Topic: Left has Tea Party of it's own | |
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Edited by
Peccy
on
Thu 10/06/11 03:02 PM
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Washington (CNN) -- Wall Street should have seen it coming. After all, market forces were at work.
Take a financial crisis that yielded few prosecutions; add a broken government in Washington; then mix in millions of unemployed adults with nothing but time on their hands and it's no wonder Occupy Wall Street came screaming out of the economic chaos. The calls for revolution echoing from Lower Manhattan to Washington and the rest of the nation are also conjuring up comparisons to the battle cries of another political movement, the tea party. "It's time to get crazy," Occupy D.C. protester Kay Deamer said at a rally organized by a variety of liberal groups on Capitol Hill. "In fact our country is getting too crazy in a way that's unhealthy for the ordinary American people. And so any way that we can, we got to get people to wake up," Deamer added. Both Occupy and tea party movements are angry. They just see different remedies. When tea party rallies flared up across the country more than two years ago, conservative activists were mad about bailouts and their impact on the national debt. To them, government was part of the problem. Occupy demonstrators are also upset about the financial crisis and the economy. But they see government as part of the solution. "There's a general sense that we're getting screwed and we need to fix things," Occupy D.C. protester Eric Lotke said at the same rally. Unlike the tea party, Lotke would raise taxes on the rich to pay for bridge and school construction projects to put people back to work. But if Lotke had a tri-corner hat, he said he would tip it to the tea party for showing the Occupy movement how to turn anger into action. "Some of it is tea party. And some of it is hippies," Lotke said of the Occupy protests. With all of that rage, tea partiers can attest, trouble can brew quickly. Violent clashes between Occupy Wall Street protesters and New York City police officers have raised obvious questions about the demonstrators' intentions. Open story: Are you involved? "It's a classic mob uprising. It's utterly incoherent. They're always left wing," conservative commentator Ann Coulter said in a Fox News interview. During the height of the tea party movement, there were few confrontations with police. But violent rhetoric was often caught on camera and immediately uploaded onto YouTube. "If ballots don't work, bullets will," tea party activist and radio talk show host Joyce Kaufman said at a rally about the midterm elections of 2010. Still, many tea party organizers are offended by the comparisons. "OWS (Occupy Wall Street) reminds me of an out-of-control child having a temper tantrum," Tea Party Express Chairman Amy Kremer said. "Stop having a temper tantrum and channel your energy into effecting change." That's just what former White House Green Jobs Czar Van Jones has in mind. "I am not mad at the tea party for being so loud. I am mad at the rest of us for being so quiet," Jones said at a rally at the U.S. Capitol. Having watched the tea party movement propel Republicans into power in the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2010 midterm elections, Jones said he relishes the idea of building a tea party movement for the left. "When you talk about the people on Wall Street, I think that those young people and the people who are struggling are doing a great service. They may not have message clarity, but they have moral clarity," Jones said. He now leads the liberal activist group, Rebuild the Dream, which now seeks to join forces with the protesters. Those sentiments may explain why the top two men at the White House are all but saying "we feel your rage." "I think people are frustrated and the protesters are giving voice to a more broad based frustration about how our financial system works," President Barack Obama said at a news conference Thursday. "There's a lot in common with the tea party. The tea party started why? TARP. They thought it was unfair. We were bailing out the big guys," Vice President Joe Biden said at a different public event earlier in the day. The trick for this new movement, as it was with the tea party, is to keep things from boiling over. http://www.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/10/06/tea.party.left/index.html?hpt=hp_t2 |
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One of these "events" was held in Houston today. I'm curious to see how many showed up.
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One of these "events" was held in Houston today. I'm curious to see how many showed up. They're occurring all over the country, there is one scheduled here for the 15th. As more pop up they will get bigger. Washington I hope will realize Americans are pissed, but I doubt it. |
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Sounds like what has happened in the rest of the world. It's just a matter of time.
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Washington (CNN) -- Wall Street should have seen it coming. After all, market forces were at work. Take a financial crisis that yielded few prosecutions; add a broken government in Washington; then mix in millions of unemployed adults with nothing but time on their hands and it's no wonder Occupy Wall Street came screaming out of the economic chaos. The calls for revolution echoing from Lower Manhattan to Washington and the rest of the nation are also conjuring up comparisons to the battle cries of another political movement, the tea party. "It's time to get crazy," Occupy D.C. protester Kay Deamer said at a rally organized by a variety of liberal groups on Capitol Hill. "In fact our country is getting too crazy in a way that's unhealthy for the ordinary American people. And so any way that we can, we got to get people to wake up," Deamer added. Both Occupy and tea party movements are angry. They just see different remedies. When tea party rallies flared up across the country more than two years ago, conservative activists were mad about bailouts and their impact on the national debt. To them, government was part of the problem. Occupy demonstrators are also upset about the financial crisis and the economy. But they see government as part of the solution. "There's a general sense that we're getting screwed and we need to fix things," Occupy D.C. protester Eric Lotke said at the same rally. Unlike the tea party, Lotke would raise taxes on the rich to pay for bridge and school construction projects to put people back to work. But if Lotke had a tri-corner hat, he said he would tip it to the tea party for showing the Occupy movement how to turn anger into action. "Some of it is tea party. And some of it is hippies," Lotke said of the Occupy protests. With all of that rage, tea partiers can attest, trouble can brew quickly. Violent clashes between Occupy Wall Street protesters and New York City police officers have raised obvious questions about the demonstrators' intentions. Open story: Are you involved? "It's a classic mob uprising. It's utterly incoherent. They're always left wing," conservative commentator Ann Coulter said in a Fox News interview. During the height of the tea party movement, there were few confrontations with police. But violent rhetoric was often caught on camera and immediately uploaded onto YouTube. "If ballots don't work, bullets will," tea party activist and radio talk show host Joyce Kaufman said at a rally about the midterm elections of 2010. Still, many tea party organizers are offended by the comparisons. "OWS (Occupy Wall Street) reminds me of an out-of-control child having a temper tantrum," Tea Party Express Chairman Amy Kremer said. "Stop having a temper tantrum and channel your energy into effecting change." That's just what former White House Green Jobs Czar Van Jones has in mind. "I am not mad at the tea party for being so loud. I am mad at the rest of us for being so quiet," Jones said at a rally at the U.S. Capitol. Having watched the tea party movement propel Republicans into power in the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2010 midterm elections, Jones said he relishes the idea of building a tea party movement for the left. "When you talk about the people on Wall Street, I think that those young people and the people who are struggling are doing a great service. They may not have message clarity, but they have moral clarity," Jones said. He now leads the liberal activist group, Rebuild the Dream, which now seeks to join forces with the protesters. Those sentiments may explain why the top two men at the White House are all but saying "we feel your rage." "I think people are frustrated and the protesters are giving voice to a more broad based frustration about how our financial system works," President Barack Obama said at a news conference Thursday. "There's a lot in common with the tea party. The tea party started why? TARP. They thought it was unfair. We were bailing out the big guys," Vice President Joe Biden said at a different public event earlier in the day. The trick for this new movement, as it was with the tea party, is to keep things from boiling over. http://www.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/10/06/tea.party.left/index.html?hpt=hp_t2 In order to be tea party they need the racially provocative signs and signs that make no sense like "don't take my medicare for socialized medicine" and maybe some NRA with their sign " we are unarmed, this time" and militia groups who hate the government and ignorants who hate liberals even though they don't even know what they are and then you will have a tea party like demonstration. Oh and don't forget the racially provocative music to go along with it by Hank Williams Jr. Otherwise it has no similarities to the tea party at all. It has no millionaire backing it. It has no government officials backing it. So no similarities to tea party at all unless any group of people equals a tea party. |
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Weither it's "tea baggers", OWSers, Grannies and Gramps, unionists, or whoever where ever, it just shows that people all over are getting pissed.
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Edited by
Peccy
on
Thu 10/06/11 05:22 PM
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So no similarities to tea party at all unless any group of people equals a tea party. |
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So no similarities to tea party at all unless any group of people equals a tea party. Enough is enough. |
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So no similarities to tea party at all unless any group of people equals a tea party. Enough is enough. |
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Weither it's "tea baggers", OWSers, Grannies and Gramps, unionists, or whoever where ever, it just shows that people all over are getting pissed. I am a teabagger, that is a big compliment I love doing that to women. |
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So no similarities to tea party at all unless any group of people equals a tea party. Yep... and these two 'movements'... Have more in common then different. Bet 2012 will be a real eye opener. |
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