Tomorrow and Saturday two of the Tea Party movement’s corporate shills, Eric Odom and Allen Fuller, will bring their unique brand of right-wing astroturf to their hometown of Nashville.

The two-day conference, RootsHQ2009, is being billed as a “center-right new media summit” and will cover “social media, new media technology, internet marketing, search engine optimization, collaborative information movements and NOW media.”

But the attention should be on the motivation of both Odom and Fuller and their willingness to misrepresent themselves in order to manipulate the people. The TNDP has the scoop:

Eric Odom and Alan Fuller founded two firms, Strategic Activism and Flat Creek Management, to provide strategic communications and on-line training for Tea Party activists.

“Tea Party demonstrators have been receiving how-to-disrupt packets from organizers like Odom and Fuller, who get paid to stop legislation opposed by their corporate benefactors,” Tennessee Democratic Party Chairman Chip Forrester said.

“People need to stop for a moment and consider who organizes these events and the origins of this movement. It’s beginning to look more and more like corporate interests are fueling the Tea Party movement.”

Last February, Eric Odom was exposed as having ties to Rick Santelli’s rant on CNBC that “spontaneously” launched the Tea Party movement. On the same day of the rant, a website called Officialchicagoteaparty.com and registered to Odom went live. The summer before, Odom had organized DontGo.com, a fake grassroots campaign meant to pressure Congress and Nancy Pelosi to pass an offshore oil drilling bill. And who would this kind of bill benefit? Meet Fred Koch and his family, “multibilllionaire owners of the largest private corporation in America,” “funders of scores of rightwing thinktanks and advocacy groups, from the Cato Institute and Reason Magazine to FreedomWorks,” and “co-founder of the notorious extremist-rightwing John Birch Society.”

Jane Hamsher of FireDogLake produced a Tea Bag movement timeline that prominently features Mr. Odom:

February 19 — Rick Santelli rant: “We’re thinking of having a Chicago Tea Party in July. All you capitalists that want to show up to Lake Michigan, I’m gonna start organizing.” First mention of the term “tea party.” Clip goes straight onto Drudge.

Within hours, a site called officialchicagoteaparty.com went up, with the domain name registered to Eric Odom. At the time he was working for a group called the Sam Adams Alliance, a 501 c(3) non-profit that legally can’t engage in political activity. Its chairman, Eric O’Keeffe, is on the board of the Club for Growth. He’s since been taken off the website, but it’s cached here.

Odom is one of the organizers of the Tax Day Tea Party group, and Matt Stoller accused him of astroturfing during the Drill Drill Drill campaign. Last year the Alliance started “an ambitious project … to encourage right-leaning activists and bloggers to get online and focus on local and state issues.”

February 20: A Facebook page goes up calling for Tea Party demonstrations across the country:

Rick Santelli is right, we need a Taxpayer (Chicago) Tea Party

Rick Santelli is dead right! Enough bailouts of everyone who acted recklessly! It’s time to stand up for all the regular people who played by the rules! Taxpayer Tea Party!

Listed admins include Odom and Brendan Steinhauser of Dick Armey’s Freedomworks. The creator is Phil Kerpen of Americans for Prosperity, and the Facebook Group leads back to a site called taxpayerteaparty.com, run by Americans for Prosperity.

February 27 — the first official “Tea Parties” are held in eight cities across the country. According to John Hendrix, who organized the Tampa Bay event, the original idea came from Tom Gaithens of Newt Gingrich’s Freedomworks.

The idea that the Tea Baggers are a “grassroots” movement that Right Wing infrastructure subsequently tried to exploit is not supported by the facts.

Supported by facts or not, Odom and Fuller will insist that they are grassroots activists and not paid corporate shills.

They’re delusional, writes Matt Stoller at Open Left, “I mean, according to their theory, Newt Gingrich and House Republicans did the messaging and organizing work on a campaign, which was funded by billionaires, and used essentially the same playbook the right has used since 1978, but it finally tipped because some GOP junior consultants with blogs signed up for Twitter. F**king morons.”

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The Rachel Maddow Show investigates RecessRally.com and the people behind the people disrupting the town hall meetings. What Maddow and her staff find is that they’re professional, Republican-staffed organizations and companies who are doing the bidding of their corporate healthcare overlords and who are very adept at using the American people.

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

“These guys are the pros. This is an industry. Americans are showing up at these events to shout down the discussion and chase their Congressman and they are enraged. And they’re enraged at least in part because they’re being riled up by over-the-top fabricated conspiracy theories about healthcare. And they’re being directed and orchestrated by corporate interests that do this for a living and do it very well.

Recessrally.com is not some organic outgrowth of American anger. This is how corporate America creates the illusion of a grassroots movement to support their own interests. This is what they do. They are professionals. This is an industry. To talk about these town hall events as some organic outpouring of average American folks who have concerns about healthcare is to be willfully blind to what is really going on which is, professional PR operatives generating exploitative manufactured strategically deployed outrage in order to line their own pockets.

These PR spinmeisters get paid a lot of money for doing it. The corporations they work for get to kill legislation that would hurt their profits. And the real people who they launch into these town hall settings after they’ve been told that healthcare reform is a secret Commie plot to kill old people and to mandate sex changes? Those real people get more and more and more and more angry and more and more and more alienated. And ultimately they get left like the rest of us with a healthcare system that is broken and doesn’t work in the interest of the American people and that does work in the interestes of the corporations who profit from the way the system is now.

This is professional, corporate-funded, Republican-staffed PR…and it should be reported as such.”

Would you like fries with that manipulation?

I just heard a story on NPR about a spontaneous protest twenty years ago by some older Americans trying to get their Congressman to listen to them. He wouldn’t give them any time so they waited outside his office and, trying to be heard, they yelled at him and followed him out to his car.

Now, Americans have an opportunity to be heard about about healthcare – you know, the real concerns most of us have about meaningful reform with a public option – and instead of allowing these concerns to be heard, they are being thwarted by other Americans who have been armed with lies and misinformation and who, because of their bad behavior, won’t allow a real healthcare discussion to take place.

What about the other Americans who are attending these town halls hoping to learn something or get a question answered? Is it a coincidence that along with their elected official, they aren’t being heard either? Uh, no. When recent polls show that over 70% of the American people want healthcare reform, not allowing them to be heard is part of the plan.

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