I wouldn't call the Tea Party a Party as much as a political movement within another party.
The lulz just keep on coming.Tim Profitt -- the former Rand Paul volunteer who stomped on the head of a MoveOn activist -- told told local CBS station WKYT that he wants an apology from the woman he stomped and that she started the whole thing.
"I don't think it's that big of a deal," Profitt said. "I would like for her to apologize to me to be honest with you."
We deserved 9/11 because we bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Perfectly reasonable train of thought...In addition to damning America, he told his congregation on the Sunday after Sept. 11, 2001 that the United States had brought on al Qaeda's attacks because of its own terrorism.
"We bombed Hiroshima, we bombed Nagasaki, and we nuked far more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon, and we never batted an eye," Rev. Wright said in a sermon on Sept. 16, 2001.
If it wasn't such a frustrating premonition for how I perceive the future of this country to be, it would be hilarious. But then I think that in a few decades, these people will be puzzled why Mountain Dew is killing their plants.
- now, whether or not you believe in free market jesus is irrelevant, as this is a debate about religion, and a religious view that's not particularly extreme. The idea of Jesus being a servant to the poor is evidenced by...his service to the poor. That one thing about the rich man, a camel, and the eye of a needle? That wasn't found in Dianetics. So my point is that you're pointing to a *highly* contestable religious argument, one with a great deal of plausibility, and saying that you think someone is too extreme? If he believed that Jesus, for instance, said "if there's grass in the field, PLAY BALL, dude!" with regard to romantic encounters, then perhaps we could agree that he's a bit off base from the Christian message. But if you think the idea of helping the poor is contentious, I got a book about Jesus I think you should read. It might open your mind about him a bit more.he believes that Jesus believed in forced redistribution of wealth
- you're being vague here. i bet you don't even know what the projected deficits for FY 2009/2010 were. You will, once you respond to this post and google them beforehand. Now that you know them, compare them to year-over-year deficit rates for the past 30 years (inflation adjusted, of course). OMG HE SPENT MONEY ON TARP; that's coming back at a profit to the government. So focus on, you know, the specifics of the overspending. How large does a deficit have to be to meet your definition of "extreme?" Also, there is no such thing as "deficit money." Also, when you say "spent more" do you mean aggregated over full presidential terms (i.e., Obama has outspent 8 years of Bush in 2 years)? You're hardly making any sense at this point - you're just throwing stuff at the wall and hoping it sticks.he has spent more deficit money than any other president (the definition of extreme--significantly more than all else)
he has created new executive powers at an astounding rate, creating czars who have no accountabliity to congress
he has nationalized more of our nations economy that most of us believed was even possible in the US of A
how about using his power as the new "CEO" of GM to BUILD A PLANT IN MEXICO, providing who with more jobs?
How about appointing a known and self proclaimed communist to his staff? (although he was later let go)
Yea. Credit where it's due? Course not.Government Motors no more
An apology is due to Barack Obama: his takeover of GM could have gone horribly wrong, but it has not
[...]
Many people thought this bail-out (and a smaller one involving Chrysler, an even sicker firm) unwise. Governments have historically been lousy stewards of industry. Lovers of free markets (including The Economist) feared that Mr Obama might use GM as a political tool: perhaps favouring the unions who donate to Democrats or forcing the firm to build smaller, greener cars than consumers want to buy. The label “Government Motors” quickly stuck, evoking images of clunky committee-built cars that burned banknotes instead of petrol—all run by what Sarah Palin might call the socialist-in-chief.
Yet the doomsayers were wrong.
[...]
That does not mean, however, that bail-outs are always or often justified. Straightforward bankruptcy is usually the most efficient way to allow floundering firms to restructure or fail. The state should step in only when a firm’s collapse poses a systemic risk. Propping up the financial system in 2008 clearly qualified. Saving GM was a harder call, but, with the benefit of hindsight, the right one. The lesson for governments is that for a bail-out to work, it must be brutal and temporary. The lesson for American voters is that their president, for all his flaws, has no desire to own the commanding heights of industry. A gambler, yes. An interventionist, yes. A socialist, no.
- now, whether or not you believe in free market jesus is irrelevant, as this is a debate about religion, and a religious view that's not particularly extreme. The idea of Jesus being a servant to the poor is evidenced by...his service to the poor. That one thing about the rich man, a camel, and the eye of a needle? That wasn't found in Dianetics. So my point is that you're pointing to a *highly* contestable religious argument, one with a great deal of plausibility, and saying that you think someone is too extreme? If he believed that Jesus, for instance, said "if there's grass in the field, PLAY BALL, dude!" with regard to romantic encounters, then perhaps we could agree that he's a bit off base from the Christian message. But if you think the idea of helping the poor is contentious, I got a book about Jesus I think you should read. It might open your mind about him a bit more.
I should have also qualified much of what I listed with also stating that I viewed Bush as an extremist as well.cite your source; show us that these positions exist in greater numbers for the Obama administration than they have for prior presidential administrations. If you want to make a comparative claim ("created new executive powers at an astounding rate"), show us the baseline. Compared to what rate? Compared to 2000-2008, he's increased the power of the executive? You're out of your mind.
Google it yourself, as I stated before, I'm not here to apply for the Mykevermin stamp of approval on my "feelings of extremist" application.This is really you taking one point and splitting it up because you couldn't think of other examples. First, cite your source for the Mexico claim. Second, please tell me what you would have done in Obama's position, given the circumstances he's in. Would you have let GM and other auto manufacturers fall, destroying thousands of US jobs, and wrecking the economy? If so, how dare you have the gall to call anyone "extreme"? What alternate, NONEXTREMEBUTMODERATE policies could Obama have put in place that would have saved GM and not nationalized them and/or been cheaper?
Van Jones? GTFO. You're merely supporting the politics of personal assassination when it benefits you. You know who's not pursuing the whole "Christine O'Donnell is a satan worshipping hottentot" angle? Me. Other liberals. Why? Because it'sing stupid (except when it's parodied on SNL, that was just kinda sorta funny). We attack her for being a maniacal crazy bonkers dipshit who has amazingly insipid ideas, philosophies, and policy proposals. We don't go after Rand Paul for worshipping Aqua Buddha, but for being a totalitarian society wrecker conspiracy theorist. We don't go after Sharron Angle for...um, not being a communist?...but instead because her ideas are my-eyes-are-literally-not-figuratively-coming-out-of-my-head stupid at best, racist at worst.
Van Jones? You probably think ACORN is still a corrupt agency that deserved to be defunded, and that James O'Keefe is "da man" (or whatever vernacular you use). You probably thought the same thing about NPR a week ago, yes?
You don't support ideas, you support outcomes, and any idea, no matter how inane or contradictory, that helps get you there. Your arguments about Obama's "extremism" are only "extreme" if you place someone who thinks health care is "kinda expensive" as a "far left radical" and move from there. If you take someone who says "AMERICA HEALTH CARE KICKS YOURING PUSSY TALIBAN ASS, BITCH!
I should have also qualified much of what I listed with also stating that I viewed Bush as an extremist as well.
Google it yourself, as I stated before, I'm not here to apply for the Mykevermin stamp of approval on my "feelings of extremist" application.
And bailing out GM was extreme, and should not have been done. One of my biggest complaints of Obama.
Wow, three paragraphs and not one attempt to claim he is not an avowed communist. Focus much?
I would consider the act of any president that appointed an avowed communist to his cabinet as extreme. If you think that's a stupid position, that likely puts you in a small minority.
But they don't read, dude. They don't read.(Have you actually read Adam Smith? Today he'd be a democrat. It's clear on almost every page.)
[/QUOTE]The stomping was one of two reported to Lexington police outside the debate. Paul supporter Marsha Foster, 49, reported that earlier in the night a person had intentionally stomped on her broken foot, causing “minor visible injuries,” according to a police report. Foster could not be reached immediately for comment.
Stage a scene for Republican candidate's supporters. The reactions of a candidate's supporters to the RepubliCorp brand is a compelling part of the event. Try to position at least one scene near or in the crowd of supporters, and try to capture their response to your action on video.