Bachmann-Gaffney Anti-Muslim Overdrive

Far right conspiracy mongers infiltrate the federal government
Wingnuts • Views: 38,616

Oh yeah, and also … Michele Bachmann (R-Mars) came out of storage this week and launched a McCarthy-like crusade against a nonexistent Muslim Brotherhood infiltration of the upper echelons of the US government, targeting Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s aide Huma Abedin in particular.

This crackpot anti-Muslim conspiracy theory has been circulating among the so-called “counter-jihad” nitwits for years; it’s unclear why Bachmann suddenly latched onto it (for publicity, ya think?), but here’s a look at one of the primary sources: Frank Gaffney’s Latest Boogeyman Inspired Bachmann’s Witch Hunt.

Senator John McCain deserves congratulations for his remarks on the Senate floor yesterday defending Huma Abedin — top aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton — against charges that she is part of a “Muslim brotherhood conspiracy,” as claimed by Congresswoman Michele Bachmann.

But even as McCain condemned the attacks on Abedin, he defended the think tank — the Center for Security Policy — whose tinfoil-hatted research forms the basis of those attacks, and CSP’s president, Frank Gaffney, whom McCain described as “a longtime friend.” As Adam Serwer noted yesterday, “It’s Gaffney’s scurrilous reasoning masquerading as policy expertise that lead to Bachmann’s smearing of Abedin in the first place.”

Jump to bottom

84 comments
1 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:35:16pm

Nothing escapes the derpularity, a line of reasoning so dense it collapses in on itself and no rational thought can escape.

2 Big Joe Ghazi  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:35:34pm
Q: Would you consider taking her off the Intelligence Committee? Congresswoman Bachmann?

BOEHNER: I don’t know that that’s related at all.

Guess having a nutcase on the Intelligence Committee is OK with him.

3 Destro  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:35:46pm

We should be welcoming and defending and extolling the example of Ms. Huma Abedin as a secularist, feminist women from the muslim world (I don't know if she is religious or not). Yet, the Bachmannites want to tar and feather all Muslims all the time.

That is like saying General Eisenhower was a Nazi because he was of German ancestry.

4 dragonfire1981  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:35:56pm

Bachmann-Gaffney Anti-Muslim Overdrive

Now really, that's not fair to the great and awesome Randy Bachman.

5 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:36:02pm

"McCarthy-like crusade" - no question. I'd go so far as to drop the "like" there are no political degrees of freedom between Bachmann an McCarthy.

If light of that, here is Murrow's commentary on McCarthy:

That's from 58 years ago.

6 Destro  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:36:10pm

re: #2 Big Joe

Guess having a nutcase on the Intelligence Committee is OK with him.

Great point.

7 nines09  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:36:39pm

It's like John McCain has sentences he just can't get out. Either to afraid to rock the Loon Boat or just plain pandering?

8 Obdicut  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:36:49pm
But even as McCain condemned the attacks on Abedin, he defended the think tank — the Center for Security Policy — whose tinfoil-hatted research forms the basis of those attacks, and CSP’s president, Frank Gaffney, whom McCain described as “a longtime friend.”

Well, that sucks. There goes that modicum of respect I'd gained back for McCain.

Criticizing Bachmann, who is just a consumer of the conspiracy stories, while calling their creator a 'friend', is either deeply cynical or deeply stupid.

9 OhNoZombies!  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:37:51pm

Innocent peoples lives mean nothing. In the end it's about someone making a buck.

10 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:38:23pm

re: #7 nines09

It's like John McCain has sentences he just can't get out. Either to afraid to rock the Loon Boat or just plain pandering?


Doesn't matter, they hate him anyways.

During the Cold War, Communists and Soviet sympathizers were not allowed into sensitive positions in government, except of course during Democrat administrations. When we have Islamist groups, such as the Muslim Brotherhood that want to replace our Democracy with a theocracy and this is their avowed goal, what the hell are we doing letting them anywhere near the door?

John McCain needs to sit down and shut up. Perhaps he should buy a clue about a subject before he starts talking about it.

11 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:38:54pm

If Edward R. Murrow lived today and worked for, say, NPR, and gave that little statement about Bachmann, I wonder if he would keep his job the next day?

12 OhNoZombies!  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:39:10pm

re: #8 Obdicut

Or he doesn't want to bite the hand that feeds him.

13 Obdicut  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:39:45pm

re: #12 OhNoZombies!

Or he doesn't want to bite the hand that feeds him.

That'd be deeply cynical.

14 Daniel Ballard  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:40:38pm

I just want nothing to do with people or organizations that live and breathe anti religious bigotry. Hatred kills. As soon as our hate overcomes our souls, we are done as human beings. Worse than animals, they kill to eat. Haters kill for pleasure.

JFK's religion was an issue based on anti Catholic bigotry. Romneys religion is being used against him. And now we have another case of a hard working staffer getting crapped on over their religion. It's disgusting to use a persons religion against them IMHO.

15 Bulworth  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:41:21pm

I don't need any of #youpeople to criticize the great Frank Gaffney and the CSP

16 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:41:27pm

re: #9 OhNoZombies!

Innocent peoples lives mean nothing. In the end it's about someone making a buck.

Innocence proves nothing but an appalling lack of caution.
///

17 nines09  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:42:59pm

re: #10 Kragar

Oh I lost all respect for John McCain when he stood there with Sarah Palin and announced how marvelous she would be for the Nation. Then his back tracking. Then there's just him in a room full of GOP/TP faithful. The real Johnny shows up. Hack.

18 OhNoZombies!  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:43:34pm

re: #13 Obdicut

You said stupid or cynical. I chose cynical.
I modified my statement and just failed to edit out my 'or'.

19 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:43:40pm

re: #17 nines09

Oh I lost all respect for John McCain when he stood there with Sarah Palin and announced how marvelous she would be for the Nation. Then his back tracking. Then there's just him in a room full of GOP/TP faithful. The real Johnny shows up. Hack.

Just remember, she's still a better candidate than Romney.

20 Lidane  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:44:56pm

re: #19 Kragar

Just remember, She's still a better candidate than Romney.

So was Rick Santorum. The Frothy One at least had a coherent message, as hateful and bigoted as it was.

21 nines09  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:45:07pm

re: #19 Kragar

Yes. They've come so far since 08.

22 lawhawk  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:45:49pm
23 Lidane  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:48:54pm

re: #22 lawhawk

Rush commits to derpularity over his Batman Bain-Bane comments.

Dear El Rushbo,

Please stop ruining pop culture and comic books for the rest of us. We'd like to actually enjoy The Dark Knight Rises instead of thinking about your stupid while we watch it.

No love,
Sane America

24 Targetpractice  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:51:15pm

re: #22 lawhawk

Rush commits to derpularity over his Batman Bain-Bane comments.

Yeah, I had a chance to catch an early showing of it, and I'll say to anybody who thinks that Bane is a swipe at Bain, they're in for one hell of a shock.

25 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:52:46pm

One thing to note is that the individual under attack here, Abedin, is a close ally to Hillary Clinton. And, Clinton and McCain were buddies in the Senate.

Even if one looks at John the Orange's rebuke of Bachmann, it is premised on not that he knows Abedin personally but that he knows the people for whom she works and her reputation.

Why is this important? Well, this is a case of the good-ol'-boy network in the Capitol. Bachmann had done wrong by going after one of their own.

If Abedin was just another person with connections to islam, do you think that Boehner or Rubio would be publicly coming out in support of her? Where are these champions of freedom in leading the charge for local mosques all over this country whose very existence is trying to be eliminated by local building code "interpretations"?

26 Lidane  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:55:19pm

re: #24 Targetpractice

Yeah, I had a chance to catch an early showing of it, and I'll say to anybody who thinks that Bane is a swipe at Bain, they're in for one hell of a shock.

My jealousy, let me show you it. Maybe someday I'll be able to afford movie tickets again.

God, I need a job. A dozen new applications just today. WTF.

27 erik_t  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:56:04pm

re: #14 Daniel Ballard

JFK's religion was an issue based on anti Catholic bigotry. Romneys religion is being used against him.

It is? Where?

28 blueraven  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 12:58:51pm

re: #27 erik_t

It is? Where?

Certainly not in the mainstream. But there are Christian fundamentalist religious groups that will go there.

29 Lidane  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:00:10pm

re: #2 Big Joe

Guess having a nutcase on the Intelligence Committee is OK with him.

Boehner's entire House GOP caucus is filled with nutcases. How can he possibly tell the difference anymore?

30 allegro  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:01:53pm

Anyone who puts their religion first, their country second, is not qualified for office, IMO. The Christian fundies screaming the loudest about Muslims wanting to turn the US into a theocracy are the top of the list since it is projection at its finest.

31 Interesting Times  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:03:58pm

re: #30 allegro

Anyone who puts their religion first, their country second, is not qualified for office, IMO. The Christian fundies screaming the loudest about Muslims wanting to turn the US into a theocracy are the top of the list since it is projection at its finest.

Speaking of which:

32 OhNoZombies!  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:06:03pm

re: #29 Lidane

Because they're the ones pressing the knife against his kidney.

33 dragonath  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:08:24pm

This is why false equivalencies between both parties is a joke. A member of the House Intelligence Committee is echoing sentiments that one might find from the English Defence League. Absolutely incredible.

34 allegro  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:10:35pm

Any title with the word "intelligence" in it applied to Michele Bachmann is absolutely incredible.

35 Targetpractice  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:16:20pm

Caught pushing a blatant misrepresentation, what does Romney do?

That's right: Doubles down.

Mitt Romney: Obama Does Not Understand What Makes America ‘Unique’

Mitt Romney is edging ever closer to the recent controversial comments made by campaign surrogate John Sununu, who ultimately apologized for saying President Obama needs to “learn to be an American.”

At a campaign stop near Boston Thursday, Romney doubled down on his latest attack based on an out-of-context Obama quote Romney and the GOP has pounced on all week.

Romney said the “you didn’t build that” line he has seized on in speeches and ads wasn’t a “gaffe” but is “instead [Obama’s] ideology.”

Romney explained that Obama doesn’t really understand how the country works.

“I just don’t think the president, by his comments, suggests an understanding of what it is that makes America such a unique nation,” Romney said. “Why people have come here for hundreds of years. It’s because this is the land of opportunity. We welcome people here with dreams and say to them, ‘Come build it.’ Not, ‘Come here because government will give it to you.’”

36 allegro  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:19:41pm

re: #35 Targetpractice

Caught pushing a blatant misrepresentation, what does Romney do?

That's right: Doubles down.

Mitt Romney: Obama Does Not Understand What Makes America ‘Unique’

He's becoming an increasingly embarrassing spokesperson for the US. That he is the best one of the two major parties can offer as the nation's leader is simply ghastly.

37 Schadenfreude 'r' Us  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:20:32pm

re: #36 allegro

He's becoming an increasingly embarrassing spokesperson for the US. That he is the best one of the two major parties can offer as the nation's leader is simply ghastly.

Same to you, Mittens. You just think you know everything about "those people."

38 Targetpractice  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:21:04pm

re: #36 allegro

He's becoming an increasingly embarrassing spokesperson for the US. That he is the best one of the two major parties can offer as the nation's leader is simply ghastly.

Yeah, he's not the "best," he's just the only one left standing. The others were focused on big wins early, while his was a campaign geared towards the long haul. He beat them by just having the better ground game.

39 erik_t  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:24:22pm

re: #38 Targetpractice

Describing any of those candidates as having a 'focus' is probably being charitable.

40 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:25:16pm

DHS Secretary Blasts GOP Rep For Peddling Bachmann’s Anti-Muslim Conspiracy Theories

Gohmert asked Napolitano about his previous request for information on accusations made by all the usual Isamophobic bloggers that Elibiary leaked classified information to the media. Napolitano called Gohmert’s claim “inaccurate,” adding, “What bothers me, quite frankly, are the allegations that are made against anyone that happens to be Muslim”:

NAPOLITANO: I found out that the statements that have been made in that regard are false. They are misleading and objectionable, and I think they’re wrong.

GOHMERT: You need to know that you have people who are lying in your department. … Are you saying …it is a lie that Mohammed Elbiary downloaded material from a classified website using the secret security clearance you gave him? Are you saying that is a lie?

NAPOLITANO: I’m saying that is inaccurate. That is incorrect. … I’m saying that he as far as I know did not download classified documents. [...]

GOHMERT: It did not bother you that he accessed some information?

NAPOLITANO: He accessed some information. What bothers me, quite frankly, are the allegations that are made against anyone that happens to be Muslim.

Gohmert insists he’s not singling out Muslims because of their religion. “You see me hugging Muslims around the world, because the ones I hug are our friends.” The exchange went further down hill from there, with Gohmert repeatedly interrupting and yelling at Napolitano.

41 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:26:05pm

re: #39 erik_t

Describing any of those candidates as having a 'focus' is probably being charitable.

Does saying "Obama is an evil Muslim Socialist from Kenya" count as a focus?

42 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:26:06pm

re: #35 Targetpractice

Mitt Romney: Obama Does Not Understand What Makes America ‘Unique’

... Romney said. “Why people have come here for hundreds of years. It’s because this is the land of opportunity. We welcome people here with dreams and say to them, ‘Come build it.’ Not, ‘Come here because government will give it to you.’”

There's some real historical fantasy going on there, and it comes straight from what I call the America-Religion.

Reality - one of my grandfathers came through Ellis Island from the old country. He was a little kid, and his mother brought him here to join his father who had come a couple of years earlier.

And why did they come, because there was "opportunity" here? Well, yes, but that is only half the story. The other half is that life was very hard in the old country, with much hunger and poverty. In my great grandparent's case it was simply the local land couldn't support any more food production (given the ag tech of the late 19th century) for the population.

That's the part Romney and the America-Religion seem to keep overlooking - that it often wasn't the carrot of "opportunity" that could drag people halfway around the world on life threatening trips, but rather the stick of death, disease, oppression (religious, ethnic, creedal), and warfare that was driving people away from their homeland.

In the world of America-Religion fantasy, people are magically drawn here by a force. In reality, people just don't want to be hungry or shot at.

43 dragonath  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:27:08pm

re: #35 Targetpractice

Mitt Romney: Obama Does Not Understand What Makes America ‘Unique’

"Not, ‘Come here because government will give it to you.’”

Nice minority outreach. This is the genteel version of Jan Brewer's rhetoric.

44 Interesting Times  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:29:59pm
45 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:30:17pm

Justice Scalia – Abortion rights are not in the Constitution

So, there, take that all you uppity women.

46 dragonfire1981  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:32:45pm

With all due respect to BTO...

You get up every morning
Hear the Fox News warning
Sharia is now in your city
a racist whistle up above
And people pushin', people shovin'
And the Imams who try to look pretty
And if crazy Pam's on time
You can get hating by nine
and screw the little guy to get your pay
If you ever get annoyed
You'll just blame the unemployed
They love to work at nothing all day
And we'll be

Hating all the Muslims (every day)
Hating all the Muslims (every way)
I've been hating all the Muslims (all the time)
Hating all the Muslims, our freedom's on the line
Freak out

It's an all new inquisition,
Peter King has gone a fishin'
For any kind of Islamic fellow
Doesn't matter where they are,
whether near or whether far
You know they just can't bear to be mellow.
They worship a false god,
they're obsessed with their Jihad,
Ruining this country today.
Now I'm loading up on a guns,
So I can send them on the run,
I just can't bear to see them stay
And I'll be

Hating all the Muslims (every day)
Hating all the Muslims (every way)
I'll be hating all the Muslims (all the time)
Hating all the Muslims, our future's on the line,
Freak out

47 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:36:10pm

And here is where I make some uncomfortable:

Mitt's views of America are highly Mormon. According to that religion, there is a magical-ness about this place (especially Missouri) - a New Jerusalem it is called.

This dovetails very well with the fundamentalist Christians in this country who believe it is their duty to bring a Christian Dominion to this earth.

Yes, people really believe this stuff.

48 Schadenfreude 'r' Us  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:36:45pm

re: #42 freetoken

There's some real historical fantasy going on there, and it comes straight from what I call the America-Religion.

Reality - one of my grandfathers came through Ellis Island from the old country. He was a little kid, and his mother brought him here to join his father who had come a couple of years earlier.

And why did they come, because there was "opportunity" here? Well, yes, but that is only half the story. The other half is that life was very hard in the old country, with much hunger and poverty. In my great grandparent's case it was simply the local land couldn't support any more food production (given the ag tech of the late 19th century) for the population.

That's the part Romney and the America-Religion seem to keep overlooking - that it often wasn't the carrot of "opportunity" that could drag people halfway around the world on life threatening trips, but rather the stick of death, disease, oppression (religious, ethnic, creedal), and warfare that was driving people away from their homeland.

In the world of America-Religion fantasy, people are magically drawn here by a force. In reality, people just don't want to be hungry or shot at.

Another thing that gets ignored is that about a third of the people who came to the "land of opportunity" turned around and went back. (Two of my great grandparents came, according to family tradition, to get away from their in-laws. They stayed.)

49 Destro  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:38:28pm

re: #42 freetoken

There's some real historical fantasy going on there, and it comes straight from what I call the America-Religion.

Reality - one of my grandfathers came through Ellis Island from the old country. He was a little kid, and his mother brought him here to join his father who had come a couple of years earlier.

And why did they come, because there was "opportunity" here? Well, yes, but that is only half the story. The other half is that life was very hard in the old country, with much hunger and poverty. In my great grandparent's case it was simply the local land couldn't support any more food production (given the ag tech of the late 19th century) for the population.

That's the part Romney and the America-Religion seem to keep overlooking - that it often wasn't the carrot of "opportunity" that could drag people halfway around the world on life threatening trips, but rather the stick of death, disease, oppression (religious, ethnic, creedal), and warfare that was driving people away from their homeland.

In the world of America-Religion fantasy, people are magically drawn here by a force. In reality, people just don't want to be hungry or shot at.

The Indians needed to be wiped out so we can have all that free land for all those people and then there were the slaves.

50 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:38:34pm

re: #48 Someone Please Beam Me Up!

Maybe someone ought to point out, along that line, that Romney's own family fled the US to live in Mexico.

Maybe, just maybe, someone might ask Mitt about that one when he orates upon the magical-ness of America.

51 Lidane  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:38:54pm

re: #47 freetoken

Yes, people really believe this stuff.

Once you accept the idea that there's a mythical sky father out there watching everything you do and say and who hangs the promise of eternal life and the threat of eternal hellfire over your head, anything is possible.

52 Destro  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:41:55pm

re: #50 freetoken

Maybe someone ought to point out, along that line, that Romney's own family fled the US to live in Mexico.

Maybe, just maybe, someone might ask Mitt about that one when he orates upon the magical-ness of America.

Heh, facts are funny things.

53 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:42:14pm

re: #51 Lidane

Once you accept the idea that there's a mythical sky father out there watching everything you do and say and who hangs the promise of eternal life and the threat of eternal hellfire over your head, anything is possible.

Sky gods are fine and dandy, but everyone knows its all really about gathering skulls for the Skull Throne.

54 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:43:40pm

Hehe... another case of one Republican calling out another over releasing tax returns:

McMahon, Shays face off in final Senate debate

The two Republican candidates for Connecticut's open U.S. Senate seat tussled Wednesday night over tax policy and tax returns during their final debate before next month's GOP primary.

Wealthy, former wrestling executive Linda McMahon, the party's endorsed candidate, said during a live, televised debate hosted by NBC Connecticut that she will release her federal income tax returns for 2011, but only when they are finished.

"When it's done, we'll release them," she said, adding how she and her husband Vince McMahon, the CEO of WWE, formerly known as World Wrestling Entertainment, filed for an extension with the IRS because they are still awaiting information that they have "no control" over.

She would not commit to releasing her 2010 returns.

McMahon did not provide a date or say whether the 2011 returns will be released before the Aug. 14 primary, which prompted criticism from her GOP rival, former U.S. Rep. Christopher Shays. He said by not providing a timeframe for when the tax returns will be released "calls into question her integrity." He also accused her of having no respect for the political process and wanting to buy the election.

"She has control over that," said Shays, who has released his 2011 returns to the media. "The fact she won't tell you when is what's surprising."

[...]

55 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:46:09pm

re: #54 freetoken

Hehe... another case of one Republican calling out another over releasing tax returns:

McMahon, Shays face off in final Senate debate

Better watch out. McMahon might get him with a steel chair while his back is turned.

56 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:47:06pm

re: #55 Kragar

Better watch out. McMahon might get him with a steel chair while his back is turned.

What?! Head-shots are not allowed anymore?

57 Four More Tears  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:48:32pm

re: #47 freetoken

Take a look at Scientology and you'll stop being amazed at the stupid crap people can believe in.

58 Digital Display  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:49:23pm

Hi Lizards.. I'm all packed for a weekend journey to the mountains..
I'm selecting a place to retire. Next weekend I'm visiting an old friend from college that has a wicked flat in SF. She is looking for a roommate in the City.
By Sept. I hope to find a landing place for Winston and I. It's pretty exciting time and thank Gawd Bain Capital provided all the Roads, Airports and Infrastructure for me to succeed in this endeavor.
/

59 goddamnedfrank  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:53:23pm

re: #58 Digital Display

Hi Lizards.. I'm all packed for a weekend journey to the mountains..
I'm selecting a place to retire. Next weekend I'm visiting an old friend from college that has a wicked flat in SF. She is looking for a roommate in the City.
By Sept. I hope to find a landing place for Winston and I. It's pretty exciting time and thank Gawd Bain Capital provided all the Roads, Airports and Infrastructure for me to succeed in this endeavor.
/

Are you keeping the lake house?

60 dragonath  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:55:47pm

The Republican bench must be really thin if McMahon's running again. If Shays doesn't win, they're going to be beat like a gong in the general.

61 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 1:58:41pm

re: #60 Fred Galt

The GOP doesn't have a deep "bench" outside of the atavistic tea partiers.

The lingering upper-class Republicans in the northeast are a greying lot. I think that is one reason whey they rally around Christie - he's one of the few young Republicans in that part of the country that might have a future.

62 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:00:12pm

Conspiracists Adopt NRA Talking Points on UN Arms Treaty

Since UN talks about the ATT began on July 2, FrontPage Magazine, Andrew Breitbart’s Big Government, WorldNetDaily, and myriad other far-right “news” outlets have issued panicked articles denouncing the treaty as plot to gut the Second Amendment, destroy America, and pave the way for the establishment of a one-world government.

Particularly freaked out is the John Birch Society (JBS), a famously paranoid organization best known for accusing President Dwight D. Eisenhower of being a secret communist and for opining that fluoridated water is a communist plot to poison America.

In a recent article for the JBS mouthpiece The New American, Joe Wolverton II described the ATT as a “globalist agenda” bent on “the incremental dismantling of the U.S. Constitution and the sovereignty it protects.”

63 darthstar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:00:52pm

Just saw a clip of the Zimmerman interview. Fucker's totally reading from a teleprompter. Nice job, Hannity, you fucking douche...trying to elevate this murdering cocksucker.

64 darthstar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:01:17pm

re: #63 darthstar

Just saw a clip of the Zimmerman interview. Fucker's totally reading from a teleprompter. Nice job, Hannity, you fucking douche...trying to elevate this murdering cocksucker.

You don't think "murdering cocksucker" is too harsh a term, do you?

65 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:02:41pm

re: #64 darthstar

You don't think "murdering cocksucker" is too harsh a term, do you?

Not nearly harsh enough for a pig fucking shiteater like GZ.

66 Digital Display  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:06:55pm

re: #59 goddamnedfrank

Are you keeping the lake house?

The Taxes are really high..I'm thinking of selling it.

67 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:10:33pm

The fat lady would be singing but she died of heat stroke:

Global emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) [PDF] – the main cause of global warming – increased by 3% in 2011, reaching an all-time high of 34 billion tonnes in 2011. In 2011, China’s average per capita carbon dioxide (CO2 ) emissions increased by 9% to 7.2 tonnes CO2. Taking into account an uncertainty margin of 10%, this is similar to the per capita emissions in the European Union of 7.5 tonnes in 2011, the year in which the European Union saw a decrease in emissions of 3%. China, the world’s most populous country, is now well within the 6 to 19 tonnes/person range spanned by the major industrialised countries. In comparison, in 2011, the United States was still one of the largest emitters of CO2, with 17.3 tonnes in per capita emissions, after a steep decline mainly caused by the recession in 2008–2009, high oil prices compared to low fuel taxes and an increased share of natural gas.

With a decrease in 2008 and a 5% surge in 2010, the past decade saw an average annual increase of 2.7%. The top 5 emitters are China (share 29%), the United States (16%), the European Union (EU27) (11%), India (6%) and the Russian Federation (5%), followed by Japan (4%). The fact that global emissions continued this historical growth trend in 2011 seems remarkable at first sight, considering that in many OECD countries CO2 emissions in fact decreased – in the European Union by 3%, in the United States by 2% and in Japan by 2% – mainly due to weak economic conditions in many countries, mild winter weather in several countries and high oil prices. More important, however, is that CO2 emissions from OECD countries now account for only one third of global emissions – the same share as that of China and India, where emissions increased by 9% and 6%, respectively, in 2011. The increase in China’s CO2
emissions was mainly due to a continued high economic growth rate, with related increases in fossil fuel consumption. This increase in fuel consumption in 2011 was mainly driven by the increase in building construction and expansion of infrastructure, as indicated by the growth in cement and steel production. Domestic coal consumption grew by 9.7% and coal import increased by 10%, making China the world’s largest coal importer, overtaking Japan.

Levels of global CO2 emissions from flaring of unused gas
during oil production, which have decreased by about 25% since 2003, did not significantly change in 2011. They roughly amount to the total of CO2 emissions in Spain.

However, according to satellite observations, flaring emissions in the United States are on the rise, with a steep 50% increase in 2011. The main cause is the recent sharp increase in the country’s use of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, for shale oil production and its ensuing flaring of co-produced gas. Recently, the United States also expanded shale gas fracking and has now become the largest natural gas producer in the world.

Since 2000, an estimated total of 420 billion tonnes CO2 was cumulatively emitted due to human activities (including deforestation). Scientific literature suggests that limiting average global temperature rise to 2 °C above pre-industrial levels – the target internationally adopted in UN climate negotiations – is possible if cumulative emissions in the 2000 2050 period do not exceed 1,000 to 1,500 billion tonnes CO2. If the current global increase in CO2 emissions continues, cumulative emissions will surpass this total within the next two decades.

68 darthstar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:11:56pm

Well, Mitt Romney's not the only one who won't release his bundlers...apparently the Utah authorities won't release one with less than 750,000 bond.

69 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:14:34pm

re: #68 darthstar

Well, Mitt Romney's not the only one who won't release his bundlers...apparently the Utah authorities won't release one with less than 750,000 bond.

[Embedded content]

He should just tell them it was part of God's plan. How can it be bad if God planned it?

70 freetoken  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:17:14pm

re: #69 Kragar

He should just tell them it was part of God's plan. How can it be bad if God planned it?

Speaking of which, theologian Peter Enns, who has gained some notice since being associated with Biologos, has been taking direct shots at some of the more simpler minded literalist thinking wrt God, these past few months. Today's posting is straight to the point:

Children and Virgins as Spoils of War and the Character of God

71 HappyWarrior  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:17:34pm

This is just pathetic. It feels like we haven't learned a damn thing from the past.

72 William of Orange  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:17:42pm

To insert another Batman reference:

HOLY BULLCRAP, BATMAN!! EVEN JOHN BOEHNER BLASTS BACHMANN.

(That's a lot of B-s...)

She's almost all on her own, the girl who cried wolf.

73 darthstar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:21:29pm

re: #69 Kragar

He should just tell them it was part of God's plan. How can it be bad if God planned it?

You can't use a political fundraising retreat as a rape cabin...we're running for office, for pete's sake.

74 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:22:16pm

re: #73 darthstar

You can't use a political fundraising retreat as a rape cabin...we're running for office, for pete's sake.

"You can't fight here! This is the War Room!"

75 Kragar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:22:36pm

re: #70 freetoken

Speaking of which, theologian Peter Enns, who has gained some notice since being associated with Biologos, has been taking direct shots at some of the more simpler minded literalist thinking wrt God, these past few months. Today's posting is straight to the point:

Children and Virgins as Spoils of War and the Character of God

Blood for the Blood God indeed.

76 darthstar  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:23:49pm
77 Big Joe Ghazi  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:26:26pm

re: #68 darthstar

Well, Mitt Romney's not the only one who won't release his bundlers...apparently the Utah authorities won't release one with less than 750,000 bond.

[Embedded content]

A close personal friend of Mitt Romney too.

78 William of Orange  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:26:40pm

re: #68 darthstar

Well, Mitt Romney's not the only one who won't release his bundlers...apparently the Utah authorities won't release one with less than 750,000 bond.

[Embedded content]

In all honesty, I think Romney is a douche but pinning a rape case to him by proxy is far fetched, though I think it will be bad for him if he doesn't distance himself from this individual vehemently.

79 Big Joe Ghazi  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:27:48pm

Pallin' around with rapists.*

80 wrenchwench  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:38:46pm

re: #73 darthstar

You can't use a political fundraising retreat as a rape cabin...we're running for office, for pete's sake.

Breitbart's gone, and they really need him now...

STOP RAPING PEOPLE!!!!11!

81 BongCrodny  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:40:51pm

Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you Michele Bachman -- your next Secretary of State!


(Boy, if that ain't reason enough to vote the Big O back into office, you're impossible to convince.)

82 erik_t  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:41:53pm

re: #81 BongCrodny

Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you Michele Bachman -- your next Secretary of State!

(Boy, if that ain't reason enough to vote the Big O back into office, you're impossible to convince.)

I almost reflex-downdinged you just out of proximity.

83 Ben G. Hazi  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:45:24pm

re: #22 lawhawk

Rush commits to derpularity over his Batman Bain-Bane comments.

Rush is not a stupid man, but he does cater to stupid people.

84 Daniel Ballard  Thu, Jul 19, 2012 2:45:26pm

re: #27 erik_t

It is? Where?

Did you miss all this? I was glad to see Stewart take these guys too the woodshed.


This article has been archived.
Comments are closed.

Jump to top

Create a PageThis is the LGF Pages posting bookmarklet. To use it, drag this button to your browser's bookmark bar, and title it 'LGF Pages' (or whatever you like). Then browse to a site you want to post, select some text on the page to use for a quote, click the bookmarklet, and the Pages posting window will appear with the title, text, and any embedded video or audio files already filled in, ready to go.
Or... you can just click this button to open the Pages posting window right away.
Last updated: 2023-04-04 11:11 am PDT
LGF User's Guide RSS Feeds

Help support Little Green Footballs!

Subscribe now for ad-free access!Register and sign in to a free LGF account before subscribing, and your ad-free access will be automatically enabled.

Donate with
PayPal
Cash.app
Recent PagesClick to refresh
The Pandemic Cost 7 Million Lives, but Talks to Prevent a Repeat Stall In late 2021, as the world reeled from the arrival of the highly contagious omicron variant of the coronavirus, representatives of almost 200 countries met - some online, some in-person in Geneva - hoping to forestall a future worldwide ...
Cheechako
Yesterday
Views: 88 • Comments: 0 • Rating: 1
Texas County at Center of Border Fight Is Overwhelmed by Migrant Deaths EAGLE PASS, Tex. - The undertaker lighted a cigarette and held it between his latex-gloved fingers as he stood over the bloated body bag lying in the bed of his battered pickup truck. The woman had been fished out ...
Cheechako
2 weeks ago
Views: 258 • Comments: 0 • Rating: 1