March 31, 2010

Anarchists Plan Uprising Against Tea Parties On April 15th

Filed under: Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 11:54 PM

Just a word of warning to those who plan to April 15th Tea Party gatherings: Violent anarchists are planning on infiltrating and sabotaging the Tea Party Protests!

The Jawa Report reported this call to arms from the violent anarchists at Infowars today:

Crash the tea parties!

Anti-Racist Action
On April 15th thousands of right-wingers will attend rallies in cities and towns across the United States. The organizers of this nationwide day of protest call it a tea party. This tea party movement that emerged only a year ago is a coalition of conservatives, anti-Semites, fascists, libertarians, racists, constitutionalists, militia men, gun freaks, homophobes, Ron Paul supporters, Alex Jones conspiracy types and American flag wavers. If the tea party movement continues to grow in size and strength there is a big chance they will dominate this country in the near future. If the tea party movement takes over this country they will really hurt poor people by getting rid of social programs like food stamps, unemployment benefits, disability benefits, student aid, free health care, etc. The tea party movement will say these programs must be gotten rid of because hard-working taxpayers cannot afford to pay for these things especially when the economy is in a depression. There are three options we have with the tea party movement:

1. Organize counter-protests against the tea party demonstrations, same time, same place. This is probably the best option. We need to get in the streets on April 15th and show the tea party movement that there are lots of people out there who oppose their agenda.

2. Get individual tea party protesters to leave the right-wing and move to the left politically. That would involve passing out stuff like this at the tea party demonstrations: http://www.anarchist-studies.org/node/299

3. Ignore the tea party movement. This is the worst option because without anyone opposing them they could easily gain power.

Just bring your camcorders and record everything!

h/t Gateway Pundit



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

Tea Party Activist Takes on Chris Matthews and Wins

Filed under: Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 10:00 PM

Chris Matthews, as his pattern is, accused tea party activist of sexism and racism, on Monday’s Hardball, and even brought on a Princeton professor to buttress his charges. However conservative talk show host Dana Loesch was on hand to refute, point by point, Matthews and his guests’ absurd accusations about the right as she fended off allegations of Birtherism by pointing out the nutty Trutherism that exists on the left and denied charges of secessionism by clarifying the tea partiers are about 10th Amendment principles. For the most part Matthews claimed the Birthers were a fixture on the right but Truthers weren’t “a part of the Obama coalition.

Dana Loesch absolutely schooled Chris Matthews and colleague.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Transcript provided via NewsBusters.

CHRIS MATTHEWS AT TOP OF SHOW: Plus what are the tea partiers really angry about? Health care reform or the fact that it was an African-American president and a woman Speaker of the House who pushed through major change?

MATTHEWS: The passage of health care reform last week unleashed a rage on the right but New York Times columnist Frank Rich says that it wasn’t health care reform itself that stoked the anger but instead a shift, in this country, toward more diversity that has left some in the diminishing majority anxious. Melissa Harris Lacewell is a professor of Politics and African-American Studies at Princeton. And Dana Loesch is a radio talk show host and tea party organizer. Let’s take a look at the New York Times column that’s caused all this conversation. Frank Rich wrote this, quote: “If Obama’s first legislative priority had been immigration or financial reform or climate change, we would have seen the same trajectory. This same 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 – it would have sown seeds of disenfranchisement among a dwindling and threatened minority in the country, no matter what the policies were in play.” Professor, your thoughts. Is this fight, from the tea party side, aimed at the, or ignited by the health care defeat last week they suffered, about ethnicity and gender and orientation, sexual orientation or is it about the substance of the issue? The fiscal policy, the social policy involved. Which is it?

MELISSA HARRIS LACEWELL: Well I don’t know that we can be quite so dichotomist as to suggest which is it. But certainly what we can see is that the tone, or the strategies, the language used about the policy has ended up having overtones around all of these anxieties about diversity that Rich suggests in that New York Times column. You know we know from, pretty much decades of social scientific research at this point, including some really terrific work by Karen Stenner, in a book called the Authoritarian Dynamic, that there are individuals that have sort of a pre-disposition towards intolerance. And when those individuals are in a society where things start changing very rapidly, particularly if things start feeling like, you know political leaders are fighting or if there’s a lot of racial diversity or change, then that kind of ignites this anxiety and it creates precisely the kind of intolerance that we’re seeing. So my bet is that, certainly part of it is about policy but also part of it is about the anxieties of this particular group and that’s why we’re seeing these expressions around racial and, and homophobic, sort of discourse.

MATTHEWS: So just to stay with you, for a minute, if Hillary Clinton had won the Democratic nomination last year and had won the general election against John McCain, and that’s iffy but it’s possible, we can imagine that happened, would the anger be as extreme as it’s been with these placards, the people’s faces, the contortion of anger that you see, not in every face but a lot of faces out there. Would it still be there? Had that been the case? Right now? Hillary not Barack.

MATTHEWS: What do you make of the, what do you make of the signage? Some of it’s pretty nasty and why don’t people walk away from those signs? Why are they comfortable standing there when people have nasty signs up? Hitler mustaches, etc, etc.?

DANA LOESCH, RADIO TALK SHOW HOST: Like they did with Bush and Hitler? Because they had that on the left as well. I mean I specifically, I specifically remember the RNC protests from the Republican National Convention that happened just a year, just a couple of years ago. There were Bush/Hitler signs. I, myself, have been at a protest in St. Louis where they’ve burned Bush in effigy. So, I mean, to kind of like portray it as just being on one side or and not the other isn’t, isn’t exactly fair because – I mean google Bush/Hitler and you’ll get pages and pages of the same thing. But the bottom line too is we know that with any large group of people, you are going to have people who are on the fringe on both sides but the difference that I’m seeing is that a lot of people on the left like to sit here and portray that the fringe on the right represent the whole of the right and that’s not accurate.

MATTHEWS: Okay did just see that sign? “Don’t blame me I voted for an American.” There’s a big number of people out there led by Neugebauer of Texas and other congress people who challenge this president’s birth right. They challenge that he’s an American. If you look at a poll I saw, it shows they were largely bunched in the South. Those people who believed that he wasn’t an American and you say that’s not racial. Why would it be bunched in the South so heavily these people that believe he’s not an American. What’s that about?

LOESCH: Well do you mean the same way that the left tried to say that John McCain wasn’t an American because he was born on a base in Panama?

MATTHEWS: No, no, no. Nobody made an issue, nobody made an issue about-

LOESCH: Because you could say that’s racial too.

MATTHEWS: No, no, no Dana. No, don’t chuckle about this. It isn’t funny. And nobody-

LOESCH: It is funny!

MATTHEWS: Nobody made an issue of John McCain being born in another country, in the canal zone.

LOESCH: Well if you’re asking me, whether or not, I’m a Birther the answer is no.

MATTHEWS: Nobody made an issue.

LOESCH: Oh yeah there was. There was headlines about that.

MATTHEWS: Why are there so many Birthers out there? Why are there so many Birthers out there?

LOESCH: I’m not a Birther so I’m not quite sure.

MATTHEWS: But why are they out there and why, and why are people comfortable having them in the-

LOESCH: Why are there so many people who deny 9/11 on the left? I mean, you know, I mean we could sit here and do this all day.

MATTHEWS: Yeah.

LOESCH: But no there was that issue made about McCain too.

MATTHEWS: Well I don’t think, I don’t think the Truthers are a part of the Obama coalition. Do you think? Whereas the Birthers are a part of the tea party crowd.

LOESCH: Well let’s see who was it?

MATTHEWS: Why are they comfortable in that group?

LOESCH: Who was it? John, maybe not John Cusack or Sean Penn. There was a celebrity who is a Truther that’s, you know, talked about those.

MATTHEWS: Yeah, well, that’s odd. Let me, let me bring the professor back and I want you to go at each other.

LOESCH: But I mean why can’t we talk about the substance of this? Why do we have to constantly invalidate people who are for smaller government by saying that they’re a racist. That is, I mean, I think it’s actually an insult to the civil rights movement. And to say that people who oppose Nancy Pelosi are sexist.

MATTHEWS: Okay Professor you get in here. I have my reasons, they’re based upon all these Birthers out there that I do think are challenging his Americanism.

LOESCH: This isn’t about Birtherism! This is about big government.

LACEWELL: Well, well let me just suggest this. That the tea partiers by using the language of tea party have asked us to draw a parallel between their movement and the Revolutionary War movement. But I think if we look more carefully we’ll see that in many ways the tea party movement resembles more closely the kind of secessionist feelings that were both part of the Confederacy before the Civil War and then also remained in the post-civil war Reconstruction era. So in other words-

LOESCH: It’s about state sovereignty not secessionism. It’s about 10th Amendment principles.

LACEWELL: Well except that secessionist language has been used quite clearly, both by GOP elected officials and also been used by individuals in the tea party.

LOESCH: I’ve heard of Tenth Amendment issues, I’ve heard 10th Amendment language being used, like with health care legislation. I know that there’s been 14 states that have filed suit against it because they are upholding their Tenth Amendment right under the Constitution. I’ve never head anything about secession.

LACEWELL: I’m just suggesting that, oh, oh well certainly we saw-

MATTHEWS: You never heard Rick Perry of Texas say secession, Dana?

LACEWELL: We saw Governor Perry talk about that.

LOESCH: I’ve heard people misconstrue and misinterpret talking about Tenth Amendment rights and state sovereignty, people who want to increase the size of federal government, that being intimidating, I think, and then them looking and saying, “Oh they’re trying to secede from the, from nation. That’s, that’s not what the Tea Party is about. The Tea Party is not about secessionist. It’s about, the original Tea Party was about taxation without representation and, in many instances, those parallels can be drawn because they are logical in this modern movement.

LACEWELL: Yes but the people, but the people, but the people in these. But these people, but the people here actually are voters. So I think, I think we need to be very careful about that. That’s precisely my point. That, that what the Tea Party has asked us to do is to see themselves as these kind of disfranchised colonists with this monarchy over them. But that’s simply not what’s going on here. We have a duly elected government, with citizens who have a right to vote for this government.

LOESCH: That’s abusing the Commerce Clause with this legislation.

LACEWELL: Well but, but, but this is a duly elected government, where the citizens who are angry, who certainly, and these are, these are certainly, these are certainly individuals with a right to be angry.

LOESCH: That’s forcing people by way of just existing in the United States to purchase a product which is unprecedented in this country’s history. So it’s kind of similar.

MATTHEWS: Okay stop, stop. Okay. Dana.

LACEWELL: It is not a situation of the Revolutionary War. This is much, much closer to the Civil War.

LOESCH: It’s kind of similar in that respect.

LACEWELL: It’s not.

MATTHEWS: Okay this isn’t working. Dana, your thoughts. Just for a second, Dana. I want her to respond. It’s your turn, Dana. I want you to say, is there a parallel between a colonial government in London, that was not elected – George III wasn’t elected – and an elected president who won with majority of American voters behind him? And the polls show he still enjoys a modest advantage in that department. But you say he’s not really legitimate. That’s one of the arguments.

LOESCH: No that’s what I said at all.

MATTHEWS: Well when you start talking about secession and nullification, that’s the language-

LOESCH: I’ve never talked about secession and I’ve never said. I’m happy. I mean he was elected by the people. The people voted and they elected Barack Obama. I don’t think anybody of my acquaintance has contested that. But what I’m discussing is a piece of legislation that was passed by Congress, which, by the way, has an all-time low now, 1994 level I think, the latest Rasmussen poll this morning. What I’m talking about is a piece of legislation that was put forth by this Congress, that has been opposed by the majority of Americans from every single poll- I can rattle them off all now, if we need to be – that abuses the Commerce Clause, that abuses the power of the Constitution. That’s what I’m talking about. That’s what a lot of other tea partiers are talking about as well.

MATTHEWS: Well The civil rights bills were opposed by a good segment of the United States and so were the Voting Rights Act, opposed by good segment of the United States. It doesn’t make those people right.

LOESCH: And Democrats were against the Civil Rights Act. Let’s not remember who set an 83, let’s not forget, rather, who set an 83 day record filibustering the Civil Rights Act. And I believe one of them is still a Democrat, Robert Byrd.

LACEWELL: Well of course, and the political parties have, have shifted places over the years. We certainly know that after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, in the South, these are precisely the sort of Blue Dogs who ended up being Republicans. No one, no one is doubting on that. And also, by the way, no one doubts the rights of political minorities to voice their disagreement. I mean that is absolutely an American right.

LOESCH: Good.

MATTHEWS: Okay we have to go. Thank you both for coming on.



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

March 30, 2010

O’Reilly Factor: Al Sharpton Caught In A Lie

Filed under: Racism,Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 5:31 AM

The Rev. Al Sharpton debated Bill O’Reilly the issue whether there is racism within the Tea Party movement. When discussing the accusation made by John Lewis that a Tea Party member called him the “n-word,” Al Sharpton said it’s true because he has “seen the tape,” which was an fabricated lie, as O’Reilly pointed out, “There is no tape.” O’Reilly went on to say to Sharpton, “You gotta be careful Reverend, you just said you heard the ‘n-word’ on a tape, there is no tape!” Once again Al Sharpton threw out an accusation just hoping it would stick.



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

March 29, 2010

Harry Reid Supporters Throwing Eggs at Tea Party Express Bus Caught On Video

Filed under: Politics,Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 8:17 PM

The Associated Press reports that “Reid supporters set up a hospitality tent Saturday in the parking lot of a Searchlight casino, about a mile from the tea party rally.” Judging from the video the Reid supporters weren’t very hospitable or friendly. Reid supporters are caught on video throwing eggs at the Tea Party Express bus. One man threatening Andrew Breitbart said, “Get him out of here or I’m going to jail today.”

Special thanks to Founding Bloggers for the video



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

March 27, 2010

Andrew Breitbart Describes Radical Left Harry Reid Supporters Bus Attacks

Filed under: Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 11:19 PM

Andrew Breitbart witnessed first hand today the deceptive manipulation and violence of the radical left. “Dingy” Harry Reid supporters stood on the highway to Searchlight and held signs pointing tea party protesters in the wrong direction. Andrew also witnessed these radical leftists attacking the Tea Party Express bus with eggs as it drove by. The Harry Reid supporters then swarmed him, harassed him and made false statements to the police. And, yet the Lame Stream Media wants you to believe that the tea party activists are the extreme ones. Don’t look for this protest story to make the front page of the Washington Post.

h/t Gateway Pundit



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

Sarah Palin:”We’re not going to sit down and shut up”

Filed under: Sarah Palin,Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 9:04 PM

Somewhere around 7000 tea party activists gathered in Searchlight, Nevada to hear former Governor Sarah Palin as she rallied the troops saying, We’re not going to sit down and shut up. Saying also that Harry Reid will have to explain his votes when he comes back to his hometown to campaign.

Palin told them the big-government, big-debt spending spree of the Senate majority leader, Obama and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is over.

“You’re fired!” Palin said.

The former Governor went on to say, “Some of you are registered Republicans. Some of you are … what we used to call Reagan Democrats,” Palin said. “And some of you are like so many of my friends and my family, including my own husband, just independent, not registered in any party. Just true, blue-blooded Americans.”

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Some were calling the Tea Party gathering a conservative Woodstock. Just fine with me!



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

“Dingy” Harry Reid Supporters Throw Eggs at Tea Party Express Buses

Filed under: Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 4:02 PM

Wonder where the Lame Stream Media will be at on this one? About 35 supporters of Harry Reid, yeah 35 measly supporters showed up to throw eggs at the Tea Party Express caravan.

Supporters of Senator Harry Reid have just thrown eggs at the Tea Party Express bus caravan – striking at least one of the three buses (the red Tea Party Express bus) with multiple eggs.

About 35 Reid supporters had lined Highway 95 in front of the Nugget Casino in Searchlight where they were attempting a counter-demonstration the tens of thousands of tea party supporters who are gathering for the “Showdown in Searchlight.”

With all the negative coverage on the Tea Party you can be sure the media will totally ignore this story.

h/t Tea Party Express via The Lonely Conservative



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

Phony Nevada Tea Party Candidate Faces Criminal Charges

Filed under: Corruption,Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 12:58 PM

Phony Tea Party Candidate Scott Ashjian is one of a record 22 candidates, running for the Senate seat held by Harry Reid. Well, you might want to remove Ashjian from the list of 22 as he faces felony theft and bad check charges in Las Vegas, Nevada.

LAS VEGASA Nevada asphalt contractor who faces a legal challenge to his Tea Party of Nevada candidacy for U.S. Senate was hit Friday with felony theft and bad check charges in Las Vegas that allege he bounced a $5,000 business check last year.

Scott Ashjian is one of a record 22 candidates, including 12 Republicans, running for the seat held by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who is seeking a fifth term.

Bernie Zadrowski, head of the Clark County district attorney’s office bad check unit, said he would seek an arrest warrant Monday in Las Vegas Justice Court. Ashjian could face up to 14 years in state prison if convicted.

The tea party movement is a disparate coalition of conservative groups angered by federal spending, rising taxes and the growth and reach of government. Other tea party activists have been distancing themselves from Ashjian, and an ad targeting him has been sponsored by the Tea Party Express, one of the most visible factions of the national tea party movement.

In a separate matter, a Carson City District Court judge on Friday set an April 14 hearing on a lawsuit that challenges Ashjian’s membership in the Tea Party of Nevada and his place on the ballot. Documents filed with the lawsuit appear to show that Ashjian changed his voter registration on March 2, the day after he filed his declaration of candidacy.

Ashjian said he’s being targeted by unnamed people acting on behalf of the Republican Party.

“Clearly these people are afraid that I will siphon votes from their political party and from the Republican Party,” he said in a statement in response to the lawsuit.

The Tea Party Express has released a video telling Ashjian to get lost:



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

March 8, 2010

200 Tea Party Protesters Show Up For Obama

Filed under: Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 4:31 PM

The warm reception President Obama received inside Arcadia University is in stark contrast the cold reception he received from the 200 Tea Party Protesters outside the University in Glenside, Pa.

MyFoxPhilly – The protesters were outside Arcadia University in Glenside, Pa., where Obama spoke about his latest push for health-care reform.

But there was a lot of pushback from protesters, many who called for Obama’s removal as President or for government to cut back on spending.

One sign said “Obama Here’s Your Pink Slip,” while another said “Obamacare Is A Debt Sentence.”

A third sign compared Obama to a dictator.

During his speech, Obama blamed Republicans for the current health-care situation…The Tea Party protesters are a grass-roots organization that leans more toward the Republican Party but is more focused on the reduction of big government and government spending.

It would be nice to see twice the number of Tea Party Protesters show up in St Louis! Obama and Democrats are attempting to hi-jack the great health care coverage in the world.

h/t Riehl World View



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club

February 28, 2010

Pelosi and Democrats Share Common Views With the Tea Party

Filed under: Politics,Tea Party — Cato Uticensis @ 1:53 PM

Nancy Pelosi has made an outrageous claim stating she and her democrat comrades have a lot in common with the Tea Party movement. You know the grassroots movements she dismissed as “Astroturf!” Yeah, that movement.

Via Hot Air

ELIZABETH VARGAS, ABC NEWS: Let’s talk a bit about the coming elections in November. You had recently– and the Tea Party movement, do you think it will be a force to be reckoned with? You had said last summer that it was a faux grassroots movement. You called it the Astroturf movement.

NANCY PELOSI, HOUSE SPEAKER: In some respects it is. Uh-huh.

VARGAS: Is the Tea Party movement a force?

PELOSI: No – No what I said at the time is, that they were — the Republican Party directs a lot of what the Tea Party does, but not everybody in the Tea Party takes direction from the Republican Party. And so there was a lot of, shall we say, Astroturf, as opposed to grassroots.

But, you know, we share some of the views of the Tea Partiers in terms of the role of special interest in Washington, D.C., as — it just has to stop. And that’s why I’ve fought the special interest, whether it’s on energy, whether it’s on health insurance, whether it’s on pharmaceuticals and the rest.

VARGAS: So, common ground with many people in the Tea Party movement.

PELOSI: Well, no, there are some. There are some because they, again, some of it is orchestrated from the Republican headquarters. Some of it is hijacking the good intentions of lots of people who share some of our concerns that we have about the role of special interests and many Tea Partiers, not that I speak for them, share the view, whether it’s — and Democrats, Republicans and Independents share the view that the recent Supreme Court decision, which greatly empowers the special interests, is something that they oppose.

I can’t quite honestly think of one thing that Pelosi and her Democrat comrades have in common with the Tea Party movement.

Let’s review what the Tea Partiers typically stand for and see if Pelosi and company share common ground.

1. Fiscal responsibility – er, nope.

2. Personal responsibility – er, nope.
3. Limited government – er, nope.
4. Rule of law – er, nope.
5. National sovereignty – er, nope.

You know what Nancy, I can’t find one thing that you or your Democrat comrades have in common with the tea partiers. Sorry Nancy, you are just SOL!

Read what others are saying at memeorandum



Promoting Limited Government,Constitutional Rights and Personal Responsibility

Conservative Books and Conservative Book Club
Older Posts »