Apparently the so called grass roots protesters are not as grass roots as it 
would seem - there's a lot of astroturfing going on, to quote from the 
Washington Post article:
--
Several of the biggest efforts are led by established veterans in the 
conservative movement, whose organizations receive heavy funding from industry 
groups and sympathetic billionaires. 
--

http://tinyurl.com/nwnhs8


btw for those interestedk, the doctor told me that the stitches will be coming 
out in a few days. Damn glad I have decent health care. Not sure how we could 
have afforded the emergency room treatment otherwise.

BTW here's the full article.
Loose Network of Activists Drives Reform Opposition

By Dan Eggen and Philip Rucker
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, August 16, 2009

The rowdy protests that threaten President Obama's health-care reform efforts 
have been spurred on by a loose network of activists -- from veteran advocacy 
groups with millions of dollars in funding to casual alliances of like-minded 
conservatives unhappy over issues from taxes to deficits to environmental laws.

Most of the groups helping to organize protests view the proposed health-care 
overhaul as just one part of a broader assault by government on free markets 
and individual liberty, their leaders say. Conservatives portray the movement 
as largely organic, fueled by average citizens alarmed at the direction the 
country has taken since Obama moved into the White House.

"I think what we've been able to do is reach out to an audience that no one has 
spoken with before, people who have never been involved," said Eric Odom, 29, a 
Chicago Web developer who heads a fledgling protest group called the American 
Liberty Alliance. "They've been pushed to the edge and feel they can no longer 
stay at home."

Several of the biggest efforts are led by established veterans in the 
conservative movement, whose organizations receive heavy funding from industry 
groups and sympathetic billionaires.

One of the most prominent organizers is FreedomWorks, a Washington-based 
advocacy group headed by former House majority leader Richard Armey (R-Tex.) 
that is also pushing to defeat Democratic climate-change legislation. 
FreedomWorks's major financial backers have included MetLife, Philip Morris and 
foundations controlled by the archconservative Scaife family, according to tax 
filings and other records.

Armey said in an interview that the widespread protests over health-care reform 
could not happen unless people were "truly scared."

"This is a real grass-roots uprising that is to some extent helped by 
FreedomWorks, but it would be there without FreedomWorks," he said. "It's what 
they call in the cyber world 'viral.' "

Odom's fight began last summer with protests in favor of offshore oil drilling. 
Then came the "tea parties" earlier this year, featuring boisterous rallies 
against Obama's stimulus package and automaker bailouts.

Now, drawing on more than 40,000 members via e-mail, Odom tracks hundreds of 
planned health-care protests by Zip code and uses Facebook and Twitter to link 
up activists. Earlier this month, he hosted a conference call with more than 
200 participants.

The outlines of the anti-reform movement are still jagged, with few formal 
connections among the activist groups or with mainstream political 
organizations, such as the Republican National Committee. But interviews with 
group leaders and numerous town hall participants also make clear that 
increasing coordination has boosted turnout at many of the meetings, and it has 
focused the messages of many protesters.

"There's certainly synergy between these groups, and there's overlap," said 
Brian Burgess of CRC Public Relations, which coordinated the "Swift Boat" 
attacks on Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) in 2004 and now represents 
Conservatives for Patients' Rights, an anti-reform group. "But I don't think 
it's intentional. It's easy to see where the gaps are and how to fill a role."

One of the most visible groups is Americans for Prosperity, an anti-tax and 
anti-regulation group known for opposing smoking restrictions and for trying to 
cast doubt on global warming. The group launched a project called "Patients 
First" in June and has been conducting bus tours around the country to drum up 
opposition to the health-care legislation.

Public records show that the group is heavily funded by the Koch Family 
Foundations, a major contributor to conservative causes headed by two brothers 
who control Koch Industries, a Kansas-based oil-and-gas conglomerate. David H. 
Koch serves as board chairman of the Americans for Prosperity foundation.

Armey has come under fire from Democrats for leading FreedomWorks while working 
at DLA Piper, a firm lobbying on behalf of New Jersey pharmaceutical company 
Medicines Co. Armey announced Friday that he was quitting DLA Piper to protect 
it from "spurious attacks" over his role as a lobbyist.

Leaders of conservative groups and at the RNC have sought to distance 
themselves from some of the most provocative protest tactics, including 
shouting down lawmakers or carrying signs equating Obama to Adolf Hitler and 
the Nazis. But these leaders also are unabashed in defending an aggressive 
posture; FreedomWorks features a quote from Armey on its Web site: "If you are 
going to go ugly, go ugly early."

As a result of such rhetoric, the Democratic National Committee and other party 
leaders have portrayed the protesters as products of a fake grass-roots -- or 
"Astroturf" -- operation led by FreedomWorks and like-minded groups. Meanwhile, 
conservatives note that Organizing for America, an Obama-backed group, and 
major unions such as the AFL-CIO and the Service Employees International Union, 
have pushed to turn out thousands of their supporters at the events.

The complex forces at play in the unrest were visible at town halls last week 
hosted by Sen. Arlen Specter (D-Pa.). At a meeting in the city of State 
College, Pa., hundreds of protesters gathered outside a convention hall, 
chanting and holding colorful picket signs bearing the logos of various 
conservative groups. Americans for Prosperity brought a "Patients First" bus 
emblazoned with a giant red hand and the slogan: "Hands Off Our Health Care!"

But the scene inside was calm. Many attendees were local residents who said 
they were motivated to turn out not by conservative groups but by personal 
opposition to Democratic health-care policies. Thirty people began the wait at 
5 a.m. so they could score the coveted cards allowing them to ask Specter a 
question.

"By and large, I don't think the conservatives are nearly as organized as 
they've been portrayed," said Tom Ellicott, 54, a farm-equipment salesman who 
had traveled from Gettysburg, about 130 miles to the southeast. "The people 
that got there early like us -- and we talked to most of them as they were 
coming in -- none of those people were bused in. They were locals. We were by 
far the furthest to travel."

At a Specter forum at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pa., Tamie White, 46, 
expressed her opposition to the Obama administration, which she said is taking 
"us down a path to total socialism."

"What are you going to do about upholding our freedoms?" she asked Specter. "We 
are the land of the free and the home of the brave!"

White, a part-time bookkeeper and longtime Republican from nearby Millersburg, 
said in an interview that she learned about the town hall from e-mails she 
received from conservative groups. In March, White founded a neighborhood 
activist group that has about 20 members. She said the group's mission is to 
keep the federal government from "taking over everything."

"Government is playing God, and I'm here to say government is not God," White 
said.

Rucker reported from Pennsylvania. 



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Want to reach the ColdFusion community with something they want? Let them know 
on the House of Fusion mailing lists
Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/message.cfm/messageid:302068
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=11502.10531.5

Reply via email to