What a surprise !!! Threats against Obama

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Threats Against Obama UnprecedentedBy EILEEN SULLIVAN, AP
posted: 8 HOURS 20 MINUTES AGOcomments: 9941filed under: Political News, The Obama PresidencyPrintShareText SizeAAAWASHINGTON (Nov. 14) -
Threats against a new president historically spike right after an election, but from Maine to Idaho law enforcement officials are seeing more against Barack Obama than ever before.
The Secret Service would not comment or provide the number of cases they are investigating. But since the Nov. 4 election, law enforcement officials have seen more potentially threatening writings, Internet postings and other activity directed at Obama than has been seen with any past president-elect, said officials aware of the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity because the issue of a president's security is so sensitive.

Earlier this week, the Secret Service looked into the case of a sign posted on a tree in Vay, Idaho, with Obama's name and the offer of a "free public hanging." In North Carolina, civil rights officials complained of threatening racist graffiti targeting Obama found in a tunnel near the North Carolina State University campus.
And in a Maine convenience store, an Associated Press reporter saw a sign inviting customers to join a betting pool on when Obama might fall victim to an assassin. The sign solicited $1 entries into "The Osama Obama Shotgun Pool," saying the money would go to the person picking the date closest to when Obama was attacked. "Let's hope we have a winner," said the sign, since taken down.
In the security world, anything "new" can trigger hostility, said Joseph Funk, a former Secret Service agent-turned security consultant who oversaw a private protection detail for Obama before the Secret Service began guarding the candidate in early 2007.
Obama-Biden PhotosREUTERS500 photos Rapper Jerrone Strickland, otherwise known as Lil Bankhead, is seen in the studio of the V-103 radio station in Atlanta, Georgia, November 13, 2008. The election of the first black president in U.S. history should send a powerful signal to young black Americans: If Barack Obama made it, so can you. Bankhead said that while he supported Obama and saw him as a symbol of success he did not need him or anyone else to provide motivation for his dream of a career in the music industry.

Obama, of course, will be the country's first black president, and Funk said that new element, not just race itself, is probably responsible for a spike in anti-Obama postings and activity. "Anytime you're going to have something that's new, you're going to have increased chatter," he said.
The Secret Service also has cautioned the public not to assume that any threats against Obama are due to racism.
The service investigates threats in a wide range. There are "stated threats" and equally dangerous or lesser incidents considered of "unusual interest" — such as people motivated by obsessions or infatuations or lower-level gestures such as effigies of a candidate or an elected president. The service has said it does not have the luxury of discounting anything until agents have investigated the potential danger.
Racially tinged graffiti — not necessarily directed at Obama — also has emerged in numerous reports across the nation since Election Day, prompting at least one news conference by a local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Georgia.
A law enforcement official who also spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly said that during the campaign there was a spike in anti-Obama rhetoric on the Internet — "a lot of ranting and raving with no capability, credibility or specificity to it."
There were two threatening cases with racial overtones:
— In Denver, a group of men with guns and bulletproof vests made racist threats against Obama and sparked fears of an assassination plot during the Democratic National Convention in August.
— Just before the election, two skinheads in Tennessee were charged with plotting to behead blacks across the country and assassinate Obama while wearing white top hats and tuxedos.
In both cases, authorities determined the men were not capable of carrying out their plots.
In Milwaukee, police officials found a poster of Obama with a bullet going toward his head — discovered on a table in a police station.
Chatter among white supremacists on the Internet has increased throughout the campaign and since Election Day.
One of the most popular white supremacist Web sites got more than 2,000 new members the day after the election, compared with 91 new members on Election Day, according to an AP count. The site, stormfront.org, was temporarily off-line Nov. 5 because of the overwhelming amount of activity it received after Election Day. On Saturday, one Stormfront poster, identified as Dalderian Germanicus, of North Las Vegas, said, "I want the SOB laid out in a box to see how 'messiahs' come to rest. God has abandoned us, this country is doomed."
It is not surprising that a black president would galvanize the white supremacist movement, said Mark Potok, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center, who studies the white supremacy movement.
"The overwhelming flavor of the white supremacist world is a mix of desperation, confusion and hoping that this will somehow turn into a good thing for them," Potok said. He said hate groups have been on the rise in the past seven years because of a common concern about immigration.
Associated Press writers Lara Jakes Jordan in Washington and Jerry Harkavy in Standish, Maine, contributed to this report.
 
There are many elements of an Obama administration that I'm really dreading....


But bigots make me sick.



It would behoove us to be clear that we don't agree with them, even though the prospects for the Constitution and the Supreme Court are downright disheartening.
 
+1, I believe in assassinations at the ballot box only, lol!

Seriously though, putting aside the obvious, massive legal and moral wrongs associated with physically harming Obama, it isn't even a logical thing to do. If, God forbid, someone killed him then we'd have President Biden and if they got both somehow it would be President Pelosi. Obama won fair and square and the way our system works we just have to grin and bear it for two years and then we have our chance to make our case again and elect a Congress that will oppose his agenda.

So, here's the better game plan: Return Congress to Conservative control in '10 and the presidency in '12--preferably to Palin or another Reaganite...OK, I really mean just Palin, who am I kidding?
 
Java,

Amen.
One of the things that has us conservatives in the hole is the huge number of people who look for the Government for their security and servival. There have been five generations of people on the dole, who don't work, and look for the Government check each month. They have bred, and their children have done as they have done, on down through all five generations. We are horribly outnumbered at the ballot box.
Historically, Democracies have only lasted about 200 years. Maybe we are experiencing how they died.

Don
 
i do not support any assasanations but i would support a few million man march on washington over all gun control.
if they pass it a few million man fight.
the only way to stop gun control is to make it against the law to even bring it to the table.
the only way to get that is to elect ONLY pro constitutional candidates and that's what would take a fight.
i for one am sick of the whittling down of our rights we need to stop it now.
 
Its really not surprising
just from what has been said on this forum alone there is alot of contempt and ill will towards anyone who doe not share the same point of view as the general opinion
 
Quote:
i do not support any assasanations but i would support a few million man march on washington over all gun control.
if they pass it a few million man fight.
the only way to stop gun control is to make it against the law to even bring it to the table.
the only way to get that is to elect ONLY pro constitutional candidates and that's what would take a fight.
i for one am sick of the whittling down of our rights we need to stop it now.



I'm there--freedom to assemble peacefully! /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif

BTW, unlike the Rosie O'Donnell's anti-gun "Million Mom March," or the Louis Farrakhan "Million Man March"--neither of which came close to assembling a million people, I bet we could turn out the numbers for a pro 2d Amendment rally/message to politicians. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/ooo.gif
 
Quote:
Its really not surprising
just from what has been said on this forum alone there is alot of contempt and ill will towards anyone who doe not share the same point of view as the general opinion



Try going to some liberal forum. It's worse. People outright attack and the moderators and administrators aid in the process. Ironically they're usually a lot less tolerant.
 
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