The 911 Truth Movement is a loose grouping of conspiracy theorists who question the mainstream account of the attacks of September 2001. This in itself isn't particularly shocking or interesting. A second glance at the language, however, offers an insight into how Americans who engage in reactionary politics try to get their message across.
Take a look at the top-center poster above, where the viewer is invited to choose whether he is a "dumb-ass", "coward" or "Nazi" for being apparently duped by the 9/11 conspiracy.
Now look at how Rush Limbaugh described Obama's health care plan this week:
"If you want to do a comparison...between the people pushing (the health care bill) and the people opposing it, to national socialism in Germany, it ain't a contest. The people pushing this health care bill have far more in common with the national socialists of Germany - exempting genocide - than any of us who are opposing this health care have."
Pretty shocking. And this type of language just fans the flames in this part of the world. When you get scenes like this in a liberal state like California, you know that vitriolic language has fanned the flames to the point where all common sense and reason go out the window.
One kind of expects this language from conspiracy theorists, it's their stock in trade after all, and they'd have little or no public profile without it. But it's worrying that a significant proportion of the political establishment here throw words like "Nazi" and "evil" at people who are trying to do something as noble as expanding health coverage.
Similar strokes for very different folks, then.