
It took political
dog whistle Governor Sarah Palin just a few days to come up with a response to the Tucson die-in. A measured, professional response. That just happens to use
incredibly inflammatory terminology that doesn't remotely apply. I'm sure it was completely by accident, something that was well-scripted in the heat of the moment.

She's a bit piqued because on-line and in the press she's been tainted with the unholy brush of
collective blame. As it turns out the shooter isn't a resident of
Beckistan but rather a looney's loony who, among other things, denies the reality of the space program and makes the
readers of conspiracy web sites laugh. She's absolutely correct—collective blame
is bad.
Unless of course you're talking about
Muslims. Then it's A-OK.
But Sarah isn't the only unfortunate caught in the web of false accusation. Consider the case of the poor, frightened co-founder of the Tucson chapter of the Tea Party:
...Trent Humphries says there is another innocent victim left by Jared Lee Loughner's killing of six people and wounding of 14 others in his assassination attempt against Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. It is his Tea Party movement and, more particularly, his family. The killings, he says, are evolving into a conspiracy to destroy his organisation and silence criticism of the government.

Funny thing about dog whistles. They work even if your dog is
tone deaf. And once again we see that assassins always have
three names.
Be sure to click on all the pictures.
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