Evidently, there's batsh**t crazy and then there's HOLY F**KING BATS**T CRAAAAZYYY!!!
The first kind is OK for California Republican candidates; the second is not.
Yet.
Everybody's favorite dentist/lawyer/taekwondo expert, Orly Taitz, was uninvited to an upcoming Tea Party event tomorrow in Pleasanton, Calif.
"It's not worth it," [Bridget Melson, founder and president of the Pleasanton Tea Party,] said. "She's too controversial. This is not what the tea party is about at this point."
Spokespersons for Republican Senate candidates Carly Fiorina and Chuck DeVore, both of whom are scheduled to appear at the so-called "Tax Day" rally, appeared to have a grasp on reality:
"I can say emphatically that the Chuck DeVore campaign and Chuck DeVore himself strongly disapproves of Orly Taitz and the crazy theories she continues to advance," said Josh Trevino, a DeVore spokesman . . .
"President Obama is absolutely eligible for the presidency and is a natural-born United States citizen," [Fiorina spokeswoman Julie Soderlund] said.
Other Republican leaders, though, have a somewhat different read on what's real (emphasis added):
"I certainly don't have enough information to decide [whether Barack Obama is a natural-born U.S. citizen]," said Tom Del Beccaro, vice chair of the California Republican Party. "I've never seen yay or nay either way, so how could I know?"
In other words:
"You're crazy!"
"No, you're crazy!!"
"THHBBPTPPTPTP!!!"
"Neener, neener, neener!!"
To the best of my knowledge, Taitz has not filed a lawsuit in the matter.
Yet.