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STEP 1: Click on the image to open a large high resolution file.
STEP 2: Print it out at home or at your local Kinko's.
STEP 3: Take a photo of it at the rally and post it in the comments below or email it to us at redsquare@thepeioplescube.com.
Enjoy!
| Running-Dog Capitalist wrote |
| The Dayton, Ohio, Tea Party on Friday, July 3rd was a great success. The local fire department chief estimated that about 5000 Thought-Criminals assembled. I used some of Superkommissar Maksim's artwork for my sign. Many of the Thought-Criminals enjoyed his inventiveness. This was an excellent way for the Thought-Police to identify the worst Thought-Criminals because they would laugh [the horror!] at the parody of our DEAR LEADER.
Sadly, the Thought-Police from the Department of Homeland Scrutiny had no excuse to disperse the mob. The right-wing extremist rabble protesting DEAR LEADER'S enlightened policies controlled themselves for some strange reason and did not burn the park to the ground. They didn't even litter. The right-wing scum need to take some lessons from sec-prog protesters on the proper way to conduct a rally. Sincerely, Running-Dog Capitalist |
| TheSunNews.com wrote |
|
Sunday, Jul. 12, 2009 Protesters vent anger at lawmakers' free spending By Aliana Ramos - aramos@thesunnews.com Tired of watching lawmakers' seemingly endless spending, Billie and Jim Gunn of Murrells Inlet proudly stood with their protest signs at Grand Park Saturday. "Tax and spend not the way to go! Tell Congress stop it!" Jim Gunn's sign read. More than 300 people braved the heat and sun to listen to speakers at the second Myrtle Beach Tea Party and protest against more government spending, health care reform, taxation caps, school choice and illegal immigration. A large crowd gathered on the grass across from Market Common for the Tea Party rally, Saturday afternoon. "We would much rather be at home, but we very much feel that silence means consent," said Billie Gunn, toting a FairTax.org sign. The concept was born out of a cable news commentator's call for a tea party to protest the financial-sector stimulus grants and inspired by the tax-resisting 1773 Boston Tea Party. Participants built TEA into an acronym for "Taxed Enough Already," emblazoned on hats and signs to demonstrate their irritation. "I am here because I have an objection to outrageous government spending," Jim Gunn said. "Our leaders have put our country deeply in debt. ... This is getting out of control, and it is going to hurt our children and our children's children." The public debt in the U.S. has grown from $5.6 trillion in June 2000 to $11.5 trillion in June of this year. Ara Adams, a speaker at Saturday's event, focused on school choice and education spending. South Carolina spent billions last year on education, she said. "I don't think money is the problem," said Adams, regional director for Conservatives in Action. "We lose one out of every two children; we are at a 50 percent graduation rate. We need to remind our legislators that they work for the people. The people don't work for them." A study released by Education Week in June found the state has a 66.3 percent graduation rate. Adams pushed for school choice vouchers to allow parents to get tax credits to take their children to another school out of their attendance zones, or private schools. The Myrtle Beach Tea Party, a grass-roots group of volunteers, was also collecting signatures at Saturday's event for a protest march in Washington Sept. 11-12. For more information visit www.mbteaparty.org. About 60 to 90 people had signed up as of about 6 p.m., said volunteer Janet Spencer, of North Myrtle Beach. She got involved after last year's elections. "I was sensing our government was changing," Spencer said. |
| TheSunNews.com wrote |
|
More than 300 people braved the heat and sun |
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