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Gibbs: USdoesn’t Determine Who’s Egypt Ballot

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs reiterated the White House call for an orderly transition of power in Egypt but said it was not up to the US to determine if President Hosni Mubarak is a candidate. (Jan. 31)

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It’s too early to judge Obama on Egypt – but advice for him is plentiful | Simon Tisdall

US commentators say Obama is caught between the need for reform and security imperatives, and advice has been pouring in It’s too early to say that Barack Obama has mishandled the Egypt crisis. But so far at least, his administration has not covered itself in glory. In under a week, secretary of state Hillary Clinton went from describing Hosni Mubarak’s regime as “stable” to demanding an “orderly transition” to democracy. The truth, as many American commentators tell it, is that Obama is stuck in an “impossible hole”, caught between the need for reform and security imperatives. Sensing his hesitation, gratuitous and contradictory advice has been pouring in from all sides. But on one point mostly all agree: Hosni Mubarak is finished. Foreign policy veteran Leslie Gelb urged Obama to take a “realist” approach. “Let’s stop prancing about and proclaiming our devotion to peace, ‘universal rights’, and people power,” he wrote . The US must act swiftly to protect its political, economic and security interests. Mubarak was the “devil we know”. Chief among the devils we did not know was Egypt’s Islamist Muslim Brotherhood. “Baloney and wishful thinking aside, the MB would be calamitous for US security … If they gain control, it’s going to be almost impossible for the people to take it back. Just look at Iran,” Gelb argued. Obama should keep quiet in public while privately trying to persuade Mubarak to begin a gradual transition, culminating in UN-supervised elections in 12 months’ time, Gelb added. Defenestrating Egypt’s wounded pharaoh now would only convince other regional allies that the US could not be trusted. Peter Beinart, also blogging in the Daily Beast , took an opposing view. The Egyptian protests, like leaked Israeli-Palestine peace negotiations documents, were evidence that “the Middle East is spinning out of America’s control”. He continued: “It’s time for Obama to choose … It’s time to stop insulating Mubarak and [Palestinian president] Mahmoud Abbas from a reckoning with their own people.” Beinart added there were potential advantages in the current situation. “Osama bin Laden has never looked more irrelevant than he does this week as tens of thousands march across the Middle East not for jihad but for democracy, electricity and a decent job.” Elliott Abrams, deputy national security adviser to George Bush, told Washington Post readers that the Egyptian and Tunisian revolts were “exploding, once and for all, the myth of Arab exceptionalism” – meaning the erroneous idea that, somehow, Arabs were “beyond the reach of liberty”. Regime change was desirable, Abrams agreed, but how to achieve it? “Every day Mubarak survives in power now, he does so as a dictator propped up by brute force alone. Election of his son Gamal as his successor is already a sour joke … [but] the three decades Mubarak and his cronies have already had in power leave Egypt with no reliable mechanisms for a transition to democratic rule.” Abrams lambasted Obama for abandoning Bush’s freedom agenda, calling it “nothing short of a tragedy”. Obama’s attempts at quiet persuasion had failed to advance reform in Syria, Iran and Egypt (and Russia). “This has been the greatest failure of policy and imagination in the administration’s approach,” he said. Newsweek carried an insider assessment of the White House’s performance. It described how Obama advisers expected Mubarak to resign when he spoke on television on Friday night. Instead, he was defiant. “As Mubarak ended his address, someone in the [White House situation] room voiced the thought on everyone’s mind: ‘Well, what do we do now?’”, it reported. Time magazine concluded that, whoever was responsible for past policy failures, Mubarak’s usefulness now was at an end. “Even if he tried to fight his way out of the crisis, the autocrat’s ability to serve as a bastion of stability will have been fatally compromised,” it said. Columnist Anne Applebaum offered cheerful reassurance for Obama . Some things were simply beyond US control and options were limited. “But there are a few and we should exercise them immediately,” she said. “We should speak directly to the Egyptian public, not only to its leaders. We should congratulate Egyptians for having the courage to take to the streets. We should smile and embrace instability. And we should rejoice – because change in repressive societies is good.” Egypt Middle East Obama administration United States US politics Simon Tisdall guardian.co.uk

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I see our elected representatives are hard at work, representing their constituencies. Not that those constituencies even vaguely represent voters, you understand. No, they would like to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act 28 times. In 11 days, no less. What busy little beavers they are! Here’s a list as of today, divided by House and Senate. House H.R. 105 Dan Burton, GOP – Indiana : To repeal the Patient Protection Act & enact in its place incentives for people to buy health insurance. H.R. 118 John Fleming, GOP – Louisiana : To permit a state to elect not to have an American Health Care Exchange. H.R. 119 John Fleming, GOP – Louisiana : To prohibit hiring of irs agent to implement or enforce health insurance reform. H.R. 127 John Graves, GOP – Georgia : To de-authorize funding of Patient Protection Act. H.R. 141 Steve King, GOP – Iowa : To repeal the Patient Protection Act. H.R. 145 Connie Mack, GOP – Florida : To repeal the Patient Protection Act. H.R. 154 Ted Poe, GOP Texas : To prohibit any federal funds to be used to enforce Patient Protection Act. H.R. 171 Cliff Stearns, GOP – Florida : H.R. 2 Eric Cantor, GOP – Virginia : Repeal of Patient Protection Act. H.R. 38 John Fleming, GOP – Louisiana : Rescind funds authorized for Patient Protection Act. H.R. 9 David Drier, GOP – California : Requires Committees to look into Patient Protection Act. H.R. 26 David Drier, GOP – California : Repeal Patient Protection Act. H.R. 215 Don Young, GOP – Alaksa : Repeal Patient Protection Act. H.R. 19 John Carter, GOP – Texas : Disapprove rules on MLR in Patient Protection Act. H.R. 299 John Carter, GOP – Texas : Repeal Patient Protection Act. H.R. 358 Joe Pitts, GOP – Penn : Remove abortion funding from Patient Protection Act (there is none) H.R. 360 Michael Burgess – Texas : Amend Patient Protection Act to include President in Health Care Exchanges. H.R. 364 Tom Latham, GOP – Iowa : To Repeal Patient Protection Act H.R. 371 Marsha Blackburn, GOP – Tennessee : Repeal Title I of Patient Protection Act. H.R. 5 Phil Gingrey, GOP – Georgia : Repeal Patient Protection Act. H.R. 397 Wally Herger, GOP – California :Repeal Patient Protection Act. H.R. 429 Darrell Issa, GOP, California – Repeal Patient Protection Act. H.R. 452 Phil Roe, GOP, Tennessee – A bill to repeal Patient Protection Act. H.R. 450 Dave Reichert, GOP, Washington – A bill to repeal Patient Protection Act. Senate S. 19 Orrin Hatch, GOP – Repeal Health Mandate & therefore repeal patient protections. S. 17 Orrin Hatch, GOP – Repeal Tax on Medical Devices S. 16 David Vitter, GOP – Repeal Patient Protection Act S. 196 Chuck Grassley, GOP, Iowa – A bill to to provide congressional staff gets to participate in Exchange. S. 192 Jim DeMint, GOP, South Carolina – A bill to repeal health care. I thought it might be interesting to see what Democrats did in their first 11 days after assuming control of the House in 2006. Well, lookee there. All sorts of interesting bills in those first days. Everything from gun show loophole closures (David Dreier’s baby) to First Amendment protections, to small business assistance to alternative energy. But for Republicans and their keepers, this Congress is all about sticking it to Obama. Nothing more, nothing less.

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California wingnut arrested outside Michigan mosque with explosives: Just another ‘isolated incident’

Click here to view this media Now, I don’t know about you, but when an agitated man drives all the way from California to Dearborn, Michigan, with a trunk full of Class C explosives (high-end fireworks, mostly) and is arrested outside an Islamic center for making terrorist threats — well hey, I just naturally assume that this has nothing, nothing whatsoever to do with the right-wing Islamophobic hatred that’s regularly ginned up by radio and TV talkers. From the Detroit Free Press : About 700 people were attending a funeral inside the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn, the largest mosque in metro Detroit, when Dearborn police arrived to arrest a man in a car in the parking lot. He had driven to Michigan from California and reportedly was overheard in a bar making threatening comments about Muslims or Arabs. His car was loaded with large, illegal fireworks, police said. Now, Roger Stockham, 63, is jailed on charges that include making a false report or threat of terrorism. “He’s very dangerous,” said Dearborn Police Chief Ron Haddad. Now, how do we know that this couldn’t possibly have been a right-wing ideologue? Why, because he had been arrested back in 2002 for threatening President Bush — which is always a certain sign of left-wing politics, according to every right-wing talker on the planet. From the Detroit News : A decorated Army veteran accused of plotting to blow up a Metro Detroit mosque served time in federal prison for threatening to kill President George W. Bush and bomb a Vermont veterans’ clinic in 2002. Ah, but then we read the details of that particular arrest: In the Vermont incident, he told authorities at the time of his arrest at a Veterans Affairs Department complex in Colchester that his minivan was full of explosives. A search found no explosives. Before the arrest, Stockham called a local paper twice to say he was going to explode bombs in the neighborhood. In one call, he identified himself as “Hem Ahadin,” saying he was “a local Muslim terrorist on a roll.” He ranted against the VA, the FBI and Bush, largely because of the things the president had said about Iraq in a speech earlier in the week. According to affidavit filed in U.S. District Court, Stockham threatened to carry out “jihad,” or holy war, against the VA office in White River, Vt. In other words, the threat against Bush was made in the context of Stockham pretending to be an Islamic terrorist — that is, he threatened Bush because he wanted his listeners to believe he was a Muslim, since he wanted authorities to assume whatever act he committed was an act of Islamist terrorism. Most of all, the man had been diagnosed with (and treated for) mental illness on several occasions, which we all know means you can’t possibly blame right-wing rhetoric for having helped inspire the act, right? Yep, just another isolated incident. . We’re up to 21 and counting, by the way.

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Build Your Own Mini Hoop House in Hours (Video)

Image credit: TheYardfarmer With Spring on its way, many gardeners will be dreaming about geodesic dome solar greenhouses , converted swimming pool hoop houses , or maybe a greenhouse built from old soda bottles . But there is an easier way to protect your crops from unexpected cold snaps and get a head … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Rep. John Boehner retreated from his earlier assertions that we should raise the retirement age to 70 to begin collecting Social Security. House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) said he “made a mistake” when he suggested raising the retirement age to 70 last year. The Speaker indicated he was premature in suggesting raising the legal age at which retirees are eligible for full Social Security benefits, since he didn’t want to pre-judge a debate over how to fix the entitlement program. He said he wouldn’t rule out raising the retirement age, however. “I made a mistake when I did that, because I think having the conversation about how big the problem is is the first step,” Boehner said Wednesday evening on CNN . “And once the American people understand how big the problem is, then you can begin to outline an array of possible solutions.” His comments walk back remarks from late June, when he said the retirement age would eventually need to be raised by five years , from 65 to 70. “I think that raising the retirement age — going out 20 years, so you’re not affecting anyone close to retirement — and eventually getting the retirement age to 70 is a step that needs to be taken,” he said at the time. Republicans have been talking tough on entitlements and Social Security, and GOP leaders in the House have expressed dissatisfaction with President Obama’s comments about the program during his State of the Union address on Tuesday. He doesn’t mind using the lie that our life expectancy is going up to attack Social Security benefits. “When you look at life expectancy in America today and you look at the Social Security system, we’re all living far longer than anyone had ever anticipated and the result of these big demographic changes is having a disastrous effect on the Social Security program,” he said. “And so raising the retirement age or considering it is something that ought to be on the table.” These rich politicians and pundits have no problem saying we have to have an adult conversation . I guess lying is an adult thing to do.

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David Gergen supplies some cover for GOP: Bachmann ‘Reinforced What Ryan Said’ ‘But Provided a Lot of Facts and Figures’

Click here to view this media Apparently David Gergen agreed with fellow CNN contributor Erick Erickson following Michele Bachmann’s response to President Obama’s State of the Union address that either Michele Bachmann or Paul Ryan had any factual information to share with us. GERGEN: But I agree with Erick, she reinforced what Ryan said. She reinforced what Ryan said. She came at it a different way but provided a lot of facts and figures. Facts and figures huh? Okay David. As I already linked in my post with Bachmann’s speech , Media Matters’ Political Correction decided to be a whole lot more responsible than CNN with fact-checking of Michele Bachmann . Granted they had a research team to put work before they had to weigh in on what Bachmann said, unlike the immediate response here, but don’t tell me that these talking heads at CNN didn’t realize that Bachmann was telling some obvious lies as well. And don’t tell me that CNN could not have put a fact checking team together as quickly as Media Matters did if they wanted to. Since their management apparently doesn’t care that they barely need to be one step above the right wing liars over at Fox, I’m sure they won’t have any problems with what was said during this segment. And you can’t really say time is a factor with their lack of fact-checking on Bachmann since a day later, they’re still getting it wrong . Good thing we’ve got that “best political team on television” looking out for the rest of us, isn’t it? Here’s a little more from Digby on this: Bachman? Hilarious. I wonder if Palin is going to make fun of her odd use of the teleprompter. But more hilarious than that was the response of the CNN gasbags, who said she reinforced Ryan’s Reaganesque message, but (according to David Gergen) with more facts and figures. Meanwhile, gasbags everywhere were very concerned that Obama didn’t concentrate more on deficit reduction and the obvious necessity to destroy Social Security and Medicare as soon as humanly possible. They seem to be on something of a crusade. Here’s more of the transcript via CNN of their round table pretending that they weren’t giving a crazy lady air time by choosing to air Bachmann’s SOTU response. BLITZER: All right, Congresswoman Michele Bachmann speaking on behalf of the Tea Party movement. She’s the chair of the Tea Party Caucus in the House of Representatives, making the case — we’re going to dissect what she said. Erick Erickson is here; Anderson Cooper; members of the “Best Political Team.” I want to go to John King, though. He’s up on Capitol Hill. Give us a thought on this extraordinary development. Usually we just get one official response. Today we got two. KING: Well, Wolf, she said right at the top, it was not a competition with the official Republican response, but in many ways it was. In tone, it was very different. You heard the president of the United States, especially talk about health care, saying, “Let’s not re-litigate the last two years. Let’s look forward and fight about other issues and debate other issues.” Well, that Tea Party address from Michele Bachmann was a re- litigation of the last two years. She used “Obama care” over and over again. She said “repeal Obama care.” Her tone was a bit more alarmist. You heard Mr. Paul Ryan say, “I would like to work with the president. His tone was much more conciliatory.’ But Paul Ryan’s tone was much more conciliatory. Let’s see where we go. That was a very much a Tea Party message of fighting President Obama. And the challenge, Wolf, is not just for the president. The challenge is, “How does the new Republican House majority manage that energy, that verve, that confrontational spirit from the Tea Party members at a time when it, too, is on trial with the American people. The president has a lot to prove, but so does the new House Republican majority. And the Tea Party’s faction in it makes Speaker Boehner’s job’s a tough management challenge. BLITZER: Let’s get Erick Erickson to wear in. Eric, she wanted to be in the Republican leadership. The guy said no to her. Is this her little way of responding to that? ERICKSON: You know, I don’t think so. And you know, having seen this speech now and read through the transcript, for several days since this was announced, the narrative that’s been built up is, even by some Republicans, is this is going to be in opposition to what Paul Ryan says. But this speech very much seems to reflect it. We build up these narratives in anticipation before we know what we’re going to get. And here we’re also talking about how this is somehow combative towards Republicans. This actually, I think, played very well off the Paul Ryan speech and got to the nuts and bolts. It’s what, when you listen to the State of the Union political addresses or any of these other political address, you sometimes wish they would get to the point. That’s what she did. That’s what she did. That’s very authentic for the Tea Party movement. MARTIN: How simple is this? Paul Ryan said our debt is the product of many presidents and congresses. Yet when you hear she speech, she said we wondered whether the president would cut spending and implement real job creating policies. Was she talking about President Obama or president Bush? Republicans taking some form of responsibility is they say deficits were high under President Bush. To sit here and somehow suggest that all of a sudden things were great prior to President Obama coming in, clearly that mistakes the reality of where this country was in 2008. BLITZER: Because David Gergen, the national debt doubled during the eight years of the Bush administration. Six of those years Republicans also controlled the congress. GERGEN: Yes. And President Obama in his State of the Union laid the blame for the deficits and the debt squarely on George W. Bush. Two wars that weren’t paid for, you know, prescription drugs that weren’t paid for, tax cuts that weren’t paid for. So each side wants to make its partisan points on this. But I agree with Erick, she reinforced what Ryan said. She reinforced what Ryan said. She came at it a different way but provided a lot of facts and figures. BLITZER: You know, Candy, it’s one of these nights that we have to absorb a lot and sometimes it will take days for us to fully appreciate what happened here. CROWLEY: It is. But I’m reminded, listening to Michele Bachmann here, what John Boehner said this morning, it is what it is, and I think that’s about right. BLITZER: All right, guys. This has been an amazing night, I must say, one that I’ve enjoyed, listening to these different perspectives. The debate is only just beginning in Washington on all of these issues. The president of the United States is going to have to deal with a Republican majority in the House of Representatives. He’ll have a much smaller Democratic majority than he used to have in the U.S. Senate. This is one of those times when we could see a dramatic shift by the president. We’ve already seen some drama already. We’re going to continue all of our coverage right now with Anderson Cooper and 360.

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Many of the religious right are members of the Tea Party and for anyone that thought their anti- choice agenda was taking a back seat to their free markets/anti-government stance was not paying attention. Mike Pence, who is being groomed as a leader of the Tea Party movement, wasted no time in rewarding his base. After preaching for two years about jobs and deficit reduction, House Republicans have chosen to ignore both with their first big initiatives in the majority — the symbolic repeal of health care reform and the ” No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act .” Yesterday, while addressing the March for Life in Washington, D.C., Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN) had a message for critics of the decision to push an anti-abortion bill before tackling job creation: PENCE: These are trying times in the life of this nation. Our economy is struggling and our national government is awash in a sea of debt. Amidst these struggles, some would have us focus our energies on jobs and spending. We must not remain silent when great moral battles are being waged. Those who would have us ignore the battle being fought over life have forgotten the lessons of history. As in the days of a house divided, America’s darkest moments have come when economic arguments trumped moral principles. Pence commented that some people would rather Congress focus on economic issues, but he failed to mention that he was one of those people when Democrats held power. For instance, Pence declared in September that creating jobs “has to be the first priority and I believe will be the first priority if Republicans are given another opportunity to lead.” I also believe that it will be imperative that the new congress focus just as much energy on getting our economy moving again, making sure that in the city and on the farm, Americans have more of their own hard-earned resources to invest in ways that will create jobs, so putting our fiscal house in order, creating policies that will open the doors of opportunity to families during this difficult economy and create jobs has to be the first priority and I believe will be the first priority if Republicans are given another opportunity to lead. Similarly, in December 2009, Pence stated that ” jobs are the number one priority of the American people , and should be the number one priority of this Congress.” Like Pence, a number of leading Republicans have attacked President Obama and congressional Democrats for attempting to deal with health care — which is also a moral issue — instead of focusing all of their energy on job creation directly. I get the creeps every time I see this smug crackpot go on TV, but he knows where he lays his hat. See, Pence reveals that your jobs are really meaningless even though that’s the persona he wants you to believe.

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Prior to President Obama's State of the Union address Tuesday night, CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric wondered what the message of the midterm elections was, to which political analyst Jeff Greenfield replied: “You've got 87 new members of the House, many of whom are fired up with a kind of militancy we very rarely see, even among new members.” Greenfield went to proclaim: “One of the things Obama politically is going to try to do – not just tonight but over the next year – is to separate out the middle from what he will try to paint as a much too ideological Republican majority.” He then used the “militant” label a second time in describing tensions between new Tea Party members and Republican leadership: “It's also going to be a lot of pressure on new Speaker – the new House Speaker John Boehner. I mean, there's a tension between John Boehner and the more militant Tea Party folks.” Moments later, Couric turned to Face the Nation host Bob Schieffer and fretted: “And how serious, Bob Schieffer, do you see this chasm developing? I mean, how big a problem will this pose for the GOP?” Schieffer declared: “It is a problem. And, I mean, the fact that the Republican leadership is letting Michele Bachmann make a second response here just underlines that….they're afraid to tell her not to, because they know how powerful these Tea Party people were and the power they had in the last election.” Here is a transcript of the January 25 exchange: 9:06PM ET KATIE COURIC: You know, Jeff, a lot of people are saying the real battle is how the recent midterm elections should be interpreted. Republicans say voters wanted less government, they didn't want government-run health care. And the White House claims they just didn't like partisan politics and they wanted both sides to work together. What do you think the message of the midterms was? JEFF GREENFIELD: Because different people can interpret those differently, one of the most important things we're going to see is how the Republicans interpret it when they start to govern. You've got 87 new members of the House, many of whom are fired up with a kind of militancy we very rarely see, even among new members. They really believe they were elected to put a firm immediate halt on spending and one of the things Obama politically is going to try to do – not just tonight but over the next year – is to separate out the middle from what he will try to paint as a much too ideological Republican majority. It's also going to be a lot of pressure on new Speaker – the new House Speaker John Boehner. I mean, there's a tension between John Boehner and the more militant Tea Party folks. That may be the best political story this season. COURIC: And, in fact, John Dickerson, how is that shaking out? We all talked about after the midterm results how these two, basically, sides of the Republican Party were going to be integrated once this new congress was convened. What have you seen happen? How has it all sort of turned out so far? JOHN DICKERSON: Well, it's a shaky business so far and the shakiness comes, we see it tonight. Congressman Paul Ryan, who will give the official Republican response, and then Congresswoman Michele Bachmann will give another sort of Tea Party response. And the difference there, essentially, is between governing – which is what Ryan has to do, put together a budget, listen to all of the input and voices – and Michele Bachmann who's doing a little bit something closer to campaigning. And the mix there and how they find that mix, how they keep all of those promises they made, but still get enough votes to actually pass something that could even make it to the President's desk. That's the tension and they're still working that out and they're working it out in public. COURIC: And how serious, Bob Schieffer, do you see this chasm developing? I mean, how big a problem will this pose for the GOP? BOB SCHIEFFER: It is a problem. And, I mean, the fact that the Republican leadership is letting Michele Bachmann make a second response here just underlines that. I mean, my heavens, can you imagine what Sam Rayburn, when he was Speaker of the House, would have done if one of his members had said 'Oh, by the way, I'm going to make a response, too'? Or Lyndon Johnson, when he was the leader of the Senate? They're letting her make this speech because they're afraid to tell her not to, because they know how powerful these Tea Party people were and the power they had in the last election.

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Fox News’ Megyn Kelly claimed last week that her network doesn’t use Nazi references. Since that’s just flat out wrong, the ball was in Jon Stewart’s court to call her out. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN) had made a speech on the House floor last week comparing a Republican plan to repeal health care reform to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels. In an interview with Kelly, Democratic strategist Richard Socarides pointed out that Cohen wasn’t the only one to invoke Nazis. “If we want to get into who is heating this and overheating this, I mean every night on the very network we’re on right now, the leading commentators on this network use this kind of language,” he explained. “That’s not true, Richard,” Kelly shot back. “I don’t know if you sit and watch our programming every night, but I watch it every day, and you’re wrong.” “Megyn, I watch it every day, too,” Stewart noted. “12 long years. I think he might be right.” Comedy Central’s staff quickly produced clip after clip to prove that Kelly was the one who was wrong. “If you look back at what happened in Germany you cannot escape the similarities between what Hitler and his cut throats did back then and the hate-filled blogs, what they’re doing now,” Fox News’ Bill O’Reilly said in Feb. 2008. “There is an Obama supporter, he’s got this book and this video out that are propaganda pieces,” Fox News’ Glenn Beck said in March 2010. “And I’m telling you, they would make Joseph Goebbels proud.” “The far left in this country, the zealots — I mean these are zealots — are Nazis,” O’Reilly said in another clip. In all, Stewart found about ten clips of with Nazi references. One example was even on Kelly’s show. “Well, true believers always make me a little nervous,” Bernie Goldberg told Kelly in a segment about anti-war protesters Code Pink. “I am not calling these people Nazis. I want to make that clear, but they are not behaving like liberals. They are behaving like brown-shirted thugs.” “Aha!” shouted Stewart. “I’m not saying they’re Nazis. I’m saying they are behaving like the soldiers Hitler used. Aha! Well, Ms. Kelly, don’t you look ridiculous now?”

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