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Rep. Trent Franks tries to bury his own right wing vitrolic behavior on CNN

Click here to view this media Rep Trent Franks of Arizona made the rounds on the Sunday talk show circuit today and he did his best to make believe he’s really a very civil guy. The right is frantically trying to silence the criticism of the over the top rhetoric and violent activities during president Obama’s brief time in office that has emanated from the RWNM. I watched him on Meet the Press and then CNN. He certainly wasn’t too happy with Sheriff Dupnik’s comments about the hate that has filled our country and he cited Arizona as being the ‘Mecca for prejudice and bigotry.’ Dupnik: “When you look at unbalanced people, how they respond to the vitriol that comes out of certain mouths about tearing down the government,” he said. “The anger, the hatred, the bigotry that goes on this country is getting to be outrageous and unfortunately Arizona has become sort of the capital. We have become the Mecca for prejudice and bigotry.” Crowley: Wow, the Mecca for prejudice and bigotry. Franks: Even in these circumstance, first of all I think our focus should be upon the tragedy that occurred here and I think it’s unfortunate to inject the comments that the Sheriff did in this case because he has been heavily involved in the whole immigration issue and he found himself in this case at ends even different than Miss Giffords. And I think that he’s carrying on that debate even in this tragic moment and I think it’s unfortunate. Crowley: Probably should say that you all have been personally affected by this and that sometimes you say things you might not want to. The point being that there is now going to be this conversation about “why?” And right now we are seeing “the political conversation is terrible, it is heated rhetoric, we are seeing unhinged people to do things.” Do you see a link between increased sharp rhetoric, sometimes aggressive rhetoric, violent rhetoric, whatever you want to call it, in the political forum and this type of heinous activity. Frank: Sometimes in any human dynamic there are so many factors that it becomes difficult to really analyze it. But sometimes you can see a central element, and that central element is this unhinged lunatic that had no respect for human life was willing to make some grand statement, I don’t know if he even knows what grand statement he was willing to make to take the lives of his fellow human lives to do it. And there is the problem, a lack of respect for innocent human life. It’s a lack of respect for the constitution, for freedom . Many of the Tea Party candidates that won and lost during the midterm elections crossed the line of civility during the HCR debates a long time ago and they were backed up by the shock jocks and their FOX News friends. It would be naive to think that no matter how unhinged Loughner is, you have to ask the question. Where did he hear about the US and the gold standard? It’s not a common thread among many in this country. I think you know. However, what kind of behavior did Trent Franks put on display during 2009? Does calling President Obama a n enemy of humanity fit his definition of respect for human life? It’s interesting that he would say that. And even more interesting that Crowley didn’t think to ask him about this comment of his at last year’s How To Take Back America conference: Obama’s first act as president of any consequence, in the middle of a financial meltdown, was to send taxpayers’ money overseas to pay for the killing of unborn children in other countries…there’s almost nothing that you should be surprised at after that. We shouldn’t be shocked that he does all these other insane things. A president that has lost his way that badly, that has no ability to see the image of God in these little fellow human beings, if he can’t do that right, then he has no place in any station of government and we need to realize that he is an enemy of humanity There is no comparison of how the left and right conduct themselves. What’s sad but expected is how the MSM is trying to equivocate both sides when the right has been just throwing gasoline on the fire that they started during the general election of 2008. At C&L we obviously have focused on the extreme right wing vitriol. You can search some of our many tags to see how much hate and crime is being perpetrated because of this vitriol. Here are two… http://crooksandliars.com/taxonomy/term/3952 http://crooksandliars.com/taxonomy/term/11838 You can also check out this excellent piece that documents many vitriolic rhetoric as well as violent criminal acts that have occurred in the last few years. Insurrectionism Timeline I ask again. How many acts of violence does it take for the media to stop calling this a lone nutjob and reveal there is a well established pattern of behavior that has taken over the country and it is led by the Conservative/Tea Party/John Birch followers and transmitters?

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Leave it up to the Chicago Sun Times editorial page to take opportunistic privileges with the Arizona Shooting tragedy and post a shamefully rambling and incoherent smear against the right . With the claim that “we cannot walk away from this one” the newspaper rails against the tone of America’s political rhetoric, to end the fear-mongering and “ quit the demonizing ”. And then in an incredibly inane example of ideological laziness the editorial demonizes “the right” for the tragic shooting. read more

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Welcome The Hate

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Welcome The Hate

Every bullet, head-stomp, and crosshair-map is another gift. Let media rationalize with false equivalencies while they may, for a new era of nonviolent activism and resistance beckons. Exposing the reactionaries of our time will require courage, commitment, and unwavering devotion to the truth. During 2010, I documented a series of progressive actions that leave me convinced this is more than possible, that in fact a historical cycle is emerging and points the way forward through the tide of tea. Much more after a video and the jump… For me, the nadir of American political discourse came in April as I watched the Tea Party Express perform underneath a full-scale mock-up of the Space Shuttle. Mark Williams, who would later resign from TPE in disgrace after posting a racist ‘letter’ from former slaves to Abraham Lincoln at his website, proclaimed the tea party “a human rights movement.” Speakers repeated the ridiculous claim that two million people had attended the September 12, 2009 tea party in Washington, DC. Focusing the crowd on midterm elections, presenters called on them to “flip this house;” then Victoria Jackson came onstage for a ukulele-driven clown show. All of this was punctuated by calls to sign petitions against Obamacare. Coming on the heels of a season in which progressive action had lagged behind, caught flat-footed by gun-toting tea party organizing, it was a surreal and dispiriting experience. I recognized the lineage of what I was seeing: Cleon Skousen’s 5000-Year Leap shared a table with Williams’ book, which was drawn from his years as a hate radio talker . The signs — ranging from a John Galt references to pious jingoism to outright paranoid fantasia — had the familiar density and incoherence of anti-busing rallies in the 1970s. Those rallies also featured tricorner hats. But the most telling presence that day was the National Rifle Association booth. The gun-bearing demonstrators at town halls in the summer of 2009 confirmed this movement as an armed resistance; an explosion of eliminationist rhetoric from politicians and activists inflamed the reactionary mob. The shooting in Arizona yesterday that killed John Roll, Arizona’s chief federal judge, and wounded Representative Gabrielle Giffords was probably inevitable in an environment where Rand Paul and Allen West pay no price for violence and intimidation by their supporters. Something did start to change last year, however. The month of May saw spontaneous protests against BP, with worldwide attention to coordinated actions in June that took place in dozens of American cities. Curious to see progressive organizing in action after attending so many tea party events, I attended the BP protest in Birmingham and was not disappointed. The temperature was 95 degrees Fahrenheit — a sticky, Alabama heat that did not discourage the diverse attendees. It was very different from the tea party rallies I had covered. The signs all bore correct spelling; everyone talked about real problems instead of imaginary ones. While the people who spoke into my camera were not afraid to call the president to task, they saw BP, and not just a president or a government, as power to be confronted. While tea parties make a great noise about freedom and individual liberty, what I had seen under the Space Shuttle was the worship of power. Glenn Beck’s rally on the mall last year is another example: by extolling the monuments around him with pious reverence, Beck spoke to an audience for whom religion and politics are decidedly not separate. How much the better, then, that ‘social justice’ Christianity is so common at progressive events — for example, all the crosses in hand at September’s Appalachia Rising ( covered here ). Witnessing an act of mass civil disobedience for the first time, it dawned on me that I had never seen or even heard of a tea party that ended in arrests. Appalachia Rising, on the other hand, was led by some of the most courageous people one could ever hope to meet. Mountaintop removal activists are subject to threats, intimidation, and even violence by coal’s powerful defenders. Don Blankenship amped their rage in 2009 with the “Friends of America” rally headlined by Ted Nugent, perhaps the most easily-identified gun enthusiast on the planet. Activists who get arrested in West Virginia can see six-figure bail while those who assault them are ordered into anger management. Call Bob Kincaid some night and ask him whether Judy Bonds, who died last week, was a profile in courage. At least once in every show he will remind listeners that the people of Coal River Mountain Watch, Bonds’ seminal organization, are the bravest people he knows. November brought another opportunity at the School of the Americas Watch . While attendance was down this year from previous ones, the nation’s longest-running peace action ended in spectacular fashion as only (!) two people attempted to jump the fence into Ft. Benning — and Columbus police arrested twenty-two people, including an RT America news crew, as they left the free speech zone. This resulted in a jailhouse solidarity two hours later. Some two hundred people, mostly young, walked ten blocks to the Muscogee County jail to stand across the street clapping, singing, and banging on a drum until ordered to disperse. After spending the entire day observed and fenced on all sides, they were followed back to the convention center by a helicopter. December saw Veterans For Peace leading an antiwar protest in front of the White House. This time, a crowd of about three hundred people endured a frozen Thermopylae of sorts, assembling in Lafayette Park just as an inch of swirling snow began to fall. One hundred and thirty five of them chose to stand in the arrest zone in a “first stand” against permanent war. Watching Chris Hedges deliver a brilliant oration on the necessity of nonviolent resistance, it occurred to me that all three of these civil disobedience actions had involved poetry . Aside from occasional awkward lyrics, poetry is distinctly absent from tea parties. I still have the faded Red Sox hat that protected my camera from rain and snow; if anyone can find me the Pulitzer prizewinning tea party poet laureate, I will eat it. Courageous, creative nonviolence is already happening. To be sure, it isn’t clear that disparate forces can find common cause: Veterans For Peace recognizes that sixty green jobs cost as much as one soldier’s deployment to Afghanistan. Can they make common cause with unions? Appalachia Rising would like to talk about green jobs, too. But what of the civil rights organizations? It is by no means certain that these groups can coalesce, but I’ve never been more sure of the timing. From this moment forward, every gun incident or assault or imprecation by the tea party makes them look like the bad guy. The iron is hot; progressives ought to strike it. Writing at the New York Times today, Matt Bai falsely equates an unfortunate phrase in one Daily Kos diary to Sarah Palin’s target-map: “the question,” he suggests, “is whether Saturday’s shooting marks the logical end point of such a moment — or rather the beginning of a terrifying new one.” But that is not the question. By returning hate with love, can a new movement change the landscape of American politics — and put the lie to media blather about “both sides”? That’s a far better question, and one to which I hope the answer is yes, we can .

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Yes, Jared Loughner was ‘crazy’. That doesn’t exculpate the milieu that unhinged him

Click here to view this media They’re all going to say Jared Loughner is crazy — especially the right-wing hate talkers and Sarah Palin defenders who everybody’s looking at right now. And you know what? They’re right. But that doesn’t mean they’re blameless, either. As I already argued : When the conservative movement’s True Believers are fed a steady diet of extraordinary warnings intended to induce a paranoiac, panicked fear — They’re Destroying America! They Want to End Your Liberty! Health Care Reform is the End of America! — and simultaneously fed a diet of suggestions that the solution is simply to do away with them (see Sean Hannity’s recent bit of eliminationist “humor” ), then what other outcome should you expect? Some are pointing out that Loughner’s old acquaintances describe him — circa 2007 — as “left-wing pothead.” That may well have been true at the time. But if we examine the trail of videos and assorted writings he left behind in recent years, it’s clear that his politics took quite a different swerve to the other side of the road in recent years: it is abundantly clear that he’s now a devoted anti-government conspiracist. In particular, he seems to have developed an obsession with that classic right-wing conspiracy theory: the belief that American currency, since going off the gold standard, has become “fiat money” based on nothing. Likewise, he seems to have bought into beliefs about “government mind control” quite common to right-wing conspiracy theorists. Chip Berlet observes that this is a strain with a long right-wing pedigree: Jared Lee Loughner, the alleged shooter of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and others in Arizona shares an obsession with government currency and money manipulation plots with anti-abortion killer John C. Salvi 3d. … Jared Lee Loughner warned about the “current treasonous laws,” and stated he would not “pay debt with a currency that’s not backed by gold and silver!.” He said he could not “trust the current government because of” Constitutional “ratifications; adding that the “government is implying mind control and brainwash on the people controlling grammar (sic).” In recent years some conspiracy theorists on the political right and left have spread similar money plot theories, although they deny any lineage back to historic antisemitic roots. Instead they point to the Populist Party battle over the coinage of silver and gold in the late 1800s, popularized in the book and movie, the Wizard of Oz. Some proponents of the idea of a currency plot in the late 1800s and early 1900s, however, routinely used antisemitic references to Jewish bankers. The obsession with manipulation of currency by secret Jewish plots traces back to the hoax document The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and antisemitic writings by Father Denis Fahey, an adviser to 1930s radio demagogue Father Coughlin, a fascist and an antisemite. The writings of Jared Lee Loughner are an odd jumble of right-wing Patriot and anti-Federal Reserve themes mixed with rhetoric similar to that from people who are mentally unbalanced. It is too early to tell where this story will lead. It is clear, though, that aggressive right-wing rhetoric targeting Democrats as treasonous encourages some unstable people to act out in aggression or violence. In the YouTube videos he left behind, he also discusses his views of what constitutes terrorism — and it’s not exactly coherent: If I define terrorist then a terrorist is a person who employs terror or terrorism, especially as a political weapon. I define terrorist. This, a terrorist is a person who employs terror or terrorism, especially as a political weapon. If you call me a terrorist then the argument to call me a terrorist is Ad hominem. You call me a terrorist. Thus, the argument to call me a terrorist is Ad hominem. He also follows some classic right-wing thinking about revolutionarism: If the property owners and government officials are no longer in ownership of their land and laws from a revolution then the revolutionary’s from the revolution are in control of the land and laws. The property owners and government officials are no longer in ownership of their land and laws from a revolution. Thus, the revolutionary’s from the revolution are in control of the land and laws. And he seems to be obsessed with the Constitution — though he seems to have trouble actually reading it: In conclusion, reading the second United States Constition, I can’t trust the current government because of the ratifications: The government is implying mind control and brainwash on the people by controlling grammar. And then there’s the classic demand to return to the gold standard: No! I won’t pay debt with a currency that’s not backed by gold and silver! No! I won’t trust in God! What’s government if words don’t have meaning? Suffice to say that he’s a very confused young man. Indeed, what we can say clearly is that Jared Loughner — like a lot of people who buy into right-wing conspiracism — believes a lot of things that are provably untrue. He’s a classic demonstration of the unhinging effect that conspiracism and right-wing up-is-downism has on people: once people become unhinged from reality, they inevitably become unhinged in their behavior. It seems doubtful to me, though, that he’ll be able to put up an insanity defense, unless some real illness is uncovered. But what the Fox talkers — especially Beck and O’Reilly — will claim, as they do every time there’s another horrific act of right-wing violence, is that he’s just a nutcase, not right or left, and therefore nobody should be blaming hate talkers on the right for inspiring him. And it’s true — especially in cases where mental illness is potentially at play — that there is limited culpability for being part of the milieu that creates these acts of horror. As it happens, we don’t charge people criminally for aiding and abetting the acts of an insane person by whipping them up into a frenzy. But that doesn’t mean it happens in a vacuum, either, and can thus be dismissed as an “isolated incident” merely. As I wrote some time back : Part of the problem is that we actually have seen this happen time after time after time: A mentally unstable person is inspired by hateful right-wing rhetoric to act out violently — and yet because of that mental state, the matter is dismissed as idiosyncratic, just another “isolated incident.” And over the months and years, these “isolated incidents” mount one after another. But simply ascribing these acts to mental illness is a cop-out. It fails to account for the gross irresponsibility of the people who employed the rhetoric that inspired the violent action in the first place, and their resulting moral culpability. … The problem is that this has happened more than “on occasion” — rather, there is a history of this kind of violence, and there’s a consistent pattern to it. What’s most noteworthy is that the violence expands with the increasing use of eliminationist rhetoric. When people look at the Gwatney shooting and ask “Why?” — as so many are — that history and that pattern are a good place to start looking. The hate talkers may not be directly to blame, but they are morally and ethically culpable. But there is culpability nonetheless. The bottom line is being accountable for the words we use : Because we believe in freedom of speech and freedom of thought, there will probably always be haters like Richard Poplawski among us. Inevitably they will be driven by fear: the fear of difference. Because to them, difference of any kind is a threat. And what we know from experience about volatile, unstable actors like them is that they can be readily induced into violent action by hateful rhetoric that demonizes and dehumanizes other people. And thanks to human nature and those same freedoms, we will certainly always have fearmongering demagogues among us. But the purveyors of such profoundly irresponsible rhetoric need to be called on it — especially when they hold the nation’s media megaphones.

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Statement From Tea Party Express on Arizona Shooting

The following statement was released by one of the more prominent tea party groups in response to the Saturday shooting in Arizona that killed six people, including a federal judge, and injured 12 more, including a Democratic congresswoman. Tea Party Express Chairman Amy Kremer issued the following statement today: “We at the Tea Party Express are shocked and saddened to hear about the terrible tragedy that took place in Tucson today. It is appalling that anyone would commit such unthinkable violence against Congresswoman Gabrielle Gifford[s], her staff, a sitting federal judge and the many other victims and families impacted.

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By Eugene Robinson Race still matters in America and justice is not completely blind. Anyone who believes otherwise should examine the case of Cornelius Dupree Jr., who was ruled innocent Tuesday after spending 30 years in prison. Related Entries January 6, 2011 How America Exiles Unwanted Teenagers January 5, 2011 The House of Professors

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By David Sirota In a Washington circus that features as many morons as oxymorons, we have self-described deficit hawks who promote tax cuts, alleged war opponents who back war escalations, and supposed anti-government conservatives who press to expand the National Security State. Related Entries January 6, 2011 How America Exiles Unwanted Teenagers January 5, 2011 The House of Professors

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By Joe Conason In their ideological zeal, the new Republicans on Capitol Hill seem eager to gamble everything—even the chance of a worldwide depression—on a showdown over the national debt ceiling. Related Entries January 6, 2011 How America Exiles Unwanted Teenagers January 5, 2011 The House of Professors

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Antibiotics Not Always Needed for MRSA

The superbug staph infection, MRSA, has become a global health threat for both adults and children, but antibiotics aren’t needed to treat all of them, according to new guidelines released by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA).

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FDA Challenges Tobacco Companies

FDA: Makers of tobacco products changed since Feb. 2007 must show the “new” products are no worse for public health or see the products banned in the U.S.

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