Is The Tea Party Over?

http://motherjones.com/mojo/2009/11/tea-party-down

http://tinyurl.com/ybxlb4c

Teabaggers completely ignorant about taxes. 

Pretty embarrassing when you know jack shit about the issue that's supposedly 
your raison d'etre.

Of people who support the grassroots, "Tea Party" movement, only 2 percent 
think taxes have been decreased, 46 percent say taxes are the same, and a 
whopping 44 percent say they believe taxes have gone up.

Idiots.

http://instaputz.blogspot.com/2010/02/teabaggers-completely-ignorant-about.html

http://tinyurl.com/y97d797


CONFUSION-BASED RAGE.... 

http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2010_02/022399.php

http://tinyurl.com/yay7rnx

National Review published a couple of items recently about President Obama 
having cut taxes for 95% of working families. This is, in reality, what 
happened, but the conservative magazine was incredulous. 

"If the taxes of 95 percent of Americans actully [sic] had been cut, surely 
somebody other than Obama would have noticed," one NR writer put it.

It was a curious argument. 

It doesn't matter what President Obama did -- in this case, approval of a tax 
cut -- it matters what people perceive, even if the perceptions are patently 
false.

And perhaps no group of people is fueled more intensely by misperceptions of 
reality than the Tea Party crowd. 

Of people who support the grassroots, "Tea Party" movement, only 2 percent 
think taxes have been decreased, 46 percent say taxes are the same, and a 
whopping 44 percent say they believe taxes have gone up.

Now, we know that this 44% is wrong. 

We also know that in nearly every instance, the 46% are wrong, too. 

Indeed, my challenge to them would be to go look at their most recent paystub, 
and then dig up their paystub from, say, December 2008, before Obama took 
office. 

The math isn't that hard -- did their tax rate go up, down, or stay the same? 

Opinions and perceptions are nice, but arithmetic can be stubborn.

But as this relates to politics, John Cole noted that these folks "don't even 
know what they are mad about." Indeed, it's easy to forget this, but the first 
Tea Party crowds started protesting in March 2009 -- exactly one month after 
President Obama signed one of the largest tax-cut packages in American history 
into law. 

The protestors wanted to make clear that they are "taxed enough already," 
choosing to pretend that they hadn't just received a tax cut from the president 
they hate so intensely.

John added, "It really is quite amazing what you can do with a group of people 
who are completely uninterested in the truth, unwilling to believe anything 
that comes from someone other than Rush or Glenn Beck or an 'acceptable' source 
of information, and who have a vested interest in believing what they want to 
believe, reality be damned."

This is important to the extent that there are still some who believe the 
political mainstream should do more to listen to the Tea Party crowd and take 
its hysterical cries seriously. 

But how can credible people take nonsense seriously and hope to come up with a 
meaningful result?

The truth may sound rude, but in general, Tea Party activists have no idea what 
they're talking about. 

Their sincerity notwithstanding, this is a confused group of misled people



      

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"WebTV Dawgs/Dittos" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/webtv-pals?hl=en.

Reply via email to