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BLUSH Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-29-10 04:09 PM
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Tea Party ... or Whitey Party? / Birthers ... or Boothers?







Nahhh ... it's not about race ...



Racism and the Tea Party Part II ...

Melissa Webster
Communication Director, Mobile Area Democratic Association
Posted: March 27, 2010


Therein lies the biggest problem with the Tea Party movement. Ignorance and fear begets bigotry, and bigotry begets violence that escalates the longer it festers, which is why we're only seeing this now that a black man has become President.

The idea perpetuated by the Tea Party movement to "Take back our country!" from is no more than racism in drag. The Alabama Constitution was created by a group of wealthy white male landowners in 1901 for the sole purpose of disenfranchising minorities and women. The ironic thing about this is they inadvertently disenfranchised poor white males in the process. I like to call it God's little joke.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/melissa-webster/racism-and-the-tea-party_b_515854.html




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BLUSH Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-29-10 06:40 PM
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1. Tea Party Rage Is Not About Health Care
Tea Party Rage Is Not About Health Care

Frank Rich
03-28-10

In fact, the current surge of anger — and the accompanying rise in right-wing extremism — predates the entire health care debate. The first signs were the shrieks of “traitor” and “off with his head” at Palin rallies as Obama’s election became more likely in October 2008. Those passions have spiraled ever since — from Gov. Rick Perry’s kowtowing to secessionists at a Tea Party rally in Texas to the gratuitous brandishing of assault weapons at Obama health care rallies last summer to “You lie!” piercing the president’s address to Congress last fall like an ominous shot.

If Obama’s first legislative priority had been immigration or financial reform or climate change, we would have seen the same trajectory. The conjunction of a black president and a female speaker of the House — topped off by a wise Latina on the Supreme Court and a powerful gay Congressional committee chairman — would sow fears of disenfranchisement among a dwindling and threatened minority in the country no matter what policies were in play. It’s not happenstance that Frank, Lewis and Cleaver — none of them major Democratic players in the health care push — received a major share of last weekend’s abuse. When you hear demonstrators chant the slogan “Take our country back!,” these are the people they want to take the country back from.

They can’t. Demographics are avatars of a change bigger than any bill contemplated by Obama or Congress. The week before the health care vote, The Times reported that births to Asian, black and Hispanic women accounted for 48 percent of all births in America in the 12 months ending in July 2008. By 2012, the next presidential election year, non-Hispanic white births will be in the minority. The Tea Party movement is virtually all white. The Republicans haven’t had a single African-American in the Senate or the House since 2003 and have had only three in total since 1935. Their anxieties about a rapidly changing America are well-grounded.

If Congressional Republicans want to maintain a politburo-like homogeneity in opposition to the Democrats, that’s their right. If they want to replay the petulant Gingrich government shutdown of 1995 by boycotting hearings and, as John McCain has vowed, refusing to cooperate on any legislation, that’s their right too (and a political gift to the Democrats). But they can’t emulate the 1995 G.O.P. by remaining silent as mass hysteria, some of it encompassing armed militias, runs amok in their own precincts. We know the end of that story. And they can’t pretend that we’re talking about “isolated incidents” or a “fringe” utterly divorced from the G.O.P. A Quinnipiac poll last week found that 74 percent of Tea Party members identify themselves as Republicans or Republican-leaning independents, while only 16 percent are aligned with Democrats.


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/28/opinion/28rich.html


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BLUSH Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-29-10 09:31 PM
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2. In the faces of Tea Party shouters, images of hate and history
By Colbert I. King
Saturday, March 27, 2010

The angry faces at Tea Party rallies are eerily familiar. They resemble faces of protesters lining the street at the University of Alabama in 1956 as Autherine Lucy, the school's first black student, bravely tried to walk to class.

Those same jeering faces could be seen gathered around the Arkansas National Guard troopers who blocked nine black children from entering Little Rock's Central High School in 1957.

"They moved closer and closer," recalled Elizabeth Eckford, one of the Little Rock Nine. "Somebody started yelling, 'Lynch her! Lynch her!' I tried to see a friendly face somewhere in the crowd -- someone who maybe could help. I looked into the face of an old woman and it seemed a kind face, but when I looked at her again, she spat on me."

Those were the faces I saw at a David Duke rally in Metairie, La., in 1991: sullen with resentment, wallowing in victimhood, then exploding with yells of excitement as the ex-Klansman and Republican gubernatorial candidate spewed vitriolic white-power rhetoric.

People like that old woman in Little Rock, the Alabama mob that hounded Autherine Lucy, the embracers of Duke's demagoguery in Louisiana, never go away.

They were spotted last weekend on Capitol Hill under the Tea Party banner protesting the health-care-reform bill. Some carried a signs that read "If Brown can't stop it, a Browning can." Some shouted racial and homophobic epithets at members of Congress. Others assumed the role of rabble, responding to the calls of instigating Republican representatives gathered on a Capitol balcony.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/26/AR2010032603335.html







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