Why are tea baggers white?

AnnaG

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Jul 5, 2009
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Really? Then why are you participating here? Are you also trolling? or are you the only voice of reason here?
You are leaping face-first into Lake ASSumption as usual I see. When I saw the title I expected to see facts, evidence, etc. about the rate of crime concerning blacks and whites in the US. I imagine Les did, too.

Something like what's in Wiki:

Crime in the United States - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

By the way, Joke, aren't your questions to my husband rather trollish in themselves? How about all those snide remarks about conservatives, right-wingers, Republicans, Christians, etc. that you spew. I'd suggest that you are one of the most profuse hypocrites here that isn't bright enough to stop calling the kettle black.
 

AnnaG

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Anyway, usually the most crime is done by those who are disadvantaged. The poor simply want what the rich have and won't share. Given the same opportunities, I would bet that African Americans would be no more prone to crime than palefaces.It isn't that easy to escape slums. It is as if one is conditioned into failure there. Take a look at Mississippi and a couple others in that neighborhood, they still practise segregation there in a few spots. I bet there are a few more reasons, as well.
 

YukonJack

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First of all, "tea-baggers are those who love to suck on tea bags.

Like those who approve gay marriage. Those who love unnatural openings for pleasure. Those whose taste in chocolate is expressed in tasting excrement.

Those who protest against high taxes, too much government and freedom are TEA-PARTIERS.

Hate them, if you must. Fear them in November 2010.
 

YukonJack

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I guess you missed the news item where an African-American was savagely beaten by SEIU Union thugs for carrying a sign opposing the government.
 

ironsides

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Feb 13, 2009
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This could very be the third political party some are suggesting for the United States.

Tea party movement grows

Efforts could shake up 2010 elections

By Anthony Man, Political Writer
10:03 PM EST, December 28, 2009

It could be the birth of a party.

Fueled by anger at politicians and distrust of the government, the rapidly growing tea party movement could upend the political establishment in the 2010 elections -- ultimately becoming a permanent, game-changing force in American politics.

Or, it could fizzle.

Even supporters aren't sure. Joyce Kaufman, a talk-show host on WFTL, AM 850, thinks the answer will come in the November elections. "If nothing happens in 2010, it falls apart," she said.

But she doesn't see that happening.

"It's going to be a huge dynamic. I don't think it's going to be easily defused. I think what you're going to see is an energized voice. What they will do is come out and vote. The tea party movement is going to make a difference," Kaufman said.

From its start in February with an on-air rant by CNBC analyst Rick Santelli, who said he was organizing a "Tea Party" for those opposed to the president's proposed homeowner bailout plan, the tea party brand has become formidable. Protesters turned out for tea party demonstrations in cities across the country on April 15, then again to voice their opposition to health care legislation at town hall meetings throughout the summer.

Now, tea party supporters and related groups have picked up where the demonstrations left off. They are active throughout the United States and in South Florida, where they're holding regular protests, preparing to register voters and recruiting more and more followers.

An NBC/Wall Street Journal poll this month showed more than four in 10 Americans have a favorable view of the movement, significantly more than the 24 percent with a negative opinion. That was better than the 35 percent positive rating for Democrats and the 28 percent Republicans got. In a Rasmussen poll in December, more people said they would vote for tea party movement candidates than for Republican ones -- 23 percent to 18 percent, respectively.

Supporters disagree over how to best harness the movement's energy.

Charlotte Beasley, a Republican who unsuccessfully challenged Democratic Palm Beach County Commissioner Burt Aaronson in 2008, said she thinks a tea party third party would be strong -- and she's a member of the Republican Executive Committee, the governing body of the Palm Beach County Republican Party.

She thinks it would get something done. "It would hurt the Republican Party absolutely, but I think it's a good idea. People have a bad taste for Democrats and a bad taste for Republicans," she said.

Danita Kilcullen, of Fort Lauderdale, co-leader of the tea party group that protests every Saturday afternoon at the intersection of Oakland Park Boulevard and Federal Highway, said she thinks a tea party "third party" is a bad idea.

"I know that there's talk," she said. "I'm not for any third party that splits the [Republican] Party. I just want the Republican Party to get back on track. That's really what we want."

Political science professor Robert Watson, director of American studies at Lynn University in Boca Raton, said a third party won't happen.

"Everybody wants a third party, and everybody says the time is right, but it just doesn't happen," he said. " Ralph Nader and Ross Perot were interesting and enigmatic, but even they couldn't get a third party going."

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/elections/fl-tea-party-movement-20091228,0,3440323,print.story

 

Kakato

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First of all, "tea-baggers are those who love to suck on tea bags.

Like those who approve gay marriage. Those who love unnatural openings for pleasure. Those whose taste in chocolate is expressed in tasting excrement.

Those who protest against high taxes, too much government and freedom are TEA-PARTIERS.

Hate them, if you must. Fear them in November 2010.

That's not what a teabagger is.:lol:
No tea involved allthough a bag is.
 

ironsides

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Feb 13, 2009
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There is a famous video on internet, of a FOX reporter inciting the tea party crowds. So FOX not only promotes tea parties on the news, they actually make the tea parties happen.

Nothig wrong with pushing a idea or agenda. Nothing would ever get done if someone just left it to the other guy,

BLACK REPUBLICAN: National Black Republican Association E-News

BLACK REPUBLICAN: National Black Republican Association E-News: Obama – Carter's Black Boy

"The insinuation in this letter is that the members of the Tea Party are against President Barack Obama because he is a black. Are you aware that the chairman of our local tea party is black?"
Tea Party critics ones who went too far | GoDanRiver


Just in case anyone thinks that all Blacks support President Obama. Surprise!! They don't.
 

Kakato

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I stand corrected,tea partiers are now known as tea baggers!:lol:

Only now, the protesters and their organizers are fighting a battle on two fronts: not only against what they see as a government gone wild with giveaways; but ridicule for the double meaning of "tea bagging."

The cheeky Urban Dictionary has expanded its definition of "tea bagger" from "a man that dips his scrotum and testicles into the mouth of another person" to include "a conservative activist who is so ignorant that they protest against tax cuts (that benefit them) by throwing tea into a river."

Proving that she’s as hip to the gay underworld as she is to politics (or lesbian life), Rachel Maddow covered this burning topic on her MSNBC program. As seen here, she’s using all of her journalistic skills to keep from cracking up.
YouTube - The Rachel Maddow Show: Insani-Tea: Conservatives Rally Around "Teabagging"
 

YukonJack

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"Still like to know why tea baggers seem to be mostly white?"

Perhaps because they - as a group - pay the highest taxes and they are the ones most threatened by Obama's "redistribution of wealth" scheme in order to support the free-loaders.
 

YukonJack

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Would one be correct to question the mental stability, indeed, the sanity of any group of people who vote 87% to one party?

Would whites be considered redneck morons if 87% of whites voted Republican?

Just asking!
 

YukonJack

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"Considering the mess those non-"freeloaders" have made, maybe all their pennies should be taken away. They've already proven they're not deserving"

Yeah, go ahead lone wolf! Just remember the words (paraphrased) of Lincoln that you can not make the poor rich by making the rich poor. Or (again, paraphrased) the words of Margaret Thatcher who said that socialism is wonderful until it runs out of someone else's money.
 

Kakato

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Would one be correct to question the mental stability, indeed, the sanity of any group of people who vote 87% to one party?

Would whites be considered redneck morons if 87% of whites voted Republican?

Just asking!

Well if the majority voted for him then I see no reason to question who they voted for unless you got a bad case of sour grapes.
Your stereotyping and attempting to pidgeon hole people.
Who cares what color they are?
 

lone wolf

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Nov 25, 2006
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"Considering the mess those non-"freeloaders" have made, maybe all their pennies should be taken away. They've already proven they're not deserving"

Yeah, go ahead lone wolf! Just remember the words (paraphrased) of Lincoln that you can not make the poor rich by making the rich poor. Or (again, paraphrased) the words of Margaret Thatcher who said that socialism is wonderful until it runs out of someone else's money.

Socialism is just your assumption.
 

YukonJack

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"Socialism is just your assumption."

No, lone wolf, it is not. Facts (already seen) and intentions (to be seen) by Obama should be enough to give all the producers a scare.
 

lone wolf

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And it concerns me how? Obama is NOT the Canadian president. If you don't like him, bitch out an American forum.

How many times have you used our "socialist" healthcare system
 

Kakato

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They are Hispanic and White, so what? Those two groups make up the majority in the U.S.

I think he was referring to what teabagging meant before the tea partys.
Tea bagging is when someone squats over someone(usually passed out) and dips their testicles onto the victims face.
Pictures are then taken along with a video to be published on youtube the next day.:lol: