Election Day: The eyes of the nation are on Oregon.
Kari Chisholm
Since the U.S. Senate election in Massachusetts last week , conservatives have been crowing that anti-tax fervor has arisen again to majority status - and will be sweeping across the nation in 2010. (Admittedly, they tried to claim the same the day after Obama's win 2008. They're not known for rational thought.)
Today, here in Oregon, we'll see the first test of that theory in the post-Massachusetts political world. If the teabaggers are right, and they're the new majority, Measures 66 and 67 will go down to a stunning defeat.
I believe that Massachusetts wasn't at all about the rise of the anti-tax crowd. Rather, Massachusetts showed us what happens when we allow Republicans to take on a populist veneer and hide who really supports them. It's especially bad when it's aided and abetted by a Democratic candidate who delivers all the wrong subconscious cues.
Just watch the competing ads from Massachusetts. Mute your speakers, and ignore the on-screen captions. Tell me which candidate looks more like the working-class Democrat and which one looks like the wealthy Republican.
Well, it's now election day in Oregon - and the nation will see whether Massachusetts was the harbinger of a new and more strident form of anti-tax sentiment; or whether working-class populism is alive and well.
Oregon's always been an anti-tax state, despite its reputation as a progressive haven. (Maybe Portland, but not the rest of Oregon.) If Oregonians decide that they can support slightly higher taxes on 2.5% of the highest income-earners (over $250k) and the most successful corporations, we will provide a template for the rest of the nation.
And make no mistake, the nation is watching us. In the Washington Post, the AP notes that our election "could give legislators in other states a hint about whether they can ask taxpayers for help in repairing ravaged budgets."
The New York Times notes:
While tax increases are probably coming in plenty of other states, most by executive or legislative action, Oregon will be the first this year to ask voters to raise taxes on themselves — or at least on some of themselves.
The Los Angeles Times notes:
The success or failure of Measures 66 and 67 will be a concrete test -- one of the few in the country this year -- of how willing voters are to accept tax increases targeted at those theoretically best equipped to pay them."These measures are the first test of a progressive solution to the recession," said Cynthia Kain, a spokeswoman for the National Education Assn. who has been working to help pass the ballot measures.
And finally, as Joan McCarter notes at Daily Kos:
This election could demonstrate that there is a mood in this country for tax equity, for investing in what's important, in this case critical social and safety services as well as schools. It will help make taxing the wealthy a reasonable answer to making government work again. It will do so all the more because it will be the people deciding themselves on this solution.
So let's bring this one home, folks. Just a few hours to go. Find your nearest Yes for Oregon campaign HQ and give 'em a few more hours of work.
America is counting on us.
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Jan 26, '10
The eyes of the nation are indeed on Oregon. It was interesting timing for two network reports featuring President Obama ... and coverage of a speech he gave on joblessness.
The first, ABC News anchor Diane Sawyer interviewed President Obama where he reiterated his position that raising taxes in the midst of a recession is ill-advised and then he made a rather startling admission that being a one-term president would be okay by him.
The second, NBC Nightly News ran a special segment the chronicles the plight of 26,900,000 Americans who can't find full-time work, and dove down into the real pain behind the headline numbers.
In a speech earlier in the day, he called joblessness in America "an Epidemic."
President Obama: Declares Joblessness An Epidemic. Reaffirms No New Taxes Pledge
Jan 26, '10
In a speech earlier in the day, he called joblessness in America "an Epidemic."
So, if anyone really gives a damn, we can start with the real jobless numbers. 1 in 4 males is underemployed or unemployed. That is on a par with the Great Depression. Record numbers of banks have failed. Will it take seeing the neighbor in a soup line for most to grasp what that cocksucker Bush has done to us?
Little details can make a big difference. Personally, I've had it with the insulting tone that implies you have all the answers, with some refusing to even engage in debate. Chuch hasn't responded to a comment (and there have been many that start with "Chuck..") since November 23, and that was to the woman at Gresham Ford. Before that I got tired of looking. It was probably last summer. You have paid contributors bitching on Facebook about what a bummer the readership is, and t.a. and Pat routinely cursing us for disagreeing with them.
I was prepared to vote yes/yes, but after reading the latest round of know-it-all Blueoregon contributors telling us what we are too stupid to get, I just tore my ballot up.
This used to be a good blog. Today? I still can't get over the "revelation" that a commercial wasn't shot on location, and the frenzy that followed, as if that were a revelation. If this is what it takes to pay the bills, then Oregon deserves to starve. You've devoted over 75 posts to this, while Copenhagen got one. The failure of the measures (one at least) will be a headache. The failure of Copenhagen will mean that your children can never hope for the mediocre quality of life you enjoy, at best. Meanwhile Obama breaks every campaign promise. Not to worry, I doubt you'll have me reading ANY politics until at least 2012, and by then the world will end.
Jan 26, '10
"I believe that Massachusetts wasn't at all about the rise of the anti-tax crowd. Rather, Massachusetts showed us what happens when we allow Republicans to take on a populist veneer and hide who really supports them. It's especially bad when it's aided and abetted by a Democratic candidate who delivers all the wrong subconscious cues."
If we want to diagnose why Brown won, you have to look at the voters who historically voted democratic but voted for Brown or just didn't show up. Why did they vote Republican or not vote at all? The data I've seen infers that this voting block was disappointed w/ democratic corporatism. I think this was the primary reason we lost Massachusetts. We knew the tea-baggers wouldn't be voting democratic and we knew they would be fired up. It's tough to "take on a populist veneer" when you have people like Larry Summers and Tim Geithner on your economic team.
Jan 26, '10
It's obvious that we need to get this election done: people are starting to lose their wits. A yes vote would be good if only to pave the way for the most obvious solution to our national debt: raising revenue and paying it down. The rich have simply not been doing their share. That needs to be reversed. We don't need to get overblown about this.
Jan 26, '10
I am pretty left leaning, and have read loads and loads on these. And i just do not think it is "progressive" or in anyway fair for the burden to fall on the "rich" only. If something is worth doing everyone should be involved and take ownership. Im kinda sick of the type of politics that tries to put the burden on certain unpopular groups such as the "rich" or smokers etc etc. That is not Progressive at all its the politics of jealousy . Vote No on both.
Jan 26, '10
Tell me which candidate looks more like the working-class Democrat and which one looks like the wealthy Republican.
Good point. Brown looks much more like a person of, with and for the people. And they did it without looking phony.
Jan 26, '10
Also, don't kid yourself. This special election is not a national referendum on higher taxation on business and individuals. It's an anomaly. Especially when Obama is out there every single day telling us that raising taxes now is a bad move.
e.g. last night on ABC:
"I can guarantee that the worst thing we could do would be to raise taxes when the economy is still this weak." - President Barack Obama to Diane Sawyer.
Jan 26, '10
"Brown looks much more like a person of, with and for the people."
Especially during that campaign stop when he smiled at the guy who screamed the comment about his opponent to "shove a curling iron up her butt." A real regular Teddy Roosevelt you have there.
"...telling us that raising taxes now is a bad move."
Because lowing taxes during a time of war and foriegn occupation really worked out well for us, didn't it Ricky.
"Im kinda sick of the type of politics that tries to put the burden on certain unpopular groups such as the "rich" ...
You mean like the burden Bush put on the middle class with his tax cuts for the wealthy in 2001 and 2003?
8:20 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
"I can guarantee that the worst thing we could do would be to raise taxes when the economy is still this weak." - President Barack Obama to Diane Sawyer.
Obama gets to have that luxury because he doesn't have to balance the budget. They get to borrow lots of cash.
Oregon has no such luxury. So in fact, the worse thing we can do is to cut spending: more jobs lost, more people in poverty unable to get healthcare and other basics, more school days cut, etc.
Jan 26, '10
Scott. On Bush,yes. But what really annoys me is that those in the Lege here do not think I am capable of paying my share. Im lower middle class and find it offensive that they think I am not capable of makeing a contribution to our State. This is some weird reverse feudalism were our rich masters pay everyones way ,keeps the peasants happy. If this crisis really is a crisis it should be all hands on deck. Every oregonian should be involved in finding a way out, not just pinning everything on one class. If we want true participation in our demorcacy all should understand the obligations as well as rights.
Jan 26, '10
Kari, if you wouldn't say "kike" or "n*gger" then you shouldn't say "teabagger" -- it's deliberately insulting, disrespectful, and contrary to the stated values of BO.
Jan 26, '10
"Im lower middle class and find it offensive that they think I am not capable of makeing a contribution to our State."
So you haven't actually read the measures you are voting against?
"This is some weird reverse feudalism were our rich masters pay everyones way ,keeps the peasants happy."
So you're ok with the fact that Nike, Intel, and Columbia Sportswear all have off shore bank accounts where they can park their profits from oversea sales (legally), earn interest, and not pay a dime of federal, state, or local taxes? It's ok with you that on the last $10 million Phil Knight earns he pays less as a percentage in taxes than you do? You're comfortable with the fact you didn't get jack #$%^ during the Bush years but Timmy Boyle at Columbia pocketed hundreds of thousands of dollars in his own personal checking account.
Glad we got that all cleared up.
Jan 26, '10
President Obama is a very nice bland moderate republican; not in his soul a Democrat or a Progressive. Sure he acted like one on the campaign trail but almost everything he has done in the White House since his election could of been done by a moderate republican (if you could find such an endangered creature) and we wouldn't of noticed a bit difference.
I think he has surrounded himself with advisors who are giving him so very, very bad advice. He is listening to all the wrong voices. Rahm, I'm talking to you.
Just today, the White House has floated a trial balloon of the 'three year discretionary spending freeze.' That's an absolutely horrible policy to implement in the middle of economic downturn. It's really the worst thing he could do at this point in time but............ there he goes again, determined to stick it to the very people who voted for him and who desperately need help.
I have to hand it to the republicans; when they get elected they do everything within their power to pass bills that their voters like. Democrats-when they get elected President they seem to get this crazy idea that the path to success is to piss off the very people who voted for you in the first place. Crazy I tell you.
9:03 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
And i just do not think it is "progressive" or in anyway fair for the burden to fall on the "rich" only.
Nor will it, after the passage of Measures 66 and 67. With regard to personal income taxes, the rate is simply increased for individuals making more than $125K and households making $250K or more. It doesn't release anyone making less than that from paying their current tax burden. The "rich" won't be the only ones bearing the tax burden. What they will be doing is bearing a small amount more of the burden than they currently are.
Jan 26, '10
OregonScot says: "Im kinda sick of the type of politics that tries to put the burden on certain unpopular groups such as the "rich" ...
Actually, Measures 66 and 67 are more in the nature of a tax on the upper middle class than a tax on the rich.
Measure 67, in particular, will have no effect on the larger, more wealthy corporations in Oregon
A few years ago the large corporations convinced Salem to exempt them, for all intents and purposes, from paying Oregon income tax. This was accomplished by revising the "apportionment formula."
Under the new apportionment formula, a multi-state corporation, such as Nike or Intel, first computes its Oregon tax liability like any other corporation, but then it multiplies its Oregon income tax liability by a fraction, where the numerator is sales within Oregon and the denominator is worldwide sales. The result of this calculation is the amount of tax the corporation actually has to pay to Oregon.
A company such as Nike, with an extremely small percentage of its sales within Oregon, pays virtually no Oregon income tax.
Prior to the new apportionment formula, corporations contributed nearly 20% of all Oregon income tax. After the new tax law was fully phased in 2008, corporations pay only 5% of all Oregon income tax (individuals pay 95%). As you can see, the great majority of the corporate income tax came from the large multi-state entities.
Measure 67 affects the mid-size corporations whose operations are mainly in Oregon.
I support Measure 67 and certainly the mid-size corporations can do more to support state government, but it's disappointing to see large multi-state corporations escape taxation in Oregon, and to know that Measure 67 will not have any material effect on them (the new apportionment formula assures that).
Jan 26, '10
"ALL Eyes are on Oregon"
Good! This should attract people of wealth to Oregon! I bet wealthy business owners across the nation will be looking to Oregon to setup shop. What a brilliant economic strategy - especially when we need JOBS!
You Progressive Socialists must be proud!
9:35 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
Good! This should attract people of wealth to Oregon! I bet wealthy business owners across the nation will be looking to Oregon to setup shop. What a brilliant economic strategy - especially when we need JOBS!
Actually, it is. It shows that we care about our community and our state. And let's be honest...Oregon will still have the 43rd lowest corporate tax burden in the nation if M67 passes. Lower than New York. Lower than California. Corporations seem to be quite happy to locate to those states.
Jan 26, '10
"then you shouldn't say "teabagger" -- it's deliberately insulting, disrespectful, and contrary to the stated values of BO."
Au contraire, the term's growth in the political arena earned attention by the Oxford American Dictionary, and the word "teabagger" achieved finalist status for the OAD Word of the Year.
9:39 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
Awww, I seem to have hurt Anonymous Coward 8:13's feelings.
deliberately insulting, disrespectful
Calling the FreedomWorks-funded and Fox-News-rallied anti-tax activists "teabaggers" may indeed be "deliberately insulting" and "disrespectful", but if you can't tell the difference between that and a racial slur, well, we're done here.
Meanwhile, do try and remember that the phrasing was invented by the teabaggers themselves. As Keith Olbermann notes:
9:41 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
I bet wealthy business owners across the nation will be looking to Oregon to setup shop. What a brilliant economic strategy - especially when we need JOBS!
Oregon will go from being the 3rd lowest business taxes to the 8th lowest. So what?
And if low taxes create jobs, where the hell are the damn jobs already?
Remember when Intel lost their top recruit for a key executive post because he didn't want to raise his kids in a place where they close the schools in May? Yeah, I think a crappy school year will have a bigger effect on bringing big companies here than a one-tenth of one-percent of Oregon-based sales minimum tax.
Jan 26, '10
A "no" vote on 66/67 suggests a similar attitude to the one that supported a "yes" vote on California's Pro. 13.
10:20 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
t.a. and Pat routinely cursing us for disagreeing with them
I've never cursed anyone out. I have called cowardly anonymous posters cowards, and pointed out their apparent lack of critical thinking skills, and myopic obsessive focus on their respective One-Trick-Pony Jihads.
It may make them feel "cursed". I sincerely hope so.......
Jan 26, '10
@thinkoregon -- timing is not curious, these people are looking for any reason not to look at the repudiation of the national progressive statist agenda embodied by Brown's win (which had national implications clearly apparent to the thouands of people nationwide that gave time and $ to the Brown campaign). If the measures go down, count on media silence in the MSM and here on BO. If they pass, statists will try to inflate it nationally (though the national implications aren't nearly as clear as Mass) and use it as propoganda -- "see, the people are in favor of progressive solutions ..."
10:35 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
Abby, this is an Oregon blog. We don't do a huge amount of coverage of national or international news, except in how it relates to Oregon. In Oregon, nothing is more important than these measures. If you decided to tear up your ballot because BlueO wasn't talking about Copenhagen, that would be akin to criticizing OPB for not covering sports enough. It's not what we do.
And also, we don't pay contributors. (Or editors!)
10:37 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
The teabag "controversy" is amusing. After spending decades popularizing names like "the Democrat Party," "Defeatocrats," etc., Teabaggers are now complaining that liberals are calling them by a name they gave themselves.
It sucks to have chosen unwisely, but the teabaggers are going to have to live with that mistake.
Jan 26, '10
I don't know. I don't buy that the results of this election, if yes on 66/67 is the outcome, that it'll snap the teabagger's strings, so to speak. I get the feeling they'll use it as ammunition if either 66 or 67 fails, but if 66/67 passes, they'll shrug and say "well, it's just Oregon, they're all crazy liberals anyway" like they always do and move on. Nothing will really split them short of a major economic depression brought on by a wary government that decides to freeze spending and reinvestment into the economy. If enough of them are out of work and teetering on the edge of starvation, that might be enough to make them wake up and realize how important that government support and reinvestment really is. There aren't a lot of tea partiers that are starving...it doesn't take much more than a casual glance at one of their rallies to confirm that.
Jan 26, '10
@Jeff alworth -- by my non-scientific polling most tea party folks are independents -- not really one in the same with those that smeared D's with name calling.
Jus sayin'
Jan 26, '10
Abby,
Take a Zoloft, drink a glass of wine and chill. You're losing it.
10:51 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
Gotta side with Geoff on this one.
What's the point in villifying a whole bunch of people concerned that DC is wholly in the pockets of the international banking community, just because the libertarians and the Republicans got to 'em first?
We should be trying to co-opt them with "the relevant facts", 'cause that's what progressives are supposed to be about.
<hr/>Have to admit that the tone deafness demonstrated by their "leaders" in Kari's example gave me a bunch of belly laughs early on, but continuing in that vein is self defeating IMO.
Jan 26, '10
Makes you proud to be an Oregonian! I will happily walk the five miles to a drop-off spot to cast my bit of history. Hey, thinking about it...voluntary exercise is fine, but why not fund Tri-Met to give anyone that requests it, one free pass on Election Day? A bus project drive through the under represented areas, drop-off wise, might be a decent idea as well, no?
Posted by: Jeff Alworth | Jan 26, 2010 10:37:08 AM
The teabag "controversy" is amusing. After spending decades popularizing names like "the Democrat Party," "Defeatocrats," etc., Teabaggers are now complaining that liberals are calling them by a name they gave themselves.
It sucks to have chosen unwisely, but the teabaggers are going to have to live with that mistake.
They could disband. I'll gladly be corrected, but I've only heard them refer to themselves as TEA party or TEA protesters. I think they object to teabagger as it sounds like d-bag. That and they eventually learned what "to teabag" meant. It's pretty rich, that folks that went out in public with tea bags hanging from their glasses would complain about being made fun of. We can't touch their self parody.
What's sad is that neither side seems to know very much history at all about the actual, historic event that took place in Boston Habor.
Jan 26, '10
Kari, I still don't buy your logic. Even though there is ample evidence of African-Americans using the "n-word", it still isn't OK to use it. (and I submit the collective works of Snoop Dog as my back up).
Or even closer, there are many instances of Homosexuals using the "f" slur. Doesn't make it OK for me to use it.
What I find most amusing is that I can NEVER find someone on the left who is willing to use the term to my face.
I tell you what. When I run into you, I will invite you to call me a teabagger in person. If you have the guts to do it, I will donate $50 to John Kitzhaber's campaign.
11:41 a.m.
Jan 26, '10
Like I said, DS, a racial slur and "teabagger" are hardly equivalent. It may be insulting and disrespectful, but so is calling someone an "asshole" or a "bastard" or "fucktard" - but none of those are even remotely in the same ballpark as the N-word.
Jan 26, '10
Funny, Darth. I don't know one of my friends (or myself) that would fail to call you that. I don't believe I've ever used it unmodified, though. Kind of like "yankee" to an old school Southerner. In fact, I seldom use fewer than three adjectives with it. Care to guess what they are?
For those that say that at least they're engaged, I would compare their efforts to your six year old daughter putting on her mother's formal. It's cute, but it doesn't work and it certainly isn't sexy.
So, you ARE Bill Spadea in real life?
Jan 26, '10
"What I find most amusing is that I can NEVER find someone on the left who is willing to use the term to my face."
Oh oh oh oh pick me! Pick me!
Jan 26, '10
The point, O'Scott, is that you ARE already paying your fair share. The argument breaks out, O'Scott, when the wealthy and utterly buffered are asked to pay a proportionate share to yours.
The Gatekeepers depend upon serfs living in earnest orthodoxy such as the one you espouse. I agree, all should shoulder, but it's like you are begging off on master's behalf!
Don't be such a lackey, dear! Nobody believes you are unwilling to pay what is yours to pay and more - but you can best believe that those impugning the little sliver of a point oh percentage point do not share your earnest willingness to do what must be done for self and all.
Jan 26, '10
to geoff lundt
i am so glad that you are back. i have another question. my brother and i want to throw a tea party. not just a tea party meeting but a real tea party where we get to throw tea. the problem is we don't live near a harbor or anything. so my question is can we throw a tea party in a mill pond? my sister who thinks she's all that says we can't because the tea will kill the endangered pond turtles in the mill pond. i told her she's wrong and not a patriot because there is nothing in the constitution about protecting pond turtles. is this the right answer? anyway we have a canoe. what do you think? i am trying to be self-reliant but i need some help.
luis (not immigrant)
Jan 26, '10
@Lou Fleming -- Look, I made your day! Again.
Jan 26, '10
Scott in Damascus commented: You mean like the burden Bush put on the middle class with his tax cuts for the wealthy in 2001 and 2003?
Scott, fyi:
IRS Releases Data on Burden of Income Tax
The IRS has recently released data showing that the share of the federal income tax borne by taxpayers in the highest income tax brackets has increased under the Bush Administration. The data lays to rest the myth that the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 amounted to tax cuts for the rich. The data reveal that the share of total federal income taxes paid by the wealthiest 1 percent of tax filers (those with adjusted gross income over $388,806) increased to 39.89 percent in 2006 (up from 37.42 percent in 2000). In 2006, the top 5 percent accounted for 60.14 percent of all federal income tax revenue, and 97.01 percent of all federal income revenue was paid by the top 50 percent of income tax filers.
Alternatively, in 2006, the tax burden on the bottom half of tax filers (those with adjusted gross income under $31,987) stood at an all-time low of 2.99 percent. The IRS data also reveals that the share of income generated by the wealthiest 1 percent of taxpayers increased from 14.23 percent to 20.81 percent from 1992-2000, coinciding with the Clinton Presidency. Under the Bush Administration, the rate of growth of the share of income generated by the wealthiest 1 percent declined substantially, only increasing to 22.06 percent in 2006. Source: IRS, 2006 Tax Data.
Jan 26, '10
"then you shouldn't say "teabagger" -- it's deliberately insulting, disrespectful,"
Well I am sorry to say that I am a member of the Democratic party, no' the "Democrat" party so go f yourself, you teabaggin republican moron.
Jan 26, '10
@Steve -- feel better now?
Jan 26, '10
albatross:
You really should read you own cut 'n paste before you, uh, cut 'n' paste.
A comparison of real dollars doesn't mean squat. The poor got poorer, the middle class lost ground, and the wealthly suddenly became the uber-wealthy. So yeah, in real money they paid a percent or two more compared to some other number. Whatever.
FYI, the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts reduced the TOP four marginal income tax rates as follows:
39.6% became 35% 36% became 33% 31% became 28% 28% became 25%
Oh, and don't forget the reduction on capital gains and dividends. They also phased out the estate tax, repealing it entirely in 2010.
In addition, the tax cuts included three components often referred to as “middle-class” tax cuts, though many higher-income families benefit from them as well. One provision created a new bottom income tax rate of 10 percent for some of the income previously taxed at a 15 percent rate. Another provision increased the Child Tax Credit from $500 to $1,000 per child and made many low-income working families eligible for the credit. The third provision was “marriage penalty relief” — a set of changes that reduced taxes for some married couples.
But Scott from Damascus, how much did they cost?
Thanks for asking.
The 2001 and 2003 tax cuts added about $1.7 trillion to deficits between 2001 and 2008. Because they been financed by borrowing (let's give a shout out to China!) —which increases the national debt — this figure includes the extra interest costs resulting from that additional debt.
This figure also includes the cost of “patching” the Alternative Minimum Tax to keep the tax from hitting millions of upper-middle-class households, a problem the tax cuts helped cause.
Over the next decade (2009-2018), making the tax cuts permanent would cost $4.4 trillion, assuming that the tax cuts remain deficit-financed.
Now pay attention, this is where it gets interesting:
A very large share of the value of the tax cuts flows to high-income taxpayers. In fact, the top 1 percent of households — a group with incomes over $450,000 in 2008 — would receive 31 percent of the tax cuts’ benefits.
Let's repeat that last sentence for emphasis:
THE TOP 1 PERCENT OF HOUSEHOLDS WOULD RECEIVE 31 PERCENT OF THE TAX CUTS' BENEFITS!
Jan 26, '10
Here's an MSNBC interview w/ Dave Hunt and Tim Boyle, President of Columbia Sportswear. The best part is at the very end when Boyle warns that if these measures pass people will "vote with their feet" and leave the state. We all know how better schools, public safety, and healthcare really send people running for the hills. We can only dream that the greedy right-wing anti-government tea-baggers would actually leave. I hear Texas is pretty awesome conservatives!
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/35086061#35086061
Jan 26, '10
Teabaggers/to teabag
As an observer at the teabag demonstration at the Capitol in Salem last year, I saw plenty of teabags strung from hats and top shirtbuttons, and signs saying "teabag" this or "teabag" that.
It's too bad that this movement, whatever it's called, was started by millionaires behind the scenes and radio shouters, because at the demo I saw lots of working people like those I grew up with, being deeply deceived by those haranging them. I would love to see their anger directed at the banksters and corporate bosses and corrupt pols who deserve it. Maybe that day will come, and I'll march with them.
Jan 26, '10
So the new BO position is that derogatory terms are okay as long as they aren't racial. So "kike" and "wop" are in (ethnicity != race)? Or just lifestyle words like "faggot"? Or personal insults like "dipsht" and "d*chebag"?
I'm not questioning the right and duty of BO to fly the double standard -- I expect it. I just want the rules clarified. Is that so difficult?
(And I'm loving this repository of Obama's new politics of respect. Definitely one way to be the change you want to see.)
Jan 26, '10
If you find "teabagger" demeaning, T.O, then I have no problem regarding it so. Fine. Only use it to demean. I really don't get though, how each side can't see they're acting against their principles, just to be pissy. Moderate liberals are the most surprising. I'm talking the "who feels it knows it party" (with apologies to RNM- bday in a week,btw). The original preachers that "words hit as hard as a fist", saying, basically, that you are stupid to be offended. Personally, I would tend to agree. But then I am often despised by them because I don't have the correct reaction to the plight of whichever group they've decided to "help" this week. Every time that happens, we're told to lay facts aside and concentrate on the one important fact, that those people really, really, feel poorly about whatever. This is hypocrisy of the first magnitude. On the other side, conservatives are the "suck it up", "sticks and stones" crowd, and they're carrying on like ninnies. It has very much the ring of, "we really hate your constant molly coddlying idiots that should have known better, but while we're at it, we'd like a serving, thank you"! On the final day of the campaign deciding measures 66/67, this is an absolutely fitting penultimate scene.
I hear Texas is pretty awesome conservatives!
Not. It's a good place to be from, as myself and Jenni S. can attest. Good you don't care much about livability and sustainability. Austin is nice. Oh, look. It just happens to be the most liberal city in Texas. San Antone is nice, but good conservatives would probably wince at the large non-anglo population. I won't even mention the Big Onion. Dallas fits your demographic. Very livable. If you're a piece of asphalt. And the surrounds are worse. The only reason Texas doesn't fall off into the Gulf is because Oklahoma sucks so much. Next time you want to do one of those mindless right wing "I know you are, but what am I"s, you might want to look into Oklahoma Democrats.
The only way I was ever able to make a difference for the environment was to tell building maintenance they could turn off the AC on New Year's Day, when only I was working in the building. It was physically impossible to cross the street for lunch. You had to drive. Lloyd Doggett, one of the best potential political leaders alive got 24% of the vote against Phil Fuuureaking Graham. Ann Richards paid her debt for being different by working for big tobacco the remainder of her years. Hey, you should like that. "Say 'no' to M66/M67. Want more school funding, encourage more smoking!" She always was the friend of education. So was Shurb. Ed. is big in Texas. I will concede that one point. UT university system is the best value for money in the US.
Jobs situation is much better though. And you know why (besides the aforementioned university system)? Because there are places you work and places you play. Unemployment is endemic in those places you play. Was talking to a guy from Lille, France, the other day, and he was saying the exact same thing, about south France v north France. Some Penn supporter was trying to make some voodoo economic point about why the north was better, just like conservative Texans would say vis a vis Oregon.
Jan 26, '10
I think you have officially lost it.
Jan 26, '10
Darth,
Considering you are using a pseudonym we don't have much chance to take you up on your dare to call you a teabagger to your face, do we? Convenient. Tell you what...leave your real name and contact info and I'll be glad to take you up on it.
In the meantime---Darth Spadea, you are a teabagger.
Jan 27, '10
"And if low taxes create jobs, where the hell are the damn jobs already?" - Kari Chisholm BO "Intellectual"
In government you buffon! That's where the job growth is. That's where the sweet retirement packages and raises are.
Jan 27, '10
"What I find most amusing is that I can NEVER find someone on the left who is willing to use the term to my face." - Redneck in Damascus
That's because your head is always up your ass.
Jan 27, '10
Posted by: Del | Jan 26, 2010 9:24:28 PM
I think you have officially lost it.
Wonderful. Link spammers commenting on my mental health.
Jan 27, '10