Quite frankly I have little respect for sincerity.Quote from AAAintheBeltway:
You seem sincere, so I am just going to assume you are incredibly naive.
One goal of Obama, Soros and the thugs who work for them is to silence opposition or if that is not possible, to imitmidate their opponents into withholding financial support. One way of doing that is by getting the names of large donors, who then can be subjected to pressure campaigns.
The law is that donors to these 501c(4) groups can remain anonymous. The left acts like this is an outrage, but they didn't feel that way when the Supreme Court ruled that states could not force the NAACP to reveal its membership. The Court saw that allowing the names of people who support controversial groups to be made public has a chilling effect on exercise of First Amendment rights. It's the exact same reason most people post political commentary on the internet under assumed names.
We know from repeated incidents that these concerns are not over blown. The cited article recounts a case of Target caving into pressure from gay activists over political contributions. Since the IRS scandal has surfaced, many people have come forward with credible accounts of being subjected to harrassment from not only the IRS but other government agencies after their political opposition to Obama became known.
People from Chicago do not have to have this spelled out for them because it is standard operating procedure in the thuggish politics of that city. Every businessman doing business with the city knows the risks of not contributing to the right candidates.
The IRS scandal has at least two dimensions. One is the pattern of targeted harrassment of Tea Party and like-minded groups, with the obvious goal being to deny them the ability to exercise First Amendment rights. The other is to use the IRS to leak sensitive information to liberal front groups like ProPublica, which then pass it on to other soros groups with less scruples about how it is used.
I'm pretty sure Che was sincere too.
