gee, thanks![]()
Which has a value approaching zero.
gee, thanks![]()
A...n...d, zero.
lots of posts in that thread from you... zero indeed.
I agree. This place has no impact on the world.
LOL...
I never thought of that.
I'll bet they are straining to do so, but I haven't noted any.
You know that post was made in order to poke fun at the OP?
More poking fun at Yonivore, but I agree the prediction was off. Frankly, I agreed with the OP and thought there would be more latching on to some random MSNBC analyst comment about the shooter as proof of the liberal MSM's agenda against the Tea Party, but it looks like the biggest story here is that America doesn't really care that much when people get shot in a place of non-Christian worship.
Sure. I agree that someone would tie it to the Tea Party or others if they could.Do you disagree this could likely happen?we all know that some lunatic on the left will make a comment trying to tie the alleged shooter to a tea party/ right wing group...
Probably too soon after Brian Ross got slapped down for Googling the Aurora shooter's name and Tea Party.
Tell me, Spurminator; how would you describe the Tea Party?
I don't see the coverage as being that different that the Aurora shooting.
I would describe the Tea Party as a bunch of Republicans who don't want to call themselves Republicans.
It started out as a donation drive for Ron Paul da gawd, then was hijacked by neocons and steered towards their usual redneck, evangelical, bigoted, warmongering agenda, tbh..."But we're for microscopic tax decreases, that makes us different from the John McCains of the GOP!"
Ron bless
That is a part of the people who claim such a name. There are also democrats who no longer appreciate the democrat party. It's not just disenfranchised voters of the two major parties either.
WC was right, they have been straining to do so. The New York Times finally found the angle ... it's in the music.
Music Style Is Called Supremacist Recruiting Tool
It's a squiggly line but they managed to draw it.But Mr. Burghart and other experts on racist ideology said the movement has grown disjointed in recent years, despite the recruiting opportunities presented by an economic recession and the election of a black president.
One reason for the disarray might be the growth of a more mainstream movement, the Tea Party, whose successful forays into electoral politics have siphoned energy and support from violent fringe groups, said Chip Berlet, a Boston-based journalist who writes about right-wing groups.
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