Click.   Michael Hintze's phone line went dead -- the caller never identified  himself.  A prominent Wisconsin Tea Party leader, Hintze is the latest  recipient of anonymous death threats.
Maybe  you thought it was finally over in Wisconsin.  Walker overcame the  liberal blitzkrieg, elected Republicans decided that there's no moderate  stance between bankruptcy and prosperity, the bill was passed and signed, and the fourteen Democrats gave up their life on the run.  
But  there's more.  Though chapter one undeniably ended with a resounding  victory for Walker, the next part may easily become a forgotten chapter  among thousands in the left's annals of Alinsky-style combat.
Wisconsin  has become the latest setting for organized liberal activism.   Pro-union forces are setting out to execute the power-plays of leftism:  divide, intimidate, and conquer.  Community organizers are working  tirelessly to increase the opposition through lies and distortion in the  hope of building cold-blooded hatred for Walker and his allies.  
Traditional  Wisconsin symbols have been co-opted to foment anti-Walker sentiment.   UW Madison mascot Bucky Badger is portrayed as a victim of Walker's  budget cuts, cheese is promoted as union-friendly, and some even claim  that Walker has cut state funding for the Green Bay Packers.
Shockingly, the absurdity doesn't end there.  The Wisconsin Dog Rescue  is joining others in vilifying Walker as a dog-hater, and liberal blogs  steadfastly avow that "Governor Scott Walker wants to kill puppies."
Common  citizens and private businesses are the next objects of union wrath.   Director of the Wisconsin Professional Police Association Jim Palmer  signed a letter giving businesses who donated to Gov. Walker's campaign  one week to publicly denounce Walker or face a union-organized boycott.
Sendik's  Food Market has refused to capitulate.  Consequently, their doors were  super-glued shut at one of their Milwaukee locations.
In  Merrill, a group trying to recall Democrat Sen. Jim Holperin set up a  table outside the Lincoln County Courthouse.   Soon union protestors  arrived and surrounded the group's table, waving signs and screaming  through megaphones.  In a press release, the group reported that even as  the pro-union crowd chanted "this is what Democracy looks like," one of  the protesters, "pretending to be interested in signing the petition,  wrote profanity across a partially collected petition form, then began  ripping up the completed petitions that were in close proximity."
Pro-union  forces remained around the table and prevented people from reaching the  petitions.  According to the group, police officers stood by and did  nothing.
In another incident, during school hours, a supposed teacher posted this on the Madison Craigslist:
So you Tea Bags want to take away my hard earned blue ribbon bennies. Well guess what you scum sucking Tea Bags, I got your kids all day long in my classroom and with just a few slick questions I know who the little tea bags are! And you think you'll have the last laugh HA-Ha-ha
I,  too, a twenty-year-old college student, have been subject to this union  onslaught.  Nearly two weeks ago, I captured incriminating video of  doctors handing out sick passes on the streets of Madison.  The video  went viral, and I consequently appeared on Fox News and several radio shows to discuss the fraud.  The left has yet to forgive me. 
I've  been stalked, chased, and verbally assaulted by several individuals.   One woman drew a crowd around me and proceeded to rattle off my full  name, my age, my hometown, and the exact size of my family.  She noted  that I am the second-oldest of thirteen children.  She also recited the  very dates I had been on Fox News and the time period of my visit to New  York. 
Creepy  though it was, this woman's knowledge of my personal life was  impressive. She knew information that many of my friends were not aware  of.
This is the new norm in Wisconsin: an unrivaled, systematic  assault is leveled against anyone who refuses to carry the union's  water.  It's a war zone where the left seems driven by Saul Alinsky's  motto: "The end justifies almost any means."
Democrats  and their union allies are making their agenda clear:  retain power at  all costs.  If they can raise enough money, silence enough foes, recall  enough senators, intimidate the opposition, and strong-arm enough  businesses, they believe that they will ultimately win.
If  they lose the fight to preserve collective demanding, Democrats fear  that Republicans will review every other liberal policy failure.   Entitlement reform could be the next target -- or worse yet, America's  growing economic quagmire, also known as the national debt.
Gov.  Walker is a new kind of Republican -- a leader whose steadfast  convictions break from the indecisive muddling that has forever defined  the right.
Such  fortitude is a dramatic shift from past eras, where Democrats routinely  bullied Republican leaders onto their list of tribute-paying victims.   Walker's victory changes all that.  It sends a simple but clear message  to the overpowering bully: "Take my name off your list."
That is something the left can't afford to tolerate.
Josiah  Cantrall also writes for BigGovernment.com, and his works have been  referenced by USA Today, Megyn Kelly, and Greg Gutfeld.  He has appeared  on Fox News, Fox Business Channel, GlennBeck.com, and the Lars Larson  show.  His Washington Times column debuts April 1.  Follow him on Twitter or Facebook.
American Thinker
 
 
