Home » Posts tagged with » america (Page 190)
Maher: ‘Governing This Country With Republicans is Like Rooming With a Meth Addict’

Click here to view this media Bill Maher took a shot at Republicans in his New Rules segment for showing us that they have absolutely no interest in governing and instead just trying to whip their base up into a frenzy fear mongering over the latest faux outrage of the day. MAHER: New Rule – Fantasies are for sex, not public policy. When you go down the list of useless distractions that make up the Republican Party agenda; public unions and Sharia law, anchor babies and a mosque at ground zero, ACORN and National Public Radio, the war on Christmas, the New Black Panthers, Planned Parenthood, Michelle Obama’s war on desserts… …you realize that one reason nothing gets done in America is that one of the political parties puts so much more into fantasy problems. Governing this country with Republicans is like rooming with a meth addict. You want to address real life problems like when the rent is due and they’re saying “How can you even think of that stuff when there’s police scanner voices coming out of the air conditioning unit?”

Continue reading …
Maher: ‘Every Black Person Scares Republicans Unless They Look Like Urkel, Talk Like Colin Powell and Wear Bill Cosby Sweaters’

Bill Maher went on a hate-filled rant about Republicans Friday night because the GOP in his view are too interested in “useless distractions” like public unions, ACORN, NPR and Planned Parenthood. After telling his “Real Time” audience, “Governing this country with Republicans is like rooming with a meth addict,” he dubbed the entire Party as racist saying, “Every black person scares you unless they look like Urkel, talk like Colin Powell and wear Bill Cosby sweaters” (video follows with transcript and commentary): BILL MAHER: New Rule: Fantasies are for sex, not public policy. When you go down the list of useless distractions that make up the Republican Party agenda – public unions and Sharia law, anchor babies and a mosque at Ground Zero, ACORN and National Public Radio, the war on Christmas, the New Black Panthers, Planned Parenthood, Michelle Obama’s war on dessert. Oh for Christ’s sake, she’s just trying to get you to eat a carrot not stick it up your ass! – you realize that one reason nothing gets done in America is that one of the political parties puts so much more into fantasy problems than real ones. Governing this country with Republicans is like rooming with a meth addict. You want to address real life problems like when the rent is do, and they’re saying, “How can you even think of that stuff when there’s police scanner voices coming out of the air conditioning unit?” What's really hysterical is that Maher later depicted a “real problem” facing the nation is climate change, but it's certainly not surprising this idiot has problems separating fantasy from reality: MAHER: Do you know what Republicans in Congress were working on this week? Two gym teachers named Sen. James Inhofe (R-Ok.) and Rep. Steve King (R-Ia.) introduced a bill that would require that all government functions be conducted in English, because you let someone down at the DMV say “Si” instead of “Yes,” the next thing you know George Lopez is hosting the “Tonight Show.” In Oklahoma, the voters there banned Sharia law, which is the strict religious law in the Koran, and who could blame them what with their Muslim population rapidly approaching zero. The falsehoods on display here were almost breathtaking. A Rasmussen poll taken last May found 87 percent of Americans favor English being declared our official language. One in August found 58 percent of respondents support English-only ballots. As such, Inhofe and King are with the majority of Americans, and Maher is once again with the minority. As for Oklahoma's Muslim population “rapidly approaching zero,” almost one percent of that state is a member of that religion. The Islamic Society of Oklahoma City gives a breakdown of Muslims in that region, as well as directions to the city's mosques, while proudly declaring, “Islam is the fastest growing religion in the United States. Every four years there are more than double the amount of Muslims living in the U.S.” As such, and not at all surprisingly, Maher was totally clueless of the facts on these two issues. Potentially more comical, the so-called comedian just last Friday called the Koran “a hate-filled book” while charging “the threat potentially from radicalized Muslims is a unique and greater threat” than from “right-wing militias and Timothy McVeigh types.” Now, just seven days later, he's defending this religion while castigating those trying to protect themselves from its radical elements. Alas, that's standard operational procedure for Maher. Facts and positions are tools to be twisted and manipulated in order to support those he agrees with, attack those he doesn't, and advance an agenda shared by a minority of Americans. But he wasn't done: MAHER: And how can you explain the fixation with ACORN and voter fraud? Republicans are obsessed with people cooking up wild, non-existent schemes to vote ignoring one important truth: this is America – no one wants to vote. What’s next – jury duty fraud? Washing the dishes fraud? I mean, the things that these people get exorcised about. I guess Maher was out of the country for all the Democrat claims of voter fraud in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections. To suggest such accusations only come from the Right is akin to claiming only conservatives use violent rhetoric. Oh, that's right. Maher's guilty of that as well. Conveniently, this led to the portion of the program when Maher, apparently by contract, had to take a swipe at the former governor of Alaska: MAHER: Sarah Palin is one of those leading the charge to get rid of Planned Parenthood because there’s two things Sarah Palin is not interested in: it’s planning and parenthood. [Laughter and applause] And then there’s the New Black Panthers. Look, Republicans, I know this picture from Election Day 2008 scared you. If these guys weren’t trying to intimidate voters, why did they show up to that polling place deliberately black? And now it’s two years later, and that picture still scares you. Look, that guy who drove up from Orange County just ran out. Actually, it wasn't the color of their skin that frightened people away from that polling station. It was the nightsticks in their hands! But Maher and his racist ilk don't think weapons at a polling place are at all concerning as long as those wielding them are voting for Democrats. MAHER: But, it’s time you understood something: every black person scares you unless they look like Urkel, talk like Colin Powell and wear Bill Cosby sweaters, you fill your adult diaper. But here’s the thing, there are real problems: climate change, loose nukes, debt, infrastructure, the wealth gap, our addiction to oil from weird distant places run by monsters that want us dead – like Alaska. But NPR is not a problem. National Public Radio isn’t corrupting anyone and I’ll tell you why: because the simple-minded sheep who take orders from the radio are all taken. The simple-minded sheep are all taken? If only that were true, for if it were, his show would have been canceled years ago for having zero ratings.

Continue reading …
Michael Lewis’ Prophetic 1989 Japan Disaster Piece

Months before publishing 1989′s Liar’s Poker, the canonical account of life inside 1980s Wall Street, Michael Lewis, author of The Big Short, wrote an article on the prospect of Japan being rocked by a large-scale earthquake — and what it would mean for the global economy. Now, less than a week after a record 8.9 magnitude earthquake left thousands dead, half a million homeless, and economists scrambling to decipher the consequences, Lewis’ hunch appears disturbingly prophetic. The article, entitled “How a Tokyo Earthquake Could Devastate Wall Street and the World Economy” and appearing in now-defunct Manhattan Inc., contended not only that a large-scale Japanese earthquake was inevitable — “A big quake has hit Tokyo roughly every 70 years for four centuries,” he wrote — but that the Japanese government wasn’t taking adequate precautions against such a prospect. This decision, he believed, would have disastrous global consequences. Lewis depicted the Japanese government’s decision to quietly relax “formerly-strict building codes” as a mistake. “Everyone in Tokyo knows there’s going to be a big earthquake,” Lewis wrote at the time. “It’s only a matter of when.” He then discusses the effect a Japanese earthquake could have abroad, looking closely at a report by Tokai Bank on the economic consequences of a substantial earthquake. “The narrow message,” Lewis said, “is that the financial consequences of a Tokyo earthquake will be felt primarily outside Japan.” Contrary to Lewis’ prediction twenty years ago, U.S. policymakers have assured the public that the disaster will not slow America’s recovery in any meaningful way. A volatile stock market indicates the sentiment isn’t unanimous. Lewis’ article ends on this chilling note: Today, when foreign journalists stumble into MITI and demand to know what will be done about Japan’s trade surpluses, they sometimes get this strange answer: ‘When the earthquake comes, the trade surplus will go away.’ The good news from Oda is that it’s probably true. The bad new is that we’ll wish it wasn’t. You can read the entire article here. (h/t Kottke.org)

Continue reading …
Ann Coulter: Radiation Is ‘Good For You’ (VIDEO)

Ann Coulter appeared on Thursday’s “O’Reilly Factor” to advance an argument that she made in a column this week: that radiation is “good for you.” There has been a high degree of concern about the levels of radiation being released into the environment due to the crisis at the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan. But, in a column called “A Glowing Report On Radiation,” Coulter said that many scientists have been studying the effects of radiation and have found that, as she put it,” at some level–much higher than the minimums set by the U.S. government–radiation is good for you,” and actually reduced the risk of cancer. She repeated this assertion to a skeptical Bill O’Reilly, who told her that, even if there was scientific discussion going on about the effects of radiation, it was the media’s job to be “responsible” and “err on the side of caution” about radiation. “You have to report the worst-case scenario,” he said, adding that there is a clear scientific consensus that “some radiation will kill you.” Coulter said she disagreed, and said that the scientific consensus has changed, but that the media are not reporting it. “So by your account we should all be heading towards the nuclear reactor,” O’Reilly said. WATCH:

Continue reading …
Conservatives: We Are Being Outworked And Out-Organized In Wisconsin Recall Campaigns

WASHINGTON — Both national and Wisconsin-based Republican operatives tell the Huffington Post the party is being dramatically outworked and out-organized by Democrats in the recall campaigns being launched against state Senators. The operatives, who raised their concerns out of hope it would jar the GOP into assertiveness, argue complacency has taken over after Governor Scott Walker successfully shepherded his anti-collective bargaining bill into law. While the Wisconsin Democratic Party, with major assists from progressive groups and unions, has harnessed resentment towards the governor into a full-throttled effort to recall eight GOP Senators, neither the enthusiasm nor organizational acumen exists on the Republican side of the aisle. “It’s clear that Democrats and liberal organizations are engaging in an attempt to make recall more than a mere hypothetical possibility for some Wisconsin Republicans,” said Liz Mair, Vice President of Hynes Communications and former RNC Online Communications Director, who has followed closely the work of conservative groups in Wisconsin. “Even though Governor Walker acted to end the impasse, Republicans and conservatives should not be acting like this is done and dusted.” A conservative activist working inside the state on recall efforts was even more explicitly distraught. The Wisconsin Republican Party, the operative said, was not lending resources to the recall campaign groups had launched against Democratic Senators, in turn causing those groups to narrow their target list down from eight lawmakers to just three. “It would be nice if the Republican Party, operatives, etc, would step in with a little money,” said the activist, who asked to remain nameless lest he draw the GOP even further away from the recall effort. “But they are talking about doing radio and I’m not sure that gets you signatures.” “Sure, the first battle was won with the passing of the bill,” the activist added, “but the war is not won. If they come in and recall some of those state senators and none of the Democrats get knocked out, that’s not good for the republicans at all…it is a bit of a mystery to me. You would think they would want to make sure all these [recall] efforts are successful.” The data bears out the notion of a disparity. Reid Magney, a spokesman for the non-partisan Wisconsin Government Accountability Board, described the recall efforts by Democrats against Republican state Senators as more organized than their counterparts. Whereas GOP-run recalls registered at different times and originated from a random spattering of groups–a Utah-based conservative organization was forced to find a partner inside Wisconsin to make its petitions legally acceptable–all of the Democratic activity has run through the state party. “The recalls of Republicans [launched by Democrats] all came in on the same day, they are all organized by the same people, which is the Democratic party of Wisconsin. It’s not on the docs but it doesn’t have to be. The PO box is all the same,” said Magney. “The state GOP is not involved in the same way.” The funding differences, it appears, are even more drastic than the organizational. While Mair pleaded for conservative groups to “raise and spend money in order ensure that those who pushed reform through aren’t turfed out,” Democratic organizations claim to be swimming in a historic pool of funds. Democracy for America, the group started by Howard Dean following his failed 2004 election, said it has raised nearly $800,000 to run ads and help with the recall campaign, which communications director Levana Layendecker described as “unprecedented for a non-election year issue.” In addition, 2,500 volunteers have signed up with DFA to help gather signatures. The group, with 25,000 members in Wisconsin alone, expects that number to only grow. The Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which has nearly 25,000 Wisconsin members its mobilizing as well, is pouring massive resources into an ad campaign to keep momentum behind the recall efforts. Their efforts include a new spot focusing on three GOP state senators (Alberta Darling, Dan Kapanke and Randy Hopper). Union groups, while legally prohibited from working with the Democratic Party on the recount, have still pushed to keep the issue front and center, as have a host of other progressive institutions. “I think that the governor really did wake a sleeping giant,” said Justin Ruben, Executive Director of MoveOn.org. “People feel that what happened was not just a horrible attack but the courage of regular people standing up and getting in the way. That was what electrified folks. It was the first time we had seen anything like that.”

Continue reading …

Stop Juan Crow

No Comment

Several House Democrats spoke at a rally this week in front of the Alabama legislature in opposition to HB 56, an immigration-enforcement bill patterned after Arizona’s “papers please” law. They linked their own historical struggle for civil rights in Alabama to the battle being waged over immigration. As I watched, it occurred to me that Alabama might be the first state where local history provides a focus for opposition to the tea-fueled wave of pandering state immigration bills. This took place just blocks from the Civil Rights Museum and the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church: Like much of America, Alabama is seeing an intense campaign by a new Republican majority to destroy teachers’ unions and public pensions. In the second week of the session, Alabama’s Republican House majority pushed hard to eliminate the state’s Delayed Retirement Option Plan (DROP), calling it a “Cadillac pension.” Democrats defended the program as vital to keeping qualified and experienced teachers and public servants. Here is House Minority Leader Craig Ford delivering his opening remarks to the debate: Republicans rebuffed all attempts to modify the DROP program and put it on a fiscally-sound footing, repeatedly claiming the program would have to end or else the state would be forced to lay off 780 teachers. (Sound familiar?) Here’s Lynn Greer describing the Republican version of reality: While the DROP program does include such highly-remunerated figures as our famous college football coaches, thousands of teachers and state employees have enrolled in DROP since its inception. The Republican attack on DROP is widely seen as political payback against the Retirement Systems of Alabama and the Alabama Education Association, whose leadership have opposed the GOP’s agenda. For more on DROP, here is a pretty good diary at Left in Alabama . You can follow the Goat Hill Project through my website , where I’ll (hopefully) be streaming House and/or Senate debate next week via Ustream. You can also click here to help me take this project to Netroots Nation as a model for progressive, state-level netroots.

Continue reading …
Matthew Mcconaughey Lincoln Lawyer

‘Lincoln Lawyer’ Film Review The Lincoln Lawyer – Movie Trailer 2011 Matthew McConaughey The Lincoln Lawyer – A Review of Director Brad Furman's Thriller Related Topics. Action Films · Martial Arts Films · War Films. Reference. lincoln lawyer · lincoln lawyer movie · lincoln lawyer review · matthew mcconaughey lincoln lawyer · matthew mcconaughey movie · matthew mcconaughey movies … A Movieline Investigation: Is Matthew McConaughey Really Shirtless … TRAILER: Matthew McConaughey and Ryan Phillippe in ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ Exclusive: Two new images from Matthew McConaughey’s ‘Lincoln Lawyer ‘ · Lincoln Lawyer Teaser Pulls Up – Matthew McConaughey at the wheel … Matthew McConaughey and Jena Malone from Sucker Punch thrill fans … Matthew McConaughey lincoln lawyer hand signed promo rare hot sexy beach abs workout autograph contact poster. In a slight panic, Scotty goes “No, right here, buddy” and points towards the front of the poster. … Latest Movie News America: “Lincoln,” the first main exposure … movie information from the new film starring Matthew McConaughey, “Lincoln lawyer ” before the first exposure of the first posters and stills, Matthew McConaughey doing my part to become the main suit, he looks like a deep ., poster … Matthew McConaughey Talks Up Texas, a 'Very Progressive State … … to how he parlayed his first film (‘Dazed and Confused’) into a massive career, … Read more · Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments. Source: http://www.popeater.com/2011/03/17/ matthew-mcconaughey-lincoln-lawyer -texas/ … AmayaMario says: Let's hear their insights: Matthew McConaughey and ‘Lincoln Lawyer’ author Michael Connelly discuss the #movie – http://bit.ly/grarSd

Continue reading …
Barack Obama to visit City of God

US president expected to visit shantytown that inspired film as part of bridge-building tour of Latin America When the world’s most powerful man touches down in Rio this weekend he will receive a handwritten letter from a man called José. “To his excellency, the president of the republic of the United States of America,” it will read. “Felicitations for the happy idea of coming to see our great nation and above all the City of God. Signed, José Neves.” Neves is an 80-year-old community leader from the City of God, a shantytown in western Rio de Janeiro which gave its name to Fernando Meirelles’s 2002 blockbuster movie. And on Sunday he is expecting a visit from Barack Obama, who is tipped to visit the favela as part of a five-day bridge-building tour of Latin America intended to bolster the US’s shrinking regional influence against an economic and diplomatic offensive from China. After visiting the favela, Obama is scheduled to make a speech in central Rio, before continuing on to Chile and El Salvador. Obama will call for a rapprochement between Brasilia and Washington, a partnership that soured because of ties between Brazil’s former president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. With Lula in power, western diplomats in Brasilia described an Obama visit as virtually inconceivable. Brazil’s new president, Dilma Rousseff, who took power in January, appears open to reconciliation. In a rare post-election interview with the Washington Post she vowed to “try to forge closer ties with the US” and spoke out against human rights abuses in Iran. Neves, a retired policeman and proud Afro-Brazilian, will need little convincing. In his ground-floor office in Bible Square, rumoured to be on Obama’s itinerary, he keeps a giant US flag. “I followed [Obama's] election on TV – for the first time a black man took a step up,” he beamed. “We’ll be glad to receive him. He is president of a great nation that is our friend.” The US is no longer the only great nation in town. Recent years have seen the Chinese make big strides into Latin America – China overtook the US as Brazil’s top trade partner in 2009 and is pouring billions into oil, mining, infrastructure and agriculture to secure access to its natural resources. In Washington, alarm bells are ringing. US officials deny the visit is directly intended to counter the Chinese advance but White House adviser Ben Rhodes admitted it was “imperative that the United States [did] not disengage from these regions”. “There’s a cost to disengagement,” he said. Daniel Restrepo, Obama’s leading adviser on Latin America, said the trip would highlight “the importance of the region” and “the restoration of American influence and appeal in the Americas”. For Rio’s governors the visit represents a marketing coup as they battle to revive the city’s international reputation as a safe, business-friendly metropolis. The City of God is one of more than 20 favelas that have been “pacified” in a security initiative aimed at driving heavily armed drug traffickers from the slums before the 2016 Rio Olympics. “It was terrible before,” Neves recalled. “The kids would come out of school and they would all be stood there with shotguns and revolvers. Obama wouldn’t have even considered coming to the City of God back then.” Even now, he is taking no chances. Obama will reportedly travel to the favela in a missile and gas-proof Cadillac, flanked by special forces operatives. A no-fly zone will be imposed by the Brazilian air force. Neves said he had even spotted “the FBI” inspecting his favela. “They are big,” he whispered. “And very strong.” Barack Obama Brazil US foreign policy Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Takedown: Ed Schultz Destroys Fox News’ "No Looting in Japan" Theme

Click here to view this media Boy, am I glad Ed Schultz dealt with this. It’s been a Fox theme since yesterday, beginning on Megyn Kelly’s show and continuing on all the way through tonight’s O’Reilly Factor. It goes like this: Unlike here after Katrina, and the Haiti and Chile earthquakes (translate that to where black people and Hispanics live), there has been no looting in Japan . Glenn Beck took it out to an extreme on his show today and then came on O’Reilly to tell everyone how noble the Japanese are for not looting after a disaster. Of course, the whole idea of “looting” supposes that there is a) anything left after a disaster to take; and b) those who take are doing so with the motive of enriching themselves in some way, which makes no sense in areas where dire need supplants more banal motives. The areas most heavily affected by the earthquake were virtually destroyed by the tsunami. When ships sit on top of buildings and homes are reduced to rubble, there isn’t much left to “loot.” What’s left behind is need and desperation. But if you really want to understand why you’re not seeing a whole lot of stories about looting in Japan, Slate has an excellent article explaining Japanese culture and society that will enlighten you. There’s a race-related overtone that’s really insidious here, with Beck insinuating that the Japanese people are somehow superior to Americans, Haitians and Chileans, more noble. More good. It’s quite subtle, but Ed sees it too. He also completely unwraps the idea of “no looting” and indeed, the idea of looting at all. Ed points out there is looting going on in Japan. But is it looting when there’s deep, desperate need? As Ed points out, “What is looting, when you’re trying to survive?” It’s the framing that I noticed and also what Ed picked up on. See, it always comes back to Beck’s vision of America. With Barack Obama as President, America just isn’t what it should be. We don’t have respect for our fellow man, we don’t even have respect for where we live? Glenn Beck is using false information about looting in Japan to say America isn’t good enough? Let’s remind Beck about the volunteers who went to the Gulf Coast to help clean up the BP oil spill. We should also remind him about the people who helped rescue their fellow man from the flood waters of Katrina. And Beck, let’s not forget about the first responders who ran in to the twin towers back on September 11th, 2001. Let’s remind him that yes, there are looters in America and yes, there are looters in Japan, but no matter what country they’re from, people in crisis do their best to stick together, to help one another, and to survive. Survive. Also, what IS up with that fake Oval office set Beck’s pontificating from? Is this how Fox plans to rehabilitate him? Take away the chalkboard and put him in a big desk flanked with flags? It’s offensive. Tonight Bill O’Reilly referred to him as a “Fox News Analyst.” A Fox News analyst? Really?

Continue reading …
Another ‘isolated incident’: California man charged with firebombing Planned Parenthood center, vandalizing mosque

Click here to view this media [Video from CBS 47 ] We’ve been getting lots of confirmation lately that, contrary to the claims undergirding Rep. Peter King’s Islamophobic witch-hunt hearing, the greatest domestic-terrorism threat to average Americans is not from homegrown Islamic radicals, but from the same singular source of domestic terrorism we’ve had to deal with for more than a generation: the radical right. David Holthouse at Media Matters directs us to the most recent ‘isolated incident’: Compared to the political theater of the King hearings, these busts of accused right-wing domestic terrorists received scant media attention. Even less publicized was the arrest, also on March 9, of another accused right-wing extremist who allegedly firebombed a Planned Parenthood clinic and vandalized an Islamic center in Madera, California. The case of Donny Eugene Mower further illustrates the narrow-mindedness of Rep. King and his conservative media cheerleaders for focusing on Muslim domestic terrorists to the exclusion of all other violent extremists, including white supremacists, militia members and anti-abortion radicals. According to the federal criminal complaint against Mower, he admitted to throwing a Molotov cocktail through the window of the Planned Parenthood clinic in the middle of the night last September 2. No one was injured, but the damage was extensive. Mower left a note at the scene: “Murder our children? We have a ‘choice’ too. Let’s see if you can burn as well as your victims.” The note was signed “ANB,” short for American Nationalist Brotherhood. The same entity had claimed responsibility for menacing letters posted outside the Madera Islamic Center. The first of those messages appeared last August 18: “No temple for the God of terrorism at Ground Zero. ANB.” At the time Fox News and others were feverishly manufacturing outrage at the supposed “Ground Zero mosque” in New York City. Two days later, according to investigators, Mower threw a brick at the Islamic center, causing minor damage, and then returned his focus to the Planned Parenthood clinic, posting another threat: “Murdering children? That is your choice? Reap your reward. ANB.” On August 24, another message appeared at the Islamic center: “Wake up America. The enemy is here. ANB.” The ANB, like a number of hate groups, really is just an army of one — Mower himself. He wrote a manifesto outlining his ideology: ANB is AMERICAN nationalist, not white nationalist, black nationalist, or any other racist motivated group. The signs posted, the things to come, and yes even the brick, are not hate motivated, but rather messages. The (sic) are the voices of us who refuse to allow America to continue to be torn down brick by brick. Notice also, that the mosque was not the only target of choice. We are here to revive American pride, which has been dampened by a lot of things: The rise of Islam in America, despite 9/11; the sickening number of murdered children since 1973, hidden behind the guise of “abortion” or “choice”; the abomination of homosexuality being rewarded, while those who chose (sic) natural relationships are bigots. These and so many more are (sic) the hate crimes, they hit America with a sucker punch… isn’t it time that someone hit back? As Digby sez : Sadly, the lack of attention to this problem — or our blase acceptance of it — has even led people like Bill Maher to speciously contend that homegrown Islamic terrorism presents a much greater threat than any other kind of homegrown terrorism. I honestly don’t know why he thinks that. These are really the same kind of people except for the fact that they are being radicalized for similar purposes by Americans instead of foreigners. There are reasons why these things crop up at times of great social transition and stress. And that’s worth looking into and attempting to deal with. But those who are pretending that it’s a”foreign problem” are coming to the point of being culpable. After all, when the department of Homeland Security merely noted the potential of a problem in their annual report, the right wing didn’t distance itself from these radicals, it sprung into gear and basically shut the report down. Cui bono? Here’s our interactive map and listing of domestic-terrorism incidents involving right-wing extremists since July 2008. We’re up to 24 now — and still counting:

Continue reading …