http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/02/05/poll.tea.party/index.html
And
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-...out-the-tea-party-movement/?cid=hp:mainpromo3
They certainly made headlines last year during all the bail outs, and their message is resonating with more and more people as government spends more, borrows more, and taxes more. Should be interesting to see where they go with and how they evolve, but ignoring that many voters would be a mistake for anyone running for office.
The usual suspects preaching their hate. Good hate of course because progressive hate is founded in truth and intellectualism don't you know.
Putting Tea Party in a thread title is akin to putting Palin in a thread title here. Both churn the bowels of the far left in ways unimaginable to conservatives.
Why just yesterday at the National Prayer Breakfast Obama attended, where he thanked God, where he talked of the power of prayer and the effect it's had on his life and how it guides him daily, I couldn't help but think of how alike he and Sarah Palin truly are. Very inspiring. Why the left would fear a movement like the Tea Party movement, one endorsed by Sarah Palin when Obama and Palin have so much common ground is puzzling.
A lot of people have finally woke up. Years of new wars and spending have sent people over the edge. They voted for a man who promised to clean it all up.. but he's done nothing but the opposite thus far.If they don't identify themselves with a "certain political party," then why did they come into being when Obama took office? Where were they to protest expanding deficits and government spending under Bush? If they oppose "tyranny," where were they to oppose the patriot act, the use of waterboarding, and unprecedented levels of government secrectiveness in the last administration?
The truth is that radical right movements always gain traction when a dem is in office. This is parellel to the rise of militia movements under Clinton.
- wolf
I also doubt President Obama's values are truly constitutional as well. That seems to be the point of the Tea Partiers, they're fed up with government corruption across the political spectrum.
lol, you've got to be joking. ahahahaha. Obama is George Bush's 3rd presidency. Hell, he even meets with the Bush family behind closed doors. The press has caught it on several occasions. He's continued the legacy of spending and tyranny.Disenfranchised neoconservatives trying to rebrand themselves with faux-libertarian perspectives and voice their discontent that Bush isn't in the office.
At this point the "movement" is just a bunch of people choreographed by republican strategist consulting firms.
A lot of people have finally woke up. Years of new wars and spending have sent people over the edge. They voted for a man who promised to clean it all up.. but he's done nothing but the opposite thus far.
And yet it only took them one whole month after Obama took office for this to happen. Coincidence?
lol, you've got to be joking. ahahahaha. Obama is George Bush's 3rd presidency. Hell, he even meets with the Bush family behind closed doors. The press has caught it on several occasions. He's continued the legacy of spending and tyranny.
Most people just associate along party lines, such as yourself. Even if someone was the same person carrying the same core policies and they labeled them-self with a different letter (R or D), they'd automatically spew hatred just because of that lettering. Don't judge by a label.. judge by policy, actions and character.Yeah,
that's why neoconservatives love Obama, because he's continuation of Bush.
/facepalm
Is Sarah Palin now going to become the face of the Tea Party movement?
If so, then it doesn't help them gain any national cresedence.
The talk in the registration line ranged from frustration at having to postpone retirement because of the economic downturn to the care and training of horses. Attendees were mostly white and older; there were more women than men. Some were Republicans, more were independents. To a person, they loved Sarah Palin.
A couple were even Democrats. "We're been good friends with [Democratic Louisiana Senator] Mary Landrieu for years," says Glen Williams, 73. He and his wife JoAnn left their cattle ranch in Winsboro, La., to attend the convention. "But what she's done with health care," says JoAnn, shaking her head, "now we're gonna have to work against her. And we're here to learn how."
A lot of people have finally woke up. Years of new wars and spending have sent people over the edge. They voted for a man who promised to clean it all up.. but he's done nothing but the opposite thus far.
It's absolutely hilarious to see when the 'other party' is in power how people react, especially people on the forums. It's like the blinders all of a sudden get put on and their hands get tied behind their back. Oh no.. god forbid if someone speaks out. You'll be labeled a racist and whatever group you're with will be labeled with sexual innuendos. Pathetic. Step away from both parties and look back.. see how they're exactly the same and offer nothing but more of the same. Increased power grabs, more spending by the trillions. In the next few months when we get involved with another new war and the dollar is further weakened, continue to sit on your hands.
I'd call it more of a true conservative values movement (i.e. Constitutionalist). At one time, even democrats in this country such as John F. Kennedy held those principled values. After that era, both Democrats and Republicans moved in the neoliberal/socialist/marxist direction. More government, more power in centralized government, redistribution of wealth, massive spending initiatives, unsurpassed regulatory actions, etc. I'd really study political landscape if I were you.. because you've fallen for the same right versus left warfare mentality that the major media outlets want you to believe. As long as you're arguing right versus left, you've got the same people in power over and over again. Anyhow, to address your weak argument, even people during the Bush years started to "wake up". There were huge rallies with both conservatives and others against his policies and expanded use of government power in the name of security. Also in Bush's second term, they were going nuts over his bailout strategy and prescription drug policy. Keep ignoring history.Yeah, they just suddenly happened to "wake up." Sorry, if you don't understand the Tea Party as basically a right wing movement, then you are beyond help.
- wolf
I'd call it more of a true conservative values movement (i.e. Constitutionalist). At one time, even democrats in this country such as John F. Kennedy held those principled values. After that era, both Democrats and Republicans moved in the neoliberal/socialist/marxist direction. More government, more power in centralized government, redistribution of wealth, massive spending initiatives, unsurpassed regulatory actions, etc. I'd really study political landscape if I were you.. because you've fallen for the same right versus left warfare mentality that the major media outlets want you to believe. As long as you're arguing right versus left, you've got the same people in power over and over again.
By the way you're talking, I can tell you've never been to a rally and actually spoke with anyone there to see their views. You've taken the bait that the major media outlets have given you and you've ran with it. Classic. Just like they want the sheep to do.That could be a fair description, but my point is that the Tea Party is a conservative movement. That doesn't exactly make is post-partisan, because the vast majority will vote republican when push comes to shove. Many are dissatisfied with the republican party because it isn't far enough to the *right*, while at the same time they hate the democrats more.
I wouldn't exactly identify it as libertarian either. If they were libertarian, they would be notably to the left on social issues. They would also loudly complain about things like the Patriot Act. This is not a movement that opposes government coecive power. It's a movement that oppose government spending. That's why I have trouble agreeing with your description of it as opposing "tyranny."
- wolf
I'd call it more of a true conservative values movement (i.e. Constitutionalist). At one time, even democrats in this country such as John F. Kennedy held those principled values. After that era, both Democrats and Republicans moved in the neoliberal/socialist/marxist direction. More government, more power in centralized government, redistribution of wealth, massive spending initiatives, unsurpassed regulatory actions, etc. I'd really study political landscape if I were you.. because you've fallen for the same right versus left warfare mentality that the major media outlets want you to believe. As long as you're arguing right versus left, you've got the same people in power over and over again. Anyhow, to address your weak argument, even people during the Bush years started to "wake up". There were huge rallies with both conservatives and others against his policies and expanded use of government power in the name of security. Also in Bush's second term, they were going nuts over his bailout strategy and prescription drug policy. Keep ignoring history.
His tax policies were not progressive like modern democrats are today. His core family values were not lacking like modern democrats are today. His foreign policy and defense of the United States as a world power were not non-existent as they are in modern democrats today. His voice about defending and sticking with our allies for freedom is the opposite of what we hear from modern democrats today. His economic policy was one of laissez faire, not an iron fist which modern democrats use today. His view on religion was one of free study, not demonization like the modern democrats of today.Don't try this right-wing propaganda of 'JFK was a real American not like Democrats now'.
You don't know much about JFK or modern Democrats if you say that.
It's ironic that you complain about the left/right split but falll victim to it when you say things like that, which are based on right-wing propaganda.
One is made of Straw.
His tax policies were not progressive like modern democrats are today. His core family values were not lacking like modern democrats are today. His foreign policy and defense of the United States as a world power were not non-existent as they are in modern democrats today. His voice about defending and sticking with our allies for freedom is the opposite of what we hear from modern democrats today. His economic policy was one of laissez faire, not an iron fist which modern democrats use today. His view on religion was one of free study, not demonization like the modern democrats of today.
I could get very detailed if you like, but I can tell you're just spouting off generalities without any knowledge of the man. I'm not even going to waste my time. Read some biographies of the man and watch his speeches.
[/quote]I could get very detailed if you like, but I can tell you're just spouting off generalities without any knowledge of the man. I'm not even going to waste my time. Read some biographies of the man and watch his speeches.
His tax policies were not progressive like modern democrats are today.
His core family values were not lacking like modern democrats are today.
His foreign policy and defense of the United States as a world power were not non-existent as they are in modern democrats today.
His voice about defending and sticking with our allies for freedom is the opposite of what we hear from modern democrats today.
His economic policy was one of laissez faire, not an iron fist which modern democrats use today.
His view on religion was one of free study, not demonization like the modern democrats of today.