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(Via tumbléo.)
I’ve been watching the reactions to Ann Coulter’s now infamous f-word remark around the Internet and media. Predictably the neocons are claiming that us liberals are being hypocrites and denying Coulter her right to freedom of speech under the First Amendment. They couldn’t be more wrong.
Coulter went on Fox News to downplay her remark saying it was nothing more than a "schoolyard taunt." I’ll continue using Coulter’s analogy to illustrate my point.
Suppose my friends and I are hanging out on the schoolyard. My particular clique is called, oh I don’t know, let’s say "the reds." Across the playground is another clique hanging out called "the blues." I decide that I don’t like one of the blues named Suzy, so I make a remark calling her a f***ing c**t.
Now do I have the right to call Suzy that, no matter how crass it is? Absolutely. It’s guaranteed to me under the First Amendment.
Does Suzy and her friends the blues have a right to get mad about what I called her? Absolutely.
Can Suzy and her friends tell another group of kids, "the greens," what I said about her and suggest that the greens not play with me anymore? Absolutely.
Can the blues tell the rest of the reds that if they don’t want to be thought of as supporting that crude remark about Suzy that they should tell me what I did wasn’t cool? Absolutely.
When the greens and some of my fellow reds stop playing with me, has my right to free speech been silenced? Absolutely not, and that’s where the neocons are trying to confuse people.
What Coulter and her neocon cronies need to realize is that while they have the right to free speech and they can make whatever stupid, offensive remarks they want, there are still consequences for doing so. If you preach hate, and you get people hating you in return, don’t be surprised. Coulter and friends need to grow up and accept responsibility for their actions.
The First Amendment gives us the right to free speech, but it doesn’t give us a free ride.
Link via Scott-o-Rama

(Via tumbléo.)
According to a new report in Esquire magazine, Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) has suggested that Congress may consider the impeachment of President Bush before his term ends:
“The president says, ‘I don’t care.’ He’s not accountable anymore,” Hagel says, measuring his words by the syllable and his syllables almost by the letter. “He’s not accountable anymore, which isn’t totally true. You can impeach him, and before this is over, you might see calls for his impeachment. I don’t know. It depends how this goes.”
The conversation beaches itself for a moment on that word — impeachment — spoken by a conservative Republican from a safe Senate seat in a reddish state. It’s barely even whispered among the serious set in Washington, and it rings like a gong in the middle of the sentence, even though it flowed quite naturally out of the conversation he was having about how everybody had abandoned their responsibility to the country, and now there was a war going bad because of it.
Hagel isn’t the only one frustrated. The desire for more accountability over Bush has led to increasing calls for impeachment from the Washington State legislature, the mayor of Salt Lake City, and town hall meetings in Vermont.
Rep. Jay Inslee (D-WA) said pushing for impeachment would be counterproductive because it would break off efforts to recruit conservative support for changing the course of the war in Iraq. “We’re trying to get [conservatives] to vote against the war. They’re coming around. You don’t hear them singing the virtues of George Bush like they used to. But nothing will turn this into a partisan lockdown faster than impeachment.” Inslee added, “Ending the war is what’s important now.”
(Via Think Progress.)

(Via tumbléo.)
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(Via Apple Gazette.)