You provide the following objective source -tunnelcat wrote:You know, with that much net wealth, power and the right wing views they espouse, the Koch Brothers are a influential powerful force in the upcoming 2012 election, and not a good force either. They're just part of the Plutocracy trying to fully take over our country to use for their own enrichment. Evil is evil. If you think they're just wealthy little angels out for the good of this country, go right ahead and believe your delusion.
ooh. Let’s see how may times the Guardian writer, Ed Pilkington, can use an emotionally loaded word, phrase or expression:
“secretive” and “vast”; wow, that's two already in the headline.
First paragraph – “secretive” (again, in case you missed it the first time) and “anti-government”. Wow. So maybe they’re really secretive; ……. or maybe they just don’t talk to Ed Pilkington. And, are they “anti-government” or just some flavor of anti-Big Government? The journalistic stylings of Mr. Pilkington can only leave us to wonder.
“secrecy” appears again at several points in the article (surprise!). And the “vast” network the Kochs are reported to be setting up? Why it “has been modelled in part on the scheme created by the left after the defeat of John Kerry in the 2004 presidential election. Catalyst, a voter list that shared data on supporters of progressive groups and campaigns, was an important part of the process that saw the Democratic party pick itself off the floor and refocus its electoral energies, helping to propel Barack Obama to the White House in 2008.”
Ah, so what’s good for the goose is not good for the gander, eh? So progressives can utilize any technological tools at their disposal to advance their own agendas, but dissenting individuals or groups are supposed to just lay over and play dead. Finally, I understand what it is that liberals mean by the term “fairness”.
The rest of the article is yadayadayada, SOS, so no further comment from me.
As it happens, Robert Rapier has written yet another post that might help you to overcome your need to continue grasping for a bad guy - The Professor Who Knew Too Little. The professor here seems to have a number of misconceptions that are fairly common, and, as Robert points out, erroneously goes to biased source material (the Center for American Progress, in this case) to buttress his arguments. Spend some time here and follow through on the links. It will be well worth your time, and Robert articulates the position much better than I ever could.tunnelcat wrote: As for oil speculation, I still think the big banks need to quit playing with our money and stay out of a commodity that is so important for the functioning of our economy. They crashed it once in 2007 and now they're screwing around with commodities to just make a buck, with no other purpose by the way, and it's going to tank things all over again.