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While Right Accuses OWS of Rape, Violence Flourishes in the Tea Party
An established pattern of systemic Tea Party hatred toward women exists and is further evident in the legislation they push, and yet they just can’t help themselves from projecting.
Just look at how the late Andrew Breitbart treated alleged O’Keefe victim (number? ) Nadia Naffe.
After Nadia Naffe, a now reformed James O’Keefe Gonzo-ette, was kept in a barn on O’Keefe’s family property, drugged and unable to walk, she called “good friend” and now deceased Andrew Breitbart for help. Shockingly, Breitbart sided with the CNN boat kidnap caper planner and left Naffe stranded at O’Keefe’s mercy.
Naffe filed a criminal complaint against the already on federal parole O’Keefe, who lives with his family. Yes. Lives with his family. Naffe told the judge that after she got home O’Keefe harassed her with messages and tormented her by posting a video online in which he referred to her as “dirty”. Naffe testifed, “He made me out to be a tramp. He used other people to torment me.”
But her complaint was tossed out because of jurisdiction issues. That didn’t stop the Right from smearing her and claiming the judge had basically told her to shut up, you weren’t raped.
The judge did not say anything of the sort.
This was all Naffe’s fault, however. See Breitbart on Twitter:
@AndrewBreitbart: There is no ‘rape plot’, you slanderous, libelous wannabe Media Matters smear junkie. @DavidShuster @jamesokeefeiii
To which the now rather isolated Nadia replied:
@NadiaNaffe: Now, your an expert on ‘rape plots’? I called you that night I was held in the barn to ask for help @andrewbreitbart @DavidShuster
Then we follow her Tweets as she references other O’Keefe creepiness, like his plot to get then CNN reporter Abbie Bourdreau alone on a boat so he could humiliate her sexually (if you’re not sick to your stomach yet, let me remind you that this is the party that refused to sign the Violence Against Women Act and has been busy “redefining rape”). Apparently O’Keefe also allegedly went to poor Izzy’s apartment (the brave young woman who warned the CNN journalist about the nefarious O’Keefe love boat plot) looking for what passes for ‘love” in his disturbed mind, causing her lawyer to issue a demand letter.
Nadia had the nerve to point out on her blog that in the wake of Breitbart’s Occupy accusations, this was hypocritical of him. “A parallel had been drawn between what happened to me at James O’keefe’s barn in New Jersey and Breitbart’s characterization about the treatment of women in the Occupy Movement. Breitbart’s detractors would claim his statements appeared disingenuous, hypocritical — and they were right.”
Rape plot or just kidnapping and drugging? Huh. But oh, boy, those Occupiers…. Truth be told, I never gave much weight to Breitbart’s accusations due to his previous record, but I would imagine that when a segment of the 99% get together, some crime might occur; after all, they represent the 99%. We also have crime in the 1%, but we don’t smear the entire 1% with Bernie Madoff’s crimes. And we’re not talking about civilian members here, we’re talking about leaders of the Tea Party and gonzo journalists who have ruined other people’s careers and driven a often times false narrative with their “leadership”. Hence, the equivocation is at best a desperate attempt to deflect and smear.
I suspect O’Keefe doesn’t even really want sex; but rather, he gets off on the power of sexual intimidation and humiliation, which of course is the psychology behind rape.
One commonly believed myth is that rape is primarily a sexual act. Persons with this belief often unintentionally place the victim on trial. Her motives, her dress and her actions become suspect not only to law enforcement officials but also to her family and friends…
Their findings have shown that rape is a crime of violence, often regarded by the woman as a life-threatening act in which fear and humiliation are her dominant emotions. Sexual desire is less a motivation for the man than violent aggression.
Now, read this statement and guess whom it represents, in either in words or deed (legislation attempted to pass):
X “believed that the prevention or avoidance of rape was the responsibility of the women. Their advice, perhaps sexist, nonetheless advised women not to go out alone, not to hitchhike, not to drink alone and to learn self defense.”
Do you want to know who said that it was a woman’s job to avoid being raped back in the 1980′s? Sexual offenders. Rapists. “Offenders interviewed by members of the Institute at a maximum security state mental hospital.” These incarcerated offenders kind of sound like the modern day Republican Party, only less rabid.
And finally, who rapes and why?
A more widely accepted theory is that most rapists seem to come from a subculture of violence whose values may be different from those of the dominant culture. Therefore these adolescents and young men may be demonstrating their toughness and masculinity in a more violent and antisocial manner.
A sub-culture of violence, you say? Gee. Where oh where can I find such a sub-culture?
It could it be the Tea Party activists who….
…threw a brick threw the window of the Democratic Party headquarters, stomped on a woman’s head and neck at a Rand rally, mailed white powder and swastikas to Rep. Grijalva and fired on his office on after ruling on the Arizona immigration law, issued death threats against Sen. Patty Murray after a yes vote on healthcare reform resulting in the arrest of the armed and angry perpetrator, invited Tea Party activists to descend upon the address of a Virginia Democratic representative resulting in the gas line at that address being cut, threatened California state Senator Yee, shot at Gabby Gifford’s office windows (before she was actually shot in the head in what was described as a “lone wolf” act), spit on highly respected black leaders in public, contemplate trying to make the working class unions look bad by using a plant to stir up violence in a large group of protesters heedless of the dangers (Walker only chose to not do this because it could backfire on him politically), shoot the police via a Glenn Beck paranoid listener, arrest of another Beck listener who was upset by congress “railroading the left-wing agenda” and was planning the Tides Foundation shooting, stabbing a cab driver after asking him if he was a Muslim…. The full list is actually too long to use as an aside. (see here and here for a Google map of right wing violence just during a six month period.)
Bad apples? Really?
The truth is that the Tea Party caters to this mentality. An established pattern of systemic Tea Party violence already exists (see list above).
And while humans are humans and all groups will be tainted with a few bad apples, that’s hardly the same thing as a pattern of systemic violence. This makes sense, when we look at how the movement was established and to whom it caters. The racism, the otherism, the inflammatory remarks, the notion that only they are the real Americans.
Somehow, for over 40 years, conservatives have been lobbing inflammatory rhetoric at everyone else, but when they are accused of doing so, they claim media bias and political attack. Somehow, it’s okay for them to put crosshairs on the districts of Democrats even as those Democrats are being threatened by the conservative’s own base – but it’s not okay for anyone to suggest that they have gone too far in their rhetoric. To suggest that they take responsibility for their rhetoric is media bias and blaming them for a “few bad apples.”
It seems no one has pointed out yet that when the entire purpose of the movement centers around legislation meant to keep certain segments from voting, to steal women’s liberties, and to empower only one race and one class at the expense of all others, we can expect a lot of bad apples.
It’s as if everyone is drunk on the magic Kool-Aid of the Right and no one will say it out loud. It’s not about their signs or the ignorant things they say. It’s all in the legislation.
The record of legislation tells the story of a party looking to excuse violence against women, gays, minorities, etc. and seeking to maintain dimming power over minorities.
What sort of people did anyone think this movement was going to draw, and how long will it take for the good apples to see that they are enabling bad apples? What kind of person justifies such behavior, like the stomping of a woman or now the alleged rape of another? What kind of person thinks it’s okay that O’Keeffe allegedly left this woman stranded and drugged, or that he wanted to imprison a CNN journalist on a boat?
Today on Twitter, I met a few of them. They think it’s okay that a Tea Party leader was arrested for rape and kidnapping because “Chappaquiddick” and “Weiner”.
So now we ask ourselves, what kind of person can only reply to serious charges with childish, decades old equivocations and distractions? James O’Keefe’s reply to Mediaite was similar in nature; he lobbed ugly smears at Naffe (not worthy of repeating, but thoroughly debunked by Mediaite). Nary a word about his own conduct.
These are the sort of people who refuse to take responsibility for themselves and their party, who refuse to condemn such behavior, who justify anything with attacks on others, who never have a moment of soul searching or doubt. These are not well people.
So the fact that a Tea Party leader was arrested for rape is not a surprise. The charges that O’Keefe imprisoned a woman after drugging her are not a surprise. The appearance that Breitbart not only left the female victim in the barn but also sent his goons after her on Twitter to humiliate her for asking for help is not a surprise.
These people come from a subculture of violence, and today it’s called the Tea Party. It used to be the Birchers. Before that it was tied to the KKK. No, that’s not angry rhetoric; it’s historical fact.
But the media is too afraid to call it what it is. For years, they’ve been pretending the Tea Party is a real political party, and not a get-out-the-vote tactic for the far Right wing that now runs the Republican Party. The War on Women rages on as the Republican Party does to women what they did to Muslims, Hispanics, African Americans and gay people: Vilify, marginalize, and criminalize. Meanwhile, Independents grow slightly more disgusted by the day by the rabid Right.
Image: Copyright @AzureGhost
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Reynardine
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 1:48 pm
It took me a long time to comment on this, because I followed many a link, and also looked up Abbie Boudreau. What O’Keefe planned then, without more, was clearly kidnapping; what he committed in this case, without more, was false imprisonment (and even a brief asportation would make it kidnapping).
The judge looked like he used “jurisdiction” to get out of a hot potato. He might have been influenced, as many small-town judges are, to be seen as acting on behalf of a local, “nice”, white family on behalf of a black stranger. On an offense committed last November, however, no statute of limitations can have run. There may further be federal jurisdiction regarding acts on the Internet.
O’Keefe’s choice of victims is interesting. They seem to be two or more of the following:
A. Black;
B. Female;
C. French surnames
That this man is a psychopath, I have no doubt. That he is racist and misogynist, I have no doubt. And the props he set up for Boudreau and the theft of this young woman’s panties also indicate that in his mind, if he can convince people he has “had” a woman, even by fear or force, it is she alone who will be discredited, even if he is filmed committing what any sane person would recognize as criminal violence.
Normally, psychopathy like his must be inborn or inculcated from early, and it would be easy to characterize Teahadis as latent psychopaths given societal permission to act out. Everything from the rise of lynch mob mentality in the South to that of Nazism in Germany, however, indicates it can be induced in a sizeable portion of an apparently normal adult population. That is what worries me.
Reynardine
Mar. 20th, 2012 at 9:47 am
Owing to tiny print and the like, I garbled a sentence: I meant that the judge would not want to jeopardize his standing in the community by siding with a black outsider against a “nice” white family, but of course, any finding on the merits could have been overturned on appeal, and no jeopardy had attached. I couldn’t post this correction yesterday because the site was failing to recognize my address.
Ingarose
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 2:59 pm
What is most infuriating is that the right insists that the tea party members are peaceful, well behaved, law abiding citizens, compared to OWS who are thugs, hippies, rapists etc.
The maddening thing is that quite a few people believe O’Keefe to be a good individual who exposes the crooked left. They totally ignore his outlandish, sick, hateful behavior.
A Walkaway
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 4:09 pm
Happening somewhere else?
One of my friends got “curbed” – stomped by Tea party types – she may be the one they’re referring to.
Someone torched my electronics workshop after my elderly parents were threatened (by “Good Christians”, who also support the Tea Party). Reason? I’d written a letter against teaching creationism and supporting evolution (and saying that one can accept that evolution is fact while being a Christian). Oh, and I was preached against by name in the local dominionist churches because of that same letter.
Very often, when I wrote something or spoke out, someone would poison one of our kitties. We didn’t make the connection, however, until after they’d torched my workshop.
The last thing done that I know about – after a letter was published, someone spray-painted racist hate graffiti in front of our mailbox.
I’ve also received credible death threats, been internet stalked (for months), and so on – all by “Good Christian” conservatives.
Think this is an isolated situation? Read what happened to Darla Kay Wynne or David Mullins. There are many more examples… the arson, the murder of beloved “pets” (part of the family), the graffiti – are standard operating procedure.
In other words, sneaky, backhanded, dishonest, and vile.
Plus there is the time we were thrown out of a church because we’re Indian (said church was uber conservative), another time we were driven out partially because of race, but mostly because we didn’t accept creationism and supported gay rights. Real Christ-like, that… especially the “Good Christian” leader who advocated murdering all gay people.
Nah, it is people like you who are the liars, and who go to bullshit “sources” like Fox news – who aren’t even allowed to broadcast in Canada because of their lies.
A Walkaway
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 4:10 pm
Oops… I see the troll got deleted while I was typing…
SIGH. Spewing lies, like usual.
Churchlady320
Mar. 21st, 2012 at 2:24 pm
Same has happened to me FIVE times starting in the 1970s and continuing off and on until now. I have had to move long distances to get past the stalkers, the threats, the harassment. Five of my friends and acquaintances were murdered by RW political/religious extremists, and my own life is constantly being threatened. Why? Because I support freedom, liberty, and equity for all people.
The sheer violence many of us have experienced is beyond the pale – domestic terrorists come in all types, and these stories are NOT exaggerated. There are documented events of direct harm. What happened to Walkaway is not a figment of Walkaway’s imagination – this is how the Dominionist/Teabagger “game” is played.
We share friendship with the person head stomped – we’ve seen the intimidation first hand. We’ve been followed with GPS – facts recorded with the FBI and federal courts – and know what these people are willing to do. They are not only into their religious superiority, they are racist, xenophobic, homophobic, and misogynistic. Everyone not on of “them” is fair game.
They must not win. They will do to everyone what they have done to us and worse. They think they are empowered by God to cleanse the earth of anyone they dislike. And if it comes to rape, to assault, to harassment, intimidation and murder – they do not care. God will provide.
A Walkaway
Mar. 21st, 2012 at 2:55 pm
Thank you! I’ve left blogs because people refused to believe what I’d gone through – even after I’d privately sent documentation and photographs. So many people still hold to “But they’re a CHURCH, they can’t be THAT BAD!” – just as some still insist that the Religious Right is dying. Some people just cannot seem to be able to wrap their heads around how dangerous and evil those people really are.
The dominionist/Teabagger game… I’d add to it that they hide their tracks well, and for many people it’s nearly impossible to “prove” to the satisfaction of the police/authorities that it was deliberate or done by someone else.
When they spraypainted the racist hate graffiti in front of our mailbox, the cops tried to write it off as a “kid’s prank”… even though it was right in front of them and clear as day. Some of my friends have seen pictures of the graffiti, along with pictures of my torched electronics shop (the loss of which I’ve never recovered from).
In fact, the cops weren’t going to write up any sort of report on the graffiti, but I’d shown them my burnt-out shop and one of them (a young man) promised me that they’d write a report. His supervisor was PISSED at him for saying so… she’d already told me that because there were no previous reports of problems, they probably weren’t going to write it up. (Since he’d made the promise as an official, she had to follow up.)
Funny thing, but they both admitted there were extremists in our area “but we can’t stop them from exercising their first amendment rights” and they both knew of the dominionist churches (called them crazy), but they couldn’t accept that churches had threatened us, much less did the damage we’ve experienced.
At least now we DO have a case number and finally the start of a paper trail. We didn’t have that in the past, and the reason was always “because there are no records of you having problems in the past”.
Anyway, my condolences on your losses. The worst we’ve lost is my shop and some of our beloved “babies” – our kitties (along with jobs and money).
Reynardine
Mar. 22nd, 2012 at 9:59 am
Over half a century ago, I ordered a volune called,”Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology” by Russell Hope Robbins, from Publishers’ Central Bureau. It turned out to be a very comprehensive and scholarly work on the Inquisition, both Catholic and Protestant, and its New World spinoffs, including in the Colonies. I am very well aware of what churches will do if they have the power to do it. It was reiterated in the humanities and world history courses required in the freshman and sophomore college curricula. Probably it shouldn’t surprise us that courses on these subjects have gone missing from both secondary and college requirements, or even offerings; that history has been rewritten when offered; and that consequently, what we hear is, “But, it’s a CHURCH!” That’s the whole point, folks. Give any church a taste of power, and that’s what happens. That is exactly the point of the separation between church and state.
SinghX
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 4:26 pm
I’m betting that if someone could get a DNA sample of O’Keefe, we’d find out he’s a “love-child” of Limbaugh…come on, all we need is someone to stand up and provoke O’Keefe to “spit” or “throw his feces” at them in a rage. I doubt if there was an actual “mother”; maybe an alien from the mother ship perhaps, as all the UFO’s happen around those small towns like the one Limbaugh hails…but a human female as a carrier of O’Keefe?…naaaa, impossible!
Or, perhaps he’s the “bi”product of an “Stepford”-style experiment that went bad; his face is really put together poorly…
SinghX
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 4:28 pm
…as in bifurcated, not “bi” as I would not insult the LBGT community or foist him in their court. No, a split gene species…
nogravity
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 5:24 pm
Not Rush Limbaugh’s love child, he’s never been near a woman.
Reynardine
Mar. 20th, 2012 at 11:07 am
They took a cutting.
crystalwolfakacaligrl
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 5:34 pm
Why isn’t that little POS rat bastard o’keffe in jail for all the shit he’s done?
And lets not forget the violence recently to Doctors who provide abortion services to women… :(
I’m sick of RW lies, smears, hypocrisy! I’m just damn Sick of them period.
I wish they would follow Sarah Palin and her ilk off the edge of the world :)
(b/c none of them know the world is round )
8)
Brian Meadows
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 8:29 pm
The exact same thing as in the 1920s when you had hysteria whipped up about males of color (then including Greeks, Italians, Iberians and Jews)lusting after the sweet pure blue-eyed Celtic and Teutonic ‘Murrkin’ women and who’d commit rape if and when they couldn’t seduce these Polly Purebreds. And what did happen? The Grand Dragon of the Indiana KKK abducted and raped his secretary and caused her to poison herself! Happily, he was convicted of murder 2 and sentenced to life in prison. Same pattern all over again!!!
john r
Mar. 20th, 2012 at 12:22 am
i have wondered lately if something the magnitude of the Madge Oberholtzer incident would even register today.. guess it deepends who you are David Vitter, Larry Craig, Mark Stanford, and Even Joe Scarbourough get a free pass.. folks like Anthony Weiner get tried in the court of public opinion.. and are forced out of office.. seems its alright if your a right winger..
Reynardine
Mar. 20th, 2012 at 12:18 pm
The Oberholtzer case turned out the way it did because she died. Otherwise, she would have been just another “bad girl crying rape”. Indeed, two dissenting justices of the Indiana Supreme Court said as much: that if she took bichloride of mercury to escape her odious captivity, her kidnapper and rapist owed her no duty of care, and was guilty of nothing. But the verdict was upheld because the court below reasonably found that the proximate cause of death was systemic infection resulting from bite wounds during the rape.
A Walkaway
Mar. 20th, 2012 at 11:20 am
When I read the article, I wasn’t in the least surprised.
The dominionist churches have a real bad problem with hierarchal rape. I’ve heard many times from women (over the last ten years or so) who were raped as young girls by their pastor/youth director/elder/home church leader and could not get help or in many cases even go for help. The few that tried to get something done were labeled “Jezebels” and punished by their church.
I’ve met men who were raped by their pastor or youth director as a young boy too…
It’s so bad that I automatically suspect a fundamentalist or dominionist preacher to be a pedophile.
Those that aren’t… well, one of my female friends right now was married to a young pastor – a wife beater who was supported by the church even when he admitted to beating her. It’s also a fairly common story.
I also learned that the Assemblies formally teach their female “ministry” students that they are to NEVER NEVER take or hold a position any higher than their husband… they are always to play second fiddle to him. Thus, they’re put on the “children’s ministry” or “music ministry” (or whatever) track, and not the “pastor track”.
Since there are so many connections between the Tea Party and the dominionists… and because they’re just as focused on hierarchy and authority, IMO rape and abuse of women (and people of “lesser status”) goes with the territory.
Churchlady320
Mar. 21st, 2012 at 2:27 pm
Thank you for that important piece of history. These folks have deep roots, and now those who were once victims of the race and religious hate have ALLIED with them. Tom Tancredo would have been a target – O’Keefe’s family, too. But now they are part of the hateful abusers. We must not let them and the nation forget how brutally people have treated other people. VERY important context, thank you!
A Walkaway
Mar. 21st, 2012 at 3:17 pm
In the late 1800s, it was the homeless, the “tramp”, the “Hobo” who were the big bugaboo.
Funny, but while denouncing them and demonizing them, at the same time the very ones who were doing so (business owners) also were sending people out to recruit “transient laborers”… men and boys who would become homeless – to work for a pittance in their businesses at temporary jobs. Yep, creating homelessness… and the reason was to reduce wages for the local (and permanent) employees.
I’ve got the references to back this up… but would have to dig them out.
Although I can also argue that even then, minorities were also considered a threat to white women.
Eli Cabelly
Mar. 19th, 2012 at 10:00 pm
The democratic party got rid of the southern christian element during the civil rights movement. I wonder what it will take for the republican party to get rid of them. Also, where will they go after that?
It’s times like this when I think the parliamentary system is better. The radical right would be a large faction but they would never be able to take over the government like they’re trying to do here.
Churchlady320
Mar. 21st, 2012 at 2:27 pm
It’s not confined to the South anymore. That virus of hate and exclusion is everywhere.
Reynardine
Mar. 22nd, 2012 at 10:04 am
I have the creeping suspicion that we are going to see exemplary violence increasing in the near future, in the belief right-wingers have that women are timid by nature and that repeated reminders of “their place” will make it easier to scare them away from the polls. The “manosphere” has become so virulent lately that the SPLC Intelligence Report has taken cognizence of it.