• Republicans deserve to catch COVID-19.

    From Ubiquitous@21:1/5 to All on Mon Aug 9 00:51:28 2021
    XPost: alt.checkmate, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism
    XPost: alt.politics, alt.politics.trump, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.politics.democrats, alt.abortion, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic
    XPost: alt.recovery.catholicism, soc.women

    a322x1n wrote


    <https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/republicans-anti-government-
    chick
    ens-have-finally-come-home-to-roost/ar-AAMtL2y?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531>

    <https://tinyurl.com/ytmfjb6v>

    Republicans' anti-government chickens have finally come home to roost
    Heather Digby Parton 10 hrs ago.

    "Donald Trump, Kevin McCarthy, Marjorie Taylor-Greene and Mitch
    McConnell Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images

    Ronald Reagan, the most beloved president of the modern Republican Party (before Donald J. Trump, anyway) had a very famous saying:

    "The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from
    the Government, and I'm here to help."

    It was a clever comment that the leaders of the conservative movement
    never took seriously, of course. The Republicans were always big
    boosters of first responders, cops and the military who are generally
    the ones who literally say "I'm from the government and I'm here to
    help." But the anti-government sentiment worked well for the wealthy benefactors who paid these politicians handsomely to keep their taxes
    low and regulations scarce.

    They also used that message to persuade voters that the government was
    trying to oppress them with everything from creeping communism to
    affirmative action and women's rights. In other words, everything these people already hated was blamed on Big Government by the very people who
    ran it. The subtext of much of this was race, of course, as the cynical conservatives managed to convince people that the government was doling
    out handouts to the "undeserving" (and I think you know who they were
    talking about) in the form of welfare, while the hard-working Real
    Americans were paying the freight and getting the shaft.

    Over time they were able to demagogue the issue so thoroughly that
    average Republicans routinely voted against their own interests out of a reflexive hostility to anything the government tried to do (other than
    wage war, which they loved.) When the financial crisis hit in 2007 and
    the government was required to intervene or risk the whole economic
    system going into free fall, it was clear just how successful they had
    been.

    Almost immediately, a rebellion against the government helping "irresponsible" homeowners became the rallying cry of the
    anti-government right and the Tea Party was born. The GOP knew that government intervention was necessary but they made sure that the banks
    and the wealthy were taken care of while forcing everything else to be
    done on the cheap. The result was a very slow recovery and long-term
    damage to the average American household, which worked out well for them politically and further discredited government in the minds of many Americans.

    The Obamacare wars flowed naturally from that, with half the country hysterical at the idea the government was going to choose their doctors
    and decide who lives or dies. Their fears were stoked by right-wing politicians who suspected that the program might work and restore
    people's faith in the government to deliver needed benefits. Then where
    would they be?

    There were dozens of conspiracy theories floating around from "death
    panels" to implanted microchips, to a giant government database that was going to house every personal piece of health information on every
    American. All of this inane resistance was fueled by the right's
    decades-long anti-government propaganda campaign.

    Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

    Fast forward to 2020 and the first global pandemic in a hundred years
    with an incompetent narcissist in charge. Between his ineptitude and self-serving desire to pretend that the crisis didn't exist and the
    years of mistrust in the government, the U.S. ended up with an epic
    disaster and half the population refusing to acknowledge it existed.
    Today, we're facing a situation in which tens of millions of people are refusing vaccines because they believe in daft conspiracy theories or
    are convinced the government is lying to them even in the face of over 600,000 deaths.

    Throughout all this, most Republican officials have either been actively hostile to medical experts and their advice or they have been strangely passive, simply shrugging their shoulders as if this is just a normal
    part of life and everyone just needs to buck up. They refused to wear
    masks and social distance, they've egged on protesters and encouraged
    the right-wing media, which has been feeding snake oil, lies and
    conspiracy theories to their voters since the pandemic began.

    Fox News has been particularly egregious in its objectively pro-COVID propaganda. Their headliners Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and Sean
    Hannity have all taken slightly different approaches. Carlson has gone
    with his patented dark conspiracy-mongering, playing off of the right's
    new "Deep State" narrative to suggest that the government is forcing
    people to take vaccines against their will and that the shots are
    killing people. Ingraham has been an inveterate pusher of quacks and
    bogus cures while blaming it all on immigrants as usual while Hannity
    has been playing both sides, telling people to take the virus seriously
    in one breath and skepticism in the other. (One suspects this relates to
    his close relationship with Donald Trump, who similarly twists himself
    into a pretzel on this subject, wanting credit for the vaccines but
    being unable to buck the conspiracy addled anti-vax sentiment of his followers.)

    Most of the rest of the right-wing media have followed the same trends -
    at least until this week.

    Suddenly, we have been seeing members of Fox News breaking with their
    stars and making heartfelt PSA's exhorting people to get the vaccines, something we've never seen before: Watch the latest video at
    foxnews.com. Newsmax CEO, and friend of Trump, Chris Ruddy wrote a
    glowing op-ed complimenting President Biden on his vaccine program. One
    of the House leaders, Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La, a vaccine holdout, very ostentatiously got vaccinated and told anyone who'd listen that they
    should do it as well. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis actually went out
    and urged his constituents to get vaccinated now that his state is being overrun with COVID. Again.

    The question on everyone's mind is, "What happened?"

    Obviously, it's tied to the new surge of cases as the highly
    transmissible Delta variant runs through the population of unvaccinated people who are, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation,
    heavily tilted toward Republicans. As of the end of last month, 86% of Democrats had at least one shot compared to 52% of Republicans. And it's
    not getting any better.

    Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

    Have they seen polling indicating that they are losing ground with their
    own voters over their lack on engagement? Are they suddenly worried that their base is going to die and leave them short of needed votes? It's
    hard to say. But I think MSNBC's Chris Hayes was on to something when he suggested that they had thought they could stick with the base and its anti-vax, anti-Big Government attitude about this (continuing to reap
    the rewards that brings to them politically) and let Joe Biden's administration do the heavy lifting of getting their states vaccinated -
    at which point they would swoop in and say what a terrible job he did.
    (This works for them every time a GOP administration leaves the country
    in shambles and the Democrats have to clean up their mess.)

    The problem is that the virus is spreading, restrictions have been
    lifted and the Republican base is refusing to save itself. The anti-government chickens have finally come home to roost - and they're killing Republicans."



    The only good Trumper is a dead one anyway. It's God's will.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ubiquitous@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 20 13:06:27 2021
    XPost: alt.checkmate, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism
    XPost: alt.politics, alt.politics.trump, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.politics.democrats, alt.abortion, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic
    XPost: alt.recovery.catholicism, soc.women

    a322x1n wrote


    <https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/republicans-anti-government-
    chick
    ens-have-finally-come-home-to-roost/ar-AAMtL2y?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531>

    <https://tinyurl.com/ytmfjb6v>

    Republicans' anti-government chickens have finally come home to roost
    Heather Digby Parton 10 hrs ago.

    "Donald Trump, Kevin McCarthy, Marjorie Taylor-Greene and Mitch
    McConnell Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images

    Ronald Reagan, the most beloved president of the modern Republican Party (before Donald J. Trump, anyway) had a very famous saying:

    "The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from
    the Government, and I'm here to help."

    It was a clever comment that the leaders of the conservative movement
    never took seriously, of course. The Republicans were always big
    boosters of first responders, cops and the military who are generally
    the ones who literally say "I'm from the government and I'm here to
    help." But the anti-government sentiment worked well for the wealthy benefactors who paid these politicians handsomely to keep their taxes
    low and regulations scarce.

    They also used that message to persuade voters that the government was
    trying to oppress them with everything from creeping communism to
    affirmative action and women's rights. In other words, everything these people already hated was blamed on Big Government by the very people who
    ran it. The subtext of much of this was race, of course, as the cynical conservatives managed to convince people that the government was doling
    out handouts to the "undeserving" (and I think you know who they were
    talking about) in the form of welfare, while the hard-working Real
    Americans were paying the freight and getting the shaft.

    Over time they were able to demagogue the issue so thoroughly that
    average Republicans routinely voted against their own interests out of a reflexive hostility to anything the government tried to do (other than
    wage war, which they loved.) When the financial crisis hit in 2007 and
    the government was required to intervene or risk the whole economic
    system going into free fall, it was clear just how successful they had
    been.

    Almost immediately, a rebellion against the government helping "irresponsible" homeowners became the rallying cry of the
    anti-government right and the Tea Party was born. The GOP knew that government intervention was necessary but they made sure that the banks
    and the wealthy were taken care of while forcing everything else to be
    done on the cheap. The result was a very slow recovery and long-term
    damage to the average American household, which worked out well for them politically and further discredited government in the minds of many Americans.

    The Obamacare wars flowed naturally from that, with half the country hysterical at the idea the government was going to choose their doctors
    and decide who lives or dies. Their fears were stoked by right-wing politicians who suspected that the program might work and restore
    people's faith in the government to deliver needed benefits. Then where
    would they be?

    There were dozens of conspiracy theories floating around from "death
    panels" to implanted microchips, to a giant government database that was going to house every personal piece of health information on every
    American. All of this inane resistance was fueled by the right's
    decades-long anti-government propaganda campaign.

    Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

    Fast forward to 2020 and the first global pandemic in a hundred years
    with an incompetent narcissist in charge. Between his ineptitude and self-serving desire to pretend that the crisis didn't exist and the
    years of mistrust in the government, the U.S. ended up with an epic
    disaster and half the population refusing to acknowledge it existed.
    Today, we're facing a situation in which tens of millions of people are refusing vaccines because they believe in daft conspiracy theories or
    are convinced the government is lying to them even in the face of over 600,000 deaths.

    Throughout all this, most Republican officials have either been actively hostile to medical experts and their advice or they have been strangely passive, simply shrugging their shoulders as if this is just a normal
    part of life and everyone just needs to buck up. They refused to wear
    masks and social distance, they've egged on protesters and encouraged
    the right-wing media, which has been feeding snake oil, lies and
    conspiracy theories to their voters since the pandemic began.

    Fox News has been particularly egregious in its objectively pro-COVID propaganda. Their headliners Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and Sean
    Hannity have all taken slightly different approaches. Carlson has gone
    with his patented dark conspiracy-mongering, playing off of the right's
    new "Deep State" narrative to suggest that the government is forcing
    people to take vaccines against their will and that the shots are
    killing people. Ingraham has been an inveterate pusher of quacks and
    bogus cures while blaming it all on immigrants as usual while Hannity
    has been playing both sides, telling people to take the virus seriously
    in one breath and skepticism in the other. (One suspects this relates to
    his close relationship with Donald Trump, who similarly twists himself
    into a pretzel on this subject, wanting credit for the vaccines but
    being unable to buck the conspiracy addled anti-vax sentiment of his followers.)

    Most of the rest of the right-wing media have followed the same trends -
    at least until this week.

    Suddenly, we have been seeing members of Fox News breaking with their
    stars and making heartfelt PSA's exhorting people to get the vaccines, something we've never seen before: Watch the latest video at
    foxnews.com. Newsmax CEO, and friend of Trump, Chris Ruddy wrote a
    glowing op-ed complimenting President Biden on his vaccine program. One
    of the House leaders, Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La, a vaccine holdout, very ostentatiously got vaccinated and told anyone who'd listen that they
    should do it as well. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis actually went out
    and urged his constituents to get vaccinated now that his state is being overrun with COVID. Again.

    The question on everyone's mind is, "What happened?"

    Obviously, it's tied to the new surge of cases as the highly
    transmissible Delta variant runs through the population of unvaccinated people who are, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation,
    heavily tilted toward Republicans. As of the end of last month, 86% of Democrats had at least one shot compared to 52% of Republicans. And it's
    not getting any better.

    Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

    Have they seen polling indicating that they are losing ground with their
    own voters over their lack on engagement? Are they suddenly worried that their base is going to die and leave them short of needed votes? It's
    hard to say. But I think MSNBC's Chris Hayes was on to something when he suggested that they had thought they could stick with the base and its anti-vax, anti-Big Government attitude about this (continuing to reap
    the rewards that brings to them politically) and let Joe Biden's administration do the heavy lifting of getting their states vaccinated -
    at which point they would swoop in and say what a terrible job he did.
    (This works for them every time a GOP administration leaves the country
    in shambles and the Democrats have to clean up their mess.)

    The problem is that the virus is spreading, restrictions have been
    lifted and the Republican base is refusing to save itself. The anti-government chickens have finally come home to roost - and they're killing Republicans."



    The only good Trumper is a dead one anyway. It's God's will.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Text-Drivers R Killers@21:1/5 to Lamey on Wed Oct 20 13:06:50 2021
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, alt.politics
    XPost: alt.politics.trump, alt.politics.republicans, alt.politics.democrats XPost: alt.abortion, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic, alt.recovery.catholicism
    XPost: soc.women

    Lamey wrote

    Hell no.

    Hope you have to pay cash at the hospital and for the funeral.


    COVID is draining the swamp of rightwing imbeciles.


    It's a gift from God.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ubiquitous@21:1/5 to All on Tue Nov 2 00:20:39 2021
    XPost: alt.checkmate, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism
    XPost: alt.politics, alt.politics.trump, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.politics.democrats, alt.abortion, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic
    XPost: alt.recovery.catholicism, soc.women

    a322x1n wrote


    <https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/republicans-anti-government-
    chick
    ens-have-finally-come-home-to-roost/ar-AAMtL2y?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531>

    <https://tinyurl.com/ytmfjb6v>

    Republicans' anti-government chickens have finally come home to roost
    Heather Digby Parton 10 hrs ago.

    "Donald Trump, Kevin McCarthy, Marjorie Taylor-Greene and Mitch
    McConnell Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images

    Ronald Reagan, the most beloved president of the modern Republican Party (before Donald J. Trump, anyway) had a very famous saying:

    "The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from
    the Government, and I'm here to help."

    It was a clever comment that the leaders of the conservative movement
    never took seriously, of course. The Republicans were always big
    boosters of first responders, cops and the military who are generally
    the ones who literally say "I'm from the government and I'm here to
    help." But the anti-government sentiment worked well for the wealthy benefactors who paid these politicians handsomely to keep their taxes
    low and regulations scarce.

    They also used that message to persuade voters that the government was
    trying to oppress them with everything from creeping communism to
    affirmative action and women's rights. In other words, everything these people already hated was blamed on Big Government by the very people who
    ran it. The subtext of much of this was race, of course, as the cynical conservatives managed to convince people that the government was doling
    out handouts to the "undeserving" (and I think you know who they were
    talking about) in the form of welfare, while the hard-working Real
    Americans were paying the freight and getting the shaft.

    Over time they were able to demagogue the issue so thoroughly that
    average Republicans routinely voted against their own interests out of a reflexive hostility to anything the government tried to do (other than
    wage war, which they loved.) When the financial crisis hit in 2007 and
    the government was required to intervene or risk the whole economic
    system going into free fall, it was clear just how successful they had
    been.

    Almost immediately, a rebellion against the government helping "irresponsible" homeowners became the rallying cry of the
    anti-government right and the Tea Party was born. The GOP knew that government intervention was necessary but they made sure that the banks
    and the wealthy were taken care of while forcing everything else to be
    done on the cheap. The result was a very slow recovery and long-term
    damage to the average American household, which worked out well for them politically and further discredited government in the minds of many Americans.

    The Obamacare wars flowed naturally from that, with half the country hysterical at the idea the government was going to choose their doctors
    and decide who lives or dies. Their fears were stoked by right-wing politicians who suspected that the program might work and restore
    people's faith in the government to deliver needed benefits. Then where
    would they be?

    There were dozens of conspiracy theories floating around from "death
    panels" to implanted microchips, to a giant government database that was going to house every personal piece of health information on every
    American. All of this inane resistance was fueled by the right's
    decades-long anti-government propaganda campaign.

    Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

    Fast forward to 2020 and the first global pandemic in a hundred years
    with an incompetent narcissist in charge. Between his ineptitude and self-serving desire to pretend that the crisis didn't exist and the
    years of mistrust in the government, the U.S. ended up with an epic
    disaster and half the population refusing to acknowledge it existed.
    Today, we're facing a situation in which tens of millions of people are refusing vaccines because they believe in daft conspiracy theories or
    are convinced the government is lying to them even in the face of over 600,000 deaths.

    Throughout all this, most Republican officials have either been actively hostile to medical experts and their advice or they have been strangely passive, simply shrugging their shoulders as if this is just a normal
    part of life and everyone just needs to buck up. They refused to wear
    masks and social distance, they've egged on protesters and encouraged
    the right-wing media, which has been feeding snake oil, lies and
    conspiracy theories to their voters since the pandemic began.

    Fox News has been particularly egregious in its objectively pro-COVID propaganda. Their headliners Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and Sean
    Hannity have all taken slightly different approaches. Carlson has gone
    with his patented dark conspiracy-mongering, playing off of the right's
    new "Deep State" narrative to suggest that the government is forcing
    people to take vaccines against their will and that the shots are
    killing people. Ingraham has been an inveterate pusher of quacks and
    bogus cures while blaming it all on immigrants as usual while Hannity
    has been playing both sides, telling people to take the virus seriously
    in one breath and skepticism in the other. (One suspects this relates to
    his close relationship with Donald Trump, who similarly twists himself
    into a pretzel on this subject, wanting credit for the vaccines but
    being unable to buck the conspiracy addled anti-vax sentiment of his followers.)

    Most of the rest of the right-wing media have followed the same trends -
    at least until this week.

    Suddenly, we have been seeing members of Fox News breaking with their
    stars and making heartfelt PSA's exhorting people to get the vaccines, something we've never seen before: Watch the latest video at
    foxnews.com. Newsmax CEO, and friend of Trump, Chris Ruddy wrote a
    glowing op-ed complimenting President Biden on his vaccine program. One
    of the House leaders, Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La, a vaccine holdout, very ostentatiously got vaccinated and told anyone who'd listen that they
    should do it as well. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis actually went out
    and urged his constituents to get vaccinated now that his state is being overrun with COVID. Again.

    The question on everyone's mind is, "What happened?"

    Obviously, it's tied to the new surge of cases as the highly
    transmissible Delta variant runs through the population of unvaccinated people who are, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation,
    heavily tilted toward Republicans. As of the end of last month, 86% of Democrats had at least one shot compared to 52% of Republicans. And it's
    not getting any better.

    Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

    Have they seen polling indicating that they are losing ground with their
    own voters over their lack on engagement? Are they suddenly worried that their base is going to die and leave them short of needed votes? It's
    hard to say. But I think MSNBC's Chris Hayes was on to something when he suggested that they had thought they could stick with the base and its anti-vax, anti-Big Government attitude about this (continuing to reap
    the rewards that brings to them politically) and let Joe Biden's administration do the heavy lifting of getting their states vaccinated -
    at which point they would swoop in and say what a terrible job he did.
    (This works for them every time a GOP administration leaves the country
    in shambles and the Democrats have to clean up their mess.)

    The problem is that the virus is spreading, restrictions have been
    lifted and the Republican base is refusing to save itself. The anti-government chickens have finally come home to roost - and they're killing Republicans."



    The only good Trumper is a dead one anyway. It's God's will.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Text-Drivers R Killers@21:1/5 to Lamey on Tue Dec 7 21:26:39 2021
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, alt.politics
    XPost: alt.politics.trump, alt.politics.republicans, alt.politics.democrats XPost: alt.abortion, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic, alt.recovery.catholicism
    XPost: soc.women

    Lamey wrote

    Hell no.

    Hope you have to pay cash at the hospital and for the funeral.


    COVID is draining the swamp of rightwing imbeciles.


    It's a gift from God.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Siegel@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 1 00:34:19 2022
    On Friday, December 10, 2021 at 1:52:27 AM UTC-8, a322x1n wrote:
    "Text-Drivers R Killers" <xeto...@yahoo.com> wrote in news:souhbl$qvg$9...@news.dns-netz.com:
    Lamey wrote

    Hell no.

    Hope you have to pay cash at the hospital and for the funeral.

    COVID is draining the swamp of rightwing imbeciles.

    It's a gift from God.
    Republicans are dying at a rate five times higher than Democrats.


    Oh, come on! Don Lemon and AOC have been spotted in DeSantis's Florida.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Giant Attitude@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 1 00:30:55 2022
    On Friday, December 10, 2021 at 1:52:27 AM UTC-8, a322x1n wrote:
    "Text-Drivers R Killers" <xeto...@yahoo.com> wrote in news:souhbl$qvg$9...@news.dns-netz.com:
    Lamey wrote

    Hell no.

    Hope you have to pay cash at the hospital and for the funeral.

    COVID is draining the swamp of rightwing imbeciles.

    It's a gift from God.
    Republicans are dying at a rate five times higher than Democrats.

    Those who don't die have this to look forward to:

    <https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/long-covid-patients-and-doctors -detail-the-growing-mass-disabling-event-in-america/ar-AARECFl?ocid=msedg dhp&pc=U531>

    <https://tinyurl.com/yc3j5s83>




    But it's largely the people in the blue states who are catching it! Bwa ha ha ha!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)