Friday, October 10, 2008

Anger, the Waukesha Rally, and the Mainstream Media

The Washington Post is wrong.

This headline is wrong: Anger Is Crowd's Overarching Emotion at McCain Rally.

I was at the town hall meeting in Waukesha.

Anger wasn't the emotion that reigned at the event.

I don't like the spin that The Post is putting on the people of Wisconsin.

There were shouts of "Nobama" and "Socialist" at the mention of the Democratic presidential nominee. There were boos, middle fingers turned up and thumbs turned down as a media caravan moved through the crowd Thursday for a midday town hall gathering featuring John McCain and Sarah Palin.

"It is absolutely vital that you take it to Obama, that you hit him where it hits, there's a soft spot," said James T. Harris, a local radio talk show host, who urged the Republican nominee to use Barack Obama's controversial former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., and others against him.

"We have the good Reverend Wright. We have [the Rev. Michael L.] Pfleger. We have all of these shady characters that have surrounded him," Harris bellowed. "We have corruption here in Wisconsin and voting across the nation. I am begging you, sir. I am begging you. Take it to him."

The crowd of thousands roared its approval.

In recent days, a campaign that embraced the mantra of "Country First" but is flagging in the polls and scrambling for a way to close the gap as the nation's economy slides into shambles has found itself at the center of an outpouring of raw emotion rare in a presidential race.

...The crowds that show up for his rallies these days appear to have little appetite for the talk of bipartisan compromise that had been at the heart of his message around the Republican National Convention. During a rally outside a small airport in Mosinee, Wis., on Thursday, McCain said that "it's time we come together, Democrats and Republicans to work together. That's my record. I'll reach across the aisle."

The crowd stood silent.

This clearly is the latest spin that the lib media have decided to push.

Only McCain's supporters are angry, outraged, out for blood.

Barack Obama, Joe Biden, and their supporters aren't depicted in the same manner.

When Obama's supporters express their desire to have President Bush and Vice President Cheney tried for war crimes, that's passion.

When during the VP debate Joe Biden says something as inflammatory as "Cheney has been the most dangerous vice president we've had probably in American history," that's considered a reasonable comment from an experienced lawmaker.

(I wonder if Biden has heard of SITTING Vice President Aaron Burr killing Alexander Hamilton.)

When Obama calls for his supporters "to argue with [Republicans and Independents] and get in their face," that's being a leader.

See a pattern?

It's a nauseating double standard.

The Post highlights comments from the angry pro-McCain mob:

"No, I'm not mad, I'm pissed," said Joan Schmitz, who owns a plumbing company here. She said she was frustrated with polls showing Obama surging, McCain's performance in a Tuesday night debate, Obama himself, the media, and the liberal group ACORN, which she said was registering voters fraudulently.

Noting Obama's connections with Ayers, she said that "if it was a Republican, it would be nonstop," referring to what she said was the media ignoring the controversial acquaintance.

"I can't stand to look at him, I don't trust him. I don't like the circle of friends he keeps, I don't like his policies," Schmitz said of Obama. "I'm pissed off by it. I'm beyond mad. How is he climbing up in the polls?"

No one interviewed me.

Not everyone at the rally was seething with anger.

And for those who were, I don't see why The Post doesn't use the same standards that they use to judge Obama's supporters.

Why not call them "engaged" or "passionate" or "fired up"?

On the way into the event, the Republican Party of Wisconsin handed out fliers reading "Your Vote Is Being Stolen," an anti-ACORN leaflet that concluded, "Why is vote fraud allowed? Vote fraud is allowed since it benefits Democrats."

Every American should be horrified at what is happening in regard to ACORN. Every American should be angry about ACORN's assault on voters.

The fact is ACORN is partisan. It's an extreme liberal organization that has produced fraudulent voter registrations in multiple states, swing states.

The fact is DEMOCRATS in Wisconsin have blocked efforts to ensure the integrity of Wisconsin's elections.

Our votes are being stolen. That's the reality. I suggest The Post do an investigative report on voter fraud in Wisconsin and the Democrats' refusal to address the problem.

That fact that The Post sees reaction to this as some sort of unwarranted anger indicates the news organization is part of the problem, an ACORN accomplice.

The crowd showed equal disdain for the media, fueled by comments from Palin, who encouraged the Republican supporters to take the campaign's message around the media. "I can't pick a fight with those who buy ink by the barrel," she said. "It's dangerous territory whenever I suggest the mainstream media isn't asking all the questions."

Of course, Palin encouraged us to exercise our freedom of speech and speak the truth because it's being stifled by a biased media, propagandists for Obama and the Democrats.

Is there something angry about taking "the campaign's message around the media"?

Not at all. The media aren't entitled to filter what we say.

The lib media don't get that we know John McCain and Sarah Palin have to run against them as well as Obama and Biden.

We know the bias. We know they're hostile, and we react.

But don't call it anger. Call it passion. Call it a hunger for the truth. Call it speaking out against an injustice.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

even faux news covered the rally and showed the angry idiots yelling about socialism when they dont' undertsand anything that is about socialism. just go cry somewhere else ya'll gonna get your asses beat in Novemeber, and never be heard from again.

Anonymous said...

"The love you take is equal to the love you make."

Anonymous said...

"There was always going to be a point of revolt and panic for a core group of Americans who believe that Obama simply cannot be president - because he's black or liberal or young or relatively new. This is that point. As the polls suggest a strong victory, the Hannity-Limbaugh-Steyn-O'Reilly base are going into shock and extreme rage. McCain and Palin have decided to stoke this rage, to foment it, to encourage paranoid notions that somehow Obama is a "secret" terrorist or Islamist or foreigner. These are base emotions in both sense of the word.

But they are also very very dangerous. This is a moment of maximal physical danger for the young Democratic nominee. And McCain is playing with fire. If he really wants to put country first, he will attack Obama on his policies - not on these inflammatory, personal, creepy grounds. This is getting close to the atmosphere stoked by the Israeli far right before the assassination of Rabin.

For God's sake, McCain, stop it. For once in this campaign, put your country first."

--Andrew Sullivan. Not as if you care to listen to the "liberal media." But if all you disgusting, hatemongering McCainines could just put down the pitchforks for one second and realize how un-American and terrorist-like it is to build these absurd mythologies about Obama for one fucking second my goodness!

Mary said...

"anonymous," 9:19 AM, October 10, 2008--

You sound so threatening and angry and violent. Would Obama approve? Has he incited you to be so dangerously divisive?

Mary said...

"anonymous," 9:23 AM, October 10, 2008--

Thank you, Paul McCartney.

Mary said...

But if all you disgusting, hatemongering McCainines could just put down the pitchforks for one second and realize how un-American and terrorist-like it is to build these absurd mythologies about Obama for one fucking second my goodness!

Listen to yourself.

And you are arguing that McCain supporters are hateful and dangerous?

Right.

Christian E. Vettrus said...

http://www.freeforall.tv/

It isn't republican votes which are being stolen.

And the rhetoric about voter fraud is a construct of the right intended to use "boxing" and fear-mongering to keep folks from showing up at the polls.

To even espouse the voter fraud allegations as a republican is tremendously disingenuous. Their party has been the one who has perpetuated widespread fraud.

In fact, this was all part of Karl Rove's vision of a permanent Republican Majority at all costs.

There has never been a regime with more corruption and widespread fraud in human history.

We are left to pick up the pieces of our democracy now, and to do so you will have to stop espousing inherited opinions borrowed from your political hacks.

I was once a young republican, campaigning for three republican presidents, but I have put that behind me, and now consider myself a political independent and informed skeptic.

Partisanship is blind.

I know James T Harris personally, and disagree with him vehemently. I live a block away in the inner-city of Milwaukee.

But I love and respect him, even if we disagree.

Mary said...

I've heard James say where he lives.

I don't think of that as the "inner-city of Milwaukee."

I think of that neighborhood as an area where people are committed to preserving it as a desirable place to live and fighting back against crime to prevent it from deteriorating.

Is the "inner-city" becoming the entire city?

Anonymous said...

But even John McCain had to calm down the crowd
and said Obama is decent and not to be scared of Obama if he's elected President.

I think McCain and the Secret Service folks know now that his and Palin's earlier scare-mongering has sown some bad seeds... let's hope McCain's rebuke does some good.

Mary said...

Let's hope the mainstsream media start reporting on the red-meat rhetoric at Obama and Biden rallies, or the red-meat rhetoric the campaign lifts off of fringe Leftist blogs.

Actually, they do report it.

The problem is they incorporate that vile stuff and the lies into their pro-Obama coverage.

I expect no rebukes from Obama.

Merge Divide said...

I agree. Let's fight media bias together. There's been a lot of talk in the corporate media about a Obama/Ayers "association". Some claim that it's been a long time coming.

But I'm still waiting for John McCain to denounce his unwholesome relationship with G. Gordon Liddy. Where is the moral outrage, and who hears cries of conspiracy from the Right regarding mainstream media's suppression of this story?

Read the nasty details in THIS LINK to an article from May.

Here are some highlights:

“How close are McCain and Liddy? At least as close as Obama and Ayers appear to be. In 1998, Liddy's home was the site of a McCain fundraiser. Over the years, he has made at least four contributions totaling $5,000 to the senator's campaigns -- including $1,000 this year.

Last November, McCain went on his radio show. Liddy greeted him as "an old friend," and McCain sounded like one. "I'm proud of you, I'm proud of your family," he gushed. "It's always a pleasure for me to come on your program, Gordon, and congratulations on your continued success and adherence to the principles and philosophies that keep our nation great.
Which principles would those be? The ones that told Liddy it was fine to break into the office of the Democratic National Committee to plant bugs and photograph documents? The ones that made him propose to kidnap anti-war activists so they couldn't disrupt the 1972 Republican National Convention? The ones that inspired him to plan the murder (never carried out) of an unfriendly newspaper columnist?

Liddy was in the thick of the biggest political scandal in American history -- and one of the greatest threats to the rule of law. He has said he has no regrets about what he did, insisting that he went to jail as "a prisoner of war."

All this may sound like ancient history. But it's from the same era as the bombings Ayers helped carry out as a member of the Weather Underground. And Liddy's penchant for extreme solutions has not abated.

In 1994, after the disastrous federal raid on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, he gave some advice to his listeners: "Now if the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms comes to disarm you and they are bearing arms, resist them with arms. Go for a head shot; they're going to be wearing bulletproof vests. ... Kill the sons of bitches."

He later backed off, saying he meant merely that people should defend themselves if federal agents came with guns blazing. But his amended guidance was not exactly conciliatory: Liddy also said he should have recommended shots to the groin instead of the head. If that wasn't enough to inflame any nut cases, he mentioned labeling targets "Bill" and "Hillary" when he practiced shooting.”


Read SERENDIPITY.

Mary said...

This is Daily Kos stuff.

Jason Paris APA said...

Anonymous said...
even faux news covered the rally and showed the angry idiots yelling about socialism when they dont' undertsand anything that is about socialism. just go cry somewhere else ya'll gonna get your asses beat in Novemeber, and never be heard from again.



Anonymous...soumewhat spineless if you ask me...but I digress...

Socialism is exactly what BHO and his cronies are preaching. The basis of his economic policies are very robin hood-esque. Take from the rich and give to the poor. Free healthcare for everyone..don't worry the rich will pay for it. Companies will pay for it. Have to government control energy, healthcare, financials..who knows what's next. I find it quite disturbing that a problem caused by socialist policies (Fannie and Freddie) makes a large number of the populace in this country embrace socialism as the answer.
As far as gettong beat in November...I hope my belief in this country that we'll continue to embrace what made us great and shun what made us seperate from Britan...then we'll have a McCain-Palin administration to help lead us out of this crisis!

Merge Divide said...

"I find it quite disturbing that a problem caused by socialist policies (Fannie and Freddie) makes a large number of the populace in this country embrace socialism as the answer."

And I find it disturbing that there are still free-market true believers that insist that the Wall Street crisis was caused by Clinton's promotion of the CRA. Not only are you dangerously ill-informed (and that's giving you the benefit of the doubt)... But you are (literally) a tool trying to shill a false narrative for the benefit of those that want to pursue their unfettered greed at the expense of the taxpayers. You're making yourself an accessory to the greatest collective crime perpetuated so far this century.