Are Republicans Preparing to Militarize?

Are Republicans Preparing to Militarize?

You know, the title really should be a stupid question.​
More info from your guardian link:

"The main reason Buchal gave for his attraction to the militia groups was the cancellation of the Avenue of the Roses Parade, an annual Portland community event scheduled for 29 April, after organisers received an anonymously emailed threat of disruption."

“There is definitely something wrong if criminal gangs are essentially allowed to shut down normal and traditional activities of Republicans. With that climate arising, the question becomes: what do you do? A lot of the rank and file party members are old and frail people. They are intimidated by what’s going on.”

At the end of the day this isn't my problem to fix. A left-wing nut-job cancelled the parade, and a right wing nut-job killed the Muslims.

Maybe I should just step out of it.
 
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The OP says: "Is the republican party preparing to militarize"? It is written in the present tense and the 2016 election is over already. Is the present affected in some way, are we conjecturing a 2020 election scenario, or what?
Did you read the text and quoted passage in the OP?
Isn't it rather odd that terrible people like that don't show up at democrat rallies and do the same thing or worse to disrupt them?
Who says that they do not? There is a famous video of Obama speaking at a rally and a Trump supporter started screaming at him and disrupting his speech and he was quite fine with it and even defended his right to protest.

I mean, you missed those who rocked up to Clinton events screaming "lock her up"? Or selective memory?

The issue raised in the OP is that the GOP in Portland, in response to a right winger murdering two people for defending two young women because they looked Muslim, who had attended a right wing white supremacist rally, are now saying that they intend to have right wing white supremacist groups providing security for their future events, because one of their events that was meant to happen in the coming days, was canceled due to the murder that occurred and the fact that these events incite violence and hate. In a way, it is an attempt by the GOP to militarise by having armed right wing white supremacist militia groups provide their "security". These are the same groups that have been harassing and committing acts of violence against minorities in Portland for a very long time. But the GOP in Portland are hinting at having a sort of armed wing in the party, which is exceptionally dangerous, especially in light of the events that occurred recently.

Do you understand what the subject is now?
Yeah, I agree. Poor judgement at work here. Maybe the OP should read: "Did the Republican party learn their lesson in 2016"? The same should be asked of the protesters. They went there to start trouble and they got 4 years of a Trump/Pence administration in return. They helped put him there.
I think what got Trump/Pence into the White House is a combination of factors. Racism and bigotry being just one of the response to the support for Trump.
The sheriffs of sanctuary cities refuse to enforce federal law. I thought everyone knew that.
Now you are delving into the realm of individual State rights over Federal rights. The sheriffs also act and work under their local laws and orders from their superiors, such as the Governors, Mayor's of their districts.

Trump's executive orders could very well be unconstitutional.

And once again, you are completely off topic.
Immigration laws for one. They need to be more immigrant friendly or do you like them the way they are?
But you are complaining about sanctuary cities and what you deem to be sheriffs who fail to adhere to Trump's executive orders, that bypassed existing laws passed through Congress and which is now under an injunction to halt it because of the questions regarding whether it was constitutional or not. And once more, you are off topic.
New laws are being passed around the country to arrest protesters who obstruct traffic, and make public safety threats (bullying). This came after a BLM protest in Memphis where a baby needed to go to the ER and couldn't because I-40 was blocked and they couldn't turn the car around on the bridge. This is a video from a Memphis news broadcast. Several states are writing laws to make this kind of thing a felony:
Oookay. Now consider that only certain few are allowed to protest and will have armed right wing white supremacist militia providing "security".. I think laws against protests are unconstitutional.. Something something about your Bill of Rights go here.
It seems everyone is talking past me. Yeah the police are perfect. Listen to yourself. Why is BLM around?
You are still off topic.
Why are you so intent on trolling to stop them from doing so?

I have attempted to discuss the thread's topic with you and you seem intent on discussing everything but the thread's topic. What gives?
I am addressing your comments point by point and I'm off topic.
Well you are off topic and you are forcing me to go off topic to address your off topic points and trying to steer you back to the subject in the OP. You have done the same with everyone else.
The point is you can have black police officers and a black sheriff trying to control a race riot, and it doesn't make much difference. Aren't the Trump rallies race riots, or do you have a better name for them? What do you propose to put out the fire?
The GOP in Portland is proposing using white supremacist militia to "put out the fire".. What do you think of that? What do you think could go wrong? Do you think it is a good idea or a bad idea? Do you think it is appropriate for the GOP in Portland to look at literally having a form of military wing to provide support for their public events and protests?
Facebook is where I go for reactions, not facts. I get to hear all sides of an argument. The concept sounds foreign to you -- where you actually listen to people you disagree with and look for common ground.
The issue with Facebook and other forms of social media is that it is rife with trolls. It is online, faceless, with zero consequences. You will not get unbiased opinions on Facebook. On the contrary, you will get the absolute opposite.
So when Hillary makes a post on facebook, I shouldn't read it. ok.
I did not say you should not read it. I said that people who rely on social media for that kind of information are naive.
True, and the bias works both ways instead of the way that makes you feel good.
What we see, and we have seen that from you many times in this thread, is this repeat of ridiculous talking points and falsehoods as though they are true and factual. You do not appear to be getting any of your information from any reliable source and you have every appearance of being the type of mouthpiece that, to be blunt, spouts absolute rubbish and conspiracies. You are a prime example of why politics and Facebook should never mix.
ok. That's up to you. I guess you feel better with a virtual name where we are all virtual people. Personally, I have found a presence on Facebook brings accountability when people communicate, and the dialogue is more civil as a result.
Groups that engage in illegal activity, such as inciting violence and hatred, can land their followers and those who delve into their social media pages for information or opinions, into trouble. Unless I am working on research, I would not delve or visit their Facebook page on my home computer. For legal reasons as I do not want my digital footprint anywhere near them, as it is something that could damage my reputation and seeing that I use my actual name on Facebook, I don't want to even visit their page or any page associated with them from my account and on my home computer. You will only see what they want you to see on their pages. There is no accountability because these people feel comfortable spouting their hatred and inciting violence amongst themselves, with no opposition and lack of accountability because everyone who is there, believes as they do.
OK. In that case they were going to use public property to march. We all share the right to public property. The republican rallies are tenet by entirety, like when you rent an apartment. When you have a party you have the right to throw out anybody you don't want in your apartment. People that come there purely to start trouble should be jailed.
This wasn't just a GOP rally. This was a white supremacist and right wing rally that was canceled, after what happened in Portland. You might share the right to public property, but if someone uses said public property in a way that endangers others, the Mayor and the Governor have every right to cancel that event. Which is essentially what happened in Portland. The GOP there are now demanding that they will hold it anyway, and use white supremacist militia groups for security, possibly against law enforcement and others who do not believe as they do or do not look like they do. Understand now?
Those people are there to start trouble aren't they? Like the Westboro gang. God forbid they should show up at a funeral that I attend.
Again, as abhorrent as they are, their speech is protected. They know to stop short of inciting violence. The right wing rally attended by the murderer, incited violence. The rally itself was problematic. And inciting violence is not protected under your Constitution. So the State has every right to cancel that event.
If the wrong people stay home then the point is moot.
Are you suggesting that anyone not white, male and heterosexual should just stay home? Because white supremacist rallies incite violence against others not like them. You do get this, yes?
 
President Trump is not a patrician politician. He is a deal maker. There is a difference, which many on the left fail to see. A deal maker will take an extreme position to start the deal, knowing his opponent, will go the other way to pull the deal in his favor. In the deal, they pull in opposite directions and meet somewhere in the middle, with both happy. This is not called flip flopping, but the art of the deal.

Trump is not a patrician? Trump was born into of America’s richest families if not the richest and Trump is not a patrician? I guess that’s another of those famous right wing “alternate facts”. Pretty soon he will be playing tennis with Jesus Christ.

Trump is a scam artist, a fraudster. He’s a narcissist, but he isn’t a great deal maker nor is he a plebeian as you are representing him to be.

Trump’s in an uncomfortable position on many fronts. He has made outlandish promises to his constituents. He has made promises that are entirely unrealistic and impossible even if he were able to fully implement his policies. He cannot deliver the 4% economic growth he promised. He can’t deliver the fiscal stimulus he promised. He cannot bring back the coal industry as promised. He cannot even slow its demise. It’s kind of like trying to protect the horse carriage industry when automobiles first came to market.

Trump has no choice but to flipflop on most of his promises or make excuses for his failures, because he has made impossible promises. Trump’s a shyster extraordinaire. He isn't a master negotiator. That was clear to me when he first published his book, "The Art of the Deal" back in the 80s. Trump is a snake oil salesman. He has and always will be a snake oil salesman.

A patrician takes an extreme position and has little flexibility to move. Anything less needs to be avoided out of peer pressure. If they compromise this is called flip flopping. This is why nothing gets done in Washington and why the left can't move forward.

Which is it? Trump wasn't a patrician and now he is? That was fast.

Compromise isn’t flip-flopping compromising comrade. It’s compromising. That’s why we have different words for each with different definitions. This just another attempt by folks like you to rewrite the dictionary in an attempt to advance your political ideology.

If the Democrats had given Trump a second bid, beyond the patrician ideal that nothing about Obama Care can change, the deal could go forward. But patricians don't know how to negotiate, and end up being insulted, turning a deal into a war.

Democrats have consistently stated they will negotiate in good faith with Trump or any and all Republicans. But Republicans and Trump in particular have yet to taken them up on their offer.

If you look at the photo above, Kathy Griffin is pretending to be an ISIS fighter, with that blank unfeeling indoctrinated stare, who has just beheaded Trump. If you check the historical data, ISIS tends to attack and behead innocent people. It is all about maximizing terrorist shock value to compensate for their weaknesses. Attacking the innocent appeals to the left, since it describes them. It is not about a fair fight or good eradicating evil, but evil attempting to terrorize the innocent. This is not making a deal It is disturbing to think that the left is that intolerant. This may drive the right to make a stand against evil. The left is creating its own reality, because of a biased pre-programmed fantasy that is more than just an opening bid in a negotiation.

In her photo Griffin made a political statement. She isn’t pretending to be an ISIS fighter. She wasn't dressed as a Muslim fighter. By the way ISIS beheads innocent and guilty alike. Griffin’s photo was a political protest and very similar to what folks like you have been doing to Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama for the last 8 years. And now when you have a Republican who is the brunt of those protests you suddenly become sensitive and offended? Hypocrite is thy name.
 
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That doesn't mean Trump's inauguration was competently run, with a normal ratio of potties to people.

The point is that the crowd-size was about average at the Trump inauguration contrary to exaggerations that say otherwise. I get the feeling that you just want to argue. Since everything I say is wrong in your opinion, how about we just ignore each other? Works for me.
 
The point is that the crowd-size was about average at the Trump inauguration contrary to exaggerations that say otherwise. I get the feeling that you just want to argue. Since everything I say is wrong in your opinion, how about we just ignore each other? Works for me.

Seems like you are quickly going to be ignoring most of the forum membership at this rate... makes one wonder what the point of even having you around is, since you are obviously not interested in honest or factual discussion.

This site is not your personal soap box, after all... maybe Twitter would be a better fit?
 
Did you read the text and quoted passage in the OP?Who says that they do not? There is a famous video of Obama speaking at a rally and a Trump supporter started screaming at him and disrupting his speech and he was quite fine with it and even defended his right to protest.

I mean, you missed those who rocked up to Clinton events screaming "lock her up"? Or selective memory?

Did any of them have to cancel speeches because of it? To tell you the truth, this left-right thing is turning my stomach. I don't think I can read much more.

The issue raised in the OP is that the GOP in Portland, in response to a right winger murdering two people for defending two young women because they looked Muslim, who had attended a right wing white supremacist rally, are now saying that they intend to have right wing white supremacist groups providing security for their future events, because one of their events that was meant to happen in the coming days, was canceled due to the murder that occurred and the fact that these events incite violence and hate.

I read the guardian article and it says this:

"The main reason Buchal gave for his attraction to the militia groups was the cancellation of the Avenue of the Roses Parade, an annual Portland community event scheduled for 29 April, after organisers received an anonymously emailed threat of disruption."

“There is definitely something wrong if criminal gangs are essentially allowed to shut down normal and traditional activities of Republicans. With that climate arising, the question becomes: what do you do? A lot of the rank and file party members are old and frail people. They are intimidated by what’s going on.”

Do you understand what the subject is now?I think what got Trump/Pence into the White House is a combination of factors. Racism and bigotry being just one of the response to the support for Trump. Now you are delving into the realm of individual State rights over Federal rights. The sheriffs also act and work under their local laws and orders from their superiors, such as the Governors, Mayor's of their districts.

That's the left's rally cry for sure.


I'm talking about the laws on the books before Trump became the president.

And once again, you are completely off topic.But you are complaining about sanctuary cities and what you deem to be sheriffs who fail to adhere to Trump's executive orders, that bypassed existing laws passed through Congress and which is now under an injunction to halt it because of the questions regarding whether it was constitutional or not.

Nope.

Actually you went the wrong direction on this. The immigration laws I'm talking about predate Obama, Bush, and possibly even Clinton. In addition, there is a nationally recognized need to update our law enforcement to the current environment especially regarding mental health issues:



The GOP in Portland is proposing using white supremacist militia to "put out the fire".. What do you think of that? What do you think could go wrong? Do you think it is a good idea or a bad idea? Do you think it is appropriate for the GOP in Portland to look at literally having a form of military wing to provide support for their public events and protests?

huh? I already said it was a terrible idea. You aren't even listening.

The issue with Facebook and other forms of social media is that it is rife with trolls. It is online, faceless, with zero consequences.

They are easy to spot, unlike here. You just go to their home page. Over here we know nothing about each other.

You will not get unbiased opinions on Facebook. On the contrary, you will get the absolute opposite.

Bravo. You are starting to get it (I think). Maybe not. I take it you have never facilitated a meeting with strong opposing viewpoints.

I said that people who rely on social media for that kind of information are naive.
That's your opinion. My opinion is people that can't think through the bias are naive.

What we see, and we have seen that from you many times in this thread, is this repeat of ridiculous talking points and falsehoods as though they are true and factual.

Well I try to say I could be wrong and ask other people's input. I'm not getting anything specific, just like now. You should point out examples that will help me improve.

You do not appear to be getting any of your information from any reliable source and you have every appearance of being the type of mouthpiece that, to be blunt, spouts absolute rubbish and conspiracies. You are a prime example of why politics and Facebook should never mix.

Do you or any one else have a reliable sources of unbiased factual information? I'm all ears. In a world that is less than perfect, I have to do my own thinking. That's what it should be anyway.

Groups that engage in illegal activity, such as inciting violence and hatred, can land their followers and those who delve into their social media pages for information or opinions, into trouble.

Yeah. Those types shouldn't be there to start with. I'm not that crazy about Facebook, but the conversations seem to be more civil than virtual forums.

Unless I am working on research, I would not delve or visit their Facebook page on my home computer.

Whereas I'm networked with a broad spectrum of liberals, conservatives, republicans, democrats, and people from all over the world. We try to look out for each other.

For legal reasons as I do not want my digital footprint anywhere near them, as it is something that could damage my reputation and seeing that I use my actual name on Facebook.

My brother is a lawyer and he's on facebook. Both of my brothers voted for Obama in both of his elections, and they voted for Trump in this one. Do you now anybody like that?

Are you suggesting that anyone not white, male and heterosexual should just stay home? Because white supremacist rallies incite violence against others not like them. You do get this, yes?

No, I'm saying the whole scenario makes me want to puke. I think I've had about all I can stomach.
 
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The point is that the crowd-size was about average at the Trump inauguration contrary to exaggerations that say otherwise. I get the feeling that you just want to argue. Since everything I say is wrong in your opinion, how about we just ignore each other? Works for me.
Except it wasn't, and the proof is in the pictures.
 
Would you agree that your life is a greater priority than my free speech?
Truly pathetic argument. "I would get stressed out if Trump speaks publicly, and my blood pressure would go up - therefore he must be silenced by court order."
 
The point is that the crowd-size was about average at the Trump inauguration contrary to exaggerations that say otherwise.
The only initial comparison I saw was to Obama's crowds. Not the average.
And the main instigation was Trump's claim that his was the biggest ever - a claim he repeated, even long after. The absurdity of that was the motive behind all the mockery and extended comparisons.
 
Seems like you are quickly going to be ignoring most of the forum membership at this rate... makes one wonder what the point of even having you around is, since you are obviously not interested in honest or factual discussion

So I'm going to get an honest, factual, balanced discussion on a forum with nothing but die-hard lefties to talk to, and it's going to fairly represent all viewpoints. Then you tell me what I think instead of asking me like a genuine person would do. That's a true left-winger I tell you.
 
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So I'm going to get an honest, factual, balanced discussion on a forum with nothing but die-hard lefties to talk to, and it's going to fairly represent all viewpoints.
There's nothing unfair about the way your viewpoint is represented here. You don't know any facts, you post nothing but wingnut stereotypes about people, and saying so is simply being honest with you. What's the problem with that?
 
There's nothing unfair about the way your viewpoint is represented here. You don't know any facts, you post nothing but wingnut stereotypes about people, and saying so is simply being honest with you. What's the problem with that?
I find most rightwingers are very uncomfortable in open forums; they prefer forums where their egos are stroked by large numbers of fellow supporters.
 
#factionalism | #WhatTheyVotedFor


Click for something entirely irrelevant.

Do you understand what the subject is now?

Personally, I don't think he's confused. That is to say, the otherwise astonishing naïveté we hope he merely pretends depicts conservatives as dangerously uninformed.

To wit:

“There is definitely something wrong if criminal gangs are essentially allowed to shut down normal and traditional activities of Republicans. With that climate arising, the question becomes: what do you do? A lot of the rank and file party members are old and frail people. They are intimidated by what’s going on.”

At the end of the day this isn't my problem to fix. A left-wing nut-job cancelled the parade, and a right wing nut-job killed the Muslims.

The Republic has survived since Rep. Gabby Giffords was shot. Some members of Congress are hiding behind her:

"I was shot on a Saturday morning," Giffords wrote in a statement. "By Monday morning, my offices were open to the public. Ron Barber—at my side that Saturday, who was shot multiple times, then elected to Congress in my stead—held town halls. It's what the people deserve in a representative."

"To the politicians who have abandoned their civic obligations, I say this: Have some courage," she continued. "Face your constituents. Hold town halls."

The sharp words were a direct response to a controversial statement released earlier by Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas), in which he invoked Giffords' shooting to defend his decision not to meet with his constituents.


(Oh↱)

Mr.Gohmert's response, incidentally, was to front some machismo to say he's received threats before, so, whatever, and what he's really worried about is that his constitutents are too angry with him for their own safety:

"Threats are nothing new to me, and I have gotten my share as a felony judge," Gohmert said. "However, the House Sergeant at Arms advised us after former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords was shot at a public appearance, that civilian attendees at Congressional public events stand the most chance of being harmed or killed—just as happened there."

An "anonymously emailed threat of disruption"? If that was the American standard you could shut down our society every day:

The anonymous message claimed “Trump supporters and 3% militia” were encouraging people to “bring hateful rhetoric” to East Portland. “Two hundred or more people”, the email said, would “rush into the middle and drag and push those people out”.

When the parade was called off, Buchal issued a statement in which he bemoaned a “criminal conspiracy to commit crimes of riot” and a letter to Mayor Wheeler in which he lamented “rising lawlessness” in Portland.

In response to the cancellation, a local far-right organizer, Joey Gibson, organized a “free speech rally”—the event at which Christian, the suspect in Friday’s double murder, was filmed throwing fascist salutes and yelling racial epithets, and where he approached antifascist counter-protesters armed with a baseball bat.


(Wilson↱

In the end, Mr. Buchal, the county GOP chair, makes his point, claiming that "there has been a closing of the mind" by which "people feel justified" trying to silence each other by force. He also blames anti-fascists, and would have everyone believe Republicans are old and frail people and thus need known anti-American insurgents for a private security force.

Democrats didn't go out and hire armed insurgents after a right-winger tried to bomb a parade in Spokane. Nor after Rep. Giffords was shot.

Neither the conspiracy theorist Buchal nor the white supremacists he admires and would hire can afford attention to history if they intend to stand on this narrative.

Just like our neighbor needs to pretend what Buchal's histrionics respond to anything new. As Frank Rich↱ wrote in 2010, after a conservative campaign of threats, menacing, and violence at political events failed to forestall the PPACA:

If Obama's first legislative priority had been immigration or financial reform or climate change, we would have seen the same trajectory. The conjunction of a black president and a female speaker of the House―topped off by a wise Latina on the Supreme Court and a powerful gay Congressional committee chairman―would sow fears of disenfranchisement among a dwindling and threatened minority in the country no matter what policies were in play. It's not happenstance that Frank, Lewis and Cleaver―none of them major Democratic players in the health care push―received a major share of last weekend's abuse. When you hear demonstrators chant the slogan “Take our country back!,” these are the people they want to take the country back from.

It would be a lot easier to leave our sentiments toward white supremacism out of our assessment of Republicans and conservatives if they should allow us that luxury. Because, really, as I understand it, the talk about conservatives being a bunch of white supremacists really annoys them, and it's not even a threshold of why should they have to show they aren't supremacists, as they generally fail to achieve the basic threshold of not making a point of their supremacism. Over the last seven years, Republicans have evolved from spitting on minorities and uttering bigoted threats over health care to openly musing about hiring supremacists as a paramilitary security force.

Meanwhile, check this out:

How about framing it up this way: When the police won't protect a candidate at their political event, what should be done?

His general pretense relies on exaggerating a circumstance in order to accuse city police, a county sheriff's office, and a state patrol of dereliction.

To the other—

The point is you can have black police officers and a black sheriff trying to control a race riot, and it doesn't make much difference. Aren't the Trump rallies race riots, or do you have a better name for them? What do you propose to put out the fire?

—he is perfectly willing to acknowledge the other side of a proverbial coin as part of his running effort to justify. And while there is or isn't something to be said about hypocrisy or insincerity, and also the idea that many voices who complain loudly about police-bashing rhetoric tend to let it pass—or, perhaps, even approve—when it comes from the right wing, it seems rather quite important to point out the actual argumentative result.

Because, well, we might wonder who remembers the bit from other political contexts about the degradation of a society resulting in a civilized notion of us falling into the sort of warring, factional barbarism we frequently accuse of them. Americans now verge on their own context of an answer. They have political power, yet want to arm up like factions abroad we Americans frequently complain about. How far does the society degrade before ... er ... wait ... uh ... are we about to enter that cycle about why did they work so hard to wreck the place, and wondering what to do about the obvious answer staring us in the face?

There are plenty among American conservatives who have spent years seeking—virtually begging—an excuse to arm up. It's like a new Wild West fantasy, with life so dangerous that the wannabe virtuous have no choice but to strap on. I mean, we're talking about American conservatives; they want adventurous gunplay really, really badly. They used to raise bills in state legislatures trying to oblige households to possess guns. They pass local ordinances so people can wander around with guns strapped on because the only way to maintain order is under the threat that anyone can start shooting at any time. They just spent eight years trying to invent a pretense of being forced to revolt. They perpetually demand society become more dangerous in hopes of justifying their own dangerous, antisocial sentiments as some manner of virtuous and even heroic identity complex. The degree to which American conservatives must disdain history in order to pretend to have an argument is, in general principle, disqualifying, but that is the thing about democracy; as long as they have the numbers they can pretend to have a point.

But what we're dealing with is an argumentative position with no apparent regard for itself: Why is it so important to reframe the question as the one when we are, in another moment, to acknowledge its futility?

It makes a certain amount of sense if the point is simply to distract people until they weary of it all.
____________________

Notes:

Oh, Inae. "Gabby Giffords Shuts Down Congressman Who Used Her 2011 Shooting as Excuse to Ditch Town Hall". Mother Jones. 23 February 2017. MotherJones.com. 1 June 2017. http://bit.ly/2qF9PJL

Rich, Frank. "The Rage Is Not About Health Care". The New York Times. 28 March 2010. NYTimes.com. 1 June 2017. http://nyti.ms/1HH6NRf

Wilson, Jason. "Portland Republican says party should use militia groups after racial attack". The Guardian. 29 May 2017. TheGuardian.com. 1 June 2017. http://bit.ly/2qudLNJ
 
How do we know a bear craps in the woods? I guess we don't know for sure.
Plenty of conservatives detest Trump for legitimate conservative reasons. And liberals aren't all Democrats, especially with the DNC's ties to big business.

The fact is anger is rising against Trump, and Republicans can't answer for their craven theft and greed. They would prefer all dissent be squashed, and the media replaced by state media, as in Russia and various dictatorships. Of course violence is wrong, but Republican rhetoric isn't peaceful either. You want respect when you steal from the poor and give to the rich? When you rob our children of a stable climate? When, in ignorance, you contradict scientific truths? When you encourage our adversaries to undermine our elections? Why would you think you deserve it?
 
69.thumb.jpg

sick.
 

I have to ask... why do you find it "sick"? Is it because Trumps kids have to see it?

In that case... how did you respond to:

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/jan/04/barack-obama-effigy-hanged-georgia

Or what about:
pha1nl69s02qbwe.jpg


or
http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-bl...ives-forget-history-with-trump-effigy-outrage
For example, there is currently a 54-minute video on YouTube entitled Nationwide Burning of Effigies and Images of President Hussein Obama, published by a group called Stand Up America Now.

The video opens with two effigies of Obama hanging from nooses with a fake gravestone in the background that reads “OBAMA DEAD,” as well as a church and an upside-down flag.

Following presentations from multiple speakers at the event, the video concludes with a white man in sunglasses using a propane torch to light the Obama effigies on fire, prompting a round of applause and cheers from the crowd.

Sasha Obama was 11-years-old when this display was published.

Where was the conservative outrage when this happened? Or when the same group burned 2,998 Korans less than one year later?

I'm going to guess that the burning of Obama effigies was "OK" to you because he "was a black man", right?

*shakes head* That is the typical conservative reply I've heard so... yeah. Get off your high horse.

Here's the thing - Kathy Griffin apologized... she is still getting death threats. She was fired. Her life has been turned upside down...

Meanwhile, Ted Nugent repeatedly called for the lynching of Obama... and yet Trump invited him to the White House, where this gem of a picture happened:

21visitors-master768.jpg


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...comments-metaphor_us_5932dcb4e4b0c242ca248bf5
In 2012, Nugent said, “We need to ride into that battlefield and chop their [the Obama administration’s] heads off in November.” He also said, “If Barack Obama becomes the next president in November, again, I will either be dead or in jail by this time next year.”

So, Woody, perhaps you should save your "moral outrage" since its obvious it is quite selective.

You are disgusting.
 
pha1nl69s02qbwe.jpg


Because it is sick. Both sides of it. At least the right doesn't claim to be tolerant of those with a differing opinion. I'm still waiting for the left to own up. Wake up before you kill each other.

The right embraces white supremacy, white nationalism, religious intolerance, and the whole shebang... at least the left has the stones to condemn such bigotry.

I'm not claiming the left side is perfect (far from it), but of the two, I think I'd prefer the group that doesn't openly advocate going around and deporting/beating/murdering anyone of a different skin tone or religion, much less demeaning and demonizing our military veterans, abuse victims, and women in general...

http://www.diversityinc.com/news/trumps-record-of-hate-to-date/
Trump to Former Miss Universe: ‘Miss Piggy,’ ‘Miss Housekeeping’

Trump’s hate greatly predates his bid for the White House. A recent New York Times article interviewed numerous women who have worked with Trump over the years, including former Miss Universe Alicia Machado. Machado, a native of Venezuela, also shared her story in an interview with Inside Edition.

“He called me Miss Piggy, Miss Housekeeping,” Machado said. When asked how this made her feel, she said, “So sad. I was very depressed.”

Trump Insults Gold Star Families, Veterans

The family of an American Muslim soldier who was killed in combat called out Trump for his racist behavior and rhetoric at the Democratic National Convention. Khizr Khan, whose son sacrificed his life to save the lives of his soldiers, told Trump, “You have sacrificed nothing and no one.”

Trump responded that he has, in fact, made sacrifices: “I’ve worked very, very hard. I’ve created thousands and thousands of jobs … I’ve had tremendous success. I think I’ve done a lot.”

He also insulted Khan’s wife, who did not speak during her husband’s speech, asking if she was perhaps not allowed to talk — stereotyping the Muslim community.

“If you look at his wife, she was standing there, she had nothing to say, she probably — maybe she wasn’t allowed to have anything to say, you tell me,” Trump told Stephanopoulos. In an interview with the New York Times Friday night, Trump said, “I’d like to hear his wife say something.”

Later, at a rally, Trump accepted a Purple Heart from a veteran. Purple Hearts are only awarded to armed forces who were injured or killed in combat.

“I’ve always wanted to get the real Purple Heart,” he said. “This was much easier.”

Other Gold Star families, veterans and veterans groups responded, including Illinois Congresswoman and Iraq War veteran Tammy Duckworth, who lost both of her legs and suffered other injuries in combat. She tweeted a photo of herself in the hospital, saying, “This is how one usually looks when you are awarded the Purple Heart. Nothing easy about it.

Trump Shames Sexual Assault Victims: Roger Ailes ‘Helped’ Women

Trump twice defended former Fox News Chairman and CEO Roger Ailes’ alleged sexual misconduct, calling the lawsuit against Ailes “so sad” and insisted the alleged assault was likely “friendly.”

“He’s such a great guy. Roger is — I mean, what he’s done on television, is in the history of television, he’s gotta be placed in the top three, or four or five. And that includes the founding of the major networks. So, it’s too bad. I’m sure it was friendly.”

In a separate interview he shamed the victims and said that Ailes ‘helped’ them.

“I can tell you that some of the women that are complaining, I know how much he’s helped them,” he said. “And even recently. And when they write books that are fairly recently released, and they say wonderful things about him. And now all of a sudden they’re saying these horrible things about him.”

When asked if Ailes was helping advise Trump’s campaign he did not provide a full answer: “Well, I don’t want to comment. But he’s been a friend of mine for a long time.”

On Blacks

Trump has blamed Blacks and Hispanics for the nation’s violent crime, tweeting on June 5:

“Sadly, the overwhelming amount of violent crime in our major cities is committed by blacks and Hispanics – a tough subject – must be discussed.”

On November 22, he retweeted a racially loaded image of a masked Black man holding a handgun in a threatening manner alongside false statistics attempting to show that Blacks kill more people of all other races. One “fact” stated that Blacks killed 81 percent of white homicide victims in 2015, when, according to the FBI, the number is closer to 15 percent.

That tweet, incidentally, came a day after a Black protester was physically assaulted and removed from a Trump rally in Alabama.

The 31-year-old Black Lives Matter activist was shoved down, kicked and tackled for disrupting Trump by shouting, “Black lives matter!”

“Get him the hell out of here, will you, please?” Trump said. “Get him out of here. Throw him out!” The crowd responded with cheers.

The following morning on Fox News, Trump seemed to justify the violence against the protester: “Maybe he should have been roughed up because it was absolutely disgusting what he was doing.”

Trump Courts Anti-LGBT Hate Groups

Just one week after repeatedly touting himself as the real friend of the LGBT community, Trump set out to meet with the leaders of some of the most anti-LGBT hate groups in the country.

The private event, “A Conversation About America’s Future with Donald Trump and Ben Carson,” is has been described by the Huffington Post as “a private meeting with over 400 of the most bigoted, most homophobic and most influential anti-LGBT advocates in the United States — from Family Research Council’s Tony Perkins to James Dobson, founder of the Focus on the Family — the bedrock of the religious right, which has been a prominent part of the base of the Republican Party for decades.”

More than 700 evangelical leaders reportedly attended the closed-door event presented by United in Purpose, a right-wing Christian get-out-the-vote group, and My Faith Votes, whose honorary chairman is former GOP presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson.

Sorry Woody... but given your apparent defense of his activities, this is YOUR "president", and you are on the line for his actions, the damage he is doing to this country, and the bigotry he is actively and openly promoting.
 
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