don't. They don't speak for you, and you're not responsible for what they say.
But you don't realize that responsible conservatives feel the same way about the right-wing commentators you mention. They're "whackjobs" as much as Michael Moore or PETA or Earth First.
You can't see the difference because you're too far away. You don't understand, you don't identify, you don't care. You see that Bill O'Reilly supports McCain over Obama, so you suppose that John McCain and O'Reilly have basically the same opinions. Well, they don't.
And on top of that, of course, you're willing to dismiss as mere rhetoric the more extreme statements from liberals, but you take a much sterner position regarding anything you hear from conservatives.
It all adds up to a serious disconnect from reality.
I'm not picking on you personally. Most people are seriously disconnected from reality. Anyone who believes that either McCain or Obama is a solution to any known problem is having THIS problem.
Civilization only has one enemy. Unfortunately, as Walt Kelly pointed out, we have met the enemy, and he is us.
. png
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 07:11 am (UTC)The Faustian bargain the fiscal conservatives made with the social conservatives has destroyed the soul of the Republican party, and it's my sincere hope that their crushing defeat in both branches of government this year will cause that unholy alliance to crumble and maybe allow some new party, whether a new incarnation of responsible Republicans, or something else entirely, to fill the vacuum.
Anonymous Blog Reader #127
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 02:05 pm (UTC)My reality is that the conservatives that you, as a conservative, called "whackjobs", are vipers in your own bed. Not just in your own home, but in your bed!
And what's MORE, is that you allow them to stand on the highest mountains in the nation and spout their hate as if it were Canon. Maybe you, personally, don't "allow" it, and speak out at every opportunity, for which I'd applaud you if you did. But I don't know your writing or your past? All I know is that I did my best to remove stumbling blocks to your assigned task. I tried to remove the easy ones that are easily dismissed, because just like the others here fell into the trap of calling the KKK "conservatives", YOU fell into the tarbaby of complaining about my narrowing the field.
No, excuse me, you plunged headlong into the tarbaby's chest and wrapped your arms around it, wearing it like a second skin.
I asked you to find someone MAINSTREAM.
MAINSTREAM. ON THE TELEVISION. ON THE RADIO. IN THE NEWSPAPERS. IN NATIONALLY SYNDICATED MAGAZINES.
In the public eye.
And you failed.
Just like all the other so-called "conservatives" I've laid this challenge upon.
I'm not picking on you personally.
No, you're standing on the mountain, looking down upon me and everyone else who is "disconnected from reality". Of the two, I'd rather be picked on. At least then I'd be under the delusion that you cared about your fellow humanity?
Instead, you come across as Wobbly Headed Bob. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wobbly-Headed_Bob)
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 06:46 pm (UTC)As for my failure to meet your challenge-- oh noes! I has fail.
But really, your challenge, shorter, was: "Nobody who advocates violence is a mainstream liberal. Now, please name a mainstream liberal who advocates violence."
That's the fail right there.
If William Ayers isn't a mainstream liberal, who is? A distinguished professor with widely supported plans for social reform, a citizen of the year in Chicago. I think it's pretty clear he and Obama have no "relationship" and even if they did, it wouldn't be exceptionally relevant to the election. There are hundreds of 60s radicals around.
But Ayers is relevant to this discussion because he continues to maintain that setting bombs in public buildings was an appropriate response to the war in Vietnam. Given that liberals regard the war in Iraq in much the same terms today, this is a threat of future violence, just like the statements of conservative commentators that attempts to deprive the American people of their freedom may legitimately be met with violence.
But in reading that, I suspect you will suffer from a semantic disconnect. You don't understand the difference between threatening violence to influence policy and threatening violence to resist oppression. That's the difference between being a terrorist and being a freedom fighter.
You want liberals to be given a free pass for threatening the oppression itself-- which Obama himself does, make no mistake-- but I won't fall for that.
Just to be clear, I'm not a Republican, or a Republican-style conservative, or a Christian. I don't like the Bush administration or support the war in Iraq. But I know the difference between freedom and oppression, and I see that difference in the platforms of the two major parties. It's a darn slim difference these days, but as long as it exists, I think it's worth pointing out.
. png
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 10:45 pm (UTC)Wow, you're good. Wrapping a logical fallacy with a strawman! Nice. Not going to work, though.
As for Bill Ayers? Please. Nobody in this generation ever HEARD of Bill Ayers before Karl Rove resurrected him from the Tomb Of Irrelevance. I GREW UP in the 70's, and I never heard of him. Who cares what he continues to maintain, he would have stayed in the tomb if someone hadn't been playing Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon.
Ultimately, there are no mainstream liberals advocating violence. None. Yet we have them in spades on the conservative side, calling for blood, violence and bloody violence at every turn. Their fanbase is stoked for a lynching at the slightest provocation, and they're going to find some way to justify it.
And on the off-chance that someone like Keith Olbermann finally has enough and says one eeeety-beeeety leetle thing about maybe giving conservatives an ugly look for once, he'll be set on fire and strung up from a bridge somewhere. Metaphorically speaking.
I mean, dude! LOOK at these people! JUST LOOK!!
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 11:24 pm (UTC)Yes, John McCain has expressed his willingness to do that too. I disapprove; I'm certainly not going to vote for him.
It distresses me no end that both major parties find this to be an effective political strategy.
It's a terrible economic strategy, of course. It's bad enough when the government is used to create a separate system for redistributing wealth based on political power, and we're just now being reminded how much worse it can get when political pressure distorts the economy itself.
But it keeps coming back at us, no matter how clear the historical lessons. The 20th century proved, yet again, that the correlation between freedom and prosperity is oh-point-nine-something, yet politicians continue to assert that just the right kind and amount of oppression will lead to even better results, and voters continue to fall for it.
. png
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-13 02:47 am (UTC)Let me cut the baloney and get straight to the question: CAN YOU PRODUCE A MAINSTREAM LIBERAL THAT HAS THE PUBLIC EYE/EAR, WHO HAS AT ANY TIME WITHIN THEIR PROFESSIONAL CAREER WITHIN THIS DECADE, CALLED UPON THEIR FELLOW HUMAN BEINGS TO VISIT HARM UPON OTHER HUMAN BEINGS ON THE BASIS OF RELIGION, POLITICS, SEX, RACE, NATIONALITY OR SEXUAL ORIENTATION?
Yes? Then who.
No? Endgame.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-13 06:55 pm (UTC)So, taxes are violence, and the basis of "modern liberalism" (whatever ideological edifice you particularly have in mind by that phrase).
In my view, it isn't that "taxation is theft", or that "taxation is violence", but, rather, "taxation is the honoring of the social contract." What social contract, you ask? Why the one implicit in being (a) a citizen, and (b) a member of society. You get all sorts of benefits from (a) and (b), and it is only equitable that you contribute to help fund those benefits. "But, I don't want to!" you say? Well, you are certainly free to lobby for change in our system, or go to a system more to your liking.
From an intellectual perspective, I'd dearly love it if a sizable population of Anarcho-Capitalist Libertarians found a good-sized island somewhere, and started up a community created along Libertarian ideals. It would be very interesting to see what came of that.
Personally, I don't think Libertarianism is workable without (a) a low population density coupled with an environment where "living off the land" is practical, or (b) a high enough technological level such that each person is fully, completely self-sufficient... that is, a Post-Scarcity economy.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-13 10:45 pm (UTC)I would say, however, that I distinguish between the "social contract" argument for taxation and all the rest of the taxation that gets built on top of that in order to buy votes and pursue other political goals.
I support taxation for the purpose of providing the things that any society ought to have-- a representative government, courts, police forces, military services, foreign relations, and even some things not generally included in libertarian versions of this list, such as education and safety-net levels of social services including medical care, disability coverage, and retirement funding. (Though wherever possible, the "taxes" would actually be implemented in mandatory participation in private programs based on a percentage of income, where the government picks up the difference between an individual's ability to pay and the actual cost of the service.)
In fact, I'm okay with any government service as long as it can be clearly demonstrated that providing the service is cheaper than not providing the service. (Though again, if a service can be provided privately under a government mandate, that's how I'd rather see it implemented.) But let's just say I'd be very, very skeptical of such claims.
The practical difference between my somewhat optimized minarchism (optarchism?) and what modern liberals are pursuing is huge. The cost of government in the US is huge, something north of $5 trillion per year, but I can't imagine how more than about a trillion of that could be attributed to any kind of social contract.
Most of the difference is just theft for political purposes-- buying votes with undeserved privileges, authority, goods, and services.
What's left is waste-- private jobs required merely to ensure compliance with government regulations, government jobs that serve no useful purpose, goods and services bought but never properly used, like bridges to nowhere. (But much of the waste serves a political purpose too... favoritism, empire building, featherbedding, etc.)
We seem to agree about the impracticality of anarcho-capitalism. But we don't have to choose between that and socialism or fascism, either.
. png
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-14 12:06 am (UTC)It seems we're all arguing over where to set the thresholds for level of regulation or the ratio of State vs. private control of "the means of production." That said, I don't think it is at all productive to call our current thresholds "theft" or "violence." We all want "optarchism"... we just disagree as to what constitutes "optimal", and the criteria to be used for determining that optimal point. By any reasonable (IMO) use of those terms, what we have in the United States is neither "socialism" nor "fascism".
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-14 12:45 am (UTC)Certainly any socialist from the 1930s would be well pleased to hear that over 40% of the US economy is routed through the government, and simultaneously angered by the degree to which business interests influence the decisions of the government.
If I may ask-- why do you prefer a system that can't be realized in any existing human society?
. png
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-14 01:26 am (UTC)Yeah, I get that. IMO, you're misusing those terms... but the last thing I'm interested in doing is engaging in a protracted argument over semantics. Let's just agree to disagree on this.
"If I may ask-- why do you prefer a system that can't be realized in any existing human society?"
I'm a fan of political / economic systems based on post-Scarcity economies. It doesn't bother me that such systems are currently unrealizable; I see this as a direction we should move towards, rather than a goal we can easily reach today.
Frankly, what I see today in terms of economic / political systems is a thin veneer of civilization over the basest of primate instincts. I think we can do better. I think we should work towards the sort of world seen in Iain M. Banks' "Culture", or Elf's "Pendor"... a world where no sentient being need fear starvation, or homelessness, or a lack of medical care or education, or even death.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 04:02 am (UTC)The Republican party today is showing signs of becoming a sect of Christianity (http://iowaindependent.com/6901/john-mccain-davenport-liveblog), with goals parallel to those of the current crop of white supremacist Christianist groups in this country. That's why the example above is so telling. It's right there, in front of your nose.
But, sigh, as Orwell once wrote, "To see what is in front of one's nose needs a constant struggle."
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 04:12 am (UTC)The Klan was *never* the militant wing of the Democratic Party. It was started right after the Civil War by some Confederates who were angry about the Civil War, the loss of White Supremacy, black people having freedom, carpetbaggers, etc, etc. The Klan has always served its own interest...the supremacy of the white race...and will help or hinder whatever political entity happens to be lying around at the time that is for or against that interest.
I'm sure you can explain to me how you can claim that communists can be Democratic activists and the Klan can be the "militant wing of the Democratic party" when the Klan had no problems trying to kill Communists holding peace rallies.
Sorry, no.
Date: 2008-10-12 04:28 am (UTC)And as I said, the essence of the Republican Party, then and now, is directly opposed to everything that the Klan stands for.
The conflicts among Nazis, communists, and militant religionists are really just sectarian violence under the larger umbrella of collectivism.
. png
Re: Sorry, no.
Date: 2008-10-12 05:07 am (UTC)It really no longer matters what you think "The Republican Party" ought to be. The party is made up of individuals, not bows to history. The most active bulk of which, the part which sets the reputation of the party in the minds of the rest of us, would be perfectly happy to see a collectivist sectarian vision of some kind running this country-- and after that's happened they'll start fighting about which one. In the meantime, they've wrecked the Republican brand, and the Conservative brand is having a hard time budding off it.
I agree with you that the Democratic interests in the South, and the Klan, were certainly running along parallel lines and colluded more often than in in the post-bellum South. But that doesn't really matter now, 93 years after the collapse of that Klan.
What matters now is that not only are the Republicans essentially as vicious a collection of collectivists and class warriors as the Democrats have ever been, but both groups now have more moral standing than Grover Norquist's night watchman state (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night_watchman_state), thanks to the manifest failure of the regulatory system (http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/53802.html) to do its first and principal duty, describe and protect the private property of its citizens.
Re: Sorry, no.
Date: 2008-10-12 05:24 am (UTC)That means you're doing your fellow human beings a disservice in most of your writings about this election.
. png
Sorry, yes
Date: 2008-10-12 02:54 pm (UTC)Re: Sorry, yes
Date: 2008-10-12 06:49 pm (UTC)If Elf owes anything to anyone in this sense, it's only to himself. He'll make up his own mind about that. He doesn't need you to rush in and remind him of his free will.
. png
Re: Sorry, yes
Date: 2008-10-13 02:28 am (UTC)I'm flattered!
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-11 08:49 pm (UTC)You mean, besides the idiot right wing white supremacists who went to Denver with high-powered rifles, fake IDs and disguises with the express intention of assassinating Obama during his acceptance speech and rented a room within rifle range with a view of the stage? Those Republican protestors? The ones who weren't charged with anything besides meth possession (I did say they were idiots) because the Bush-appointed US Attorney, after grabbing the case from the local authorities, refused to press charges of trying to assassinate Obama because they "weren't a credible threat"?
Seriously, if you do an honest compare/contrast between Dem and Pub, both politicians and supporters, there *is* material for comparison, but in large part that honest comparison will find that it's Democratic acorns vs. the mighty Republican oak tree in terms of dangerously destructive and inflammatory rhetoric.
You might find it interesting to do a search on how many pundits advocate violence against the left as opposed to how many advocate (equal) violence against the right. (For the record, I don't think it's fair to consider something from Rush Limbaugh or Ann Coulter as having the same weight as an anonymous comment left on an obscure diary post on the dailykos website.)
There's a reason Kathleen Parker, a longtime conservative columnist, was so shocked when she ended up on the receiving end of the bile and vitriol the rightwing base spews on a regular basis after publishing a column observing that Palin isn't qualified for VP--she's been publishing equally negative stuff about the left for years, but this was the first time she'd been so vilified.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 01:38 am (UTC)Anyway, those idiots were socialists-- National Socialists. Nazism has nothing to do with Republican or conservative politics.
. png
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-11 09:47 pm (UTC)I thought they wore white hoods?
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-11 11:27 pm (UTC)Since when has MoveOn ever done anything to cause dismay to any thinking person?
Republican protesters tried and, largely, failed to sneak into Democratic conventions across the country, because they were too dumb to get past Democrat security.
What's wrong with anarchists and communists anyway? Most of the one i know are great people, much more loving, supportive, and yes, even god-fearing, than those supporting the Republican party at the rally being discussed here.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 03:37 am (UTC)I think you know that's way over the line. That's like trying to say that the KKK are Republican Activists. You and I both know that they are the fringe element of the right, just like the anarchist groups are the fringe element of the left and actually despised by most Democratic activists for their violent actions.
As for Republicans not showing up at the Democratic Convention, you already know that (1) fringe elements most certainly did, and (2) they were turned away in the same manner that the fringe elements were turned away at the Republican Convention...by heavy-handed SWAT teams of the Denver Police that then celebrated this with t-shirts (which Elf mentioned in an earlier blog post).
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 05:43 pm (UTC)Just find one person acting like this asshole (http://www.americablog.com/2008/10/man-holds-up-obama-monkey-doll-at-palin.html) at an Obama or Biden rally. Just one. I dare you. And don't tell me about "liberal media," because you know as well as I do that Fox would be all over it like flies on shit.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 06:52 pm (UTC)What's the weather like on your planet?
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Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 07:34 pm (UTC)Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-12 07:35 pm (UTC)There are assholes everywhere.
Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-13 03:03 am (UTC)Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-13 02:41 am (UTC)Re: Still...
Date: 2008-10-13 04:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-11 07:58 pm (UTC)"We never said that death should be used," said the people who had called him a traitor, pasted posters of Rabin in Nazi uniforms with swastikas, and otherwise delegitimized his entire political party.
I am not impressed with McCain's dog-whistle "calm down" message. That's not how you calm people down, that's how you put the finishing tones on whipping them up into a frenzy.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 01:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 11:46 am (UTC)Woman, saying she can't trust Obama: "he's an Arab"
McCain: "no, he's a decent family man"
Good for McCain to say her assertion about Obma being an arab was incorrect, but there is a basic preconception there that needs addressing:
Isn't it possible to be both? I hope so, 'cuz there are a few hundred million of 'em out there, and i hope they're decent family people.
The media is at least partly complicit in this as well, calling the various swift-boat like adds that suggest Obama is an arab or a muslim "smears".
If we replaced "muslim" or "arab" with, say... "jew", the resulting national and media dialogue would address not just an assertion that wasn't factual, but the underlying bigotry behind it. I've heard them talk about this point yesterday on "On The Media", but not anywhere else.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 09:12 pm (UTC)You're surprised about these comments?
Really... I mean, this is really the mindset that the Republican party has represented for... a long time.