Marjorie Taylor Greene’s latest rant falsely claims anti-vaxxers are being denied treatment

https://www.rawstory.com/marjorie-green-lies/

Marjorie Taylor Greene's latest rant falsely claims anti-vaxxers are being denied treatment

The latest rant from Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) is causing a stir as she rants about the entirety of American democracy being brought down by COVID testing.

 

In a Twitter thread that discussed life before COVID and after COVID, Greene claimed that people are being forced into testing when there’s nothing wrong with them. She neglected to note that the only reason someone would have to be tested if they weren’t sick is that they haven’t been vaccinated and want to do international travel or work as a healthcare staffer or for a large corporation mandating vaccines for those who don’t have religious objections.

Greene implied that the entire virus at this point was just part of a conspiracy to make pharmaceutical companies money. If that was true, people probably wouldn’t have been dying all over the world.

She went on to say that doctors are now refusing to treat people if they haven’t been vaccinated, which is also false and against the Hippocratic Oath. As much as many would like for hospitals to turn covid patients away if they haven’t been vaccinated, those who are in the hospitals now, and are “clogging hospitals,” according to one governor, are overwhelmingly those who haven’t been vaccinated.

In fact, many have started calling the unvaccinated community a kind of “death cult,” because they are now the ones who are dying in large groups.

 

You can read her full rant here.

There is a series of tweets from Marge Greene, but I won’t bother to post each one, they are at the link above. Scottie

Republicans aim to sow outrage, Trump-style, with an eye on 2022 midterms

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jan/01/republicans-sow-outrage-trump-style-2022-midterms-house-senate

Republicans embrace the culture war battles Trump waged, as a strategy for winning back control of the House and Senate

 

The debate was ostensibly over a stop-gap spending bill that would avert a government shutdown. But Chip Roy, a Republican congressman from Texas, seized the opportunity to accuse Democrats of supporting “unconstitutional” vaccine mandates, critical race theory, “woke gender ideology” and open borders. A vote to fund the federal government, he warned, was a vote to allow “tyranny over the American citizen”.

The speech infuriated Congressman Tim Ryan, a Democrat from Ohio.

 

“Tyranny?” Ryan fumed on the House floor. “What are you people talking about? We’re talking about universal preschool, and they have it as a communist indoctrination of the American student. It’s insane.”

Ryan’s frustration crystallized a dilemma for Democrats as they defend paper-thin majorities in Congress next year: how to talk about their legislative victories when Republicans are talking about everything else.

Emboldened by a string of off-cycle electoral victories, Republicans are embracing the culture war battles that Donald Trump waged from the White House as a strategy for winning back control of the House and Senate in the 2022 midterm elections.

“Lean into the culture war,” was the title of a June memo from the leader of the House Republican Study Committee, Indiana congressman Jim Banks.

The “culture war” offensive comes as Democrats, facing deep economic malaise and historical headwinds, race to deliver on the president’s domestic agenda, which includes an ambitious social policy package that faces serious legislative hurdles, hampered by Democratic holdout senator Joe Manchin.

“We have a plan to give you a better country, and they have a ploy to win back power for themselves,” said New York congressman Sean Patrick Maloney, chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. “We are tackling the tough problems of the economy and the pandemic. They seek only to win power and will say or do anything to achieve that.”

The party controlling the White House typically loses seats in the first midterm elections of a new presidency. With Biden’s plunging poll numbers, uncertainty over the centerpiece of his legislative agenda and Republicans’ redistricting edge, Democrats are increasingly dour about their chances. In the House, Democrats can only afford to lose a handful of seats; in the Senate they cannot afford to lose a single one.

Maloney said selling their economic achievements – a popular, bipartisan infrastructure law and a poverty-reducing pandemic relief package – is critical for Democrats. But he said the party must also aggressively confront the Republican cultural assault. He urged Democrats to call out the opposition party’s embrace of “dangerous and reckless conduct”, which includes amplifying Trump’s false claims of a stolen election and downplaying the seriousness of the 6 January attack on the US Capitol.

On social issues, he believes that Republicans have pushed too far, particularly on the issue of abortion. As the supreme court considers whether to weaken or overturn the landmark Roe v Wade precedent, Democrats are loudly trumpeting their support for women’s reproductive rights, as they try portray Republicans as an increasingly extreme party determined to ban abortion.

“We’re dealing with a Republican party that wants to ban abortion in all 50 states, bring back mass incarceration and burn books,” he added. “We’re not just going to respond, we’re going to be on offense.”

Grievance politics is not a new strategy for Republicans. In 1968, Richard Nixon employed the “Southern Strategy” to exploit white racial grievances coded in language such as “law and order” and “states’ rights”. But as partisanship grows and the parties become increasingly hostile to one another, so too has the potential political benefit of cultural warfare that inflames division and energizes their base.

A recent report by the Public Religion Research Institute and Brookings Institution, titled Competing Visions of America, found that 80% of Republicans believe that “America is in danger of losing its culture and identity”. By comparison, just 33% of Democrats agree. Meanwhile, 70% of Republicans say “American culture and way of life have changed for the worse since the 1950s” while more than six in 10 Democrats say it has changed for the better.

As Democrats negotiate amongst themselves over how to pass Biden’s signature domestic policy bill, Republicans have been seeding outrage over – and fundraising off of – all manner of perceived injustices from cancel culture to Dr Seuss to the 1619 Project. They are hammering the administration over its handling of immigration at the southern border and Democrats over rising crime rates in cities. And Biden’s efforts to pursue racial equity as part of his governing agenda has drawn accusations of racism from conservatives who say the efforts discriminate against white people.

Republicans are also leading the charge against the administration’s vaccine mandates for companies with more than 100 employees, which they say is an example of “radical” Democratic overreach.

On that issue, Republicans are speaking to their base, which is disproportionately unvaccinated. An NPR analysis found that the stronger a county’s support for Trump in the 2020 election, the lower its Covid-19 vaccination rate. But Republicans are betting that opposition to vaccine mandates, terms of personal liberty, will resonate beyond their base.

In legal challenges to the mandates, Republican leaders argue that the vaccine mandates will worsen the nation’s supply chain problems and exacerbate labor shortages that have arisen during the pandemic.

But with the Omicron variant circulating, Democrats believe public sentiment is firmly behind them. Americans increasingly support vaccine mandates for workers, students, and in everyday public life, according to a recent CNN poll, which found 54% in favor of requiring vaccinations for employees returning to the office.

The challenge for Republicans is to avoid alienating moderate voters in the suburbs with their efforts to energize their supporters who are deeply loyal to Trump and have come to expect their politicians to loudly voice their grievances.

Republicans believe their unexpected success in Virginia, a state Biden won by 10 percentage points in 2020, provides a playbook.

In November, Republican Glenn Youngkin won the race for Virginia governor after pledging to ban critical race theory from the state’s public schools. Democrats were surprised by the potency over culture war fight over education, allowing Youngkin to rev up the conservative base while appealing to suburban parents’ frustrations over Covid-19 school closures and masking protocols in classrooms.

“It’s the oldest trick in the book,” said Anat Shenker-Osorio, a messaging expert and host of Words To Win By. “It’s creating some sort of an ‘other’ so that we don’t notice that they’re actually the cause of our problems.”

In Virginia and elsewhere, she said Democrats were caught “flat-footed” by concerns over critical race theory, a concept that, until recently, few outside of academia had ever heard of. Instead of confronting it, she said Democrats’ instinct was to deny support and dismiss the charge as a right-wing talking point, neither of which satisfied voters.

Democrats need “an explanation for the right wing’s origin story of ‘this is why you’re suffering white man in the post-industrial Midwest’,” Shenker-Osorio said. “Unless we can talk about race, about gender, about gender identity, our economic promise isn’t going to land.”

Columnist Will Bunch, writing in the Philadelphia Inquirer, put it another way: “Once again, the Democrats showed up to a culture war gunfight brandishing a 2,000-page piece of legislation.”

While Democrats agree they have a problem, they are at odds over how to fix it.

Some argue that the party has moved too far left on cultural issues, a shift that has alienated non-college educated white voters and, increasingly, working-class Latino and Black Americans. Another cohort believes that instead of trying to recapture the voters who have abandoned the party, Democrats should find a message that appeals to a diversifying electorate.

Proponents of this approach believe Democrats should respond to the right’s attacks by adopting what they call a “race-class narrative”, which Shenker-Osorio helped develop.

The approach explicitly accuses Republicans of using racism or racial dog whistles as a divide-and-conquer tactic to sow distrust, undermine faith in government and protect the wealthy. When applied, the message not only defangs Republican attacks, it motivates and mobilizes voters of all races, its advocates argue.

“Our task is to make the idea of joining together across our differences – the idea of multiracial solidarity, as a means to collectively get these shared values that we all want – sexier than the grievance politics that the right is selling,” said Jenifer Fernandez Ancona, the co-founder and chief strategy officer of Way to Win.

In a recently published memo, advocated candidates use the “blows are landing because our agenda and accomplishments remain so far undefined in the minds of voters”.

Among its messaging recommendations, the group urges Democrats to contrast the party’s economic vision with a “Republican party that is beholden to Maga extremism” while doing more to sell their legislative achievements and highlight the steps they’ve taken to combat Covid.

“The good news is that these are not insurmountable challenges,” the memo states.

An increasingly vocal coterie of liberal critics believe the outlook is grimmer: that Democrats are staring into the political wilderness unless they are able to win back some of the non-college educated voters who abandoned the party.

Ruy Teixeira, a demographer and election analyst, believes Democrats have moved too far left on social issues like crime and immigration and is in need of a complete rebrand. He said Trump’s gains with non-college educated Hispanic voters was a “real wake-up call” that Democrats need to change course.

“We need a durable majority,” he said. “You can’t build a durable majority by ignoring socio-cultural concerns and the values of these huge swaths of the population.”

Where Democrats agree is that they must deliver on their promises while in power.

“We’re really just at the beginning of what needs to be a substantial change in the way the American economic model works,” Teixeira said. “And to do that, it’s not enough to just win one election and pass some stuff. We need to win a number of elections and pass even more stuff … It’s not much more complicated than that.”

Daily cartoon / meme roundup: Happy New Year’s day and may your new year be grand

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Scotties world today

free wi-fi

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

happy new year clay Bennett

History repeats itself

It has been 100 years and we are still having the same hope.   Lets hope this will be the year of decency and civility, reasonable discourse and understanding of reality.  What is normal but wanting to live happy and well, wishing the best for others as we hope they are wishing for us.   With malice for none but good will toward all.   Scottie

image

Increase the minimum wage. Respect labor. End poverty.

image

new mascots for parties

Dem who is a misfit

bassic needs are dead

tRump bomb 2024

John Deering Comic Strip for January 01, 2022

the kids are upstairs

image

Republicans have perfected performative politics for the deplorables.

image

DeSantis is the opposite of leadership, totally derelict of his duty.

image

image

all white people talk race

I can not vote Knee

oh yes it is bastards

fairy tale history

Republican triathlon

national guard freedom border

image

image

https://64.media.tumblr.com/c73393d0064ca39684e907758a9695f4/27bcdf3ef27d2584-e7/s500x750/824f2c26d8389d847a55a7317a97ceba9a671848.jpg

https://twitter.com/NafinStabs/status/1476257815710900225?s=20

new year start later

starting off to bad start

covid no way out

Hospital stats 1hostpital stats 2

Covid christmas socking

https://truth-has-a-liberal-bias.tumblr.com/post/672203699395887104

https://truth-has-a-liberal-bias.tumblr.com/post/672201678858141696

Ya now tell me there are not a bunch of cameras trained on that spot?   Right.  

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

And now some for fun

Real Life Adventures Comic Strip for January 01, 2022

Pickles Comic Strip for January 01, 2022

Cornered Comic Strip for January 01, 2022

Family Tree Comic Strip for January 01, 2022

Rubes Comic Strip for January 01, 2022

For Better or For Worse Comic Strip for January 01, 2022

Biden Avoids Economic CATASTROPHE

Hawaii’s Tiny Houses Address the Housing Crisis in a Big Way

How School Board Meetings Became ‘Ground Zero’ For Mask Wars

How arsine, how stupid, even the ones touting the bible have it all wrong. These people have no clue but are passionately loud and possibly violent.

Republican Governors 2 different responses

Daily cartoon / meme roundup: Things have changed in the US

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Scottie’s world today

none of these rules apply to me

The dead zone

msg couldn't be sent

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Below is a group of tweets and the screen captures are an insight in how some businesses treat workers.   Scottie

The above tweet thread is important to read and click through.   It shows how companies feel about workers, even workers they claim to need and value.   As soon as you want something it is too much, but they can demand anything and everything from you.   In this case it fails spectacularly.  Scottie

Working It Out Comic Strip for December 31, 2021

If you can not win

Rob Rogers Comic Strip for December 31, 2021

Lock him up

Drew Sheneman Comic Strip for December 30, 2021

Lalo Alcaraz Comic Strip for December 30, 2021

below the water line

Joel Pett Comic Strip for December 30, 2021

is it too late

Tim Campbell Comic Strip for December 30, 2021

Junk Drawer Comic Strip for December 31, 2021

back to abnormal

https://twitter.com/buitengebieden_/status/1476499417788301314?s=20

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Misleading right wing media cartoons / memes

I think they are going to try.   I really believe that the Republicans have given up on democracy.   They don’t want it.   They want power, they want to rule.   Yes they will have a fake sort of democracy like China, Russia, and other authoritarian nations that have sham elections of either one party or set up so only one party can win.   That is what Putin does, he jails or kills his opponents and wins almost all the votes.   Think of what the Republicans have done this last year with changing election supervisors and laws, all designed so they can change any vote they disagree with.    Our democracy hangs by a thread, we should be worried.   Scottie

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

And now some for fun

Zack Hill for Dec 31, 2021

Non Sequitur Comic Strip for December 31, 2021

Speed Bump Comic Strip for December 31, 2021

Pickles Comic Strip for December 31, 2021

Dogs of C-Kennel Comic Strip for December 31, 2021

Let’s talk about Biden’s economy….

People Are DYING Of Curable Illnesses As Anti-Vaxxers Fill Hospitals