Thursday, April 16, 2009

Tea & (No) Sympathy

Ugh. The extreme, rabid, right-wing nutbags are at it again with all of their "tea party" business. And while it is frustrating, annoying, laughable and deep down, really quite terrifying, all of the "teabagging" jokes have been super fun.

Here is my favorite statement about the whole mess, including the recent threats of secession, from one of the many missives I've been reading in recent days:

Extreme partisan rancor is never pretty, but in a democracy like ours probably far more common and unavoidable than we would like to think. Dressing up in revolutionary war costumes, calling for the overthrow of the government and waving teabags at the behest of wealthy right wing funders is, while a little pathetic and strange, well within the realm of constitutionally protected behavior and may even play a somewhat constructive role in our democracy. The notion that Obama is a socialist because he wants a minor tax increase for a tiny fraction of Americans and would prefer to spend our treasure on helping people rather than on conducting wars of dubious origin or intention is more than a little strange, but if a small minority of people want to assert it, that is again well within their rights.

Floating the idea of secession over this, even in a somewhat tongue in cheek manner, is a very different story. The history of secession in the US is not a pretty one. It was tried once and the seceding states were brought back into the union, but the cost was high as the country was torn apart by what was, at that time, one of the bloodiest wars in human history.

The issues dividing Republicans and Democrats today are relatively mild, mainstream partisan issues, obviously not at all comparable to those which divided our country on the eve of the Civil War. Democrats and Republicans are fighting over a few percentage points in the tax rate for the richest Americans, increased domestic spending, and greater environmental, financial and other regulation. This is, frankly, ordinary and not all that interesting partisan fare which, in many respects, was not too different during the administrations of Roosevelt, Reagan, Clinton or many other presidents. That is why these threats and rhetoric are so concerning. Nobody really threatens secession over a mild increase in the tax rate or over a spending plan. Nobody really calls for revolution because the government is trying to spend too much on infrastructure.

Why then are Republicans willing to talk about revolution, secession and other ideas that would destabilize our country and our democracy. One hopes that most of this can be simply chalked up to a party that is weak, defeated, directionless and out of ideas, but it may not be that simple. Perhaps the demonstrators and, more significantly their leaders, feel that for some existential, and undoubtedly irrational, reason the Obama presidency is a profound threat to their worldview, values and vision of the US. If that is the case we can only hope that these people remain on the margins. This is likely to occur as Obama's worldview, values and vision not only reflect those of a huge plurality of Americans, but will likely to continue to become more, not less, accepted over time.

That's Lincoln Mitchell writing at Huffington Post. You can read the entire article here.

PS: in 1871 the Supreme Court declared secession unconstitutional in Texas v. White. I wonder what kind of fits the GOP would have and foaming at the mouth they'd do if a Democrat suggested secession? No, of course I don't REALLY wonder because we all know what would happen. They would label that individual a traitor and want him or her tarred and feathered in the public square. I sure do love hypocrisy.

1 comment:

George Polley said...

Very good post. I missed Lincoln Mitchell's article. You do some excellent work on your blog; keep it up.