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Thousands of Right-Wingers Rally at Capitol to Hear Lies About Health-Care Reform

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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-06-09 06:10 AM
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Thousands of Right-Wingers Rally at Capitol to Hear Lies About Health-Care Reform

By Adele Stan, AlterNet

Posted on November 6, 2009, Printed on November 6, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/143768/

Thousands of right-wingers rallied yesterday on the lawn on the U.S. Capitol building to hear a parade of Republican lawmakers warn them of an alleged threat to their freedom embedded in the secret channels of the health-care reform bill unveiled last week by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Lawmakers expect to vote on the bill this Saturday.

Congressional star power was provided on the podium by the likes of Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., who called for the rally from the hallowed platform of Sean Hannity's FOX News program. Other big names on the Capitol podium included House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio; Joe "You Lie" Wilson, R-S.C., (who got a huge ovation from the crowd) and Whip Eric Cantor, R-Va., who promised that he was doing all he could to ensure that "not one Republican" votes for the health-care reform bill.

Actors Jon Voight and John Deszo Ratzenberger (the guy who played Cliff on Cheers) provided the glamor quotient.

Had you witnessed the 912/Tea Party march on Washington in September, you'd be forgiven for thinking of today's rally, same stuff, different day. Except it wasn't quite.



Sure, the yellow Gasdsen flags -- the standards bearing the image of a coiled snake and the words "Don't Tread on Me" -- were everywhere, as were the crazy conspiracy-theory signs. Just like the 912 march, this was a white people's rally, most of them appearing to be over the age of 40. And the same triumverate of forces -- FOX News, together with the astroturfing groups Americans for Prosperity and FreedomWorks -- were involved with the rally, which was promoted heavily by FOX News personalities and the Web site of Americans for Prosperity, as well as via the AFP e-mail network. FreedomWorks President and CEO Matt Kibbe addressed today's crowd, just as he did at the 912 march, which FreedomWorks organized.

And while yesterday's crowd was far smaller than that of the 912 march, it was impressive in size for a weekday. People did indeed come from all over the country -- many on American for Prosperity buses, but many on their own. By my guesstimate, organizers drew some 5,000 enthusiastic Tea Partiers -- not bad for a Thursday afternoon.

A seemingly endless parade of speakers seemed to encompass virtually the whole of the House GOP caucus. What really set this event apart from all others is that the long list of Republican lawmakers assembled before the crowd did so as part of a day's work in Congress on the steps of U.S. Capitol, cheerfully facing a barrage of signs that decried Pelosi and President Barack Obama as socialists, and the president as a usurper and transgressor of the Constitution.

Sure, you've heard that that story before, even bits and pieces of it out of the mouths of individual members of Congress. And, yes, U.S. senators and representatives have been present before on podiums where the Obama-as-fascist-socialist-Marxist-Muslim-foreigner story revealed itself in the chants and signage of protesters. But here was the leader of the House Republicans, addressing just such a crowd as part of his day job, leading perhaps 20 members of Congress to join that fray.

Boehner Looks On

Minority Leader John Boehner's remarks were unremarkable but for the fact that, holding up a copy of the U.S. Constitution, he purported to be quoting from its preamble while actually reading the opening lines of the Declaration of Independence. More notable is the fact Boehner's misstep followed a sneering speech byf radio talk-show host Mark Levin (introduced as a "great one," by Bachmann) who has built a cottage industry of representing Obama as a dictator who has come to overturn the American Revolution. Levin is also famously misogynist when it comes to liberal women, referring to the secretary of state as "her thighness", and making references to the body of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Of the Democratic leadership, Levin said, "They don't believe in private property rights; they're taking a wrecking ball to this magnificent society....They want to control you, your children, your parents, your doctor...They want to ration care; the bottom line is, they want to play God, and decide who lives and who dies."

Perhaps chastened by his recent run-in with FreedomWorks chairman Dick Armey in the 23rd congressional district in New York, where Boehner backed the wrong candidate, the minority leader simply looked on as Levin delivered his rant, and made no reference to Levin's remarks in his own. He was apparently unfazed, as well, by the rhetoric of those he leads and the signs carried by protesters who echoed the message that the president, and by extension, the speaker, somehow attained their positions illegitimately.

"This is your house," said Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Tex., of the U.S. Capitol, "but there's people there who don't belong there."

One protester, close to the front of the stage, held a sign that read, bore this message on a yellow background in stenciled black letters: "KEN-YA TRUST OBAMA?"

Another held a placard that read, "IF OBAMA'S BIRTH CERTIFICATE IS LEGAL, WHY IS HE SPENDING $1,000,000+ TO CONCEAL IT?"

And the leader of the House Republicans looked on.



Ratzenberger, the Cheers actor (who also voiced a toy pig in the film, Toy Story), said of the philosophy of Pelosi and Obama, "It doesn't come from America; it comes from overseas. It comes from socialism."

He claimed that Pelosi and today's Democrats were not philosophical decendants of John F. Kennedy, even though the health-care reform legislation currently making its way through Congress was a lifelong dream of JFK's brother, the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass. "They're the philosophical descendants of Abby Hoffman, Saul Alinsky and Wavy Gravey," he said. "These are Woodstock Democrats," he said.

And the leader of the House Republicans looked on.

Arizona's John Shaddegg stoked up the red-baiters. "You and I have been handed the torch of freedom," he said, "to fight against the socialism that is in this heath-care bill."

And the leader of the House Republicans looked on.

Rep. Paul Broun of Georgia gave the rally-goers this instruction: "Tell your congressman that you're not going to eat this rotten stinking fish that is Pelosi health care. We're going to put a stop sign in front of the steamroller of socialism."

That all seemed to go with the sign that read, "MARXISM=CHANGE; WE DON'T NEED THEM."

And the leader of the House Republicans looked on.

Actor Jon Voight took up the Obama as red theme, as well, claiming that the president aimed to create "a socialist America" through the use of "radical Chicago tactics." Obama wanted to pass health care "not for the poor," he said, "but for his own political gain."

And the leader of the House Republicans looked on.

Religious Right Lifts Its Pinkie; Tea Party Claims GOP Victories

Later in the program, Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, took the stage, marking the unofficial merger of the religious right and the Tea Party movement. Calling the health-care bill "a bailout for the abortion industry," Perkins signaled the final front in the health-care battle -- whether private plans that currently cover certain therapeutic abortions will be permitted to do so under the new scheme.

An abortion theme emerged in the remarks of Congress members who followed him to the podium, including Joe Pitts, a member of the Capitol Hill religious cult known as The Family, who has teamed with Democrat Bart Stupak, another Family member to try to stall health-care reform by using abortion as a wedge issue.



The speeches were also peppered with references to this week's Republican gubernatorial wins in Virginia and New Jersey. Indeed, Virgina victor Bob McDonnell has strong ties to Americans for Prosperity, having borrowed AFP consultant Phil Cox as his campaign manager, and having done legal work for the group himself. Speaking of the Garden State, where the Tea Party movement threw in with Republican Chris Christie, Rep. Joe Wilson -- the South Carolina Republican who interrupted Obama's health-care speech to a joint session of Congress -- was quick to take a bit of credit, citing his own appearance at a New Jersey Tea Party event on the eve of the election -- an event of which the candidate steered clear.

FOX News Sent Us

As the rally wound down and people began to filter out, I got to talk to some of those who had gathered on the Capitol lawn. Of the five I spoke to, all but one cited a FOX News personality as the source for their information about the rally.

Peggy Dau came in from Oklahoma with two friends. "Drove all night," she said. She was motiviated by her work with the oppressed peoples of Laos, she said, where Christians are persecuted. That's what she sees coming down the pike for us, she said, if we don't stop these attempts to curtail our freedoms. She gave me a copy of a magazine called Voices of the Martyrs, named for the ministry for which she works. When I asked how she learned about the rally she said, "From Michele" -- meaning the Minnesota congresswoman. "I saw her on FOX -- I think it was Sean Hannity's show," she said.

continued>>>
http://www.alternet.org/politics/143768/thousands_of_right-wingers_rally_at_capitol_to_hear_lies_about_health-care_reform%2C_courtesy_of_bachmann_and_gop_leaders
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-06-09 06:28 AM
Response to Original message
1. A Miind Is a Terrible Thing to Lose
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M155Y_A1CH Donating Member (921 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-06-09 08:12 AM
Response to Original message
2. The war on Christmas has officially resumed
from the article:

"Peggy Dau came in from Oklahoma with two friends. "Drove all night," she said. She was motiviated by her work with the oppressed peoples of Laos, she said, where Christians are persecuted. That's what she sees coming down the pike for us, she said, if we don't stop these attempts to curtail our freedoms."

How many stories this week at least casually mention xtians being persecuted?
They won't rest until laws are changed to favor their group over all others.
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tanyev Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-06-09 08:22 AM
Response to Original message
3. When Jon Voight and John Ratzenberger are your glamour quotient,
brother, you've got problems.
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4dsc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-06-09 09:07 AM
Response to Original message
4. A rally of idiots...
This get funnier every time they hold one of these rally's..
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