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Chaos is an flying dragon turning on itself to destructively, recklessly, and wantonly
devour itself and if not stopped, destroys America.
The Tea Party is
anti-American!
Today, chaos is used with
the original meaning in mathematics and science to refer to a very specific kind
of unpredictability and informally, to mean a state of confusion.
If unchecked, chaos In the
future becomes the state of civilization as we now know it forcing
a new primitive world to begin out of chaos.
The Tea
Party
would
eliminate
all
programs,
services
and
actions not
originally
included
in the
original 1776
Constitution
approved
by our
founding
fathers.
I f America follows the original U.S. Constitution as the Tea Cup
movement
mandates
without
any of
the
subsequent
amendments
and
precedents
giving
birth to
the
multitude
of
programs
and
services
presently
available
from the
United
States
government, chaos
will
result
throughout America devastating life as we know it.
The
following
programs
and
services
have
been
added to
the
original
Constitution;
consequently,
all
would be
duly
eliminated:
Social
Security,
Federal
Old-Age
Survivors
and
Disability
Insurance,
unemployment
benefits,
temporary
Assistance
for
Needy
Families,
Health
Insurance
for Aged
and
Disabled
(Medicare),
Grants
to
States
for
Medical
Assistance
Programs
(Medicaid),
State
Children's
Health
Insurance
Program
(SCHIP),
Supplemental
Security
Income
(SSI),
OASDI
(Old
Age,
Survivors,
and
Disability
Insurance)
or RSDI
(Retirement,
Survivors,
and
Disability
Insurance).
In
addition:
The
Veterans
Administration
including
nursing
and
retired
homes
for
American
veterans.
Progressive
Taxation,
the Federal
Communications
Commission,
Environmental
Protection
Agency,
Occupational
Safety and
Health
Administration,
Federal
Drug
Administration, National
Labor
Relations
Board,
Securities
and Exchange
Commission,
The
Federal
Reserve, minimum-wage
and
maximum-hour
laws, and
Civil
Rights.
Social
Security,
in
everyday
speech,
is used
to refer
to the
benefits
for
retirement,
disability,
survivorship,
and
death,
currently
estimated
to keep
roughly
40% of
all
Americans
age 65
or older
out of
poverty.
In
addition,
present
thinking
by
educated
Americans
conclude
climate
change
is real,
and man
is
causing
it.
“It’s a
flat-out
lie,”
Mr.
Dennison, a
50-year-old
electrician
and
founder
of the
Corydon
Tea
Party,
said, "I based
my view on
the
preaching of
Rush
Limbaugh and
the teaching
of
Scripture.
I read my
Bible. God
made this
earth for us
to utilize.”
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Sharron Angle, the Tea Party-backed candidate |
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Christie McDonnell, the Tea Party candidate |
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Marco Rubio, the Tea Party candidate |
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Susana Martinez, the Tea Party candidate |
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Sarah
Palin endorses
Susana Martinez for New
Mexico governor |
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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 and women 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 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.” |
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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
Founders’
masterpiece,
O’Donnell
said, isn’t
just a legal
document;
it’s a
“covenant”
based on
“divine
principles.”
For decades,
she
continued,
the agents
of
“anti-Americanism”
who dominate
“the D.C.
cocktail
crowd” have
disrespected
the hallowed
document.
But now,
finally, in
the “darker
days” of the
Obama
administration,
“the
Constitution
is making a
comeback.”
Like the
“chosen
people of
Israel,” who
“cycled
through
periods of
blessing and
suffering,”
the Tea
Party has
rediscovered
America’s
version of
“the Hebrew
Scriptures”
and led the
country into
“a season of
constitutional
repentance.”
Going
forward,
O’Donnell
declared,
Republicans
must
champion the
“American
values”
enshrined in
our sacred
text. “There
are more of
us than
there are of
them,” she
concluded.
By now,
O’Donnell’s
rhetoric
should sound
familiar. In
part that’s
because her
fellow Tea
Party
patriots ―
Glenn Beck
and
Sarah Palin, also
refer to the
Constitution
as if it
were a holy
instruction
manual that
was lost,
but now,
thanks to
them, is
found. And
yet the
reverberations
go further
back than
Beck. The
last time
America
elected a
new
Democratic
president,
in 1992, the
Republican
Party’s
then-dominant
insurgent
group used
identical
language to
describe the
altogether
different
document
that defined
their cause
and divided
them from
the heretics
in charge:
the Bible.
The echoes
of the
religious
right in
O’Donnell’s
speech ― the
Christian
framework,
the
resurrection
narrative,
the “us vs.
them” motif,
the fixation
on “values”
― aren’t
coincidental.
From a legal
perspective,
O’Donnell’s
argument is
in-accurate.
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.
When Barack
Obama took
office,
experts
rushed to
declare an
end to the
old battles
over race,
religion,
and
reproductive
rights ―
whether
because of
Obama’s
alleged
healing
powers, or
the Great
Recession,
or both. But
these
analyses
ignored an
important
reality: at
heart, the
culture wars
were really
never about
anything as
specific as
abortion or
gay
marriage.
Instead, as
James
Davison
Hunter wrote
in Culture
Wars, the
book that
popularized
the term,
the
conflicts of
the 1990s
represented
something
bigger: “a
struggle
over…who we
have been,
who we are
now, and who
we, as a
nation, will
aspire” to
be. Such
conflicts,
Hunter
explained,
pit
“orthodox”
Americans,
who like the
way things
were,
against
their more
“progressive”
peers, who
are
comfortable
with the way
things are
becoming.
For the
forces of
orthodoxy,
the election
of a black,
urban,
liberal
Democrat
with a
Muslim name
wasn’t a
panacea at
all; it was
a
provocation.
So when the
recession
hit, and new
economic
anxieties
displaced
the
lingering
social
concerns of
the Clinton
era,
political
fundamentalists
sought
refuge in a
more
relevant
scripture ―
one that
could still
be made to
accommodate
the simpler,
surer past
they longed
for but
happened to
dwell on
taxes and
government
instead of
sinning and
being saved.
The
Constitution
was waiting
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.
Contemporary
Constitution
worshipers
claim
they’ve
distilled
their entire
political
platform ―
lower taxes,
less
regulation,
minimal
federal
government ―
directly
from the
original
text of the
founding
document.
Any overlap
with
mainstream
conservatism
is
incidental,
they say;
they’re
simply
following
the Framers’
precise
instructions.
If this were
true, it
would be
quite the
political
coup: oppose
us, the Tea
Party could
claim, and
you’re
opposing
James
Madison. But
the reality
is Tea
Partiers
engage with
the
Constitution
in such a
selective
manner, and
for such
nakedly
political
purposes,
that they’re
clearly
relying on
it more as
an
instrument
of
self-affirmation
and
cultural
division
than a
source of
policy
inspiration.
In legal
circles,
constitutional
fundamentalism
is nothing
new. For
decades,
scholars and
judges have
debated how
the founding
document
should
factor into
contemporary
legal
proceedings.
Some experts
believe in a
so-called
living
Constitution
― a set of
principles
that, while
admirable
and
enduring,
must be
interpreted
in light of
present-day
social
developments
in order to
be properly
upheld.
Others
adhere to
originalism,
which is the
idea the
ratifiers’
original
meaning is
fixed,
knowable,
and clearly
articulated
in the text
of the
Constitution
itself.
While
conservatives
generally
prefer the
second
approach,
many
disagree
over how it
should be
implemented
― including
the Supreme
Court’s most
committed
originalists,
Antonin
Scalia and
Clarence
Thomas.
Thomas
sympathizes
with a
radical
version of
originalism
known as the
Constitution
in Exile. In
his view,
the Supreme
Court of the
1930s
unwisely
discarded
the
19th-century’s
strict
judicial
limits on
Federal
power, and
the only way
to resurrect
the
“original”
Constitution
― and regain
our
unalienable
rights ― is
by rolling
back the
welfare
state,
repealing
regulations,
and perhaps
even putting
an end to
progressive
taxation. In
contrast,
Scalia is
willing to
respect
precedent ―
even though
it sometimes
departs from
his
understanding
of the
Constitution’s
original
meaning. His
caution
reflects a
simple
reality:
that
upending
post-1937
case law and
reversing
settled
principles
would prove
extremely
disruptive,
both in the
courts and
society at
large. As
Cass Sunstein, a
centrist
legal
scholar at
the
University
of Chicago
who now
serves in
the Obama
administration,
has
explained,
“many
decisions of
the Federal
Communications
Commission,
the
Environmental
Protection
Agency, the
Occupational
Safety and
Health
Administration,
and possibly
the National
Labor
Relations
Board would
be ruled
unconstitutional”
if Thomas
got his way.
Social
Security
could be
eliminated.
Same goes
for the
Securities
and Exchange
Commission
and the
Federal
Reserve.
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.”
I ndividual
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, " We are
moral, you
are not; we
represent
America, you
do not."
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
Tea Partiers
tend to
sound more
like Thomas
than Scalia.
Every
weekday on
Fox News,
Glenn Beck ―
“the most
highly
regarded
individual
among Tea
Party
supporters,”
according to
a recent
poll ― takes
to his
school room
chalkboard
to rail
against
progressives
like Woodrow
Wilson and
Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
“They knew
they had to
separate us
from our
history,” he
says, “to be
able to
separate us
from our
Constitution
and God.” In
Beck’s view,
progressives
forsook the
faithful
Christian
Founders and
forced the
country to
adopt a slew
of
unconstitutional
measures
that
triggered
our long
decline into Obama-era
totalitarianism:
the Federal
Reserve
System,
Social
Security,
the
graduated
federal
income tax.
True
patriots,
according to
Beck, favor
a
pre-progressive
vision of
the United
States. When
Nevada
Senate
nominee
Sharron
Angle says
we need to
“phase out”
Social
Security and
Medicare;
when Alaska
Senate
nominee Joe
Miller
asserts
unemployment
benefits are
“unconstitutional;”
when West
Virginia
Senate
nominee John Raese
declares the
minimum wage
should
“absolutely”
be
abolished;
when
Kentucky
Senate
nominee Rand
Paul
questions
the legality
of the Civil
Rights Act
of 1964;
when
Minnesota
Rep. Michele
Bachmann
claims
Obama’s new
health-insurance
law violates
the
Constitution;
and when
various Tea
Party
candidates
say they
want to
repeal the
amendments
that
triggered
the federal
income tax
and the
direct
election of
senators ―
this is the
vision
they’re
promoting.
At times,
the Tea
Party can
seem like a
popularized,
politicized
offshoot of
the
Constitution
in Exile
movement.
Over the
years
critics have
lodged
dozens of
objections
to
originalism
― the
disagreements
among the
Founders; the
preservation
of slavery
in the final
product; the
inclusion of
an amendment
process ―
and they
apply to the
Tea Party’s
interpretation
of the
Constitution,
too. But at
least originalism
is a
rational,
consistent
philosophy.
The real
problem with
the Tea
Party’s
brand of
Constitution
worship
isn’t that
it’s too
dogmatic.
It’s that it
isn’t
dogmatic
enough.
In
recent
months, Tea
Party
candidates
have behaved
in ways that
belie their
public
commitment
to combating
progressivism.
They’ve
backed
measures
that
blatantly
contradict
their originalist
mission. And
they’ve
frequently
misunderstood
or
misrepresented
the
Constitution
itself. In
May, for
example, Paul told a
Russian
television
station
America
“should
stop”
automatically
granting
citizenship
to the
native-born
children of
illegal
immigrants.
Turns out
his
suggestion
would be
unconstitutional,
at least
according to
the 14th
Amendment
(1868) and a
pair of
subsequent
Supreme
Court
decisions.
A
few weeks
later,
Paul
said he’d
like to
prevent
federal
contractors
from
lobbying
Congress ― a
likely
violation of
their First
Amendment
right to
redress. In
July,
Alaska’s
Miller told
ABC News
unemployment
benefits are
not
“constitutionally
authorized.”
Reports
later
revealed his
wife claimed
unemployment
in 2002.
The list
goes on.
Most Tea
Partiers
claim the
10th
Amendment,
which says
“the powers
not
delegated”
to the
federal
government
are
“reserved to
the states,”
is proof the
Framers
would’ve
balked at
today’s
bureaucracy.
What they
don’t
mention is
that James
Madison
refused a
motion to
add the word
“expressly”
before
“delegated”
because
“there must
necessarily
be admitted
powers by
implication.”
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.
The truth is
for all
their talk
of purity,
politicians
like Palin,
Angle, and
Miller don’t
seem to be
particularly
concerned
with
matching
their actual
positions to
the
Constitution
they profess
to worship.
For them,
the sacred
text serves
a higher
purpose ―
and in the
end, that
purpose
isn’t hard
to pinpoint.
Since the
earliest
days of the
republic,
Americans
have, like
the Tea
Partiers,
spoken of
the
Constitution
in religious
terms. In
1792,
Madison
wrote that
“common
reverence…should
guarantee,
with a holy
zeal, these
political
scriptures
from every
attempt to
add to or
diminish
from them.”
George
Washington’s
Farewell
Address
included a
plea the
Constitution
“be sacredly
maintained.”
In his
Lyceum
speech of
1838,
Abraham
Lincoln
cited the
document as
the source
of “the
political
religion of
the nation”
and demanded
its laws be
“religiously
observed.”
In 1968,
Supreme
Court
Justice Hugo
Black called
the
Constitution
his “legal
bible,” and
a few years
later,
during
Richard
Nixon’s
impeachment
hearings,
Texas Rep.
Barbara
Jordan
testified
her “faith
in the
Constitution
is whole.”
But the
similarity
between
these
figures and
the Tea
Partiers
ends at the
level of
language.
For leaders
like Lincoln
and Jordan,
the
Constitution
is a symbol
“that
supplies an
overarching
sense of
unity even
in a society
otherwise
riddled with
conflict,”
as
sociologist
Robin
Williams
once wrote.
It is an
integrative
force ― the
cornerstone
of our civil
religion.
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.
The Tea
Partiers are
right to
revere the
Constitution.
It’s a
remarkable,
even
miraculous
document.
But there
are many
Constitutions:
the
Constitution
of 1789, of
1864, of
1925, of
1936, of
1970, of
today.
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.”
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