Again, you keep trying to exaggerate some common themes to the point of distortion. The SPLC points out the SIMILAR VIOLENT, ANARCHISTIC, THREATENING language between various "legit" and "criminal" militias. I pointed out that similar language can be found in teabag parties and in the pundit rhetoric (and some politicians, on occasion).
To date YOU CANNOT POINT TO ANY VIOLENT LANGUAGE IN THE SPCA THAT IS REPLICATED OR SIMILAR TO ALF'S. That is the major flaw in your reasoning which you stubbornly try to ignore. Let me repeat for clarification...it is the similarity in violent, anarchistic, threatening language that is the issue, NOT benign agreement in contrary politics.
So you admit that there are plans to put them into place; thanks.
You're more demented than I thought.![]()
See what you happens, when you finally try to think.
You just don't do it enough, to be very good at it.![]()
Perhaps you have a point. I know I definitely don't think about you much.
Jesus Christ, you are dense.
To date you can not point to any violent language from We the People. The SPLC bases their conclusion on guilt by association and some shared ideas, language and/or symbols with other groups. I could not find any other info they gave for why this group should be considered a hate group.
The same sort of arguments can be made to connect the SPCA to PETA and or ALF. I am sure there have been some shared members/donors. All often use images of suffering animals to make their points. These same things can be said of environmental groups.
I am not saying those sort of weak connections are a basis for criticizing the SPCA. You are. Of course, I do not believe the SPCA is the same as PETA or ALF just as I do not think every gun rights group is the same.
Also, I am not really criticizing PETA either, but they are certainly different than the SPCA and ALF for that matter.
The article you cite above, is nothing but guilt by association. I have been at events with G. Edward Griffin. I don't share all of his views. I have been at peace rallies where the Uhuru's and Sami Al-Arian spoke. I don't share their views either. I have probably rubbed elbows with countless nuts over the years. That's part of politics.
I love it when jokers like you crow your "intelligence" when the chronology of the posts display your folly with ease. You made an absurd comparison of the SPCA to PETA to ALF, not me. I proved that wrong...it has no place in the discussion, and you just threw it in as some sort of convoluted way to prove your defense of We the People and your condemnation of the SPLC.
Bottom line: the SPLC painstakingly shows how WE The People's founder Schulz courts known and convicted racist radicals to build his coalition and membership. Schulz isn't just "associating"...he's recruiting and aligning himself and his organization with these people. Playing the semantics game of not directly making violent threats won't help you...because any cop worth his salt will tell you that the smart criminals carefully choose their words before and after they lawyer up. THAT is why a prosecutor presents EVIDENCE, like the following:
The ranks of We the People have burgeoned since the November congress, and they now include dozens of prominent radical-right figures. Among them are Orly Taitz, the California dentist on a personal jihad to prove that Obama is not a citizen; Cory Burnell, a former leader of the white supremacist League of the South and later founder of Christian Exodus, which seeks a theocratic takeover of the state of South Carolina; John Hassey, former leader of the Central Alabama Militia; Walter Burien, co-founder in the 1990s of the Arizona Sons and Daughters of Liberty militia; and Jo Ann Dingley, once a contact for the Santa Rosa County Militia and a delegate to the Third Continental Congress, a Patriot formation.
With this swelling of the WTP rolls have come people with reported criminal histories. (Each of the people named below did not respond to E-mails seeking comment; details of their histories come from press reports). Among them:
Wayne Gunwall, who in the 1990s traveled around the country helping groups set up common-law courts. He was sentenced to 15 months in prison in 1997 for conspiring to impede and harass Internal Revenue Service agents.
Arthur Hollowell, a "sovereign citizen" who in 1982 was convicted of forgery charges and then was a fugitive for years. He was eventually sentenced to a year in federal prison in 1997 after pleading guilty to running a scam, called the Northwest Community Exchange, to hide millions of dollars from the Internal Revenue Service. In the 1990s, Hollowell was tied to the Citizens Bar Association, which urged tax resistance and was reportedly anti-Semitic.
Robert B. Beale, convicted of tax evasion in 2008 after two years on the run.
And David Eugene Landess, who accepted a plea bargain in 2009 on felony charges of attempting to evade taxes over several years.
..... In August, William Kostric, identified as a member of WTP's Arizona chapter, showed up at a health care reform meeting hosted in New Hampshire by President Obama. Kostric was wearing a gun strapped to his thigh and carrying a sign reading, "IT IS TIME TO WATER THE TREE OF LIBERTY" (a reference to Thomas Jefferson's statement that the "tree of liberty" needs occasional refreshing with "the blood of patriots and tyrants"). According to press reports, Kostric, who did not respond to requests for comment, had a MySpace page filled with paeans to militia groups and Randy Weaver, a white supremacist hero of many militiamen.
That same month, Chris Broughton, also listed as a member of WTP's Arizona chapter, brought an assault rifle to an Obama town hall meeting in Phoenix, provoking something of a media storm. While there, he was interviewed by Ernest Hancock, the militia sympathizer who also attended the Jekyll Island summit. A day earlier, Broughton had attended a fiery sermon by Tempe pastor Steven Anderson, who reportedly prayed for "Obama to melt like a snail tonight" because he was a "socialist devil, murderer, infanticide." Anderson told reporters he regularly prayed for the president's death and that Broughton was part of his congregation.
Bottom line: the SPLC is on target, the reporting is valid. You can deny it, BS about it, lie about....but the evidence is there for all to see. To date, NO ONE HAS PROVEN THE REPORTING TO BE WRONG ON IT'S FACTS. Deal with it.
That's your problem. Here's my answer:
Originally Posted by Taichiliberal
I love it when jokers like you crow your "intelligence" when the chronology of the posts display your folly with ease. You made an absurd comparison of the SPCA to PETA to ALF, not me. I proved that wrong...it has no place in the discussion, and you just threw it in as some sort of convoluted way to prove your defense of We the People and your condemnation of the SPLC.
Quote:
Bottom line: the SPLC painstakingly shows how WE The People's founder Schulz courts known and convicted racist radicals to build his coalition and membership. Schulz isn't just "associating"...he's recruiting and aligning himself and his organization with these people. Playing the semantics game of not directly making violent threats won't help you...because any cop worth his salt will tell you that the smart criminals carefully choose their words before and after they lawyer up. THAT is why a prosecutor presents EVIDENCE, like the following:
Quote:
The ranks of We the People have burgeoned since the November congress, and they now include dozens of prominent radical-right figures. Among them are Orly Taitz, the California dentist on a personal jihad to prove that Obama is not a citizen; Cory Burnell, a former leader of the white supremacist League of the South and later founder of Christian Exodus, which seeks a theocratic takeover of the state of South Carolina; John Hassey, former leader of the Central Alabama Militia; Walter Burien, co-founder in the 1990s of the Arizona Sons and Daughters of Liberty militia; and Jo Ann Dingley, once a contact for the Santa Rosa County Militia and a delegate to the Third Continental Congress, a Patriot formation.
With this swelling of the WTP rolls have come people with reported criminal histories. (Each of the people named below did not respond to E-mails seeking comment; details of their histories come from press reports). Among them:
Wayne Gunwall, who in the 1990s traveled around the country helping groups set up common-law courts. He was sentenced to 15 months in prison in 1997 for conspiring to impede and harass Internal Revenue Service agents.
Arthur Hollowell, a "sovereign citizen" who in 1982 was convicted of forgery charges and then was a fugitive for years. He was eventually sentenced to a year in federal prison in 1997 after pleading guilty to running a scam, called the Northwest Community Exchange, to hide millions of dollars from the Internal Revenue Service. In the 1990s, Hollowell was tied to the Citizens Bar Association, which urged tax resistance and was reportedly anti-Semitic.
Robert B. Beale, convicted of tax evasion in 2008 after two years on the run.
And David Eugene Landess, who accepted a plea bargain in 2009 on felony charges of attempting to evade taxes over several years.
..... In August, William Kostric, identified as a member of WTP's Arizona chapter, showed up at a health care reform meeting hosted in New Hampshire by President Obama. Kostric was wearing a gun strapped to his thigh and carrying a sign reading, "IT IS TIME TO WATER THE TREE OF LIBERTY" (a reference to Thomas Jefferson's statement that the "tree of liberty" needs occasional refreshing with "the blood of patriots and tyrants"). According to press reports, Kostric, who did not respond to requests for comment, had a MySpace page filled with paeans to militia groups and Randy Weaver, a white supremacist hero of many militiamen.
That same month, Chris Broughton, also listed as a member of WTP's Arizona chapter, brought an assault rifle to an Obama town hall meeting in Phoenix, provoking something of a media storm. While there, he was interviewed by Ernest Hancock, the militia sympathizer who also attended the Jekyll Island summit. A day earlier, Broughton had attended a fiery sermon by Tempe pastor Steven Anderson, who reportedly prayed for "Obama to melt like a snail tonight" because he was a "socialist devil, murderer, infanticide." Anderson told reporters he regularly prayed for the president's death and that Broughton was part of his congregation.Bottom line: the SPLC is on target, the reporting is valid. You can deny it, BS about it, lie about....but the evidence is there for all to see. To date, NO ONE HAS PROVEN THE REPORTING TO BE WRONG ON IT'S FACTS. Deal with it.
Is it the problem of all the leftists who attended the peace rally or leftists in general who opposed the war? Are all of them members of a hate group or supporters of terrorism due to this tenuous connection with al-Arian?
Griffin buys in to and spreads conspiracy theories, but I don't know that he has actually advocated or participated in any violence. I am not sure why he was even mentioned.
There is just more repetition of the guilt by association argument.
That same month, Chris Broughton, also listed as a member of WTP's Arizona chapter, brought an assault rifle to an Obama town hall meeting in Phoenix, provoking something of a media storm. While there, he was interviewed by Ernest Hancock, the militia sympathizer who also attended the Jekyll Island summit. A day earlier, Broughton had attended a fiery sermon by Tempe pastor Steven Anderson, who reportedly prayed for "Obama to melt like a snail tonight" because he was a "socialist devil, murderer, infanticide." Anderson told reporters he regularly prayed for the president's death and that Broughton was part of his congregation.
That same month, Chris Broughton, also listed as a member of WTP's Arizona chapter, brought an assault rifle to an Obama town hall meeting in Phoenix, provoking something of a media storm. While there, he was interviewed by Ernest Hancock, the militia sympathizer who also attended the Jekyll Island summit. A day earlier, Broughton had attended a fiery sermon by Tempe pastor Steven Anderson, who reportedly prayed for "Obama to melt like a snail tonight" because he was a "socialist devil, murderer, infanticide." Anderson told reporters he regularly prayed for the president's death and that Broughton was part of his congregation.
so the same people who say it is wrong to criticize a presidential candidate for being a member of Rev Wright's church now say we can condemn the Tea Party because a member attends someone's church?.........
No, the SPLC did not profile Rev. Wright and his congregation as a militia...neither has the FBI, last time I checked.
we're talking about the Tea Party....nobody has listed them as militia either.....the analogy that has failed, ever since page one, is Tea Party and militia.....
You and several others are all quick to denounce the SPLC's report on the rise of "militias" since Obama's inaugeration
Originally Posted by Taichiliberal
You and several others are all quick to denounce the SPLC's report on the rise of "militias" since Obama's inaugeration
the SPLC report has nothing to do with the Tea Party.....militias have nothing to do with the Tea Party.....why are you even posting anything about the SPLC report.....it has nothing to do with this thread.........
It really doesn't matter if those articles are "solid and irrefutable" because those articles aren't talking about the Tea Party........