Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

Merry Christmas to you, whether you like it or not – ChicagoNow

A Christmas throwback from 2015:

Merry Christmas and I mean it. I like saying it. Something about it makes me feel good and I suspect that's true for a lot of people.

Saying Merry Christmas is not a political issue. It is a simple wish for peace or joy or happiness, if only for a season or just one day.

If you find it offensive, you need to grow up.

Whether you're a Jew, Muslim,Shaolin monkor an atheist,you should accept those good wishes like you would any other. Consider it a once-a-year elevation of the mundane, Have a nice day.

Wishing someone Merry Christmas isn't like proselytizing. No one's trying to foist their religious beliefs on you. It's not about religion at all.

Santa Claus has nothing to do with anyone's faith. He's just a guy in in a cool outfit who comes down your chimney to give you presents. You don't even have to lose any teeth to summon him.

There's no litmus test for being merry. You don't have to believe in Jesus or God or anything to enjoy the spirit of Christmas. Even terrorists can get into it.

All you have do, Achmed, is chill out for a day. You can always blow yourself to kingdom come after New Years.

Earth can be an unwelcoming place, so a day when people wish each other well should be cherished. Merry Christmas is both simple and exquisite.

We wish each other a happy 4th of July without considering the social impact of the Boston Tea Party. Most people don't know the significance of Labor or Memorial Days, but they still tell you to have a good one.

Even people who hate the Irish wish each other a happy St. Patrick's Day. Most of us will never even know the joy of puking onRush Street.

Growing up Jewish, we always searched out friends who celebrated Christmas, just so we could horn in on their festivities.

Still have fond memories of Christmas Eve with the Chelemengos clan.

Even as an atheist, I take comfort in those magical words. Sometimes I try to imagine what it would be likeif we all worked a tad harderto spread a little joy.

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Merry Christmas to you, whether you like it or not - ChicagoNow

Some Republicans arent done fighting the election and among themselves – Deseret News

In the wake of a popular vote and Electoral College victory for Democratic President-elect Joe Biden, some Republicans are not done fighting for President Donald Trump.

Despite warnings from Senate GOP leadership, several House Republicans are reportedly plotting to overturn the Electoral College results when a joint session of Congress convenes Jan. 6, 2021, to ratify those results.

And the differences among GOP members arent just in Congress. The decision to accept the election results and focus on the future of the party sans Trump has also divided state party officials and elected GOP officials.

But fighting for Trumps unsubstantiated claims that the election was rigged wont stop the inevitable: President-elect Biden will be inaugurated on Jan. 20 as the 46th President of the United States. And Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will make history as the first woman to hold the nations second-highest executive office.

On Wednesday, Republican Sen. Ron Johnson held an oversight hearing to examine the irregularities in the 2020 election. The Wisconsin senator and longtime ally of Trump said the hearing before the the Homeland Security and Government Affair Committee, which he chairs, will go ahead even though he acknowledged that the election results were legitimate.

I havent seen anything that would convince me that the results the overall national result would be overturned, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.

Johnsons evolution from ideologically driven standard-bearer of the tea party to one of Trumps most stalwart defenders mirrors the arc of his party over the past decade, The Washington Post reported. With Johnsons term expiring in 2022, Wednesdays hearing could be both the last stand of Trumps most fervent Senate follower and the first act of a post-Trump Republican Party,

The hearing comes the day after Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell congratulated incoming President-elect Biden on his Electoral College victory, and later joined party leaders in warning Senate colleagues to stop contesting the election.

Shortly after midnight Wednesday, Trump retweeted a post that attacked McConnell who won his seventh term last month as NOT a Patriot and said that it was too soon to give up. Republican Party must finally learn to fight. People are angry!

On Jan. 6, in a joint session of Congress, lawmakers will ratify this weeks Electoral College and declare Biden and Harris the victors.

The New York Times reported that Trump loyalists in the House are plotting to challenge the election results in swing states Arizona, Pennsylvania, Nevada, Georgia and Wisconsin on the House floor during the joint session.

There is almost no chance they will succeed. But if they could persuade at least one senator to join them, they could force a vote on the matter, transforming a typically perfunctory session into a bitter last stand for Mr. Trump, The Time reported. Under rules laid out in the Constitution and the Electoral Count Act of 1887, their challenges must be submitted in writing with a senators signature also affixed.

As of Wednesday, no senators had agreed to join the small group of House Republicans, according to the Times, appearing to stand fast with McConnell.

A spokesman for Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee told The Hill the senator has no plan to support the efforts of House Republicans. Lee has been a loyal supporter of the president and campaigned for Trump earlier this year.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., as recently as Tuesday afternoon, had not acknowledged that Republicans lost the presidential election, CNN reporter Many Raju tweeted.

The election causing divisions within the GOP were further detailed in a story from conservative digital media publication The Dispatch on Wednesday. The story titled Begun, the GOP Civil War Has shows how state GOP officials have attacked the high ranking state Republicans for distancing themselves from the one-term presidents ongoing fight against official election results.

Pundits promised a GOP civil war if Donald Trump lost his reelection bid. Its here, with ones degree of loyalty to the outgoing president serving as the line of demarcation, The Dispatchs Declan Garvey wrote. Degree is the operative word here, because both sides of this post-election conflict are and have been incredibly loyal to the president.

For example, The Dispatch cited GOP turmoil in Arizona and George where party leadership has attacked Republican public officials for appearing to stand against Trumps unfounded claims of election fraud regardless of their former devotion to the president.

How is it that the governor of Arizona (Republican Doug Ducey) could surrender to the mob and abandon our great President, all while working behind the scenes to undermine and get rid of our brave and beloved chairwoman (Kelli Ward)? No loyalty!, the Arizona Republican Party tweeted last week.

Earlier this month, Georgia Republican Party chairman David Shafer announced that the Republican National Committee would join together in suing the states top election official, Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.

David Shafer and the Georgia GOP need to stop passing the buck for failing to deliver Georgia for Trump and actually focus on getting out the vote in January, Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs said in response to the lawsuit, reported WTVM, in Columbus, Georgia.

In Utah, Republican Gov. Gary Herbert and Gov.-elect Spencer Cox condemned Republican Attorney General Sean Reyes decision last week for joining a Texas a lawsuit challenging election results in Pennsylvania and other states that Trump lost.

The Supreme Court, which includes three conservative judges appointed by Trump, rejected the lawsuit on Friday.

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Some Republicans arent done fighting the election and among themselves - Deseret News

Tom Petty’s Mad Hatter Music Video Scarred The MTV Generation – Screen Rant

Tom Petty's video for "Don't Come Around Here No More" cast him as the Mad Hatter from Alice In Wonderland, and it gave MTV viewers nightmares.

The music video for Tom Petty's "Don't Come Around Here No More" featured the late, great singer as Alice In Wonderland's Mad Hatter, and it scarred a whole generation of MTV viewers. Lewis Carroll's Alice In Wonderland is one of the most popular fantasy novels ever written and follows the titular heroine as she falls through a rabbit hole and emerges into a world populated by all kinds of bizarre creatures. Since it was first published in 1865, Carroll's seminal work has been adapted into just about every medium.

While it received mixed reviews, Tim Burton's Alice In Wonderland -which cast Mia Wasikowska as Alice and Johnny Depp as the Mad Hatter - was an enormous financial success. The book also received a cult video game in the form of American McGee's Alice, Rose Reynolds played the character in the final season of Once Upon A Time, and even the original Resident Evil movie is a loose adaptation of the novel. Milla Jovovich's character is named Alice who awakens in a bizarre, underground facility and faces off with an A.I. dubbed the "Red Queen," who likes to decapitate victims.

Related: Alice: Madness Returns - Hysteria Mode Explained (& How To Use It)

If an Alice In Wonderland soundtrack existed, it would be filled with the many, many songs it has inspired, including Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit" and "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" by The Beatles. "Don't Come Around Here No More" is one of Tom Petty's most famous videos, and while the song itself wasn't penned with Alice In Wonderland in mind, the video is a major ode to Carroll's work. The song itself was featured on Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers album Southern Accents, and the title came from an argument producer Dave Stewart witnessed between Stevie Nicks and an ex, with Nicks uttering the phrase.

The Tom Petty Alice In Wonderland video was a staple on MTV back in the day and it gives off a distinctly trippy tone. Actress Wish Foley plays Alice, who sits across from the Tom Petty Mad Hatter at a recreation of the Mad Tea Party passage from the book. She drinks from a cup of tea - which is prone to changing sizes - as Petty's Hatter leers at the camera. The hallucinations come thick and fast around the midway point, with scenes such as Alice trapped in a cup of tea as giant lumps of sugar are thrown in the cup, or seeing an image of herself turning into a pig.

"Don't Come Around Here No More's" Alice In Wonderland homage ends with the fairly unsettling image of Alice being turned into a giant cake. Tom Petty's Mad Hatter and his guests then proceed to eat her alive, with the final image being Petty swallowing Alice and burping. While it's fairly tongue-in-cheek and tame by modern standards, the sight of Alice being turned into a living cake scarred some viewers back in 1985 and is said to be partly responsible for Tipper Gore co-founding the Parents Music Resource Center. In a retrospective interview with Yahoo! the video's director Jeff Stein laughs about the video even being accused of promoting cannibalism with the sequence.

Next: Alice In Wonderland 2 Easter Egg Revealed The Fate Of Crispin Glover's Villain

Why The Mandalorian Let Baby Yoda Touch His Face

Its pronounced Paw-rick, not Pad-raig. Now thats out of the way, a brief introduction. Padraig has been writing about film online since 2012, when a friend asked if hed like to contribute the occasional review or feature to their site. A part-time hobby soon blossomed into a career when he discovered he really loved writing about movies, TV and video games he even (arguably) had a little bit of talent for it. He has written words for Den of Geek, Collider, The Irish Times and Screen Rant over the years, and can discuss anything from the MCU - where Hawkeye is clearly the best character - to the most obscure cult b-movie gem, and his hot takes often require heat resistant gloves to handle. He's super modern too, so his favorite movies include Jaws, Die Hard, The Thing, Ghostbusters and Batman. He can be found as i_Padds on Twitter making bad puns.

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Tom Petty's Mad Hatter Music Video Scarred The MTV Generation - Screen Rant

Tea time: Shepherdstown Community Club and Daisy Troop join together for holiday celebration – Shepherdstown Chronicle

Daisy Troop 15099 members gathered for a photo before leaving the holiday tea Monday evening. Back row, from left are Sophia, Bella and Willa. Seated on the floor are Cheyenne and Isabella. Toni Milbourne

SHEPHERDSTOWN As many things have gone virtual this year, the Shepherdstown Community Club holiday tea was no exception. The tea did, however, take an in-person turn when members of Daisy Troop 15099 held their awards ceremony and joined the tea in-person Monday evening.

The five members of the troop, along with their moms and one grandmother, arrived in fine array for the tea that was then livestreamed to club members who joined in from their homes.

We had 17 baskets picked up by club members that included everything that the tea offers tonight, said SCC President Jen Wabnitz.

Each Daisy and her guest, seated at separate tables, enjoyed the fare together from cucumber sandwiches to croissants and tasty holiday shortbreads and other cookies.

SCC member Steve Campbell and his daughter, Kyleigh, arrived to handle the video feed just as surprise guest, Mrs. Claus, arrived to share stories with the girls and the audience at home. Mrs. Claus, who normally reads The Night Before Christmas and How the Grinch Stole Christmas at the towns tree lighting ceremony, explained she was unable to do so in-person this year, and shared how happy she was to be able to read for the tea attendees.

Santa sent candy canes to each of you, Mrs. Claus said as she handed out the sweets. He also said to make sure you are wearing your masks, socially distancing and washing your hands. You know hes still watching!

The girls took the opportunity to ask Mrs. Claus some pointed questions, including whether Santa Claus wears his mask, as well as how he watches everyone from the North Pole.

He definitely wears his mask, Mrs. Claus said. And, he is magic. He knows lots of tricks, that guy.

You know he comes down the fireplace and if you dont have a fireplace, he has a magic key, she said.

The group also had a lively conversation about all of the adventures their Elves on the Shelves have had this season.

In addition to enjoying the tea and their visit with Mrs. Claus, the five members of the Daisy Troop received the badges and petals they have earned up to this point at the event. Troop leader Angelina Gray recognized each girl and their accomplishments.

We celebrate today what we have done in the last few months, Gray told the girls.

Members of the troop earned their Respect Myself and Others petal, Responsible for What I Say and Do petal and their Counting Up leaf. In addition, they received badges that included Celebrating Yoga, Virtual Campout, Fill a Stocking, Thanksgiving Parade and a Tea Party patch. The girls also received their Investiture badge.

According to Gray, the girls will now focus on cookie sales.

The goal is for each girl to sell 125 boxes. The overall troop goal is to sell enough to raise funds to visit the National Aquarium in Baltimore, she said, mentioning the girls had voted on that activity as an overall goal.

Those interested in purchasing Girl Scout cookies and helping the troop meet their goals are encouraged to contact Gray at gstroop15099@gmail.com.

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Tea time: Shepherdstown Community Club and Daisy Troop join together for holiday celebration - Shepherdstown Chronicle

Texas is a hub of hyper-partisanship as American politics grow ever-more divisive – Houston Chronicle

WASHINGTON National politics in 2020 pushed partisan lines further than theyve been since the Civil War, and Texas is expected to play an outsize role in whether things get even more polarized as Democrats and Republicans vie ever more fiercely for money and support.

In a year shaped by the pandemic, Americans still cannot agree on how serious it is, or on basic coronavirus protection measures, such as masks. We are still arguing over who won a presidential election a month and a half after it ended. The disagreements are stoked by politicians who increasingly speak to the extremes of their parties, often encouraging their followers to ignore basic facts. Increasingly fragmented news boosted by social media feeds offer up whichever reality their users want to believe.

Even for a country thats been increasingly polarized over the last decade, the last year stood out as exceptional ending with President Donald Trump falsely alleging the election was rigged against him and casting President-elect Joe Biden as illegitimate the first time in U.S. history that a sitting president has so resisted the transfer of power.

The last year also saw growing calls from the left for socialist policies such as universal health care and for defunding the police that at times had Biden playing defense against elements of his own party as he campaigned for the presidency a preview of whats likely in store for the Biden administration over the next four years.

One side has one reality and the other side has another and both of them kind of regard the other as something between evil and ill-conceived, said Dan Diller, director of the Lugar Center, a D.C. think tank focused on bipartisanship.

Theres maybe no state thats going to have a bigger impact on the direction of American politics in the next 20 years than Texas, said Diller, who tracks the increasingly divisive nature of politics. Its just the most important state in terms of the transition of American politics were going through right now.

TEXAS TAKE: Get political headlines from across the state sent directly to your inbox

A Lugar Center study released earlier this year showed Texas is among the most politically polarized states in the U.S., and its congressional leaders are more partisan than those of any other populous state in the nation.

Several Texas lawmakers were rated by the Lugar Center as among the most partisan in the nation, including U.S. Reps. Chip Roy, a Central Texas Republican who rated as the third-most partisan member of Congress, and U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, whose record in the Senate is less partisan than those of just five other senators since 1993.

Experts say the upcoming Texas legislative session is likely to highlight those divisions in 2021.

Recent polling by the University of Houston showed more than 58 percent of Democrats in Texas believed the pandemic was the most pressing public policy concern facing state lawmakers returning to Austin in January.

Fewer than 27 percent of Republicans agreed.

And even as the country struggles to recover from the economic havoc the pandemic brought, only 4 percent of Democrats in Texas called economic development a top priority, compared to 31 percent of Republicans.

Were starting to see these extreme cleavages between the parties just like we do at the national level, said Renee Cross, senior director of the Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston. Some of the differences are staggering and I honestly dont know of a period where youd see 50 or 60 point differences between people of different parties.

The divides nationally this year were stark.

According to Pew Research Center, Trumps approval rating has been more sharply divided along partisan lines than that of any president in the modern era of polling. And as the presidential race escalated in October, Pew found that the vast majority of Trump and Biden supporters 77 and 80 percent, respectively fundamentally disagree with the other side on core American values and goals.

Data, meanwhile, suggests Congress is more polarized than it has ever been.

Sean Theriault, a University of Texas at Austin political scientist who studies polarization, said looking strictly at how lawmakers voted, the Senate was 42.6 percent as polarized as it would be if every Democrat always voted against every Republican. Thats the highest that measure has ever been, after climbing eight percentage points since 2010.

The Houses average was down some overall, which Theriault attributed that to more moderate voting records among Democrats who won swing districts in 2018. Republicans in the House, however, had more partisan voting records than ever before.

Theriault says the data shows that, at least in Congress, certainly the last 10 years has been more polarized than any decade since the Civil War.

And Donald Trump has clearly lit a match, he said.

On the other side, left-wing Democrats are calling for universal health care, free college and other socialist policies that would wipe out decades of cuts to entitlements, saying they will increase taxation on the wealthy to pay for them. Biden has pitched $5.4 trillion in new spending over the next decade, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis.

And even Biden, who campaigned as a moderate, is seeking to end the nations reliance on fossil fuels, which means job losses in Texas a Republican attack line that Biden only reinforced with statements he made late in the presidential campaign.

Historians say theres no equivalent for Trumps response to his loss.

Trump has spent the weeks since the election trying to undermine the results, claiming without evidence the election was stolen and repeatedly calling Biden an illegitimate president.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxtons failed attempt last week to convince the Supreme Court to overturn election results in four battleground states was widely supported by the states Republicans, including both Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick .

Stephanie McCurry, a Columbia University historian specializing in the Civil War and Reconstruction, said the moment parallels the response from white southerners to Ulysses Grants election in 1868.

Southern Democrats never accepted Grants presidency as legitimate because they believed it was based on Black votes, she said. That same view was taken toward newly elected Black senators, congressmen and members of state legislatures. The Republican Party was viewed as the enemys party, she said.

Its like what were hearing now that the vote was illegitimate, she said. This is what worries me now. What happens now? Were heading into a period thats looking increasingly like theres a chunk of the population that wont concede the legitimacy of the election of Joe Biden.

Russian President Vladimir Putin beat many Texas Republicans to acknowledging Bidens win, including more than a dozen Texas congressmen and Sen. Cruz, who had agreed to argue Trumps case before the Supreme Court.

Its important to let Trumps legal challenges play out in court before declaring Biden the victory, said Cruz, who scoffs at those accusing Trump of chipping away at the foundation of our democracy.

Its almost like theyre persecuting heretics, Cruz has said of the insistence by Democrats that Republicans in Congress individually affirm Bidens win with public statements. They scream at you, Youre undermining democracy. Thats nutty. No, democracy means if there are legal challenges you resolve the legal challenges.

Texas political observers expect the energy Trump has stirred up after losing the election to translate to the legislative session, which is just weeks away. The last decade began with the rise of the Tea Party in Texas after the election of Barack Obama, the last Democrat to hold the White House, Jim Henson and Josh Blank of UT Austins Texas Politics Project point out.

There can be little doubt that the effects of Trumps commandeering of the Republican party by inflaming the most reactionary grievances among his base, demonstrating the yields of that approach to other GOP officials and hopefuls, and then refusing to accept his loss, has reenergized some of the same forces in the Texas GOP that surged in the party a decade ago, they wrote in a recent blog post. If the politics of 2011 are any guide, there is a lot of potential for a familiar ugliness fueled by an activated reactionary base to creep into the Legislature next year.

In Washington, meanwhile, Biden has said repeatedly he believes he can bridge the divide, something he campaigned on as he showed some success winning over Republican voters though they were by far the minority of the partys supporters.

And early signs are theres little change on the way to Washington.

Even as she said she believes Biden will be able to break down the polarization in D.C., a top aide to the president-elect had harsh words for Republicans.

Mitch McConnell is terrible, Bidens deputy chief of staff, Jen O'Malley Dillon, said in an interview with Glamour. She later apologized, but the comments were swiftly seized upon by Fox News and other conservative outlets.

When Biden said in December that he planned to sign an executive order on day one to require masks to be worn everywhere I can, he received a taste of whats to likely to come from Texas Republicans.

U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin, responded: On day one I will tell you to kiss my ass.

ben.wermund@chron.com

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Texas is a hub of hyper-partisanship as American politics grow ever-more divisive - Houston Chronicle