Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Tea Party Party

My friend, Bev Eakman, wrote an article, Saving Civil Society and a Culture of Merit, (http://tinyurl.com/y9zo2qy) in which she said,

A flurry of new conservative websites, groups, and talk-show hosts have emerged in the wake of failing dominoes: ObamaCare, federal takeovers, bailouts, and stimulus packages. Tea-Partiers represent but a smattering of upstart activists that increasingly feel alienated from old stalwarts of the conservative movement: among them, the Heritage Foundation, American Conservative Union, Conservative Political Action Committee and Americans for Tax Reform, Empower America, and even the old Silent Majority and the Dr. Laura show.

Today, the very term “conservative” has a bad rap. The trusty dictionary and thesaurus define conservative variously as “conformist,” “unadventurous,” “old-fashioned,” “old school,” “cautious,” and “conventional.” Nothing exciting, expansive, or smacking of the can-do spirit there. Thus, the “conservative” moniker fails to reflect the level of political anger of those who once were loyalists of a constitutionalist-traditionalist Republican Party, the one fashioned out of the old Revolutionary War-era Whig Party that supported the supremacy of Congress over the Executive Branch and fought for independence as opposed to autocratic rule in alignment with the Founding Fathers.


Go to the site (URL above) to see the entire article.

Bev has been asked to do some writing for the Tea Party movement, in anticipation of a new party. Always up for a party, I will look forward to when it is and what I should bring. I wonder if they need any protest songs.

Please comment back: Are you in the mood for a new, third party?

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