Tea Time
Tea Party Phenomenon? Perhaps phenomon isn’t the right word. The Parties have been, it appears, co-opted (or hi-jacked) by the larger conservative movement; perhaps out-Foxed, or perhaps merely filling in for a large, hyper-politicized electorate bored now that the election is over. One wonders if Obama had lost, and McCain had implemented similar policies in his first months (which, despite all the tough talk on Pork is fairly likely) whether the Tea Parties would have ever gathered steam. Certainly McCain was no darling of the Republican Party, and yet the Big Government years of George W Bush were met with muted critiques – if any – by the O’Reilly’s and Glenn Beck’s of the world. (Glenn Beck, to be fair, has grown increasingly mad-as-in-hatter over the last year or so, so one can hardly hold his less crazy self against his current ramblings, faux-tears, and inability to properly define fascism).
What can be said that hasn’t already about theNow, Jack Gillis was on to something in his guest post the other day:
There are, I think, two sources for the spiritual unease fueling the Tea Party movement. First, those invested in the movement have come to terms (or are coming to terms) with the fact that the last election demonstrated that they are now in the social minority. After decades of gripping tightly to a self-conception founded on Richard Nixon’s idea of the “Silent Majority“–and to be fair, that self-concept was not without objective justification–the grass roots conservatives, after a period of cognitive dissonance in which they tried to convince themselves we were still a “center right nation,” is recognizing that the Silent Majority has become the Silent Minority.
And Silent Minorities don’t influence society if they remain silent. A Silent Majority can operate simply by living their lives and then consistently winning elections. That is, they can engage themselves only once every two or four years but nevertheless feel as if they control their own destinies. But a minority has to be noisy to have any hope at all of influencing the course of social development. So to claim, as some have and will, that the Tea Parties are “just noise” is to gloss over one of the most significant aspects of the movement. The fact that it’s “just noise” is the strongest indication yet that they now know that they have to make noise.
Noise-making is all fine and good, but one wonders at what point does just making noise become just plain silly. For instance, a lot of the talk in the Tea Parties focuses on the injustice of taxes. Now, it is entirely justified to be angry at the government (past and present) for the massive corporate bailouts, and it is only slightly ironic that much of the Tea Party movement has corporate backers, and that many in the movement will benefit either directly or indirectly from the bailout or the stimulus or both. People have a right to want capitalism to work as it ought to work – without bailouts, without booms and busts and the accompanying stimuli, etc. It is right to not want one’s tax dollars or one’s children and grandchildren’s tax dollars to go to lining the pockets of rich, corrupt businessmen.
However, the dissonance for me sets in when I think about what it means to protest taxes when one has recently supported a vastly expensive war (or two) that has cost trillions of dollars that can only be paid for by taxes. Similarly, many of the new Tea Party members are movement conservatives, and very much pro-defense. Well, again, I’m not sure how we fund one and a half trillion dollars of defense and defense/security related spending without paying taxes. Perhaps this is one reason the original, often anti-imperialist Tea Partiers made a bit more sense, or had a bit more credibility than our current crop.
I would like to see a return to local government and local business and that requires some crippling or metamorphosis of the federal government, but I don’t think that’s what drives most of these people. Right now they are just making noise because they don’t understand the game. They don’t understand that the new boss is essentially the same as the old boss. Some do, plenty don’t. Plenty are only too happy now to rail against socialism or fascism and tote about signs ridiculing our Commander in Chief. This isn’t the way to go about reducing the size and scope of the government. And in all honesty, lower taxes isn’t the answer either – it’s just a simple, easy talking-point cop-out. In a just society the rich do pay higher taxes. Such is the cost of social stability, which is what allows the rich to remain so in the face of the hungry mob. Keep the middle class strong and the poor well fed and you don’t ever have to worry about the guillotine.
So what can we do about this leviathan state we now live in?
First we need to kill the monster that is
, and give back the power of war-making to Congress. No other step will go so far in reducing the power and imperialist role of the executive. Cutting defense spending and cutting off the President’s ability to make war whilly-nilly will diminish the relevance of the federal government in our society in more ways than just foreign policy.Second, shift attacks from solely focusing on the government and focus some of this rage on Big Business and its insidious private partnership with the government. Do this by buying locally and working with your town or community to create autonomy and growth within your own locale. Keep out the job-sucking, capital hoarding Big Boxes and go buy your stuff from a local vendor. Buy your food from a local farmer. Start a local currency.
Third, quit fighting local tax hikes to pay for public school and other local government functions; as soon as the local money goes, in comes the federal government to clean things up. Be willing to sacrifice in order to achieve autonomy, but don’t do it in such a manner that will cause harm to the poor or to our youth. Government services are still necessary – the point is to make them as locally controlled and funded as possible. Autonomy does not mean no government, it simply means replacing the huge cold federal state with one of our own making. Conservatives have become too hostile to any and all government and too friendly with Big Business. The one is as bad as the other in terms of our own local, communal autonomy.
This is the “futility” of protesting, in my mind: it does very little other than make noise. Real change is often grass-roots, true, but while a picket or a rally certainly do get people riled up, and generate lots of heat, they are also by their nature temporary and a little absurd. The friction that makes them is of a manufactured variety. A great deal more can be achieved in local town hall meetings, and by attempting to retake once again the community in which we live – to become involved in the politics and business of the world on a smaller scale, as unglamorous or quiet as that may be. Go have tea with your neighbors for goodness sakes.
You know, a conservative protest against closeness between government and industry would be exactly the sort of thing that would generate news, because it would be novel. It would also have the virtue of making a valid point. Bush’s wasteful spending wasn’t cause he done gone liberal, but because his administration was corrupt along the lines of some of the greats of American corruption, like Roscoe Conkling and James G. Blaine. Medicare Part D did involve spending more money, but it was a ridiculously high amount because Bush wanted to help out the drug companies. Bush’s defense policy, including the warmaking, was a sop to defense contractors. His farm bill was a sop to agribusiness. And so on. Nobody wanted to talk about this during his term, but it was inescapably true. Since Republicans seem to think that every critique of business is evidence of left-wing sympathies it’s doubtful that such a message would carry with the tea party crowd, but it would be something specific and correct, and it might garner some attention from the public.
But I guess they decided that it would be better to just say “fascism” a lot.Report
Put another way – the most effective way of protesting the growth of Wal-Mart isn’t to picket outside, it’s to simply not buy anything from Wal-Mart. Similarly, the most effective way of protesting the growth of the federal government is to, well, not participate in the growth of the federal government.
I’m not sure I agree with all your proposals here, but the main argument seems basically sound to me.Report
Exactly Lev – and that’s what I think we will eventually see rise from the ashes of this current cluster.
Mark, I agree. Vote with your wallet – but also, if a community doesn’t want a Wal*Mart to come into town they should be able to keep it out, and not vilified as anti-capitalist for doing so…Report
E.D.:
Great article.
We accept Levithan in all its malign glory in return for the material prosperity it provides. The temptation, I think, is all but irresistable. Wish I could be more optimistic.Report
As best I can tell, the overwhelming majority of tea party goers pay under $10,000/yr in federal income taxes. More than likely, a good portion pay under $1,000 per year in federal income taxes. Roughly half of the tea party goers pay no income tax or actually receive the refundable portion of the EITC or Child Tax Credit. And that is probably overly generous given party demographics. This is Joe the Plumber America, outrage at the fiction of oneself might having some day to pay high taxes.Report
Thanks, Jack. It’s true, and it’s funny because the Tea Partiers find all that irresistable, too, they’re just in a funky denial.
Badger – yeah, most people just don’t pay that much in taxes. And I still fail to see why taxes are so horrible. They suck, but we need them to function as a society. The goal should be getting those tax dollars to work better, locally, rather than bloating huge federal departments and funding stupid wars.Report
People who complain about taxes are some of the same individuals that scream their heads off when a disaster strikes and no government assistance is avalable to help. As long as it’s their party or their pet project were taken care of every thing is kosher. Let the tax money go somewhere else they scream like a banshee. If the money was not spent to try to turn the country around and EVERYTHING really hit the fan, you’d see all sorts of misery happening. They seem not to be able to see what is truly at stake. If we don’t spend that money and start job regrowth then the misery index will be very high. Their selfishness (and most of those individuals will see less taxes coming out of their pay) and self-centered actions over the last eight years has brought us to this point. They should shut up and lend a hand to help turn this economy and country around.Report
I didn’t see Buffett, Periot, Gates or any of those who will truly be hit by the new taxes. 100% of those few thousands I saw out there will be getting a tax breeak from the government. This is a true case of the uninformed fringe segment of our society and they will do almost anything to mug for the cameras.Report
Everybody there reminds me of Emmanuel Goldstein!Report