Tag Archives: president

Tea partiers: You get mad now?

do you know wtf are you talking about?

another solid argument from a 'tea bagger'

Since the health-care debate brought out the worst in the tea party protesters, we’ve seen a shift from fear mongering, to the disgusting behavior of last weekend that included bigoted, racist name calling, spitting on on elected officials and finally vandalism and death threats.  If it weren’t clear before, the ‘movement’ has truly showed us what is  behind their manufactured anger, and it ain’t health care.  Case in point, how can people be mad now, when they weren’t mad when the previous administration that just walked all over the constitution, sent us into a war with a country that never attacked us and raised the debt to record highs?  Well as I tried to figure out how to condense my thoughts, who would have thought Rosie O’Donnell would have covered it so well, with a post on her blog titled We had eight years of Bush and Cheney, Now you get mad!? One of her readers was able to succinctly break down the blatant hypocrisy of this whole affair, providing a perfect platform for a tea party rebuttal, but don’t expect that, instead lets expect more gay bashing from those cowards.  I’m reprinting the post here (just like the DailyKos did) because it needs more exposure, so please pass it on.  After that, follow-up by reading Frank Rich’s Op-Ed titled The Rage Is Not About Health Care for more rational of what is the true driver for this behavior, it gives us a lot to think about.

01-20-2009 – the end

george_bush_holding_breath

I’ll be long gone before some smart person ever figures out what happened inside this Oval Office.

George W. Bush, Washington DC, 12 May, 2008

* So I did some checking to get a source for this, and as I expected, it’s slightly taken out of context (Bush was trying to infer that someone would be impressed with what he accomplished). The interview was done by Shmuel Rosner of Haaretz.com – you can see the full transcript here.

The ongoing hypocrisy of the Republicans

McCain and Dubya eating cake while Katrina kills

McCain and Dubya eating cake while Katrina kills

This shows what I hate about the conservative “right” – blatant hypocrisy.  As usual, The Daily Show highlights these … let’s say shifts of opinions, with recent videos that show them playing both sides of the issue, depending on the subject. If it was a liberal issue, they’re all over it, if the EXACT issue comes up with them, it’s off limits and we’re the “angry left” for bringing it up! Just watch a few minutes here, you’ll see what I mean.

John McSame – why M.c.Cain would be 4 more years of the same

Why McCain would be another 4 years of the sameUPDATE: months after confusing Iran and Iraq, (multipletimes), M.c.Cain continues to try to upstage Bush’s famous canon of mis-spoken quotes by stating that Putin is President of Germany.

Say what you want about Barack Obama’s ‘change’ message, just know if you go with J.o.hn M.c.Cain you’re saying yes to four more years of Bush style politics.  While he’s still hawking that ‘maverick’ tag, don’t believe the hype, instead, let’s look at some statements by the senator.  Recently M.c.Cain perked my interest when he came out in favor of FISA, warrantless wiretapping/eavesdropping and executive power.  Funny thing is, he had the exact opposite opinion on these topics when he was asked in December 2007!

On Wednesday, I documented J.o.hn M.c.Cain’s complete reversal of views — in the last six months alone — on FISA, warrantless eavesdropping and executive power. M.c.Cain’s diametrically opposite views were contained in a questionnaire M.c.Cain completed for The Boston Globe last December (wherein he rejected many of the Bush/Cheney theories of presidential omnipotence and warrantless eavesdropping) and then a statement M.c.Cain issued this week to National Review (wherein he embraced those same theories in order to persuade the Right that he approves of and would continue Bush’s lawless surveillance policies).

Another source states more of what transcribed at the National Review:

A top adviser to Senator J.o.hn M.c.Cain says Mr. M.c.Cain believes that President Bush’s program of wiretapping without warrants was lawful, a position that appears to bring him into closer alignment with the sweeping theories of executive authority pushed by the Bush administration legal team.

In a letter posted online by National Review this week, the adviser, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, said Mr. M.c.Cain believed that the Constitution gave Mr. Bush the power to authorize the National Security Agency to monitor Americans’ international phone calls and e-mail without warrants, despite a 1978 federal statute that required court oversight of surveillance…