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Originally posted by RealSpoke
reply to post by bjax9er
Deflect? I addressed exactly what you were talking about.
Obama and Romney are both fascist. Romney isn't capitalist, he is corporatist all in it for his cronies. Have fun supporting that.
Originally posted by bjax9er
Originally posted by RealSpoke
reply to post by bjax9er
Deflect? I addressed exactly what you were talking about.
Obama and Romney are both fascist. Romney isn't capitalist, he is corporatist all in it for his cronies. Have fun supporting that.
so who are you voting for?
Basically, the definition was written very broadly so it could encompass the wide range of extremist groups we were talking about which were primarily the white supremacist movement which has neo-Nazi groups, Ku Klux Klan groups, Christian Identity groups which is a racist religion that thinks whites are the true Israelites. We have skinhead groups. We have other types of white supremacists. It also was alluding to sovereign citizens, those that reject federal and state authority in favor of local authority. It was also talking about the militia extremists. So, basically, some of the conservative radio talk show hosts took this definition out of context, and without the scope of talking about violent extremism and terrorism which was stated upfront in the scope note, and took this definition out of context and applied it to a broad range of people. I think it was done deliberately as a political maneuver to use against the new administration.
You may want to defend them as fellow citizens against the big bad government but I won't. Sure they have a right to say whatever they please but when they start plotting or planning or executing - such as in WI - then they lose me and I would hope you as well.
I don't think every single Tea Party member is racist, I think that the core of the movement is
Originally posted by Blackmarketeer
Former DHS Analyst Daryl Johnson on How He Was Silenced for Warning of Far-Right Militants in U.S.
www.democracynow.org
(visit the link for the full news article)
While many were shocked by the massacre at the Sikh temple, our guest, Daryl Johnson, had warned years ago that such an attack was imminent. While working as a senior analyst in the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in 2009, Johnson authored a report warning about the increasing dangers of violent right-wing extremism in the United States, sparking a political firestorm in the process.
Originally posted by CB328
I don't think every single Tea Party member is racist, I think that the core of the movement is
It definitely is. Most of them weren't claiming they were overtaxed before Obama got elected (and cut taxes), or crying about the constitution, even though Bush flagrantly violated it. And they didn't question his opponent being born outside the US either. They claim it's not racist, but they hold up racist signs all the time as well.
The election of the nation’s first black president, Barack Obama, triggered an explosion in the number of militia and so-called “patriot” groups across the U.S., a new report from the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) finds.
The report (...) finds that while there were 149 such groups active in the U.S. when Obama was sworn in, in January 2009, the number today is 1,274 — an increase of more than 755 percent over the first three years of the Obama administration.
- The SPLC defines the “patriot” movement as made up of conspiracy-minded individuals who see the federal government as their primary enemy. The movement includes paramilitary militias as well as groups of “sovereign citizens,” who believe they are not subject to federal or state laws, nor obligated to pay federal taxes, according to SPLC.
- The center also reports a steady rise in the number of hate groups in America — from 604 in 2000, to more than 1,000 last year. Those include anti-gay groups, anti-Muslim groups, black separatists and “Christian Identity” groups, which hold racist and anti-Semitic views that overlap with neo-Nazi beliefs.
- The spike in these groups can be attributed to a combination of factors, including the sluggish economy, radical propaganda and anxiety over the election of a black president, [the SPLC’s Mark] Potok said.
- Potok said although many individuals involved in patriot militias are not criminals, a handful of these groups have been responsible for a significant amount of violence in recent years.