Does your health insurance cover exploding craniums due to maddening and unexplained selfishness?

Does your health insurance cover exploding craniums due to maddening and unexplained selfishness?

So we’ve been talking a lot about how the Republicans leading the charge against health security for all Americans already have health care coverage. Good health care coverage. It’s the classic, “I got mine, screw you guys” scenario.

But this weekend we learned, when several of the tea party protesters were treated during an event in D.C., that while some of us are languishing in a system designed to screw us out of everything we’ve ever worked for, members of Congress not only have solid health care coverage – they also have a backup. A BACKUP!

Yep. Members of Congress have affordable health care coverage. Twice.

From Joe Powell:

As a few thousand folks lined up to hear the Republican congressmen (most of whom were absent from actual committee votes on public policy) last week, some of those anti-healthcare bill protesters needed some emergency medical help from – gasp!! – government operated medicine providers.

One person suffered a heart attack and several others also needed medical care — all of it provided by government medical personnel. Other protesters denouncing government-run healthcare likewise benefited from a service they despise, though none refused medical assistance from the Office of Attending Physicians [OAP] who are always on hand to treat elected officials.

And how does the OAP work?

Members of Congress do not pay for the individual services they receive at the OAP, nor do they submit claims through their federal employee health insurance policies. Instead, members pay a flat, annual fee of $503 for all the care they receive. The rest of the cost of their care, sources said, is subsidized by taxpayers.

Last year, Congress appropriated more than $3 million to reimburse the Navy for staff salaries at the office. Next year’s budget allocates $3.8 million for the office, including more than half a million dollars to upgrade the Office’s radiology suite. Sources said additional money to operate the office is included in the Navy’s annual budget.

In 2008, 240 members paid the annual fee, though some sources say congressmen who didn’t pay the fee were rarely prevented from using OAP services.

The arguments against affordable health insurance from Bachman, Pence, King et. al. wouldn’t be so gag-worthy if they would just give up their health insurance. And the backup plan.

  • Share/Bookmark

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.”

  • Share/Bookmark
Without your well-placed tax dollars, the Tea Parties would have to rescue their own kittehs.

Without your well-placed tax dollars, the Tea Parties would have to rescue their own kittehs.

Proving that all hypocrisy is local, the Tennessee Tea Party is organizing a rally this Friday to protest “big government” at the Nashville’s Municipal Auditorium – a venue funded and maintained by the taxpayers of Davidson County.

You can view the history of Municipal Aud and see just how much “big government” has put into the building to make it safe, comfortable, and affordable so organizations like the TN Tea Party can protest its intrusion into our lives. For example, in 1978 the Metro Council designated $200,000 to paint the interior and update seat upholstery. In 1993 they allocated $1.159 million in repairs and renovations for the auditorium. And in 2001, a brand new one-million dollar sprinkler and fire alarm system was installed.

In other words, Tennessee Tea Partiers, it’s not about “big government,” it’s about smart government. And without a smart government believing that it’s a good idea to spend taxpayer dollars to keep conventioneers from being burned to a crisp, the Tea Partiers wouldn’t have a safe place to peaceably assemble.

We won’t hold our breath waiting for a “thank you.”

UPDATE: Mark NoChaser expounds: “While we’re at it, Mary, let’s not forget that the Teabaggers will drive to the auditorium on taxpayer-funded roads. While they’re at the event, their cars will be protected by taxpayer-funded police officers. They will scurry home Friday night and bang out blog posts claiming the Municipal Auditorium was filled by 3 MILLION protesters. Of course, their lights and their computers will be run on taxpayer-subsidized electricity.”

  • Share/Bookmark

I just wrote a post about the kind of healthcare debate our Democratic representatives should be having while Republicans are crunching numbers. If I had just listened to that little voice inside my head that heard Ralph Bristol on WTN this morning discussing with his listeners their plans to disrupt health care town hall meetings and said to myself, “He’s talking about this for a reason. There is a movement afoot to bully lawmakers into not even having a discussion on healthcare,” I wouldn’t have wasted my time.

And then I remembered also reading in Politico that certain town hall meetings were being canceled because some elected Dems were fearful and then Bristol saying “ha ha ha isn’t that funny that they’re afraid of you, my harmless little fuzzball listeners.”

Think Progress put it all together this afternoon:

This morning, Politico reported that Democratic members of Congress are increasingly being harassed by “angry, sign-carrying mobs and disruptive behavior” at local town halls. For example, in one incident, right-wing protesters surrounded Rep. Tim Bishop (D-NY) and forced police officers to have to escort him to his car for safety.

This growing phenomenon is often marked by violence and absurdity. Recently, right-wing demonstrators hung Rep. Frank Kratovil (D-MD) in effigy outside of his office. Missing from the reporting of these stories is the fact that much of these protests are coordinated by public relations firms and lobbyists who have a stake in opposing President Obama’s reforms.

Then they printed the leaked memo from the FreedomWorks website Tea Party Patriots that details exactly how to unmistakeably disrupt a health care town hall that I’m sure was faxed to every two-bit Teabag and right-wing radio station across the country.

– Artificially Inflate Your Numbers: “Spread out in the hall and try to be in the front half. The objective is to put the Rep on the defensive with your questions and follow-up. The Rep should be made to feel that a majority, and if not, a significant portion of at least the audience, opposes the socialist agenda of Washington.”

– Be Disruptive Early And Often: “You need to rock-the-boat early in the Rep’s presentation, Watch for an opportunity to yell out and challenge the Rep’s statements early.”

– Try To “Rattle Him,” Not Have An Intelligent Debate: “The goal is to rattle him, get him off his prepared script and agenda. If he says something outrageous, stand up and shout out and sit right back down. Look for these opportunities before he even takes questions.”

The memo above also resembles the talking points being distributed by FreedomWorks for pushing an anti-health reform assault all summer.

“Try To “Rattle Him,” Not Have An Intelligent Debate?” Well, this certainly makes the following Teabag Party signs suddenly very ironic:

These next two aren’t relevant but, OMG! Really?!?

Ouch. Callous, much?

Ouch. Callous, much?

Does this mean what I think it means? Seriously, dude, don’t make us have to have another beer summit. Poor Elbert couldn’t take it.

Seriously? Don't make us have to have another beer summit.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

Thanks, Jennifer, for live blogging yesterday’s tea party so I could stay inside where there’s air conditioning.

1 p.m. — Tea party wraps up with stirring suggestion from Phil Valentine to mail golf balls to our lawakers, “because if they don’t have any, we’ll send some to ya.”

12:55 — Freedom yell was intro for Phil Valentine. Hi, Phil Valentine!

12:55 — Again with the freedom yelling.

12:50 — Two more speakers to go. Crowd is urged to consider the Vitamin D they’re absorbing from the blazing sun right now.

Hi, Drew Johnson! Lay some libertarian think tanking on us.

Remember that time Johnson and the Tennessee Center for Policy Research revealed Al Gore’s electric bill to the world? He says they got a dozen death threats after that. Hmm.

12:46: You know who’s having a good day? Hosea the flag vendor. Suddenly those little yellow Don’t Tread on Me flags are everywhere.

Please say you’ll do us a solid and be there to bring the funny again tomorrow…? Thanks! We owe ya one.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

Rutherford County Democrats want to know why instead of “helping families clean up after the deadly Good Friday tornado,” Rutherford County Republicans gathered on the square in Murfreesboro to protest much needed investment in Rutherford County schools, enhanced health care benefits for their veterans, the extension of unemployment benefits for the county’s unemployed, and “the change in direction over the past 8 years of failed conservative economic policy of unprecedented government expansion, deficit spending and tax cuts for the wealthiest 5% of Americans.”

Besides also asking one of their own, State House Rep. Joe Carr (R-Lascassas), why he is co-sponsoring the bill that urges Governor Bredesen to reject stimulus money that could help families in Rutherford County who are underemployed, newly elected Rutherford County Democratic Party Chair Jonathon Fagan has some pointed questions for the tea baggers protesters:

Where were all these folks when George W. Bush and a Republican Congress were running up trillion-dollar deficits with no bid contracts and tax breaks for oil companies? Instead of picking up a microphone and whining about taxes, we Democrats from across the state will be partnering with the city of Winchester in helping our fellow citizens clean up storm damage on Saturday April 25 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m..

Now that a movement to get behind…

  • Share/Bookmark

Crashing the Tea Party

Mmmmmm…a special brand of tea from the Sunshine State:

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

Tom Tomorrow has some questions

Doff o’ the cap: Elliot!

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

We Read it for the Articles

Who knew that Playboy had such a crack investigative reporting team as Mark Ames and Yasha Levine? [I did. -- Freddie]

What they uncovered about Rick Santelli’s populist rant against President Obama’s foreclosure relief policies on CNBC and the rallies that resulted will make you say “damn.”

Turns out that his “spontaneous” call for a “Chicago Tea Party” actually one cog in a giant wheel of coordinated attacks on President Obama’s economic policies. Ames and Levine ask all the right questions:

But was Santelli’s rant really so spontaneous? How did a minor-league TV figure, whose contract with CNBC is due this summer, get so quickly launched into a nationwide rightwing blog sensation? Why were there so many sites and organizations online and live within minutes or hours after his rant, leading to a nationwide protest just a week after his rant?

So who’s really behind Santelli’s populist grassroots movement? According to the Playboy reporters it’s familiar names from the Republican rightwing machine including PR operatives who “specialize in imitation-grassroots PR campaigns”, bigwig politicians, and notorious billionaire funders.

I never thought I would say this but, go over to Playboy.com now and read Backstabber: Is Rick Santelli High On Koch?. And remember, no clicking around.

Hat Tip: Crooks and Liars.

UPDATED: Because the original link to the article is no longer active, it has been updated with a new link.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

The Liberadio(!) Tea Party

I haven’t been on This Week with Bob Mueller (or “Mulleropoulos,” as we like to call it) in a while (darn that Representative Gilmore!), but the last time I was on, Steve Gill and I were poking at each other (and not in the friendly Facebook way) over big government vs. small government. Gill, while accusing all “liberals” of being for big government, said he was for making government small enough to drown in a bathtub. I told Steve that it wasn’t about big or small government, it was about smart government.

Fast forward a few months to a new president, a continuing economic downward spiral, and the same old accusations from Republicans. On steroids. “The era of big government is back,” said Congressman Marsha Blackburn. “The era of big government is back,” said John Boehner. “The era of big government is back,” said Lamar Alexander. ” “The era of big government is back,” said Steve Holland of Reuters (As Southern Beale says, “Thank you, Liberal Media!!!”)

Which makes one wonder (at the risk of channeling my inner Carrie Bradshaw) where were the snappy fiscal talking points when President Bush was “spending like a drunken sailor?” And where were the rallies?

I got my answer to these and other burning questions when I went to the faux Tea Party (there wasn’t any tea) the TNGOP threw on the steps of the Capitol on Friday to protest President Obama’s economic policy. All the people I spoke to were big enough to admit that President Bush overspent…too. However, not one had been to an organized rally in the last 8 years. Huh. Go figure.

But it was good to see that even post-election, President Obama continues to motivate people to get involved when in the past they *ahem* didn’t have the time…or something:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

At the end of the long afternoon filled with hyperbolic signs and shouts of “send Congress to Gitmo!,” I was left to wonder (at the risk of channeling that pesky inner Bradshaw again) if, as progressives and Obama supporters, we should organize a rally to protest eight years of near-total Republican government control and the fiscal policies they produced that resulted in one of the most unstable U.S. economies since the Great Depression? Then I remembered that we already had one. It was last November. And 69 million people showed up. Aw, snap!

More hypocrisy watch coverage of the Tennessee event Braisted at Nashville 21, Dru’s Vues, a Kleinheider Joint, and WPLN.

  • Share/Bookmark

Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!

Visit our friends!

A few highly recommended friends...