DrMaddVibe
14 years ago

"Spoken like the bitter lib you really are.

It's not my fault that your idol betrayed you. It's not my fault that you still hold dear the Communist Manifesto. It's also not my fault that you choose to STILL defend The One when America is crumbling."

This would be funny if it wasn't so full of inaccuracies, wrongful assumptions, and brainless jingoisms.

Knowing how to copy and paste links and toss out right-wing slang doesn't make you an authority on anything. It is telling that you choose to avoid answering any of the questions or addressing any of the substance of my post.

Maybe you should take a look at your anger and why it drives you to act like an anti-intellectual fool rather than obsessing on our crappy president and the "liberal" bogeyman. Perhaps then you could make a coherent argument. Because for now, what you post here is basicaly fanatical, partisan noise. Get a grip.

cbc812 wrote:




What questions?

As far as anger...you've got your head so far up your own ass with that guess. Not making any arguments either, they're rather steeped in facts.

"Get a grip"...says you. That's hysterical. Your fantasyland is crashing down all around you as you cry for the hippies that are pissed about all the bailouts and buyouts on Wall Street. They're coming for YOU! You need a grip. On REALITY!

Run CBC Run!
DrMaddVibe
14 years ago

"So it's EXACTLY the way I described it.

No, it will not be interesting. They will show their collective ass. They will reveal the puppetmasters and they will be arrested.

Nothing interesting to see at all."

Um, no. The idiot hippies/anarchists/Marxists are vastly outnumbered by what appear to be smart, well mannered people from across the dempgraphic spectrum who are there out of genuine concern and anger about how our democracy is for sale. Unfortunately, the hippies and crazies are the ones who will get the media attention, because the same people that own the politicians oversee the news coverage these guys get.

Although I'm sure you know exactly what is going on there from the right wing news feeds you get down there in heaven's waiting room. I couldn't have any idea what's going on there walking past the park every day.

You're very funny.

cbc812 wrote:





See the smart well mannered ones like yourself won't make the news. They're surrounded by useful idiots.

Yeah, I'm watching all of this on tv...riiight.

You described it EXACTLY the way I did waaay back up there but you're going to what say I'm wrong now?

You're either an idiot or a liar.
cbc812
14 years ago
"As far as anger...you've got your head so far up your own ass with that guess. Not making any arguments either, they're rather steeped in facts."

Okay - here's a pointed question - do you support unfettered financial access to politicians by anyone with $$$? Are you happy that any legislation that actually gets through Washington's cesspool is bought and paid for? Why do you object so strongly to a protest, that by all accounts, has loosely coalesced around the notion that our government represents not the people but the moneyed/connected few? You think this is okay?

See if you can sprinkle an answer or two among your partisan slogans and personal insults.
cbc812
14 years ago
"They're surrounded by useful idiots."

In light of your incredibly concise and convincing posts above, your labeling of anyone as a "useful idiot" is the funniest thing I've seen or heard in a very long time. Thanks for the laughs.

Now back to gnashing your teeth about the Kenyan Muslim.

Have fun, sparky!

fiddler898
14 years ago
I think we can evaluate this debate by the number of ad hominem remarks... when facts fail you, insults will suffice.
HockeyDad
14 years ago
What was the debate about and who won?

The way I see it, we globalists still control everything and we own Obama.
wheelrite
14 years ago

What was the debate about and who won?

The way I see it, we globalists still control everything and we own Obama.

HockeyDad wrote:



The EU is toast..

The Crimean war will resume momentarily
DrMaddVibe
14 years ago

Okay - here's a pointed question - do you support unfettered financial access to politicians by anyone with $$$? Are you happy that any legislation that actually gets through Washington's cesspool is bought and paid for? Why do you object so strongly to a protest, that by all accounts, has loosely coalesced around the notion that our government represents not the people but the moneyed/connected few? You think this is okay?

See if you can sprinkle an answer or two among your partisan slogans and personal insults.

cbc812 wrote:




Their ilegal "rally" isn't about campaign finance or the reform of it. Am I happy about it? No. I object to their protest because it's not legal.
Brewha
14 years ago

I object to their protest because it's not legal.

DrMaddVibe wrote:



Overruled . . . . .
DrMaddVibe
14 years ago

OCTOBER 4, 2011 12:00 A.M.
The Left’s Pathetic Tea Party
The Occupy Wall Street movement is a juvenile rabble.

In the Occupy Wall Street movement, the Left thinks it might have found its own tea party.

MoveOn.org and some unions have embraced the protesters. The left-wing Campaign for America’s Future is featuring them at its conference devoted to reinvigorating progressivism. Liberal opinion-makers have celebrated them — Washington Post columnist E. J. Dionne welcomes their spirit, and New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof compares them, astonishingly enough, to the demonstrators at Egypt’s Tahrir Square.

This is a sign either of desperation to find anyone on the left still energized after three years of Hope and Change, or of a lack of standards, or both. The Left’s tea party is a juvenile rabble, a woolly-headed horde that has been laboring to come up with one concrete demand on the basis of its — in the words of one sympathetic writer — “horizontal, autonomous, leaderless, modified-consensus-based system with roots in anarchist thought.”

The Right’s tea party had its signature event at a rally at the Lincoln Memorial where everyone listened politely to patriotic exhortations and picked up their trash and went home. The Left’s tea party closed down a major thoroughfare in New York City — the Brooklyn Bridge — and saw its members arrested in the hundreds.
On the cusp of the confrontation, the protesters chanted “This is what democracy looks like,” betraying an elemental confusion between lawbreaking for the hell of it and free discussion. They flatter themselves that, in contrast to the wealthiest 1 percent, they represent “the 99 percent.” It might be true if the entire country consisted of stereotypically aging hippies and young kids who could have just left a Phish concert.


What was remarkable about the Right’s tea party is that it depended on solid burghers who typically don’t have the time or inclination to protest anything. Occupy Wall Street is a project of people who do little besides protest. It’s all down to a standard operating procedure: the guitars, the drums, the street theater, the age-old chants. If the perpetual rallying cry of demonstrators is to be believed, “the whole world” does little else than “watch” activists stage protests.

The New York Times quoted one Occupy Wall Street veteran telling a newcomer: “It doesn’t matter what you’re protesting. Just protest.” That captures the coherence of the exercise, which is a giant, ideologically charged, post-adolescent sleepover complete with face paint and pizza deliveries.

“The Declaration of the Occupation of New York City,” the first official release of Occupy Wall Street, is Marxism for people whose familiarity with Marx probably begins and ends with seeing his bearded visage on some T-shirt. It thunders that “corporations do not seek consent to extract wealth from the people and the Earth.”

The myriad charges against corporate America include poisoning the food supply, torturing animals, and using the military to suppress freedom of the press. Of course, corporations stand accused — in a hardy perennial — of perpetuating colonialism. The long list of complaints is thoughtfully affixed with an asterisk and an accompanying note, “These grievances are not all-inclusive.”

The Tea Party had such an impact because it had a better claim on the middle of America than its adversaries. It wrapped itself in our history and patriotic trappings. It plugged in to the political system and changed the course of the country in the 2010 elections. The Left went from denying it, to ridiculing it, to envying it.

Occupy Wall Street is not a real answer. It is both more self-involved and more ambitious than the Tea Party. It represents an ill-defined, free-floating radicalism. Its fuzzy endpoint is a “revolution” no one can precisely describe, but the thrust of which is overturning our system of capitalism as we know it. If elected Democrats dare associate their sagging party with this project, they need immediately to consult their nearest psychiatrist and political consultant, in that order.

Occupy Wall Street is toxic and pathetic, the perfect distillation of an American Left in extremis.

— Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review. He can be reached via e-mail: [email protected]. © 2011 by King Features Syndicate
Stinkdyr
14 years ago
no teabagging on da bridge yo !!

[ram27bat]
DrMaddVibe
14 years ago
How many Tea Party protestors have been arrested at any of the events they've held nationwide?[whip]
dubleuhb
14 years ago
May I suggest these hoodlums type up a resume, put on a suit get a haircut and then go look for a job. The more I read about this the more idiotic it appears. Get a job hippie !
DrafterX
14 years ago


The New York Times quoted one Occupy Wall Street veteran telling a newcomer: “It doesn’t matter what you’re protesting. Just protest.”

DrMaddVibe wrote:




ahh yes... just like the Bush era.... noone really knew why they didn't like him... but they were cool... 😟
DrMaddVibe
14 years ago

May I suggest these hoodlums type up a resume, put on a suit get a haircut and then go look for a job. The more I read about this the more idiotic it appears. Get a job hippie !

dubleuhb wrote:




You don't have any idea what's going on there unless you're walking past the park every day. So said the resident bailout recipient.

I'd die laughing if CBC would tell them who he works for. They'd skin him alive.

DrMaddVibe
14 years ago

Big Soros Money Linked to “Occupy Wall Street” | Print |
WRITTEN BY ALEX NEWMAN
WEDNESDAY, 05 OCTOBER 2011 15:59
8
Labor unions, communists, “community organizers,” socialists, and anti-capitalist agitators have all joined together to “Occupy Wall Street” and protest against “greed,” corporations, and bankers. But despite efforts to portray the movement as “leaderless” or “grassroots,” it is becoming obvious that there is much more going on behind the scenes than meets the eye.

Billionaire financier George Soros’ fingerprints, for example, have been all over the anti-Wall Street campaign from the very beginning. And this week, the infamous hedge-fund boss publicly announced his sympathy for the protesters and their complaints about bailouts — despite the fact that he lobbied for even greater unconstitutional handouts to bankers in 2009.

“Actually I can understand their sentiment, frankly,” he told reporters while announcing a large donation to the United Nations. “I can sympathize with their grievances.”

But Soros’ support for the protesters goes far beyond his tepid public statements. In fact, the original call to “Occupy Wall Street” came from the magazine AdBusters, an “anti-consumerist” publication financed by, among other sources, the Soros-funded Tides Foundation.

Other Soros-backed outfits promoting big government — some with myriad ties to the Obama administration — are also publicly driving the occupation campaign. MoveOn.org, for instance, has received millions of dollars from the billionaire banker. And now, the group is urging its supporters to join the Occupy Wall Street movement as well.

“Over the last two weeks, an amazing wave of protest against Wall Street and the big banks has erupted across the country,” MoveOn said in a recent e-mail to supporters, praising the “brave” demonstrators. “On Wednesday, MoveOn members will join labor and community groups in New York City for a huge march down to the protest site — the biggest yet.”

On top of supplying activists to join the demonstrations, MoveOn is also staging what it calls a “massive ‘Virtual March on Wall Street’ online.” The Internet-based demonstrations are a collaborative effort with another radical and well-connected outfit tied to Soros called Rebuild the Dream.

Led by self-described communist and former Obama administration czar Van Jones, the “Dream” movement is a partnership between a host of Soros-financed “progressive” groups. Big Labor and even Planned Parenthood — the largest abortion provider in America, which receives hundreds of millions of tax dollars each year — are partners, too.

“Together, we'll add hundreds of thousands of voices of solidarity from the American Dream Movement for the protests across the country and show just how widespread outrage at the Wall Street banks really is,” MoveOn boasted in its e-mail.

Other groups working with Rebuild the Dream are also publicly hyping the demonstrations. And more than a few of them are on the Soros payroll as well. Some examples include People For The American Way, Planned Parenthood, Campaign For America's Future, Democracy For America, Leadership Conference for Civil and Human Rights, Common Cause, Public Campaign, and many more.

Soros, of course, has a long history of financing organizations targeting the American system of government. He has also served on the board of the immensely influential global-governance-promoting Council on Foreign Relations.

Just last year, Soros claimed that the brutal communist dictatorship ruling mainland China should lead what he calls the “New World Order.” The Chinese tyrants, meanwhile, have also been touting Occupy Wall Street through the regime’s propaganda organs.

But Soros does not love the despots in Beijing for their commitment to “equality” or “democracy.” As The New American reported, behind Soros and his tens of billions lies even more wealth and power: the unimaginably vast Rothschild banking empire.

One of the richest men in the world today, Soros has been in legal trouble for corruption before — in France, for instance, he was fined more than $2 million for his illegal scheming. So, critics noted, it might seem ironic that the textbook example of a “corrupt financier” would finance a protest supposedly aimed at corrupt financiers. But the irony hardly ends there.

Union bosses and others intimately linked to President Obama — whose top campaign contributors included Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup, and other big banks — are also playing a key role in the Wall Street protests. The protesters are even recycling administration talking points such as the old “the rich should be forced to pay their 'fair share'" — despite the fact that the “Buffett rule” tax proposal being advanced would almost exclusively soak what remains of the middle class.

But that might be the point. According to reports and analysts, the whole anti-Wall Street movement has been carefully orchestrated by the Obama-linked anti-capitalist union titans and tax-funded “community organizers.” A troubling plot to essentially finish off capitalism was exposed earlier this year, and at the time it was blasted as “economic terrorism.” Even more disturbing: It was uncannily similar to the growing Wall Street demonstrations.

Community organizer Stephen Lerner of the SEIU, a regular White House guest, was caught on video in March discussing the scheme to “bring down the stock market” and "destabilize" the nation — all with the stated goal of "redistributing wealth." And while the whole conspiracy was not revealed because Lerner suspected police were present, the strategies he mentioned included civil disobedience and mass anti-banker protests.

Another conspirator said to be pulling the strings, disgraced ACORN founder and union boss Wade Rathke, was advocating massive “Day of Rage” protests targeting bankers earlier this year. And he is also closely tied to Obama, who actually used to work for Rathke’s “community organizing” outfit.

ACORN, of course, was recently exposed engaging in widespread criminal activity while receiving millions of federal tax dollars. But after the organization filed for bankruptcy, its tentacles are taking over under new names — and still receiving government handouts.

Rathke is also a founding board member of the Soros-funded Tides Foundation, a key source of money for AdBusters magazine (which first called for the Wall Street occupation) and countless other anti-business groups. And he is directly tied to more than a few unions including the SEIU.

Beyond Big Labor and Soros “front groups,” as critics call them, is also a vast collection of socialist and Marxist organizations supporting the demonstrations. The Socialist Party USA, the Marxist-oriented Workers World Party, the International Committee of the Fourth International, and the Communist Party USA-affiliated People’s World are all publicly and openly backing the movement.

While the occupation movement purports to be “leaderless,” in reality, critics say its leaders and financiers are barely concealed. According to analysts, the protests — which are quickly spreading to cities across the United States, Canada, and Europe — actually represent a well-orchestrated operation being used by the very same elite “one percent” supposedly being protested against.

The “official” goals remain murky so far, almost certainly not by chance. But it is becoming increasingly apparent that liberty and honest money are not among the demands. Rather, bigger government, higher taxes, and an end to what remains of the free market system seem to be at the top of the list.


http://thenewamerican.com/usnews/politics/9269-big-soros-money-linked-to-occupy-wall-street 




So...still anyone thinking that they're like the Tea Party now?
DrMaddVibe
14 years ago
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=9jOxERtkwN4

The more you look...the more you find.

LOLOLOLOL!!!!!


Take a bath you filthy animals!!
pgje51
14 years ago
Several arrests earlier this morning of occupiers who decided to ignore the 'no overnight camping law in the park near the capitol in Sacramento CA. On the news last night, they asked the local organizer "What is your purpose?, Why are You Doing this?. What is your mission? The buffoon responded that they had a team working on exactly determining that and he would let them know later.

Gave me flashbacks of 'seizing' the Administration Building on campus in 1971. THe Rhode Island state police were not amused.
DrMaddVibe
14 years ago
http://dailycaller.com/2011/10/06/organizer-admits-to-paying-occupy-dc-protesters-video/#ixzz1a4HMvV49 


After you read the article and watch the video clip...don't forget to read the comments.

Damn there's some good ones in there![whip]
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