How the Tea Party Could Get My Vote

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>
How the Tea Party Could Get My Vote</font size>


<font size="4">There's got to be a way to push back on big
government without blaming Obama for everything.</font size></center>


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The Root
By: David Swerdlick
July 16, 2010


In a lot of ways, I could be a Tea Party recruit.

I'm a middle-class guy who grumbles every time I pay my mortgage. I'm a fan of paying state and local taxes for things I can see--traffic lights and libraries--and annoyed by federal income taxes that seem to get spent on things that I don't really want or hope that I'll never have to use.

I'm still skeptical of President Barack Obama's health care plan. My car radio is always tuned to talk radio. And any time a retail clerk, nightclub bouncer or customs officer asks me for ID, I feel like handing them my pocket copy of the Constitution that I carry at all times. Seriously. I switched my voter registration over to ''unaffiliated'' years ago and haven't looked back.

But mostly, I could be a potential tea partier because I like to complain--and I really enjoy a frothy, cathartic, nonviolent uprising. I don't cross picket lines--not because I'm especially pro-union--but because I'm pro-protest. As someone who spent his college days marching outside of the provost's office, when I see a Tea Party rally on TV, I think to myself: ''I want in.''

I pretty much agree with the consensus of my colleagues at The Root that the NAACP wasted its time and energy this week passing a resolution challenging Tea Party racism. As Cord Jefferson writes, the NAACP is ''ill-advisedly ... leveling hefty charges of bigotry against the nebulously connected outposts of a crypto-political party.'' And as Sophia Nelson notes, the NAACP's focus on Tea Party racism ''may miss the larger issues of why the Tea Party exists in the first place.''

Polls consistently show that the Tea Party demographic is older, whiter and more male than the nation as a whole--the ''NASCAR dads'' of old. It's probably not a stretch to say that racists are well-represented in its ranks, but there are bigoted Democrats, Republicans and independents, too.

So if the Tea Party's beef is with big government and not the black guy running it, fine. But if they want real political credibility, they have to deal with their biggest problem. It's not racism; it's hypocrisy.

Before they were known as tea partiers, this is the same crowd that brought down George W. Bush's 2007 immigration reform initiative. On that one issue, they've remained consistent. But on nearly every other major issue--war, budget deficits, Medicare Part D, financial regulation--they stayed mum during the Bush years, but now are going after Obama with a vengeance.

Presumably, Obama's blackness isn't the reason for the shift. Yet since Obama only modified, but didn't fundamentally alter, Bush's TARP policy or Afghanistan policy, and came into office with a stimulus package that his congressional opponents merely wanted to shrink, but didn't actually oppose, Obama's Tea Party critics have opened themselves to charges of a double standard. They won't live down the racism rap until their political shift is better explained.

At the same time Sarah Palin was taking the NAACP to task for the suggestion that tea partiers opposed Obama for being ''half white or half black'' and calling on Obama to ''refudiate'' the NAACP, an Iowa Tea Party group was taking down one of its billboards that pictured Obama alongside Vladimir Lenin and Adolf Hitler. While it's not per se racist to draw a direct comparison between one's own duly elected president and the most nefarious despots of the 20th century, it does fall into that ''things that make you go 'hmm?''' category. It's so absurd that it invites speculation about Tea Party motives, and makes them that much harder for people like Palin to defend.

There's plenty of real criticism to be directed toward Obama. If all tea partiers want is lower taxes and spending cuts, they should just say that--instead of trying to tag the president as a ''socialist'' who's ''taking away their freedom.'' These amped-up cheap shots are what's keeping the uprising, however formidable, from becoming a mature political movement.


http://www.theroot.com/views/how-tea-party-could-get-my-vote
 
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This is exactly what I am talking about. The Tea Baggers are about the most ignorant group of people and illustrates racism. The Baggers claim they are against big government, yet they have FDR on their posters. FDR was about big government. His New Deal was despised by conservatives and republicans alike. That's why they don't know what the fuck they are talking about!<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>
 
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Republican analyst Lenny McAllister tells CNN's T.J.
Holmes what the Tea Party movement needs to do.

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Endure the brief commercial to get to the video with
Lenny McAllister. I believe it is worth the view/listen.

QueEx

 
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Why This Conservative
Won't Be at Glenn Beck's Rally</font size>
<font size="4">

I understand why some black conservatives feel the need to
participate in the Restoring Honor event in Washington, D.C.
However, I have declined the invitation.</font size></center>


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By: Lenny McAllister
August 27, 2010



It could have been an honor to attend. It would have been something to tell my grandchildren about one day. I could have said that I participated in a historic event -- Glenn Beck's Restoring Honor rally that will be a notable point in the story of the Tea Party movement in America.

Instead, I felt that I had a greater obligation to history -- the Aug. 28, 1963, "I Have a Dream" rally in Washington, D.C. -- than I had to being present in Washington, D.C., this Aug. 28.

For me, it was clear why I -- and perhaps many other black conservatives -- had to say no. I understand that there are some who will participate in the rally on Saturday. For example, anti-abortion Dr. Alveda King (niece of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.) will be one of the featured speakers.

The Frederick Douglass Foundation will attend the rally as "esteemed" guests, sitting on the speakers' stage, primarily in support of King. I get this. It is important that pro-life advocates grab advantageous platforms to address and eradicate the black genocide via abortion in our communities -- and since the political left is not willing to provide an opportunity to address these grievances, opportunities such as Saturday's will have to do.


<font size="4">Yet for me,</font size>

  • <font size="3">after former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's defense of Dr. Laura during the "n-word" controversy; and</font size>

  • <font size="3">Glenn Beck's feigned gratitude to "divine providence" for picking the Aug. 28 date,</font size>

<font size="3">. . . it just seems historically improper for most black conservatives to acquiesce to the spirit of this event, particularly as some of the principal personalities involved have long sidestepped the crisis in black America today -- the very issues that King spoke to back in Aug. 1963.</font size>


Glenn Beck is a media star who often quotes historians and politicians of the past, points to historical facts and figures, and implores his viewers to know more about the best of America's foundation and history-making events. He invites his audience to use this knowledge as inspiration to change America from the dangerous path that it is on. I concur with that general message,<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00"> but I find it both paradoxical and duplicitous for a self-taught historian -- whose notable CPAC speech just months ago was full of great facts, quotes and figures from America's past -- to be so ignorant of the significance of Aug. 28, much less any speech on that date from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.</span>


<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">It seems dishonorable that a man who has called the first black president a racist (on his television show) and mocked the president and his daughters with racist dialect (on his radio show) should lead a rally on the anniversary of the greatest civil rights speech recorded, and on the very grounds where the epic speech was given in 1963.</span>

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00"><font size="3"> <center>It is dangerous to support a leader who believes that the diversity among
us should not be acknowledged and addressed, even as we see the further
widening of the gap between blacks and whites in America.

If Beck's presence on this anniversary contravenes the leadership of King
in many ways, the appearance by Palin mocks it. Any notion of "don't retreat,
reload" coming from the former vice-presidential candidate -- a phrase she proudly uttered in March soon after shots were fired into the office of Rep.
Eric Cantor, R-Va., during the tension over the health care vote -- is a callous
disregard of how King and many of his peers during the civil rights era left this
earth: at the hands of racists intent on "reloading" in order to "reclaim America."
</span></font size></center>


When Sen. John McCain was calming down the incendiary anti-Obama hatred during the 2008 presidential campaign, Palin stoked the fires, refusing to address inappropriate catcalls of "boy" and other racial vitriol. Throughout his struggles and his triumph as a Nobel Peace Prize winner, he exhibited leadership and grace to unify and advance America. Palin's actions have been choppy and biting, inconsistent and often polarizing -- a trend since she burst onto the national scene in 2008. Her actions do not signify leadership, and thus, I cannot and will not co-sign her irresponsibility with my presence onstage on Saturday.

Smaller government -- a basic tenet of the Tea Party movement that I concur with -- will never return to America without a bigger role for people, a role that is capable of touching blacks in Chicago at the same depth as whites in Kansas. Not enough of the Tea Party movement -- and many would say none of the Tea Party movement at all -- embraces unity outside of the friendly confines of its immediate supporters. Too many of its representatives, including most of the speakers on the stage, are incapable of winning the political middle, saving the destitute and making inclusive change. All of those things mattered to King.

What we need in America is unifying leadership. President Obama promised it as a post-partisan candidate and has not yet delivered as a very partisan president. The Republicans have not shown an ability to spark that connectivity across communities even as they garner momentum for November. People such as Palin, Dr. Laura, Rush Limbaugh and Beck have rallied conservatives effectively, but not Americans collectively.

I support conservatives, and I believe in the core Tea Party message. I support the good people of the movement across the nation. Yet I also know that there is an honor that must be restored through an acknowledgment of the problems that divide us, as well as the courage to heal through the differences that estrange us, especially during turbulent economic and social times. So that's why I said no.


Lenny McAllister is a syndicated political commentator and the author of an upcoming new edition of the bookDiary of a Mad Black PYC (Proud Young Conservative): The Obama Era, Part I (2008-2010). He will be featured on CNN Saturday Morning to provide commentary on the Washington, D.C., rallies on Aug. 28. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.



http://www.theroot.com/views/why-conservative-wont-be-glenn-becks-rally?page=0,1
 
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