Great, Now Clinton is saying we will have another Oklahoma City Bombing....

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  • 5.56'aholic

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    <- tragic boating accident
    So, when his supporters and liberals in general protested Bush, Cheney and the rest of the government from 2001-2009 its not demonizing the government, but now that the dems are in full control its wrong?

    Was it not Pelosi herself who said that dissent was the highest form of patriotism? Oh wait, thats righ! That thought process only applied while Bush was in office, now its the lowest form of racism......silly me.

    FOXNews.com - Clinton Warns 'Demonization' of Government Leads to Threats, Chides 'Right-Wing Media'

    Clinton Warns 'Demonization' of Government Leads to Threats, Chides 'Right-Wing Media'
    FOXNews.com
    Former President Clinton on Sunday broadened his warning that Tea Party protesters could feed violence reminiscent of the Oklahoma City bombing, suggesting "right-wing media" and the blogosphere could be culpable for any future politically fueled extremism as well.

    Former President Clinton on Sunday broadened his warning that Tea Party protesters could feed violence reminiscent of the Oklahoma City bombing, suggesting "right-wing media" and the blogosphere could be culpable for any future politically fueled extremism as well.

    The former president, speaking on ABC's "This Week," elaborated on his controversial comments from Friday, when he drew parallels between the modern Tea Party movement and the anti-government rage of the mid-'90s that preceded the 1995 Oklahoma City attack that killed 168 people and injured hundreds more.

    Clinton said Sunday that political dissent is necessary, but "demonization" of government is dangerous -- citing the uptick in threats made against members of Congress and other officials.

    "We shouldn't demonize the government or its public employees or its elected officials," Clinton said. "We can disagree with them, we can harshly criticize them. But when we turn them into an object of demonization, we increase the number of threats."

    The debate over and passage of the health care overhaul this year has coincided with an increase in threats against lawmakers. According to a recent report, lawmakers reported 42 security incidents from January through March -- lawmakers reported only 15 cases in the first three months of 2009. A middle-aged software engineer fueled by his hatred of the Internal Revenue Service also crashed his small plane into an Austin, Texas, building that housed IRS offices in February.


    Tea Party protests focus heavily on anti-tax and anti-health care reform rhetoric -- but organizers routinely reject charges that they're in any way fomenting violence or intolerance.

    Clinton's comments from Friday, made at a symposium commemorating 15 years since the Oklahoma City bombing, drew a rebuke from conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh, who accused Clinton of having "just set the stage for violence in this country" and said "future acts of violence" would be on the former president's shoulders.

    Clinton, in the interview Sunday, said the remark "doesn't make any sense." He instead suggested the behavior of "right-wing media" is reminiscent of the hostile mood of the country before the Oklahoma City bombing.

    "I realized that there were lot of parallels between the early '90s and now, both in the feeling of economic dislocation, the level of uncertainty people felt, the rise of kind of identity politics, the rise of the militia movements and right-wing talk radio, with a lot of what's going on in the blogosphere now, and in the right-wing media," Clinton said.

    "A lot of the things that have been said, they create a climate in which people who are vulnerable to violence because they're disoriented, like Timothy McVeigh was, are more likely to act," he added.

    McVeigh was convicted on federal murder and conspiracy charges and executed in 2001 for his role in the attack on the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. Co-conspirator Terry Nichols is serving life in prison on federal and state bombing convictions.
     

    Joe Williams

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    Yup. And it's all the fault those nasty turds who dare exercise their freedom to disagree with the King.
     

    Panama

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    Oh yeah, if Bill says it, it has got to be true!

    "I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky,"

    biil-and-monica.jpg


    YouTube - Clinton, "I did not have sexual relations with that woman...
     

    irishfan

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    in your head
    This is the same line of B.S. that Pelosi was talking about a few months ago. Unfortunately, from what history I have read it seems that it is left-wing liberal black and anti-war/hippie groups that they both supported and still back today that caused violence. Honestly, the leaders in either major party don't want people thinking for themselves or thinking outside the box that they structure for you. Do you really think the leaders of the Democrats and the GOP want people making independent decisions and voting out the rank and file or the lobbyists who line their pockets? NO WAY
     

    Leadeye

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    Government people are always concerned about any movement that stirs up the public's sense of empowerment and gets them voting. The Tea Party must be demonized by making it out to be something like the KKK which it is not. Watch for increasingly shrill and frequent condemnation as time goes by.
     

    Joe Williams

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    Government people are always concerned about any movement that stirs up the public's sense of empowerment and gets them voting. The Tea Party must be demonized by making it out to be something like the KKK which it is not. Watch for increasingly shrill and frequent condemnation as time goes by.

    KKK can't be a Tea Party thing. KKK came from the Democratic Party. Heck, a KKK recruiter is one of the most senior and revered by Democrats Senator to this very day.
     

    Bill of Rights

    Cogito, ergo porto.
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    Where's the bacon?
    Clinton said Sunday that political dissent is necessary, but "demonization" of government is dangerous -- citing the uptick in threats made against members of Congress and other officials.

    "We shouldn't demonize the government or its public employees or its elected officials," Clinton said. "We can disagree with them, we can harshly criticize them. But when we turn them into an object of demonization, we increase the number of threats."
    What Clinton has neglected to say is that it is impossible to demonize something that is already borderline demonic. The uptick in threats against them was not something out of the blue, nor was it something originated in the Tea Parties... it was a response to the members of Congress abdicating their oaths to support the Constitution and ignoring the will of their constituents. The people found it unacceptable, and the members of Congress heard the response. Funny thing, though... none of them were actually injured. There was some property damage, but I don't recall even hearing about one of them being burned in effigy.

    If you want to stop the members of Congress from being demonized, tell them to stop doing it to themselves. This is like telling the the cat to not be scared of the dog that is barking, snarling, and baring his teeth at the end of his rope.... which is fraying rapidly.

    In that situation, I'm reminded that diplomacy is the art of being caught near a lion's den and saying "nice kitty, nice kitty"... while reaching for your pistol.

    Blessings,
    Bill
     
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