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Attachment 1634 |
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I dont understand what is wrong with that quote, besides that Angle is a moron. She obviously meant take him out of office.. I dont see how it could be read any different way. |
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Isn't that the way it is suppose to work? |
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You - and the right wing hysteria machine - said the Sheriff originally called out right wing/conservatives. That's your excuse for attacking him. He did not. That's clear on the tapes of the press conference. The Sheriff never, in his press conference, called out the right or conservatives, did he? Now, later - after the right wing hysterics have been screaming for 24 hours that he called them out when he didn't - he's on talk shows talking about how it doesn't surprise him the right wing hysteria machine ginned itself up over him simply talking about vitriolic talk in a general way. It's laughable. That's exactly what happened. As Brian pointed out. As we are pointing out now. You've now proved my point for me. Thanks :D ;) |
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And I'll bet you learned that because it was all over the TV News, didn't you? |
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It's time to stop the SPIN. Sheriff Clarence should not be using his job to be making political statements, and he shouldn't be placing blame on anyone before the facts are in. He's the catalyst that started all this, "You're to blame. No, you're to blame." nonsense. It accomplishes nothing except to make the chasm wider between the parties. Nothing has been stated by Sharon Angle or Sarah Palin that hasn't been stated by members of both political parties in their campaign rhetoric. Now, all of a sudden - rhetoric is at fault for this nut job's actions. |
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There is this concept called "reality". When people literally do not say something, simply insisting that they did say something doesn't make it true. Then posting a video of the person at a later date, still not saying it , but talking about how YOU said they did, doesn't make it true, either, no matter how hard one closes their eyes and hopes it does. Face it: the Sheriff brought up vitriolic talk in general, the far right wing immediately and defensively went over the edge attacking him and the left. Exactly as Brian said. Again. Predictably. It's what they do. How many "liberal" media outlets actually, truely blamed someone on the right? Not very many. Not any in the major media. Simply talking about the existence of Sarah's crosshair PAC ad (even Bill O'Reilly called it "lame", but no more) isn't "blaming". Talking about Sharron Angles' statement on second amendment remedies isn't "blame", it's discussing her talk. Showing images of the idiots that carried guns to political rallies isn't blaming. It's talking about the subject the Sheriff brought up, vitriolic rhetoric. So let's talk about what you guys are screaming about. Have some said Beck, etc are indeed to blame for this? Yes. Very few. In fact, so few, you guys should feel free to quote them and name them here. They are idiots to directly blame specific people's talk with the killer, there simply isn't any indication of that now. In fact, there are plenty of quotes from people "on the left" agreeing with you, agreeing with that, saying nobody's talk on the national scene can possibly be blamed for the acts of a madman. Hey, the Sheriff even said that in the original press conference. Feel free to be turning your outrage on them - don't turn it on people that haven't said it, and are only trying to talk about the general vitriol out there. Like the Sheriff and the vast majority of the media. |
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But the ultra right wing conservative machine picked up that shoe, said it fits them perfectly, and how dare he! Exactly as Brian said - nobody accused them, but boy, they sure started defending themselves :D Those who are lying and misspeaking about what the Sheriff said - and it's a whole lot - have the moral and ethical responsibility to correct their public misstatements. What he's talking about in the videos you posted from the next days are simply acknowledging that yes, the right wing sure got riled up! True, isn't it? Quote:
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Then stop doing it. Stop saying things that are not true. |
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:zz: Is using words really this difficult? Quote:
And after all these decades, I'm still a registered Republican, thanks. |
The briliant voice of reality....George Will
It would be merciful if, when tragedies such as Tucson's occur, there were a moratorium on sociology. But respites from half-baked explanations, often serving political opportunism, are impossible because of a timeless human craving and a characteristic of many modern minds. The craving is for banishing randomness and the inexplicable from human experience. Time was, the gods were useful. What is thunder? The gods are angry. Polytheism was explanatory. People postulated causations. And still do. Hence: The Tucson shooter was (pick your verb) provoked, triggered, unhinged by today's (pick your noun) rhetoric, vitriol, extremism, "climate of hate." Demystification of the world opened the way for real science, including the social sciences. And for a modern characteristic. And for charlatans. A characteristic of many contemporary minds is susceptibility to the superstition that all behavior can be traced to some diagnosable frame of mind that is a product of promptings from the social environment. From which flows a political doctrine: Given clever social engineering, society, and people, can be perfected. This supposedly is the path to progress. It actually is the crux of progressivism. And it is why there is a reflex to blame conservatives first. Instead, imagine a continuum from the rampages at Columbine and Virginia Tech — the results of individuals' insanities — to the assassinations of Lincoln and the Kennedy brothers, which were clearly connected to the politics of John Wilkes Booth, Lee Harvey Oswald, and Sirhan Sirhan, respectively. The two other presidential assassinations also had political colorations. On July 2, 1881, after four months in office, President James Garfield, who had survived the Civil War battles of Shiloh and Chickamauga, needed a vacation. He was vexed by warring Republican factions — the Stalwarts, who waved the bloody shirt of Civil War memories, and the Half-Breeds, who stressed the emerging issues of industrialization. Walking to Washington's Union Station to catch a train, Garfield by chance encountered a disappointed job-seeker. Charles Guiteau drew a pistol, fired two shots and shouted "I am a Stalwart and Arthur will be president!" On Sept. 19, Garfield died, making Vice President Chester Arthur president. Guiteau was executed, not explained. On Sept. 6, 1901, President William McKinley, who had survived the battle of Antietam, was shaking hands at a Buffalo exposition when Leon Czolgosz approached, a handkerchief wrapped around his right hand, concealing a gun. Czolgosz, an anarchist, fired two shots. Czolgosz ("I killed the president because he was the enemy of the good people — the good working people. I am not sorry for my crime.") was executed, not explained. Now we have explainers. They came into vogue with the murder of President Kennedy. They explained why the "real" culprit was not a self-described Marxist who had moved to Moscow, then returned to support Castro. No, the culprit was a "climate of hate" in conservative Dallas, the "paranoid style" of American (conservative) politics, or some other national sickness resulting from insufficient liberalism. Last year, New York Times columnist Charles Blow explained that "the optics must be irritating" to conservatives: Barack Obama is black, Nancy Pelosi is female, Rep. Barney Frank is gay, Rep. Anthony Weiner (an unimportant Democrat, listed to serve Blow's purposes) is Jewish. "It's enough," Blow said, "to make a good old boy go crazy." The Times, which after the Tucson shooting said "many on the right" are guilty of "demonizing" people and of exploiting "arguments of division," apparently was comfortable with Blow's insinuation that conservatives are misogynistic, homophobic, racist anti-Semites. On Sunday, the Times explained Tucson: "It is facile and mistaken to attribute this particular madman's act directly to Republicans or tea party members. But . . . " The "directly" is priceless. Three days before Tucson, Howard Dean explained that the tea party movement is "the last gasp of the generation that has trouble with diversity." Rising to the challenge of lowering his reputation and the tone of public discourse, Dean smeared tea partyers as racists: They oppose Obama's agenda, Obama is African-American, ergo . . . Let us hope that Dean is the last gasp of the generation of liberals whose default position in any argument is to indict opponents as racists. This McCarthyism of the left — devoid of intellectual content, unsupported by data — is a mental tic, not an idea but a tactic for avoiding engagement with ideas. It expresses limitless contempt for the American people, who have reciprocated by reducing liberalism to its current characteristics of electoral weakness and bad sociology. |
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Sheriff Clarence has outworn his usefulness in law and order - time to step down and run for political office. |
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The Sheriff never said what you and the right wing hysterics say he did. That's the only truth there is. You can continue to deny it. Maybe you could say, "Wow, I never realized he really didn't say that. Everyone was saying he did. Kinda crazy. I'll stop saying he said it, because he didn't" Because, gee, why add to the vitriolic rhetoric for no reason? |
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