I've decided to start a new thing in which I pull together all the right wing insanity going on across America. It's not that dKos, Thinkprogress, TalkingPointMemo and Media Matters doesn't document the cray cray. It's just that I'm unaware of anyone who compiles it all in one place.
By definition, I'm going to fail. There's just so much crazy to keep up with.
In Minnesota, I'm one of two bloggers left who document the batsh!ttery of the RWNJs in my state. With Michele Bachmann set to retire, I need a new focus. My fair state's media won't touch this with a 10ft ethnic joke. I, however, don't have any RWNJ readers to anger.
So here goes nuthin ...
a GOP group declared today is Catch An Immigrant Day at the University of Texas Austin campus. Anyone who catches an illegal immigrant on campus will receive a $25 gift card.
Former Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, non on Fox News, conflates inexpensive and in some cases free health insurance to giving away Obamaburgers.
Another brain donor on Fox News, Elisabeth Hasselbeck, worries that elderly pregnant woman would lose their health insurance under Obamacare.
White Supremacist Craig Cobb (who is also part African-American) is trying to take over a small town in North Dakota. His plans hit a roadblock as he's been arrested for threatening local residents with guns.
A whole bunch of right wing pundits, former Bush Administration officials and "journalists" are comparing the healthcare.gov rollout to Katrina. Jon Stewart sets them straight:
One of the worst Governors in the US, Scott Walker (WI), nominates himself to be President of the Paul Ryan Fan Club. The same Paul Ryan who wants to eliminate Medicare.
Here at dKos, varii noted that Catholic Bishops are more concerned about their relationship with the Republican Party than speaking truth about economic justice.
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor says the House can't address immigration reform because of healthcare.gov.
A single source is all the New York Post and Fox needs to start a conspiracy theory that Obama faked a jobs report in the run up to the 2012 election.
The Mooney Times, aka the Washington Times which is owned by Sun Myung Moon, published an op-ed that decried the focus on sexual assault in the military as not as bad as some want to make it seem. Furthermore, the authore, Mackubin Thomas Owens, claims that it makes women seem weak.