Author Topic: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!  (Read 3722 times)

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #25 on: January 28, 2012, 06:05:17 PM »
 :o.  More ghetoobama alinsky tacticts. 

Dos Equis

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #26 on: January 28, 2012, 06:06:01 PM »

When Hurricane Gustav struck LA, Jindal called Obama to have federal intervention and he obliged the request.  However the following year, when Jindal delivered the rebuttal to Obama's State of the Union, he basically gave him an FU for the help and said that the government should stay out of states businesses in diasters like Hurricane Katrina.

 That's why Obama blasted Jindal through the wall when they met. 

Or maybe Obama "blasted" Jindal because Obama is an arrogant, hypersensitive, insecure baby.  

tu_holmes

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #27 on: January 28, 2012, 06:09:41 PM »
What a surprise Bill Maher and more of his stupid bullshit, respect is earned.

When you are voted in as President of the United States, you earned the respect.

It goes with the office.

How many times did people do this to Bush? I remember an Iraqi threw a shoe at him, but how many politicians just out and out disrespected the office?


blacken700

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #28 on: January 28, 2012, 07:37:08 PM »
When you are voted in as President of the United States, you earned the respect.

It goes with the office.

How many times did people do this to Bush? I remember an Iraqi threw a shoe at him, but how many politicians just out and out disrespected the office?




just like pat buchanan said it's the dumbing down of the repub party,they see nothing wrong with this

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #29 on: January 29, 2012, 04:01:49 AM »
Jesse Jackson Says Gov. Brewer ‘Gave President Obama the Finger’
Newsbusters ^
Posted on January 29, 2012 5:53:36 AM EST by Sub-Driver

Jesse Jackson Says Gov. Brewer ‘Gave President Obama the Finger’ By Mike Bates Created 01/28/2012 - 9:37pm

It was a routine Saturday morning at Rev. Jesse Jackson's Rainbow PUSH forum, broadcast nationally on the Word Network. He was all over the map. Jackson trashed Ronald Reagan, Barry Goldwater, Newt Gingrich, and Mitt Romney. He warned that enterprises such as black funeral homes and black insurance companies are “under attack.” He condemned a proposed change in Grammy Award classifications. Jackson also spoke out against Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, who, he said, “did the ultimate insult. She put her finger in his (President Barack Obama) face.” Jackson wants people to call and complain (video here):

Also, while it’s on my mind, Gov. Janice K. Brewer, the finger person. Gov. Janice K. Brewer, who gave President Obama the finger, governor of Arizona, call 1 800 253 0883. Keep that line real busy. 1 800 253 0883. We’ll give you the number later a little later today and this week on the email number of her press secretary. We want to keep Arizona. . . until she can put her hands in her pocket and have some good. . . do you know how insulting it is to put your finger in somebody’s face? Try it with the cameras rolling, she knew the cameras.

She knew what she was doing. She was telling him off. She was cutting him down to his size. She must never get away with that. Even George Wallace did not put his finger in Dr. King’s face. Say, enough is enough.

Being the pious, innocent, saintly man he is, perhaps the Most Rev. Jackson deserves a pass. Maybe he doesn’t actually know the difference between giving someone the finger and waving one’s finger in another person’s face. But does he really consider the latter to be “the ultimate insult”? For a man who’s referred to Jews as “Hymies,” said in the last campaign that “Barack’s been talking down to black people” and that he would like to cut Obama's testicles out, and admitted to, as a young waiter, having spit into the food of white customers he didn’t like, Jackson has a remarkable notion of what comprises the ultimate insult.

Naturally, Jackson’s blunder will be ignored by the mainstream media. He’s always given a pass. But the very next time “the black view” is needed on a story, he’ll be front and center and ready for his close-up.

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #30 on: January 29, 2012, 04:04:24 AM »
Al Sharpton: Jan Brewer Incident Is More Race-Related Disrespect For President Obama
Mediate ^ | 01/28/2012 | Tommy Christopher
Posted on January 28, 2012 11:12:49 PM EST by SeekAndFind

On Thursday night’s Politics Nation, host Al Sharpton called out Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer‘s disrespectful conduct toward President Obama during their tarmac tussle, connecting it to a pattern of such contemptuous behavior by Republican leaders. Sirius XM radio host Joe Madison gave it a name, saying that there are people “who cannot stand the fact that this is an african-american who is now one of the most powerful individuals on the planet.”

RELATED: Drama Clubbed: Jan Brewer Says ‘I Felt A Little Bit Threatened’ By President Obama

Rev. Al opened the segment by calling Gov. Brewer’s finger-pointing “unacceptable” and “disrespectful,” noting “but she’s not apologizing.”

He played video of Brewer recounting the incident to reporters, calling the President “thin-skinned,” and saying she “felt a little bit threatened.”

To his credit, Rev. Sharpton is one of the few commentators to key in on the racial subtext of Brewer’s remarks. “Thin skinned? You felt threatened?” he said. “What does that even mean, you felt threatened? By the President of the United States? This is yet another example of disrespect and delegitimatizing this president.”

RELATED: Why Won’t Black People Let Newt Gingrich Help Them?

Rev. Al then played a fairly comprehensive rundown of clips that featured prominent Republicans behaving disrespectfully toward the President, including Rep. Joe Wilson‘s infamous “You lie!” moment. Speaking of lying, Sharpton also noted Gov. Brewer’s dueling descriptions of her 2010 meeting with the President, which was the genesis of the tarmac dispute.

“So Governor Brewer,” Rev. Sharpton said, “when were you telling the truth? When you just walked out of the meeting and told the press in front of the White House, with a smile on your face, how it was cordial and how the tone was very good, positive, or when you wrote a book saying it was condescending, and he was lecturing you?”

He also characterized Brewer’s handing of a letter to the President as political grandstanding. That letter centers around what sounds like an invitation for the President to be lectured by Brewer, to learn at her knee, if you will. “I’d love an opportunity to share with you how we’ve been able to turn Arizona around with hard choices that turned out to be the right ones,” it reads.

Joe Madison weighed in by pointing out that even a small child knows it is disrespectful to point in someone’s face, and related some suggestions he got from his radio audience, including bending back her finger, to having the Secret Service jack Brewer up. “I give the President of the United States credit for doing what?” Madison said. “Walking away.”

Madison also told Rev. Al to add to his dis list Newt Gingrich’s (and others) tendency to refer to the President simply as “Obama,” and Republicans’ demands to see the President’s grades. “Excuse me,” Madison said, “what 50-year-old-plus man has to provide his grades? What, getting elected as the president of the Harvard Review is not enough?”

He continued, “This is nothing more, and I’ll just say it straight up. There are some people, not all, in this country who cannot stand the fact that this is an African-American who is now one of the most powerful individuals on the planet. And there are those who cannot consciously and subconsciously handle it.”

“You know you’re not going to get a debate from me,” Rev. Al replied. “They brought race in. They put a race deck on the table. If you pull a card, it’s a race card because they set the deck.”

What you have to ask yourself is not whether Republican leaders have been disrespectful to this president, but whether they have done so in ways that white presidents have not had to deal with. The same holds true for liberal critics of the President, are they treating him as they would a white Democratic president?

This doesn’t have to mean that all of these folks hate black people. People like Gov. Brewer and Speaker Gingrich ought to ask themselves if they have succumbed to something more insidious, this tendency in white media culture (or as I call it, “media culture”) to promote, at best, informality with (and among) black people, the effect of which is to lower the inhibition to behave bluntly.

Here’s the clip, from MSNBC:

CLICK ABOVE LINK FOR THE VIDEO CLIP

Vince G, CSN MFT

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #31 on: January 29, 2012, 03:44:34 PM »
:o.  More ghetoobama alinsky tacticts.  



 :)

Saul David Alinsky (January 30, 1909 – June 12, 1972) was an American community organizer and writer. He is generally considered to be the founder of modern community organizing, and has been compared to Thomas Paine as being "one of the great American leaders of the nonsocialist left."[4] He is often noted for his book Rules for Radicals.

In the course of nearly four decades of political organizing, Alinsky received much criticism, but also gained praise from many public figures. His organizing skills were focused on improving the living conditions of poor communities across North America. In the 1950s, he began turning his attention to improving conditions of the African-American ghettos, beginning with Chicago's and later traveling to other ghettos in California, Michigan, New York City, and a dozen other "trouble spots".

His ideas were later adapted by some U.S. college students and other young organizers in the late 1960s and formed part of their strategies for organizing on campus and beyond.[5] Time magazine once wrote that "American democracy is being altered by Alinsky's ideas," and conservative author William F. Buckley said he was "very close to being an organizational genius.


In the 1930s, Alinsky organized the Back of the Yards neighborhood in Chicago (made infamous by Upton Sinclair's novel The Jungle for the horrific working conditions in the Union Stock Yards). He went on to found the Industrial Areas Foundation while organizing the Woodlawn neighborhood, which trained organizers and assisted in the founding of community organizations around the country. In Rules for Radicals (his final work, published in 1971 one year before his death), he addressed the 1960s generation of radicals, outlining his views on organizing for mass power. In the first chapter, opening paragraph of the book Alinsky writes, "What follows is for those who want to change the world from what it is to what they believe it should be. The Prince was written by Machiavelli for the Haves on how to hold power. Rules for Radicals is written for the Have-Nots on how to take it away."[7] Alinsky did not join political organizations. When asked during an interview whether he ever considered becoming a Communist party member, he replied:

    Not at any time. I've never joined any organization—not even the ones I've organized myself. I prize my own independence too much. And philosophically, I could never accept any rigid dogma or ideology, whether it's Christianity or Marxism. One of the most important things in life is what Judge Learned Hand described as 'that ever-gnawing inner doubt as to whether you're right.' If you don't have that, if you think you've got an inside track to absolute truth, you become doctrinaire, humorless and intellectually constipated. The greatest crimes in history have been perpetrated by such religious and political and racial fanatics, from the persecutions of the Inquisition on down to Communist purges and Nazi genocide.[4]

Nor did he have much respect for mainstream political leaders who tried to interfere with growing black–white unity during the difficult years of the Great Depression. In Alinsky's opinion, new voices and new values were being heard in the U.S., and "people began citing John Donne's 'No man is an island,'" he said. He observed that the hardship affecting all classes of the population was causing them to start "banding together to improve their lives," and discovering how much in common they really had with their fellow man.[4] He stated during an interview a few of the causes for his active organizing in black communities:

    Negroes were being lynched regularly in the South as the first stirrings of black opposition began to be felt, and many of the white civil rights organizers and labor agitators who had started to work with them were tarred and feathered, castrated—or killed. Most Southern politicians were members of the Ku Klux Klan and had no compunction about boasting of it.[4]

Alinsky's tactics were often unorthodox. In Rules for Radicals Alinsky wrote, "[t]he job of the organizer is to maneuver and bait the establishment so that it will publicly attack him as a 'dangerous enemy.'" According to Alinsky, "the hysterical instant reaction of the establishment [will] not only validate [the organizer's] credentials of competency but also ensure automatic popular invitation."[8] After organizing FIGHT (an acronym for Freedom, Independence, God, Honor, Today) in Rochester, New York, Alinsky once threatened to stage a "fart in" to disrupt the sensibilities of the city's establishment at a Rochester Philharmonic concert. FIGHT members were to consume large quantities of baked beans after which, according to author Nicholas von Hoffman, "FIGHT's increasingly gaseous music-loving members would hie themselves to the concert hall where they would sit expelling gaseous vapors with such noisy velocity as to compete with the woodwinds."[9] Satisfied with the reaction to his threat, Alinsky would later threaten a "piss in" at Chicago O'Hare Airport. Alinsky planned to arrange for large numbers of well dressed African Americans to occupy the urinals and toilets at O'Hare for as long as it took to bring the city to the bargaining table. According to Alinsky, once again the threat alone was sufficient to produce results.[9]

Alinsky described his plans in 1972 to begin to organize the white middle class across America, and the necessity of that project. He believed that what President Richard Nixon and Vice-President Spiro Agnew called "The Silent Majority" was living in frustration and despair, worried about their future, and ripe for a turn to radical social change, to become politically-active citizens. He feared the middle class could be driven to a right-wing viewpoint, "making them ripe for the plucking by some guy on horseback promising a return to the vanished verities of yesterday." His stated motive: "I love this goddamn country, and we're going to take it back."[4]

Alinsky's own words, from his 1946 "Reveille for Radicals",[10] capture his perspective, his motivation, and his style of engagement:

        A People's Organization is a conflict group, [and] this must be openly and fully recognized. Its sole reason in coming into being is to wage war against all evils which cause suffering and unhappiness. A People’s Organization is the banding together of large numbers of men and women to fight for those rights which insure a decent way of life. . . .

        A People's Organization is dedicated to an eternal war. It is a war against poverty, misery, delinquency, disease, injustice, hopelessness, despair, and unhappiness. They are basically the same issues for which nations have gone to war in almost every generation. . . . War is not an intellectual debate, and in the war against social evils there are no rules of fair play. . . .

        A People's Organization lives in a world of hard reality. It lives in the midst of smashing forces, dashing struggles, sweeping cross-currents, ripping passions, conflict, confusion, seeming chaos, the hot and the cold, the squalor and the drama, which people prosaically refer to as life and students describe as 'society'.



Pacem in Terris Award, 1969





This guy obviously wasn't a communist or socialist....in fact William Buckley respected the guy.  Sounds like this was a great person.



A

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #32 on: January 29, 2012, 06:49:28 PM »




LOL.    Obama is such a freaking baby. 

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #33 on: August 15, 2012, 06:35:09 PM »

Kazan

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #34 on: August 15, 2012, 06:43:21 PM »
When you are voted in as President of the United States, you earned the respect.

It goes with the office.

How many times did people do this to Bush? I remember an Iraqi threw a shoe at him, but how many politicians just out and out disrespected the office?



Really? The office gets respect the man has to earn it
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tu_holmes

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #35 on: August 15, 2012, 06:50:08 PM »
Really? The office gets respect the man has to earn it

The office and the man are one and the same when it comes to the POTUS.

And people aren't disrespecting the man at these times, they are disrespecting the office.

Soul Crusher

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #36 on: August 15, 2012, 06:51:04 PM »
The office and the man are one and the same when it comes to the POTUS.

And people aren't disrespecting the man at these times, they are disrespecting the office.

At this point I really don't care.   Obama has degraded the office and deserves to be treated accordingly.

Kazan

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #37 on: August 15, 2012, 06:52:44 PM »
The office and the man are one and the same when it comes to the POTUS.

And people aren't disrespecting the man at these times, they are disrespecting the office.

Sorry but I see a distinct difference. The office is there long after what ever asshole happened to occupy it's bones have turned to dust.
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andreisdaman

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Re: Obama tries to thug up Gov. Brewer on the tarmac. FUBO!!!!!!!!!!!
« Reply #38 on: August 15, 2012, 11:02:18 PM »
Sorry but I see a distinct difference. The office is there long after what ever asshole happened to occupy it's bones have turned to dust.

don't you get tired of having your dick in your mouth???