Friday, July 29, 2011

Politico Columnist: These Tea Partiers Are "Full Blown Terrorists"

Guy Benson

Have you ever heard of someone named William Yeomans?  Neither had I, until an op/ed he penned for Politico hit the web earlier today.  Yeomans' thesis is subtle, nuanced, and perfectly aligned with the "new tone" of civility the Left demands of conservatives:
It has become commonplace to call the tea party faction in the House “hostage takers.” But they have now become full-blown terrorists.  They have joined the villains of American history who have been sufficiently craven to inflict massive harm on innocent victims to achieve their political goals. A strong America has always stood firm in the face of terrorism. That tradition is in jeopardy, as Congress and President Barack Obama careen toward an uncertain outcome in the tea party- manufactured debt crisis.
Silly me.  I was under the impression that the debt crisis was "manufactured" by Washington's endless spending spree -- which Democrats have accelerated exponentially since 2007, when they assumed control of the nation's purse strings.  Nope, it's the fault of a nascent grassroots political movement that sprung up in 2009...largely in response to policies that have exacerbated the debt crisis.  I stand corrected!  A few more lowlights:
As markets fall in anticipation that there may not be a timely resolution; as credit agencies issue dire warnings that the U.S. political system has become so dysfunctional that a credit downgrade may be inevitable, and as America looks weakened in the eyes of the world, the tea party’s hostage-taking has evolved into the intentional infliction of harm on innocent Americans to achieve a political objective – terrorism.  Terrorism is a tough term, but, unfortunately, it describes tea party tactics precisely...
Even in the absence of default, credit agencies would almost surely downgrade our credit worthiness, producing increases in interest rates that would slow the economy, increase unemployment and force families into foreclosure and bankruptcy.  Rather than reject the unthinkable, the tea party harnessed this potential harm as its weapon of mass destruction...The challenge for America is to stand firm in the face of terrorism, no matter the source.
If you're shocked by this Lef-winger's invocation of terrorist imagery to slander and libel fellow Americans with whom they take issue, you shouldn't be.  This line of anti-conservative attack is all the rage -- and I do mean rage -- these days.  President Obama likened AIG and big banks to "suicide bombers" in 2009.  Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) compared talks with Republicans to negotiating with terrorists during December's tax debate.  Alan Grayson (D-FL) suggested his 2010 opponent was cut from the same cloth as the Taliban, and compared the GOP to "members of Al Qaeda."  Various lefty media figures have carried on this delightful tradition -- and former Obama appointee, confirmed Communist, and 9/11 truther Van Jones parroted a similar line just today.   So this brand of hyperbolic swill isn't a new phenomenon.  I just hope Politico is proud of itself for amplifying it.  Incidentally, who is William Yeomans, anyway?
William Yeomans, an American University law professor, served as Sen. Ted Kennedy’s chief counsel on the Senate Judiciary Committee and as a Justice Department official.
Perfect.

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UPDATE - While we're on the subject of left-wing hysteria (it's been a hot topic this week), Democratic Texas Congresswoman and awful human being Sheila Jackson Lee took to the House floor and weighed in on the Boehner plan moments ago:
"This is the worst bill that any American could imagine in the history of this nation!"
UPDATE II - My colleague Katie Pavlich reminds me that there are certain terrorists the Left doesn't seem to mind in the least.
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How much is the debt ceiling really? Look at 10 things 14 TRILLION could buy...


Amid all the chaotic negotiations and political hubbub surrounding the national debt in Washington, we're having a little trouble wrapping our heads around the $14.3-trillion limit the US has for borrowing.

What exactly could you do, if you had that amount of money?

Sure, it's exponentially larger than any amount we'll ever have disposable. But that doesn't mean it's not fun to fantasize.

(Story continues below...)

We are in a dire situation in this country today, and small publications like this one do not have the huge resources of George Soros pouring in like our liberal friends.

Worth Reading is not funded by the government like NPR.

Worth Reading is not funded by the government like PBS.


Please become a supporting member and help fund this ongoing effort to provide you with news and commentary relevant to our divided nation.

Help us get back our simple conservative values. Remember, the Bigger the Government - the Smaller the citizen!

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You could buy the world a Coke, and you could teach it to sing.

A Coke in The Boston Globe vending machines costs $1.25, a 30-minute voice lesson can cost $20, and the latest population clock from the US Census Bureau shows 6,951,681,990 people worldwide as of midday Wednesday.

Added all up, everyone on the planet could get a Coke and a voice lesson -- and we'd have enough money left over to give more than 707 million additional hours of voice lessons to the (ahem) "tonally challenged" among us.


Newton North High School's $197.5 million price tag caused quite a stir during the past few years. With our insane amount of money, we could pay for more than 72,400 copies of it.

Think what the Bay State would be like with 206 of these schools for every town.

Imagine what those increased resources could do for the state's troubled MCAS science scores.


Say what you want about the Big Dig, but we did get a nice green space out of the deal for the mere cost of $21.93 billion. Why not do that a few more times?

The debt ceiling is equivalent to about 652 Big Digs. Why not give it a shot in Quincy or Canton?


No Boston fantasizing would be complete without a Duck Tour. They're good enough for the Stanley Cup-winning Bruins, so they must be good enough for our $14.3 trillion.

At $32 a duck tour for an adult, you could bring 446,875,000,000 of your closest friends -- or roughly 595 times the number of active Facebook accounts. Yes, that would include Mark Zuckerberg.



Speaking of the Bruins, with our $14.3 trillion we could have their famed $156,679.74-post-Stanley-Cup party at Shrine nightclub 91 million times.

Hopefully, Foxwoods has 3 billion Jager bombs ready.


Let's be honest: If any of us had trillions of dollars just lying around, we'd make our way to Cape Cod a time or two.

Sure, we could probably afford our own boat to get there from Boston, but it would be more fun to take the fast ferry from Boston Harbor Cruises at $79 a round-trip ticket for an adult to Provincetown.

At those prices, you could send all Massachusetts residents 27,645 times. Think of how popular you'd be!


If cars and digging new highways aren't your things, how about creating more access to the commuter rail?

The MBTA has invested in 20 new locomotives at the cost of about $5,700,000 each. Think there would be fewer problems getting in and out of Boston for national championship celebrations if we had 2,508,771 more locomotives on hand?


All this math has got us hungry.

Hungry enough for about 1,148,594,377,510 cheese pizzas from Pizzeria Regina.


It might take us until the early morning to eat that much pizza. If we're lucky, it will be late enough (or, rather, early enough) to head to Dunkin' Donuts to start in on the roughly 67,136,150,234,741 Munchkins we could afford at the cost of $2.13 for 10 holes.
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