![]() |
|
The Tea Party will Bring Chaos to America!
SANTA
FE, NM
(By
Andrew Romano,
Newsweek
&
Jon Garrido, The Jon Garrido Network)
October 21,
2010 —
Since
winning the
republican
senate
primary in
Delaware
last month,
Christine
O’Donnell
adopting the
Tea Party mandate to follow
the
1776 Constitution.
The Constitution is a relentlessly secular document that never once mentions God or Jesus. And nothing in recent jurisprudence suggests the past few decades of governing have been any less constitutional than the decades that preceded them.
Culture War
But the Tea Party’s language isn’t legal and neither is its logic. It’s moral: right vs. wrong.
What
O’Donnell &
Co. are
really
talking
about is
culture war.
Today, Tea
Party
activists
gather to
recite the
entire
document to
each other.
They demand
a
wayward
America
return to
its
Constitutional
roots.
In short,
they take
their
Constitution
worship
very, very
seriously.
The question
now is
whether the
rest of us
should as
well.
States' Rights vs. the United States Constitution
Most Tea Partiers claim the 10th Amendment, which says “the powers not delegated” to the federal government are “reserved to the states.” Individual states would be be allowed to establish official religions and determine the civil rights of persons living within each state.
Arizona using States' Rights could officially establish Apartheid (Arizona SB 1070) abolishing the rights of all non-whites as provided in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Other states would embrace Arizona's Apartheid policy leading eventually to civil war.
The Tea
Party would
claim, "
This becomes
the rallying
cry of
culture war
of civil war
Treaties
including
the
Treaty of
Guadalupe
Hidalgo
If all
amended Constitutions
after 1776
are declared
null and
void,
said
eliminations
would
also
invalidate
treaties
approved by
the U.S.
Senate and signed
by
the
President. The
Treaty of
Guadalupe
Hidalgo
signed in
1848 would
be declared
null and
void
reverting
ownership of
Arizona, New
Mexico,
Utah,
California,
Nevada,
Texas,
Wyoming,
Colorado and
Kansas back
to
Mexico.
The Tea
Party vision
Angle
has said
“government
isn’t what
our Founding
Fathers put
into the
Constitution”
― even
though
establishing
a federal
government
with the
“Power To
lay and
collect
Taxes” to
“provide for
the common
Defense and
general
Welfare” is
one of the
main reasons
the Founders
created a
Constitution
to replace
the weak,
decentralized
Articles of
Confederation.
In 2008 Palin told
Katie Couric
the
Constitution
does, in
fact,
guarantee
“an inherent
right to
privacy,” à
la Roe v.
Wade, but
added
“individual
states…can
handle an
issue like
that.”
Unfortunately,
Palin’s
hypothesis
would only
be viable in
a world
without the
Fourteenth
Amendment,
which gave
Washington
sole
responsibility
for
safeguarding
all
constitutional
rights. Then
there are
the proposed
amendments.
In the
current
Congress,
conservatives
like Michele
Bachmann
have
suggested
more than 40
additions to
the
Constitution:
a
flag-desecration
amendment; a
balanced-budget
amendment; a
“parental
rights”
amendment; a
supermajority-to-raise-taxes
amendment;
anti-abortion
amendment;
an
anti-gay-marriage
amendment;
and so on.
None of
these
revisions
has anything
to do with
the
document’s
original
meaning.
We are moral, you are not; we represent America, you do not. Theirs is the rallying cry of culture war.
The Tea
Partiers
belong to a
different
tradition ―
a tradition
of divisive
fundamentalism.
Like other
fundamentalists,
they seek
refuge from
the
complexity
and
confusion of
modern life
in the
comforting
embrace of
an
authoritarian
scripture
and the
imagined
past it
supposedly
represents.
Like other
fundamentalists,
they see in
their good
book only
what they
want to see:
confirmation
of their
preexisting
beliefs.
Like other
fundamentalists,
they don’t
sweat the
details, and
they ignore
all
ambiguities.
And like
other
fundamentalists,
they make
enemies or
evildoers of
those who
disagree
with their
doctrine. In
the 1930s,
the American
Liberty
League
opposed
FDR’s New
Deal by
flogging its
version of
the
Constitution
with what
historian
Frederick
Rudolph once
described as
“a
worshipful
intensity.”
In the
1960s, the
John Birch
Society
imagined a
vast
communist
conspiracy
in similar
terms. In
1992
conservative
activists
formed what
came to be
known as the
Constitution
Party ―
Sharron
Angle was
once a
member ― in
order to
“restore
American
jurisprudence
to its
Biblical
foundations
and to limit
the federal
government
to its
Constitutional
boundaries.”
Today, Angle
asserts
“separation
of church
and state is
an
unconstitutional
doctrine,”
and Palin
claims “the
Constitution…essentially
acknowledges
that our
unalienable
rights…come
from God.” The point is
always the
same: to
suggest the
Constitution,
like the
Bible,
decrees
what’s right
and wrong
rather than
what’s legal
and illegal,
and to
insist only
they and
their ilk
can access
its truths.
Where O’Donnell & Co. go wrong is in insisting their imagined, idealized document is the country’s one true Constitution, and that dissenters are somehow un-American. By putting the Constitution front and center, the Tea Party has reignited a long-simmering argument over who we are and who we want to be. That’s great. But to truly honor the Founders’ spirit, they have to make room for actual debate. As usual, Thomas Jefferson put it best. In a letter to a friend in 1816, he mocked “men who look at constitutions with sanctimonious reverence, and deem them like the arc of the covenant, too sacred to be touched”; “who ascribe to the men of the preceding age a wisdom more than human, and suppose what they did to be beyond amendment.” “Let us follow no such examples, nor weakly believe that one generation is not as capable as another of taking care of itself, and of ordering its own affairs,” he concluded. “Each generation is as independent as the one preceding, as that was of all which had gone before.” |
|
|
|