Click here to view this media Looks like someone has had quite enough of Sarah Palin and her eliminationist rhetoric: Shooting prompts legislation to protect lawmakers, officials : Rep. Robert Brady, D-Pennsylvania, said he will introduce legislation making it a federal crime for a person to use language or symbols that could be perceived as threatening or inciting violence against a Member of Congress or federal official. Brady’s decision to offer the legislation comes less than 24 hours after a gunman attempted to assassinate Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Arizona, in a shooting that claimed the lives of a federal judge, and a nine year-old girl, among others. “The president is a federal official,” Brady said in a telephone interview with CNN. “You can’t do it to him; you should not be able to do it to a congressman, senator or federal judge. “This is not a wake up call, this is major alarms going off,” he said. Brady is particularly incensed over a web posting by former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin during the 2010 election in which she targeted 20 House Democrats, including Giffords for political defeat. The posting showed a map of the United States with the 20 Democratic congressional districts identified by gun sights. “You can’t put bulls eyes or crosshairs on a United States congressman or a federal official,” Brady said. “I understand this web site that had it on there is no longer in existence. Someone is feeling a little guilty.” But a Palin aide Saturday denied the web posting from the 2010 congressional campaign was designed to incite violence. Rebecca Mansour told conservative host Tammy Bruce that it was a political tool and noted it should have been removed after the November election. Brady said he is hearing that the spouses of some of his congressional colleagues, specifically the newly elected members, are terrified and questioning whether they should remain in Congress. Upon hearing the news of the shooting Saturday, some spouses attending a freshman retreat in West Virginia, were “taking their children out of the daycare,” Brady said he was told. “The spouses are in an uproar,” he said. “They are panicking.” Brady said it is now time to put an end to the hyper-charged language. Well, we’ll see if Republicans go along with it, and what’s in the legislation, but I could see something like this being abused pretty easily, depending on the language in the bill.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) may only be an eye doctor but he didn’t hesitate in offering a medical diagnoses for the man that allegedly shot Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) Saturday. “I looked at some of the writings of this young man,” Paul told Fox News’ Bret Baier Sunday. “From a medical point of view, there is a lot to suggest paranoid schizophrenia, that this man was a really sick individual,” he said of Jared Loughner, the man suspected of shooting Giffords. “Absolutely we need to condemn the violence. And absolutely we need to have our prayers and our thoughts with those who suffered from this violence,” he added. Paul, a self-certified ophthalmologist , didn’t reveal which qualifications allowed him to make the diagnosis. As a darling of the tea party and a political ally of Fox News’ Sarah Palin, Paul may have reason to deemphasize any connections between Loughner and conservative ideology. Giffords was on Palin’s so-called hit list of Democratic districts being “targeted” for defeat. When Palin’s name was mentioned at a vigil for Giffords Saturday, Fox News quickly cut away . Paul also said Sunday that calls for more restrictive gun laws shouldn’t play a part in the tragedy. “I don’t think that plays into this at all. I think they’re unrelated,” he said. “This is probably about a very sick individual and what should be done for that person.” “But the weapons don’t kill people, it’s he individual that kills — that killed these people.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Thank you Harry Reid! It’s about time I heard a Democrat start to push back against the rhetoric we’ve been hearing on Social Security. David Gregory tried to get Reid to say that we need to go after Social Security to solve our “debt problem” (the one they only started caring about after a Democrat got elected as president) and Reid held firm that the program is not in crisis and is going to be solvent for years to come. Frankly I’d like to see them leave that percentage right where it is now and take the cap off of the terribly regressive tax, but I would imagine it will be a cold day in hell before we see the politicians allow that to happen. DAVID GREGORY: What about the role of government, however? Under President Obama the federal debt has expanded by 32 percent. Are people rightfully concerned about the role of government under this President, under Democratic leadership? HARRY REID: People are concerned about the debt, as they should be. But let’s just go back a little bit and look at history. It’s not as if we Democrats don’t know how to run government. Bill Clinton had a program called PAYGO. If you’re gonna have a new program, pay for it; either by increasing revenue or cutting other programs. We did that, and as a result of that we were paying down the debt. And during the eight years of Bush, the first thing they did is get rid of the PAYGO rules. And we have them now reestablished. And we– this last Congress, 111th Congress and President Obama, found ourselves in a hole so deep, you couldn’t see the top of it. And we’re working out way out of that hole. DAVID GREGORY: Social Security– how does it have to change? What they put on the agenda is raising the retirement age, maybe means testing benefits. Is it time for Social Security to fundamentally change if you’re gonna deal with the debt problem? HARRY REID: One of the things that always troubles me is when we start talking about the debt, the first thing people do is run to Social Security. Social Security is a program that works. And it’s going to be– it’s fully funded for the next forty years. Stop picking on Social Security. There’re a lotta places– DAVID GREGORY: Senator are you really saying — HARRY REID: –where you can go to save money. DAVID GREGORY:– the arithmetic on Social Security works? HARRY REID: I’m saying the arithmetic in Social Security works. I have no doubt it does. DAVID GREGORY: It’s not in crisis? HARRY REID: The ne– no, it’s not in crisis. This is– this is– this is something that’s perpetuated by people who don’t like government. Social Security is fine. Are there things we can do to improve Social Security? Of course. DAVID GREGORY: Means testing. Raising the — DAVID GREGORY:–retirement age– HARRY REID: –don’t– DAVID GREGORY: –do you– HARRY REID: –I’m– DAVID GREGORY: –agree with either of those? HARRY REID: –I’m not going to go to with any of those backdoor methods- you know, to whack Social Security recipients. I’m not going to do that. We have a lot of things we can do with– this debt. It’s a problem. But one of the places where I’m not going to be part of picking on is Social Security.
Continue reading …It has become apparent in the last 24 hours that the mainstream media is bent on attributing some level of blame for yesterday's tragic shooting in Tuscon, Arizona to Sarah Palin. The chief piece of evidence for this claim is a map SarahPAC devised that placed crosshairs over a number of congressional districts the group would target during the 2010 election cycle. But if violent metaphors in political rhetoric drive crazy people to violence, than the media had better save some blame for themselves, since political reporting is replete with such language (Howard Kurtz noted that fact in his column today). Here are just a few examples (h/t Rich Noyes): read more
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Republicans are off to a rough start after taking control of the House of Representative Wednesday. MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow noted Thursday that the party had only been in power for some 33 hours when they had already made, by her count, at least eight serious missteps. “Their initial pledges to the American people have turned out to be kind of a mess,” she said. As one of their first acts, Republicans decided to read the Constitution on the House floor Thursday, but purposefully left out some of the more embarrassing passages. For example, the three-fifths compromise that counted slaves as part of a person was nullified by the 13th Amendment, and so it wasn’t included in the reading. The 18th Amendment, which imposed prohibition on alcohol, was omitted. In addition, Article 4 Section 4 was accidentally left out of the reading because pages in a three-ring binder “simply stuck together.” In their ” Pledge to America ,” Republicans said they would cut $100 billion from the budget in the first year, but have recently backed away from that number. Homeland Security Committee chair Peter King (R-NY) is looking at cutting $50 billion, and a GOP aide told The Huffington Post’s Howard Fineman that the bottom line is more like $30 billion. While the Democrats were in power, Republicans complained that the open rules process — allowing unlimited amendments and debate — wasn’t used. Politico observed Thursday that “[n]one of the bills that will be brought to the floor this week will be brought under open rules.” Republicans adopted a new rule called cut-as-you-go that requires all legislation that will increase the deficit to be offset with spending cuts. The Congressional Budget Office has said that one of the Republicans’ first initiatives, repealing health care reform, would add $230 billion to the to the national debt over ten years. Party leadership has solved this problem by exempting repeal of health care reform from the rules. The GOP promised that all committee attendance would be publicly posted. They reversed that rule Tuesday. In their Pledge to America, Republicans promised that all bills would be justified with a citation of the Constitution. “The three bills that Republicans plan to introduce this week — one to cut the congressional budget, one to repeal the health care bill and another to instruct House committees to present new health care legislation — were posted on the Rules Committee website with plenty of time for review, but none had the constitutional citation for similar review,” Politico reported . “The Republican Party has wrapped itself in the Constitution at every turn for political purposes,” Maddow continued. “They’ve outdone themselves on this matter.” Two House Republicans skipped out on the swearing-in ceremony on the House floor Wednesday. The Huffington Post reported that Rep. Pete Sessions (R-TX) and Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick (R-PA) decided to attend a fundraiser instead. The two tried to claim they had been properly sworn in because they had raised their hands while watching the swearing in on television. Sessions and Fitzpatrick went on to cast votes in the House. Sessions even presided over the Rules Committee. “Dude, you can’t get sworn in by a TV,” Maddow explained. “You have to be there in person. If you could become a congressman by raising your hand at the TV, everyone simultaneously watching C-SPAN yesterday and reaching for something on a high shelf or waving to a friend would be a congressman right now.” “These are self-inflicted things,” she added. “Republicans carefully laid out these rakes on the floor inside the front door. They’ve been stepping on them one after the other since they got in.”
Continue reading …Now that it no longer has a complete monopoly on the media, the collectivist Left may have a hard time getting the public to swallow its meme that Gabrielle Giffords was shot because conservatives voice violent rhetoric. If you want… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Moonbattery Discovery Date : 09/01/2011 19:30 Number of articles : 6
Continue reading …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.
Continue reading …I’m waiting for Glenn Beck to finally apologize. I’m waiting for him to acknowledge that violent rhetoric can and does influence mentally unbalanced people , and that a line has been so clearly crossed , even Glenn Beck has regrets. When you tell people Obama’s planning to kill them , that has consequences. When you warn people of an impending Reichstag moment and power grab , you’re targeting our leaders. When Byron Williams, armed to the teeth and wearing body armor, drives to San Francisco to shoot officials of the Tides Foundation and hopefully start a revolution, was it a coincidence that you’d targeted them with your violent rhetoric? When your fan Richard Poplowski became so convinced that the Obama administration would take his guns that he gunned down three Pittsburgh policemen , you planted those seeds. What’s that old saying? “Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind.” You can hide behind the flag, Mr. Beck, but now everyone sees you for who you are. You’re a liar, and a bully, and a thug. You incite other people and sit back, counting your cash. Shame on you. You’re a twisted excuse for a human being, and your words led to the death of other human beings. No, you didn’t pull the trigger — but neither did Charles Manson. Dave blogged about it back in real time : Click here to view this media Beck: Look — Timothy McVeigh — nutjob! Nutjob! On the fringe of the right! That, President Clinton tried to blame on Rush Limbaugh. It was ridiculous then, and it’s ridiculous now. Harvey Milk — killed by a guy who was hepped up on Twinkies. It was ridiculous then — it’s ridiculous now. The shooter — and Timothy McVeigh — crazy people! It’s madness. Expect to hear this a lot more in the coming days.
Continue reading …Like many others, I spent much of today watching in horror the shooting of 19 people including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. It was a tragedy not only for the families of the victims but for all of America. The shooter’s name was Jared Lee Loughner. Almost immediately the Left raced to say the shooting was the fault of Sarah Palin and the Tea Party, the Right countered that evidence shows Loughner was an… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : YID With LID Discovery Date : 09/01/2011 07:45 Number of articles : 6
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Fox News started covering a vigil that was happening at the steps of the capitol in Arizona in honor of Gabrielle Giffords after she was shot earlier today. As soon as a young man mentioned Sarah Palin’s name, FOX News abruptly cut to commercial. It’s sickening. FOX News will do anything to protect the investment they have made in Sarah Palin, even at the expense of Rep. Giffords. Smith: in addition we are noticing outside the capitol in Phoenix with pictures courtesy of KSAZ, which I’m told you can put up there; a vigil is taking place… Man: Gabby, we have to look into our hearts and say to ourselves why, why do I want power. Not that I want power. And I say to you Sarah Palin. {Smash Cut to commercial.} . Sarah Palin has today been under criticism because of her insane “Target Map” in which Giffords was a member of those that were put in the cross-hairs. Elisabeth Hasselbeck was one of Sarah Palin’s biggest fans during the 2008 election so it surprising to see her bash Sarah Palin over her over the top “Re-Load” Face Book chart and called it despicable. In never-thought-you’d-see-the-day news, staunch conservative Elisabeth Hasselbeck went off on The View yesterday, railing against none other than Sarah Palin. Why? Because Palin, for whom she campaigned during the ’08 election, released an ad that put 20 Democratic members of Congress literally in the crosshairs. — The former Alaska Governor’s Facebook page features her political action committee’s ad targeting the 20 Democratic incumbents, with a SarahPac map marking districts where Democrats voted “yes” for health care reform with guns . — Hasselbeck also opposes health reform, but she’s actually far more upset about how people on her own side of the political spectrum are handling themselves. “I think the way some Republicans are handling this is nothing more than despicable,” she said in response to Palin’s tasteless ad. “It’s disappointing to see this coming from the Party , and I would hope that leaders like Sarah Palin would end this.” The violence that we predicted is taking place and it’s even scaring the likes of Hasselbeck. FWIW, here’s the SarahPAC graphic in question: enlarge No wonder Fox and Palin want everyone to forget. Especially Fox. There’s nothing they won’t do to protect Sarah Palin. (h/t Dave Weigel tweet)
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