Events

Saturday September 11, 2010
Start: 10:00 am

Join us this Saturday the 11th at 10:00 am for our September meeting, including club elections for the 2011 calendar year.

We will be meeting at the new Democratic campaign HQ, 7221 Van Nuys Blvd, Unit B-2, Van Nuys.

We'll have a shorter-than-usual meeting, followed by phone banking and other volunteering to help our Democratic ticket win in November.

The HQ is at 7221 Van Nuys Blvd, Unit B-2, Van Nuys
Formerly Hollywood Video, next to Papa John's, in the Lucky/Albertsons shopping center at the N.W. corner of Sherman Way and Van Nuys Blvd.

Thursday September 23, 2010
Start: 7:00 am
End: 8:00 pm

Join us on Thursday, September 23, at 7:00 p.m. for a reading by John Amato, author of Over the Cliff: How Obama's Election Drove the American Right Insane He will be reading and signing copies of his book.

Barack Obama’s election to this nation’s highest office was an historic achievement in American politics. His victory brought the best out in many Americans, but sowed the seeds of venom and hatred in many, many others.

In the first two weeks of Obama’s presidency, more than 200 hate crimes were committed throughout the United States, including assault, arson, and murder. And within a few months, a seemingly new right wing populist faction called the Tea Party Movement invaded the political landscape.

In a groundbreaking new book, Over the Cliff: How Obama's Election Drove the American Right Insane (PoliPoint, June 2010), blogosphere pioneers John Amato and David Neiwert carefully document the aftermath of Obama’s victory in chilling fashion.

Amato and Neiwert explain that this “movement” was not the organic uprising it was made to appear, but rather was kick-started by Roger Ailes’ FOX News and follows in a long tradition of movement conservative activism that harkens back to the street theater days of Jack Abramoff, Ralph Reed and Grover Norquist...

Over the Cliff puts the finger on the driving force behind this descent into madness: the extremist Radical Right, where the Tea Party movement’s most unhinged ideas originate, and the conservative pundits and politicians who were willing accomplices to a divisive politics of resentment.

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