FirmhandKY
Posts: 8948
Joined: 9/21/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: brainiacsub quote:
ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY [...] But Tea Party organizers -- both nationally and locally -- say the misinformed beliefs of some do not represent the views of all. "Any movement is going to have fringe elements," said Joan Fabiano, an organizer with Grassroots in Michigan, a Tea Party group based in Lansing, Mich. "If there's any sort of hateful and racist signs, that is something the Tea Party in general would disavow," she said. Firm Firm, this group looses all credibility proclaiming that racists are the fringe when they pick leaders like Tom Tancredo to give the opening speech at the first Tea Party Convention in Nashville who then makes some pretty unsavory remarks about multiculturalism and requiring civics and literacy tests for voters (a dig at minorities and immigrants...a link to that speech has been posted in other recent threads). The moderates among us certainly don't believe that everyone associated with the Tea Parties is a racist, but it's disingenuous to say that it's just a few people on the fringe. brainiac, A couple of points: 1. You seem to be implying that they are all racist because a few may be. I can find racist Republicans. I can find racist Democrats. I can find racist Independents. I can find racists whites, Asians, and blacks. We want to make the claim that all of these groups are racist? Further, I challenge you to attempt to quantify the number of racists that are part of the "TEA parties", since you say "it's disingenuous to say that it's just a few people on the fringe". This implies that the majority of the members are racists. How can you know? What are you sources? It looks to me like it's more of a little confirmation bias going on here. 2. How many "TEA parties" are there, exactly, and how many of them sent reps to Nashville? As a percentage of the whole? Of those that attended, were they elected representatives of their specific groups, or were they interested people who happened to also belong to a local TEA party, who had the time and finances to attend the meeting? No offense, brainiacsub, but most of what I've seen negative (from their opponents) about the "TEA parties" is a lot of supposition, assumptions, and confirmation biases at work, and not any real analysis. Firm
< Message edited by FirmhandKY -- 4/14/2010 12:06:58 PM >
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Some people are just idiots.
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