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| America's Freedom Tea Parties Are Growing |
| Americans Working Together |
| What's going to happen to Congress in 2010 |
| Is Barack Hussein Obama a closet racist? |
| Is it time for a realistic, pro-American Military television series |
| Honorably discharged vet mocked in Supreme Court documents for having PTSD |
| The War Experiences of a Proud Tea Party Attendee |
| Tea Party Patriot And Proud Vietnam Vet Asks For Your Support... |
| Obama Gives America His Message After The Massachusetts Special Election |
| Sen. Chris Dodd and Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., allegedly sexually assaulted a waitress |
| Lets take our government back. One politician and one government official at a time. |
| After a nine year New Jersey State Cover-up do you think these charges should be investigated... |
| A disabled PTSD Vietnam vet faces off against a State's Supreme Court Vice-Chairman and the vet wins |
| Campaign for Ted Kennedy Senate Seat Turns Violent |
| Obama bows to foreign leaders, yet he gives crotch salutes to his own country |
| Learn To Speak TeaBag By National Public Radio (NPR) |
| C-SPAN Challenges Congress to Open Health Care Talks to TV Coverage |
| America Rising: An Open Letter to Democrat Politicians |
| Dems Power Is Supreme and Somewhat Superior. At Least, they think so... |
| Never, never, never, never give up. |
| Tea Party more popular than Dems, GOP |
| Everyone's a winner, when political corruption loses... |
| ~ Treats For Troops ~ |
| Only in Todays America |
| PLAN EARLY April 15, 2010 Tea Party In Washington DC |
| HARRY REID TWISTS CIVIL RIGHTS HISTORY TO BASH GOP |
| After a nine year State Cover-up should the federal government investigate... |
| Reid Compares Opponents of Health Care Reform to Supporters of Slavery |
| Navy SEALs Face Assault Charges for Capturing Most-Wanted Terrorist |
| Tea partiers turn on each other |
| 'You can't vote against healthcare and call yourself a black man' |
| I am afraid (Of Today's America) |
| Taxpayers swarm Capitol to protest Obamacare... Keep the swarm going |
| OPEN LETTERS TO VIETNAM ERA VETERANS: Dear Hero / Dear Vietnam ERA Veteran |
| Hi, I'm Government Healthcare |
| Townhall Meeting on the Steps of the Capitol on Thursday Nov 5, 2009 at noon |
| New Jersey Finding Voter Fraud With Absentee Ballots |
| Daily Record No lie: Another Tea Party Joe Wilson to appear at New Jersey event |
| This Sunday (November 1, 2009), Bring your family, your friends, your signs! |
| November 1, 2009 TEA PARTY |
| ENERGY TAX: Cap-and-Trade Largest Tax Increase in U.S. History |
| Congressman Joe Wilson is coming to the New York/New Jersey Area on November 1, 2009 |
| This cartoon seemed far-fetched in 1948......maybe not so much now. |
| White House Advisor Anita Dunn Told high school class that her Favorite philosopher is Mao Tse-Tung |
| The young man who exposed ACORN will speak at College Tea Party |
| Tea Party Movie |
| Joe Wilson As Tea Party Keynote Speaker |
| This is the time for courage |
| Energy Tax - CAP and TRADE to cost families $1,761 a year |
| Government ethics and corruption is the number one issue for Americans |
| America is Me - O America (You Are Calling) |
| Top 10 Reasons Chicago Lost Olympic Bid |
| What's going to happen in 2010 |
| What Is This Democrat Governor Afraid Of...? |
| Obama Wants To Legalize Illegals To Get Them Health Care |
| Tea Party Washington DC 9/12/2009 Police estimate 1.2 million in attendance. ABC News 2 million |
| Watch the 39 second video of the whole Tea Party 9-12-2009 March in Washington DC |
| Thousands of downtown DC protesters blast Obama |
| America's Freedom - Tea Party Speech |
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Tea Party patriots are individuals.
Just like the original 13 colonies were. Once they came together, they kicked some ass.
Below is proud Tea Party Patriot, Vietnam Vet Jack Cunningham
standing with Congressman Joe Wilson at the Morristown, New Jersey Tea Party on November 1, 2009.
The first picture is Jack standing with his fellow Tea
Party Patriots on 9-12-2009 in Washington DC.
The Tea Party Patriot Movement is getting stronger.
Don't listen to the American-Leftist News Media. Get your news from FOX television.


Tea partiers turn on each other (article below)
The American-Leftist news media said
that the Tea Party Movement would never get off the ground. Now, the Leftist-media predicts, it's demise.
There are always adjustments when it comes to growth. They go hand-in-hand. The movement
will continue to grow and the predictions and insults will get even uglier.
Being a tool of Obama and his Socialist
Party, the American-Leftist media would love to see the Tea Party Patriot Movement breakdown, but it will only get much stronger.
With National Health Care, Cap & Trade, Illegal Alien Amnesty, 9-11 Terrorist Trials in Civilian Courts, Political Corruption,
extreme Political Narcissism and the 2010 Congressional Election facing America, the movement is growing more excited as it
plans on celebrating its first anniversary on April 15, 2010.
Tyranny will be stopped today just like
it was stopped during the American Revolution.
Join
a Tea Party group near you.
Jack Cunningham
http://www.Americans-Working-Together.com
http://njteaparty.com


Tea partiers turn on each other
http://news.yahoo.com/s/politico/20091120/pl_politico/29744
After emerging out of nowhere over the summer as a seemingly potent and growing
political force, the tea party movement has become embroiled in internal feuding over philosophy, strategy and money and is
at risk of losing its momentum.
The grass-roots activists driving the movement have become increasingly
divided on such core questions as whether to focus their efforts on shaping policy debates or elections, work on a local,
regional, state or national level or closely align themselves with the Republican Party, POLITICO found in interviews with tea party organizers in Washington and across the country.
Many of these differences date to the movement’s beginnings last winter in an outpouring
of anger about the huge increases in government spending enacted by President Barack Obama and the Democratic Congress. But
they were overshadowed by the initial explosion of activism that culminated during the congressional town hall meetings in
August. Now the disagreements and the sense of frustration they have engendered could diminish the movement’s potential
influence in state and national politics. “These groups don’t play as well together as they should,”
said Kevin Jackson, a St. Louis-based conservative author and activist who has spoken at dozens of tea party-type rallies
and is traveling across the South with a convoy sponsored by the national Tea Party Patriots group. “They’re
fractured at the organization level, I think mainly because there are a lot of people who have not had managerial experience
who all of a sudden are thrust into the limelight and become intoxicated with it. And when a potential rift comes up, instead
of handling it and maybe agreeing to disagree, they splinter and go off on their own.” The movement is composed
of hundreds of independent local groups, many of which are incorporated as nonprofits and have localized names referencing
the tea parties, 9/12 or We the People. Many of their members also belong to national conservative groups, including FreedomWorks,
Americans for Prosperity and Grassfire, while the local groups often affiliate formally or informally with loose-knit umbrella
organizations, including the Tea Party Patriots and Tea Party Nation. The organizational chaos — combined with a
widening apathy at the edges of the movement — has produced a growing consensus among local, state and national tea
party leaders that for the movement to evolve from the loose conglomeration of fired-up activists who mobilized this summer
to register their dissatisfaction with Obama and Congress at town hall protests and marches across the country into a sustainable
bloc with the power to shape the GOP and swing elections, it will require the emergence of a national leader, group or structure.
Ned Ryun, president of American Majority, a nonprofit that has conducted organizer-training sessions for many tea party
activists, said “the next three to six months” are going to be critical in determining “what’s going
to happen with the tea party movement. Are they going to be a bunch of fingers, or are they going to come together to be a
fist?” Yet, while some tout a planned National Tea Party Convention in February (at which former Alaska governor
and tea party darling Sarah Palin is listed as the keynote speaker) as a potentially unifying moment and others point to online
coordination efforts, there is deep disagreement about what any national organization would look like and who would lead it.
FreedomWorks, Americans for Prosperity, Grassfire, Americans for Limited Government and a host of other groups have helped
organize various efforts capitalizing on the energy behind the tea parties, including providing training, online war rooms
that help generate phone calls and ready-to-distribute canvassing literature. But the groups have also jockeyed —
mostly behind the scenes — to take credit for leadership of the movement, which — depending on who’s doing
the telling — took its name either as an homage to the 1773 Boston tax revolt that played a major role in sparking the
American Revolution or from an acronym standing for “taxed enough already.” Some activists see the turmoil
within the movement and the internal clashes as simply a part of maturing. “Some of these groups may burn out, but
this is part of this entrepreneurial process and the competition is good,” said Adam Brandon, vice president of communications
for FreedomWorks, a nonprofit chaired by former House Majority Leader Dick Armey of Texas. The group has facilitated some
of the efforts demonstrating the potential power of the movement. Those have included the confrontations that erupted at congressional
town halls this summer, the massive Sept. 12 “Taxpayer March on Washington” as well as another Washington rally
this month and support for conservative third-party candidate Doug Hoffman, who narrowly lost a special congressional election
in upstate New York this month despite strong support from many tea party groups and leaders. Brandon stressed that the
strength of the tea party movement is in its grass-roots nature and that FreedomWorks’s goal is to help facilitate the
movement, not to control it. “One thing that’s clear is that anyone who says they own the tea party movement
is going to get run over because no one owns the movement,” he said. Brandon acknowledged the “rivalries and
turf battles” now gripping parts of the movement but said “that’s normal because people have different ideas
about what they want. That’s what’s happening now, and it’s sometimes a painful process.” Those
fights have been waged over issues that go to the heart of the movement’s purpose and strategy as well as more mundane
rivalries and personal feuds. In Myrtle Beach, S.C., disputes within the local tea party about how much to engage in partisan
politics and whether board members were profiting from contracts to print paraphernalia emblazoned with the group’s
logo prompted the treasurer to resign and join with defectors from a North Carolina We the People group to form a new organization.
“There’s a lot of fighting, and everyone wants to be in charge, and that’s why you have so many splinter
groups,” said ex-treasurer Janet Spencer, who charged her adversaries within the tea party with saying “derogatory
things about me that were very unprofessional.” She said her new group, called Patriotic Voices of America/Carolina
Patriots, counts about 100 members and will not coordinate with the Myrtle Beach Tea Party, whose treasurer, David Ognek,
said the friction is “just group dynamics.” In Texas, a handful of thriving tea party groups severed their
ties from the national Tea Party Patriots group after it ousted, then sued a founding board member who had affiliated with
a rival group called the Tea Party Express. “Our fight is in Congress and not with each other or with these other
groups,” said Toby Marie Walker, who was the Texas state coordinator for the Tea Party Patriots and also co-founded
the Waco, Texas, tea party. This Waco group recently drew an estimated 4,000 people to a rally it organized with the Tea
Party Express, which travels the country hosting rallies. The month before, it had pulled out of the Tea Party Patriots after
the Patriots group accused the Tea Party Express of steering the movement away from nonpartisan issue-based advocacy, embracing
extremist rhetoric and raising questions about the Express’s finances. The Patriots’ attack and lawsuit worried
the Waco group’s board, Walker said, because “if you align yourself with someone who is going to be that malicious,
then how do we know they won’t turn on us?” Other local tea party groups, though, cast their lots with the
Patriots, heeding the group’s call to disassociate with the Tea Party Express. In Granbury, Texas, local tea party
organizer Josh Sullivan says he believes the movement’s effectiveness is being compromised by extremism.“You have
some interesting folks in the Tea Party movement — some of them I can support, but some of them are kind of out there
and radical, and I don’t want to associate myself with them,” he said. In Northern Colorado, meanwhile, a handful
of active 9/12 groups — named for the Glenn Beck-encouraged effort to stage the Sept. 12 Washington march — are
unhappy with the state 9/12 group’s aversion to fundraising and with its focus on national issues and have discussed
forming their own rival statewide group. “People are beginning to become a little bit de-energized — they’re
starting to feel like they’re fighting a losing battle, because we send a lot of letters into Washington, D.C., and
things like that, and people are saying they’re not listening,” said Brian Britton, who heads the Greeley, Colo.,
9/12 group. That fear is echoed by Glenn Galls, a Hot Springs, Ark., tea party organizer frustrated with the focus of
Arkansas’s state-level tea party groups on national races and issues such as cap and trade and health care. “If
the tea party movement is going to continue to thrive and to grow and to have influence,” he said, “it must start
coming together and coalescing and finding its purpose in life, because if it doesn’t, the excitement will fade like
it does from anything else.” Be a part of the daily political debate with PROJECT POLITICO powered by YouTube. Click
here to submit your video now and be featured on POLITICO.com.
"Who cares who takes the credit for forming the Tea Party Movement.
One of the proudest moments in my life was when I was one of hundreds
of thousands of proud American patriots on 9-12-2009 in Washington DC. On Election Day
2010, I'll be voting as a patriot with millions of other like-minded Americans.
We are all in this together..." Jack Cunningham
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"Support and defend the Constitution of the United
States against all enemies, foreign or domestic"
Oaths of military enlisted and all government officials
| Webmaster Jack Cunningham Sussex, NJ |

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| Webmaster Jack Cunningham Sussex, NJ |
Below is Jack Cunningham standing with Congressman Joe Wilson at the Morristown, New Jersey
Tea Party on November 1, 2009.

“Never, never, never, never
give up.” - Winston Churchill
Everyone's a winner, when political corruption loses...
Jack
Cunningham does NOT consider himself a victim of New Jersey State Corruption. After nine years of battling, I'm
a SURVIVIOR. I just need some great Grassroots support to be a WINNER.
Having
served and lived (24/7) as an U.S. Marine in a Vietnamese peasant village for months, I have Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD). I'm not looking for pity, just a little understanding that I can't continue to battle everyday.
I need SUPPORT...
Please
join my Facebook Cause (over 1,186 members) and get active and stay active: http://apps.facebook.com/causes/406864/59628385?m=9e4cc0c7
PLEASE
KEEP RECRUITING
You can learn the details about Jack's
charges at: http://www.capveterans.com/america_s_freedom_tea_parties_are_growing/id40.html
The State of New Jersey
is NOT in a hurry to bring these crooks to justice.
Some of the accused, if convicted, could impact prior criminal,
civil and ethics cases that they had oversight over.
For nine (9) years, Tea Party Patriot, disabled Vietnam veteran,
Marine, husband, father and grandfather Jack Cunningham has been battling to bring a group of corrupt lawyers and state
officials to justice in his home state. (Nine years is a long time for an honorable veteran to battle for his due process.)
With
the support of his own State Senator Steven Oroho and two members of his state's Assembly, Jack has his corruption/cover-up
charges all the way up to his state's Supreme Court. But he needs a little Grassroots support to take him the rest of
the way. (Even the lawyers of the highest court of his state are protecting their own. Please read the below letter,
which was copied by the State Senator to every member of New Jersey State's Supreme Court.)
| PLEASE
PRESS LETTER FOR A LARGER COPY |

|
| PLEASE
PRESS LETTER FOR A LARGER COPY |
Do you believe New Jersey Supreme Court
is part of a Cover-up...? (Please read the Senator's letter over again)
New Jersey's Superior Court may be part
of it.
In a civil case on this, a New Jersey
Superior Court Transcript mysterious went missing,
before it could be typed By The Court
Clerk as well...
HOW DOES A SUPERIOR
COURT TRANSCRIPT GO MISSING, BEFORE THE CLERK CAN TYPE IT?
Please Help This Combat
Wounded Vietnam Veteran By Making a Brief Phone Call. He's been fighting for nine (9) years.
Please
contact State Senator Steve Oroho at (973) 300-0200 and ask
him how the state's Supreme Court can be motivated into finally giving Jack Cunningham his justice.
Jack
has NOT received an updated status, since he received the above letter (5 months ago).

Thanks to our members in Congress, this little girl already has a huge piece of the American Pie...
See her whole picture by pressing her little nose...
GET INVOLVED BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE!!
Tea Parties are Still Growing
Watch the internet for details and plan early.
There are still gracious, honorable and dedicated politicians in America
Since November 2008, my New Jersey State Legislators
Senator Steven Oroho, Assemblywoman Alison
Littell McHose, along with State Assemblyman Gary R. Chiusano and their staff have been laboriously investigating
my allegations of malfeasance
behavior within the New Jersey Office of Attorney Ethics. Although I have a large
amount of real evidence, this diligent legislative team have faced a number of roadblocks.
The largest roadblock being the fact that the Office of Attorney Ethics is a commissioned office of New Jersey’s
Supreme Court. The fact that I’m considered 100% disabled by the federal
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), due to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) compounds the problem in various ways. Three months ago, Senator Steven Oroho had to meet directly with New Jersey Supreme Court Justice Barry T. Albin. His actions were done in order to move the Office of Attorney Ethics to release the simplest of information
of their former Vice-Chairman Robert Correale, who, along with his former law firm, Maynard & Truland, are at the center
of this investigation. This meeting and follow-up letter addressed to all New
Jersey Supreme Court justices took place, because the lack of response to Senator Oroho office’s formal letter from
February of this year, requesting this same information. Why it took until
June to answer simple questions was excused and an apology was given to Senator Oroho and his staff from the Office of Attorney
Ethics.
For almost nine (9) years now, I have been getting this same (And a little
worse) runaround from the New Jersey Office of Attorney Ethics, the New Jersey’s governor’s office, the state’s attorney
general’s office and both the Supreme and Superior Court systems. I tremendously
appreciate the unending efforts of New Jersey
legislators Senator Oroho, Assemblywoman Littell McHose, Assemblyman Chiusano and their gracious and dedicated staff. Their bills before the NJ legislature concerning PTSD veterans, and the recent announcement of a Supreme
Court reform for comprehensive public examination and access to court records, are
major steps forward. I’m praying
that their continued efforts in this investigation gain more support from additional New Jersey government officials.
I’m especially looking forward to the
day when all the parties at the center of this indignation are brought to justice, so they can never use their government
influence negatively against New Jersey’s citizens again.
It’s time for justice in New Jersey.
http://www.americans-working-together.com/attorney_ethics/id73.html
Please call Jon Corzine and ask him to answer disabled veteran
Jack Cunningham's Certified letters.
Call Gov. Jon Corzine at: 609
292 6000
New
Jersey State Senator Paul Sarto's office is not admitting to receiving any phone calls on this concern.
Please help his staff change their minds.
Please call:
NJ State Senators - Paul Sarto - 201 804-8118 and John Girgenti - 973 427 1229
Tea Parties should also fight Government
Corruption. Federal and State Government Corruption is adding BILLIONS to the United States debt.
Average Americans' Heads Are Going To
Spin
Rush, Rush, Rush - (Hide all bumps in the road...) Rush
all major changes through, before the people realize what happened.
Jack Cunningham
....................
U.S. climate change bill to compete with healthcare
By Richard Cowan Richard
Cowan 2 hrs 54 mins ago
WASHINGTON (Reuters) Environmentalists hope the push in Congress for
climate change legislation is not overwhelmed by the debate dominating Capitol
Hill over changing the U.S. healthcare system. But it might be.
Already two months behind schedule and unsure whether enough Democrats will
play along, Senate leaders still aim to pass a bill by December when a United Nations summit convenes in Copenhagen to set
worldwide goals for reducing carbon dioxide and other pollutants.
But as the debate over healthcare legislation rages and with President Barack Obama due to address a joint session of Congress on Wednesday to try to rescue the
faltering plan, it was unclear whether rattled lawmakers will have the time -- or the inclination -- to take on climate
change.
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