Author Topic: Lemonade Lessons: the Tea Parties are just the tip of the iceberg  (Read 571 times)

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Offline mystery-ak

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http://dailycaller.com/2010/10/14/lemonade-lessons-the-tea-parties-are-just-the-tip-of-the-iceberg/

Posted By Janie Johnson On 10:36 AM 10/14/2010

What the New York Times and so many other liberal institutions do not realize is that all of this recent political fuss is not about the Tea Parties or the Tea Party members. It is not about the rallies, the signs, the undocumented accusations of off-color or rude or politically incorrect comments, the Tea Party leaders (or lack of same), the candidates they support, or even the candidates they oppose. These are all just symptoms of a much larger frustration and anger.

These political protests are about the people of our nation learning or relearning about our founding principles of limited government (anti-big government), increased individual liberties, fiscal responsibility, free market capitalism, our constitutional republic form of government, and self-reliance for those who have the physical and mental capacity to be self-sustaining.

The Tea Parties are critically important, but there are many more of us who support these principles than will ever go to a Tea Party event. The Tea Parties are just saying out loud that which we are thinking.

We the people, like Tea Party members, are rereading the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. Some of us are even reading the Federalist Papers and other writings of our founding fathers. We are studying the long history of big-government failures across time and geography. And we are recalculating the balance we want and need between government “support” and control versus individual liberty and opportunity.

We the people are shocked that anything like 47% of our citizens pay no federal income tax. We all want to help and support those truly poor and needy people, but no one thinks that 47% of the people of America fall into those categories. We the people are dumbfounded and confused as to how Congress and the president can pass and sign a bill that two-thirds of us do not support. Many of us can understand the perception that our economy might have been on the brink of destruction if we allowed our financial system to fail, but very few of us know if the level of government intercession was actually needed, and many are more than just a little skeptical.

But even if some portion of the financial rescue was needed, more and more of us now feel this bailout mentality has spread too far. We are beginning to see that it was not General Motors that was bailed out; it was their union (United Auto Workers). We are beginning to see the bottomless money pit of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (the government-sponsored entities designed by Congress to maintain liquidity in the mortgage markets). We are realizing that too much government is often more dangerous than too little government.

We the people are opening our eyes to exactly what “redistribution of wealth” means. It does not just mean taking money from the well-to-do and giving it to the poor; it means taking money earned honestly in the free marketplace and giving it to the politicians or the political supporters of the takers. It is making elected politicians and government employees a preferred class.

We understand just what our elected politicians mean when they talk of “the sausage making” of our legislative process. We now know that they are referring to backroom bribes and payoffs to buy votes, political arm-twisting designed to get the weaker of our political representatives to abandon their principles, and the political bookkeeping chicanery and gimmicks used by Congress and the Administration specifically to keep our citizens confused and in the dark as to our government’s real costs and liabilities.

They hide favors to political constituents and campaign contributors in 1,000-plus-page bills and 70,000-page tax codes that even they do not read. They purposely mislead the public about the content they do understand but do not want to discuss. They use powerful poll-tested words such as fairness and social justice to rationalize taking from one group of Americans to give to a more favored (by them) group.

The Tea Parties and their members may represent the sharp end of the stick, but Tea Parties are just the tip of the iceberg. The more that “we the people” understand why our founders chose to limit government and maximize individual liberties, the more rebellion there will be against progressivism and the more powerful the Tea Parties will become. The more our citizens understand the day-to-day workings and everyday failures of our government, the more they will fear expanding it.

There is a place for government (i.e., in defense of our country, police and the court system, protection of our God-given rights, etc.), but there are many places where government does not belong. As “we the people” become more educated in the political process, the Tea Parties will grow, and we will demand more transparency and a far different brand of representation.
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Offline Chieftain

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Re: Lemonade Lessons: the Tea Parties are just the tip of the iceberg
« Reply #1 on: January 16, 2014, 03:10:26 pm »
When the Tea Party movement first got started, the Left immediately began to demonize them in the rawest ways they could find (ie: "teabagger") that has never let up to this day.  There is no Tea Party per se, but it has been characterized as such and attacked as a threat by the Right.

During the last five years the demonization by the Left and Democrats in particular has continued and never let up, but Richard Nixon's Silent Majority is still out there, has indeed been paying attention to what is going on, and has been growing increasingly impatient about being demonized by fiat by Democrats for agreeing with the values that the Tea Party stands for.

The biggest problem facing our Country is the deviation from the Constitution over the last 100 years since the 17th Amendment dismantled what was left of the original "Checks and Balances" that were written into the Constitution.  The States were written out of the Federal Government by the 17th Amendment, and in the resulting Century the two political parties have been completely in charge, not the American People, and the disastrous results are clear to see.

Last week liberals celebrated the half century mark of Lyndon B. Johnson's "War on Poverty", but we mark that anniversary with record unemployment across the black community, unprecedented levels of disability claims, food stamps, public handouts of every description along with at this time unknown (but rapidly growing) numbers of Medicaid recipients.  More people are not working in this country now than in any time during our entire history.  All the while your average Congress Critter is making 3-4 or more times the annual salary (plus benefits) of your average American Citizen, yet far too few of those Citizens even bother to vote much less take the time to try and understand how wrong all of this is and a what a threat it is to their own well being.

It is a sad situation and in many respects terrifying, because our Nation will never be the same again.  We have allowed our governments, local, state and federal to dig us into a hole from which it may well be impossible to dig out of.  People throw the word "trillion" around with no comprehension of what that number really means, much less what $17 Trillion in debt (so far) really means.

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« Last Edit: January 16, 2014, 03:12:51 pm by Chieftain »

Offline Rapunzel

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Re: Lemonade Lessons: the Tea Parties are just the tip of the iceberg
« Reply #2 on: January 16, 2014, 08:26:55 pm »
Good post, Chief. Very prescient.
�The time is now near at hand which must probably determine, whether Americans are to be, Freemen, or Slaves.� G Washington July 2, 1776

Offline happyg

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Re: Lemonade Lessons: the Tea Parties are just the tip of the iceberg
« Reply #3 on: January 16, 2014, 10:26:10 pm »
Good post, Chief. LBJ not only created poverty, but opened the gates for intentional poverty. People are being paid not to work, but get all the benefits that others earn. For nearly 25 years, I worked in factories. I made good money, but, like many of my co workers, got arthritis, and an assortment of work related injuries, all the while, people were home watching soap operas.  After the company closed in 1998, many could not get jobs because of their illnesses or age. They lived on their savings until they were depleted. Every once in a while, I run into one of them, and their stories are hard to take. I go home and cry. Many of them died for one reason or other, that I assume had something to do with their jobs, and/or the loss of them. And all the while, we have these lazy sobs who hate our guts.
« Last Edit: January 16, 2014, 10:26:38 pm by happyg »

Offline Rapunzel

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Re: Lemonade Lessons: the Tea Parties are just the tip of the iceberg
« Reply #4 on: January 16, 2014, 10:29:23 pm »
The ramifications of having LBJ as president really makes me wonder what America would look like today had JFK not been shot and had indeed jetisoned LBJ as VP in the next election.
�The time is now near at hand which must probably determine, whether Americans are to be, Freemen, or Slaves.� G Washington July 2, 1776