Authors: Dick Armey
P
ERHAPS THE MOST DIFFICULT
and insulting attack Tea Partiers have had to endure is the charge of racism, first raised by one singularly angry comedienne, Janeane Garofalo. “They have no idea what the Boston tea party was about,” she said. “This is about hating a black man
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in the White House. This is racism straight up. That is nothing but a bunch of teabagging rednecks.”
Former president Jimmy Carter later took this charge from the lunatic fringe to the mainstream. His comments arrived several days after the massive September 12 Taxpayer March on Washington in an attempt to explain the unpopularity of the president's health care proposal. “I think an overwhelming portion of the intensely demonstrated animosity
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toward President Barack Obama is based on the fact that he is a black man, that he's African American,” Carter told
NBC Nightly News
.
Do Democrats really believe that any person who disagrees with President Obama's policies is inherently racist? Of course they don't, but it's a great way to change the subject, to not talk about the fundamental problems with a government mandate that forces every American to buy a health insurance plan, the benefits of which are defined by the federal government, regardless of his or her income, age, health, or desire to do so.
President Carter obviously neglected to listen to any of the actual speakers at the event he targeted with his sweeping animus. There were Tea Partiers of every color on the stage on 9/12, including Deneen Borelli. As an African American, she is on the receiving end of more than her share of left-wing hate messages and racial slurs. Deneen has certainly paid her dues for daring to be part of this social network fighting for fiscal responsibility and limited government. Her rejoinder to Garofaloâ“Hey, Janeane, my neck is not red”âgot roars of approval from the sea of activists at the steps of the Capitol that afternoon. Indeed, her speech was so popular that she is now a regular fixture on the Tea Party circuit and a contributor on Fox News.
“The public is outraged about the president's policies
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âthe spending, the budget, the deficitânot his skin color,” Deneen said of Carter's claims. “It's easier for the Left to play the race card than address the public's legitimate concerns, but what the Left and the media are doing is damaging and dangerous. It's damaging because when everything is racist, then nothing is.”
The charge of racism that the Left so casually throws around is like a nuclear weapon. It destroys more than its target. It tears at our social fabric and undermines Dr. Martin Luther King's mandate of a color-blind society. These phony charges do real damage to the cause of a civil, tolerant, and compassionate society. We are a grassroots movement made up of people who believe in individual freedom and individual responsibility. Racism and hate are inherently collectivist ideas. As individuals who believe in individual responsibility, we judge people as individuals, based on the content of their character, not the color of their skin.
From day one, the good men and women who have risen up in peaceful dissent against a government that is bankrupting America have been subjected to the worst kinds of ridicule, name-calling, and downright hate. Most of these attacks were partisan tactics motivated by the political ends of the attackers.
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were absorbing abuse from the Left, there was “friendly” fire coming from the Right. Clearly, the Left has done its best to marginalize and dismiss the entire Tea Party phenomenon. While wrong, it is not surprising. What is more baffling, however, is that some from the right of center display a similar hostility toward the movement. Some in the comfortably established Republican old guard have also attempted to trivialize and ignore the importance of the Tea Party movement. Former Bush administration officials and think tank elitists alike have talked down the relevance and intellectual voracity of this new generation of grassroots activists, doing their best to take the steam out of a phenomenon they do not understand.
New York Times
columnist David Brooks, for example, finds it hard not to look down from his lofty post as the resident “conservative” at the opinion page with a certain disdain for these activist rubes with their signs and bullhorns and their pocket copies of the Constitution. “Personally, I'm not a fan of this movement
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,” he wrote on January 5, 2010, predicting that the “Tea Party tendency” could be the ruin of the Republican movement.
Fundamentally, his issue is with the philosophy of personal liberty and limited government embraced by these citizens. In March 2007, for example, just as his brand of big-government conservatism was destroying what remained of Republicans' standing with the American people, he argued against a return to the principles of Reagan and Goldwater. “There is an argument floating
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around Republican circles that in order to win again, the GOP has to reconnect with the truths of its Goldwater-Reagan glory days. It has to once again be the minimal-government party, the maximal-freedom party, the party of rugged individualism and states' rights. This is folly.” People want security more than they want individual freedom, he argued then. Purposefully or not, the Republicans followed his advice. Political disaster followed.
As the Tea Party movement has ascended in popularity and grown in influence, Brooks's attacks have grown more pointed. In a condescending missive entitled “Wal-Mart Hippies,” he argued that Tea Partiers have more in common with the New Left of the 1960s than with his brand of conservatism. The differences are trivial: sixties radicals “went to Woodstock,” and the Tea Party “is more likely to go to Wal-Mart.”
“The Tea Partiers have adopted the tactics of the New Left
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. They go in for street theater, mass rallies, marches, and extreme statements that are designed to shock polite society out of its stupor. This mimicry is no accident. Dick Armey, one of the spokesmen for the Tea Party movement, recently praised the methods of Saul Alinsky, the leading tactician of the New Left.”
Besides the fact that we have studied the street tactics of leftists like Saul Alinsky, the decentralized grassroots network now commonly referred to as the Tea Party has very little in common with the “New Left,” as Brooks claims. We are deeply rooted in the American traditions of individual freedom and constitutionally limited government. If it looks antiestablishment, that is because the political establishment has become completely and arrogantly dismissive of these timeless principles. And if that's radicalism, sign us up. The club is already populated with names like Jefferson, Madison, Washington, Franklin, and (Samuel) Adams.
Brooks claims that these pro-freedom protesters believe in “mass innocence.” “Both movements are built on the assumption that the people are pure and virtuous and that evil is introduced into society by corrupt elites and rotten authority structures
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.” No, it is mass self-interest we see as the human condition. The founders understood this and structured the institutions of our government specifically to protect against the deadly collusion of individual interests and unlimited power. We know that public officials act in their own self-interest, just like everyone else, so our strategy aims to support good ideas with the right political incentives.
Brooks also mocks Tea Party conspiracy theories dealing with big banks and corporations, among others. True, we believe that too many business interests conspire to use the power of the state to “compete” for market share, but our source is Adam Smith. You might call Smith a sixties radical of sorts; he wrote in the intellectual foment of the 1760s, when there was revolution in the air. “People of the same trade seldom meet together
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,” Smith wrote in
The Wealth of Nations,
“but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.” What do you suppose Smith would think about a $700 billion government bailout of banks authored by a former investment bank chairman turned government potentate, or trillion-dollar legislation mandating that every citizen buy the health insurance industry's overpriced product? That's right: it's a conspiracy, and it needs to be stopped.
Brooks doesn't like the new generation of small-government activists because, he claims, “they don't believe in establishments or in authority structures. They believe in the spontaneous uprising of participatory democracy. They believe in mass action and the politics of barricades, not in structure and organization.”
Maybe it's the decentralized, leaderless nature of the Tea Party movement that makes Brooks so uncomfortable. That's because freedom itself seems to make him uncomfortable. “Normal, nonideological people are less concerned
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about the threat to their freedom from an overweening state,” he wrote in 2007.
Someone, Brooks seems to believe, needs to tell these people what to do, what to think, how to act in polite society. Is it possible that Mr. Brooks is the one, not Tea Partiers, with far more in common with those on the Left who desire order dictated from top-down structures, or as he puts it, “just authorities”? Someone needs to be in charge; that's what he is really saying. On this point, he might find common cause with Abbie Hoffman. Or Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid.
Brooks and others on the right, such as David Frum, former speechwriter for President George W. Bush, who criticize the Tea Party movement for being too focused on the perils of too much government, appear more comfortable with the “go along to get along” approach to politics, vying for a seat at the table to make incremental changes to bad policies. This was very much the attitude that dominated Republicans in the House prior to the Contract with America in 1994. Accustomed to the perennial role of silver medalist, Minority Leader Robert Michel settled for negotiating improvements on legislation introduced by Democrats with very little vision for fundamental change. In effect, Republican leadership opted for a comfortable role as a permanent minority rather than a vehicle for change, settling for scraps at the Democrats' feast.
Today, some of the carping from the Republican establishment and the self-anointed thinkers behind it can be chalked up to self-preservation. They are looking down from the castle walls at the unwashed barbarians pounding at the gate. Senator Robert Bennett of Utah, whose bid for a third term in the U.S. Senate was rejected by Tea Party activists in his state, best sums up this worldview: “I'm convinced that the movement working against me is a movement of slogans, not solutions,” he complained to the
Washington Post
. “Now I'm not a true Republican
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because I don't go on Fox and CNN and scream.”
What is sending cold chills down the collective spine of the Washington political establishment is the now undeniable fact that the principles of limited government and fiscal responsibility have unprecedented political standing with the American electorate. There will be political consequences and those politicians out of step are losing their jobs.
This anxiety is echoed in the writings from the old guard of the political establishment. Michael Gerson, for example, another former speechwriter and an architect of compassionate conservatism for President George W. Bush, stated that much of what has recently come out of Tea Party activism is “a proposal for time travel
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, not a policy agenda. The federal government could not shed its accumulated responsibilities without massive suffering and global instabilityâa decidedly radical, unconservative approach to governing.” In other words, big government is here to stay.
Perhaps what challenges the movement's many critics is the fact that the Tea Party does not buy into the traditional Left vs. Right debate. It is better framed as “big vs. small.” It is a fundamental debate about the size and scope of government. Triggered by bailouts of irresponsible behavior on Wall Street, the Tea Party movement is first and foremost about fiscal responsibilityâsomething that the political establishment across the Left-Right spectrum has failed to deliver. Trillion-dollar deficits and stimulus packages that only stimulate more deficit spending do not pass the commonsense test of kitchen-table economics.
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established think tanks seem more slighted that they were not consulted first, even painting the Tea Party movement as lacking tradition or intellectual underpinnings. Steven Hayward of the American Enterprise Institute, for example, wrote that “the conservative movement has been thrown off balance, with the populists dominating and the intellectuals retreating and struggling to come up with new ideas. The leading conservative figures of our time are now drawn from mass media, from talk radio and cable news. We've traded in Buckley for Beck, Kristol for Coulter, and conservatism has been reduced to sound bites
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.” He laments the fact that “today's Tea Party has abandoned the intellectual icons that nurtured and expanded the conservative movement through the 1960s and 1970s. This reinforces the notion of the Tea Party as an angry, uneducated mob.”
In fairness, Hayward has since warmed up to the Tea Party movement, but the mythology that Tea Partiers lack an intellectual underpinning pervades the ivory towers of official Washington. Brink Lindsey, vice president for research at the Cato Institute, best represents this view. While “opposition to Barack Obama and the Democratic Congress has sparked a resurgence
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of libertarian rhetoric on the rightâmost prominently in the âtea party' protests that have erupted over the past year,” real libertarians should not expect this uprising to translate into a fundamental realignment, Lindsey argued. “Without a doubt, libertarians should be happy that the Democrats' power grabs have met with such vociferous opposition. Anything that can stop this dash toward dirigisme, or at least slow it down, is a good thing.”