I've noticed a lot of Tea Party members and supporters are now getting upset and indignantly challenging offhanded references to the "Teabagger" term. They seem to have forgotten that critics of the Tea Party movement did not originate this term.The "Teabagger" label was created by Tea Partiers themselves and bandied about as a term of endearment between supporters and other like minded Tea Party folks. Even commentators and reporters from the pro-Tea Party Fox News Channel repeatedly referred to members as "Teabaggers" as a legitimate term -- since this is what the Tea Partiers called themselves.see: http://www.youtube.com/v/F26vC_1_8xw&hl=en&fs=1This self-celebration of the "Teabagger" label even culminated to the point of Tea Partiers proudly dangling instant tea bags by their strings, as some odd idea of fraternal solidarity. Ya Rly.Now many Tea Partiers no longer like this phrase. Because some bright members discovered word "teabag", when co-opted as a verb, has a sexual slang connotation in US English. With sadness, their term "Teabagger" all of a sudden became pejorative in a most unfortunate way.But, the English language has a long and rich history of taking relatively benign words and attaching perceived negative connotations. "Gay" used to always mean "happy, or merry" and "faggot" used to always refer to "a stick of wood, as used for a fire". There are also many examples in history of how a pejorative term was turned into a positive affirmation identifying a brotherhood of like-minded community members. For example, 2000 years ago, the word "Christian" was created by pagan Greeks and Romans and used as a pejorative. 300 years ago, both the terms "democrat" and "republican" were serious insults to any lady or gentleman of polite society.Well, now is the time for all good Tea Partying conservatives to turn the tables. Take one of the phrases back from the degenerates of society. Fight for your rights to "own the insult," and then use it against them for all that is Right and Just. Do this just as the Christians and the Democratic-Republicans, whom you so admire, themselves did so many years ago.So, Teabaggers, go forth and shout it from the hills and rooftops: "Teabaggers! Rise up! Wear the Teabagger label proudly and live in fear no longer! Teabaggers take your country, and your native English language, back from the deviant socialist hordes!"
9/23/2010 11:37:27 AM
in before the ". . . just wait till november. . . " line
9/23/2010 11:42:06 AM
remember, rememberthe 5th of november
9/23/2010 3:45:17 PM
Try testicular torsion of teabaggers.
9/23/2010 3:57:03 PM
so, where did you copy and paste this from?
9/23/2010 7:11:16 PM
copy-paste back at ya...Tea HeeThis column has not had much to say about the "tea party" protest movement, largely because protests are not our cup of tea. Our favored idioms of expression are the argument and the bon mot; slogans and chants make us uncomfortable.That said, the tea-party phenomenon is an interesting one. The American left has an extensive protest culture, an outgrowth of the highly effective civil rights marches of the 1950s and '60s and the anti-Vietnam protests of the late '60s. Any U.S. military intervention or meeting of an international economic organization is bound to lead to organized protests, as are a variety of other political events and issues. The multiplication of left-wing protests has cheapened their currency, so that nowadays they neither reflect nor inspire serious political change--although news reporters seem to feel obliged to treat them as if they did.The tea parties, by contrast, are noteworthy, because they are something new. Apart from opponents of abortion, the American right really has no protest culture to speak of. So when large groups of people start gathering in cities around the country to protest the expansion of government, that is news.Yet although the tea parties seem to have received considerable coverage from local news outlets, the national media were slow even to realize anything was happening. A reader discovered this hilarious exchange from an April 13 online chat with Washington Post reporter Robert Barnes:
9/23/2010 7:46:17 PM
^ so that's what you gathered in the 5 weeks you were gone?
9/23/2010 7:50:01 PM
9/23/2010 8:28:08 PM
9/24/2010 4:51:48 PM
I'm proud to be a teabagger.http://biggovernment.com/abreitbart/2010/04/14/im-proud-to-be-a-tea-bagger/
9/25/2010 4:28:26 AM
I guess this shows the political diversity of TWWbased on your posts in another thread I pegged you as a Teabagger despite your earlier humorous riposte of them
9/25/2010 4:32:29 AM
youre just mad because i refuse to wear a dress to your party.
9/25/2010 4:59:37 AM
lol noif you can't pass you'll just make a fool of yourself
9/25/2010 11:41:13 AM
won't be the first time
9/25/2010 3:35:47 PM
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/08/30/100830fa_fact_mayerare you guys familiar with the involvement of the Koch family in the Tea Party's so-called grass roots campaigning?
9/27/2010 12:10:55 AM
yeah, it's a Koch-and-bull affair
9/27/2010 12:11:29 AM
i love how so-called "lifelong libertarians" will so readily hand social controls to moralizing fundamentalists
9/27/2010 11:02:09 AM
Libertarians, too, are capable of prioritizing. Some election cycles libertarians vote democrat, because of fears of the patriot act, etc. But, most election cycles they go republican because of economic fears. But even this is just 20% or so. The vast majority of libertarians don't vote out of fear that "voting just encourages them." This election will be no different.
9/27/2010 11:17:51 AM
you must get an SMS text alert anytime someone types the word 'libertarian' here.
9/27/2010 11:27:38 AM
9/27/2010 1:47:17 PM
No, just check the voting numbers. In the last midterm election, only 33% of voting-age Americans voted. I would feel safe saying that the majority of Democrats aren't going to vote this election. Nevermind a political movement whose candidates do not even appear on maybe 70% of ballots.[Edited on September 27, 2010 at 5:20 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/27/2010 5:19:27 PM
9/30/2010 10:56:57 AM
9/30/2010 11:09:41 AM
What I love is someone said "I learned all I need to know about Muslims on 9/11" at the Beck Rally. At that time The Onion ran a joke article about someone saying the same exact line. They obviously were mocking that sort of thinking.
9/30/2010 4:23:00 PM
I didn't read it yet but I imagine Taibbi's takedown of the Tea Party is good in his biased sort of style.
9/30/2010 5:00:45 PM
^http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/17390/210904#
10/1/2010 10:58:01 AM
10/1/2010 11:11:25 AM
y'know, I doubt they could even articulate it to that level of detail, even if they wanted to be honest with themselves. I think repeating alarmist slogans is pretty much the full gamut of the average teabagger's knowledge base.
10/1/2010 1:39:07 PM
^^^You can be anti-welfare and still get welfare. I'm against the government subsidizing student loans, but I took out a subsidized student loan. Now, I can justify it by saying I never consented to paying taxes, and it's yet another way of getting my money back, but really it's self interest. People think they've found some great "gotcha!" when they find someone benefitting from the government they're against, but all they've done is discovered moral hazard.[Edited on October 1, 2010 at 1:52 PM. Reason : ]
10/1/2010 1:51:06 PM
10/1/2010 2:03:35 PM
Good one, buddy. Haven't been in college for a couple years now. Stereotyping is so much easier than thinking, sometimes.
10/1/2010 3:29:24 PM
I'm totally against homosexuality. I just like an occasional circle jerk.WIDE STANCE KITTEH[Edited on October 1, 2010 at 3:34 PM. Reason : ]
10/1/2010 3:30:43 PM
10/1/2010 4:00:18 PM
Yeah, I don't how to take that. Are they saying they do deserve it? Perhaps they feel they've worked and been of value to society, so they're deserving, while others have only leeched off the system. No one is going to willfully give up the benefits they've been handed for free. It would make no sense to. There's never a scenario where if you do take a stand out of principle, the system will be reformed. It's not like masses of people are going to start saying "pass" on government cheese. I'd rather take what I can, while I can.
10/1/2010 4:09:52 PM
It just illustrates that you and people like you are not idealistic about their "anti-welfare" stance at all. It appears hypocritical and undermines your stance. Yes one can be "anti-welfare" and receive voluntary welfare, but one then looks like a douche.
10/1/2010 4:13:21 PM
10/1/2010 4:14:13 PM
^^^Nobody is suggesting they voluntarily give it up while it's being offered (although that's what you would do if you really gave a shit about the issue).The thing is they're only fighting against the types of welfare they're not getting at the moment. For example, that woman is on Medicare so that couple isn't against Medicare. And collectively, they're tapping all kinds of government programs, so nothing is going to get reformed.
10/1/2010 4:33:45 PM
That is not hypocritical. Hypocritical would be someone that is against welfare for GE, but lobbies to gain welfare for their own company. Or someone that is against welfare for the poor, then throws a fit when their own welfare program is cut off. By your definition, anyone that pays taxes is being hypocritical, because there must be something the government is doing with your money that you don't approve of. By your definition, we are all morally bankrupt unless we commit suicide or just happen to agree 100% with whatever congress does. People have no choice but to live within the rules of this society. What they want the rules to be should have no basis upon how they act within the rules that are. In my opinion, all that is required to avoid hypocrisy, is for the individual on welfare to proclaim "good riddance" on the day their welfare is repealed. That, of course, leaves out other libertarian theories over "draining the beast". Every dollar we milk out of the government, is one less dollar it has to wreck the planet. I am against tax deductions, I think they are immoral, but I hope everyone takes advantage of every damn tax deduction on the books, even going so far as to spend $1000 on a tax attorney to obtain a $1000 tax deduction.
10/1/2010 4:52:07 PM
I mean, theoretically you can choose to not pay taxes, but functionally I think it's fair to call them compulsory.I also think it's fair to call it hypocrisy when being against a non-compulsory system while gaining benefit from said non-compulsory system.A better analogy would be being against McDonald's while gaining profits from McDonald's. Taxes aren't a fair comparison.
10/1/2010 4:56:10 PM
10/1/2010 4:57:36 PM
10/1/2010 7:50:26 PM
10/1/2010 9:21:21 PM
Teabaggers actually despise the Constitution and our nation's founding principles...
1/3/2011 7:41:34 AM
1/3/2011 7:50:44 AM
The article that AlterNet quoted from later in that article says that the proposed amendment reduces that supermajority from 3/4 to 2/3: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/27/opinion/27mon2.html?_r=1&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&pagewanted=printAlso the main difference between AlterNet and WND is that AlterNet has some connection to reality; it's not as strictly fact-based as the mainstream media, concerning itself more with opinion, but it is still well within the reality-based community.
1/3/2011 7:57:42 AM
The Tea Party is nothing but a GOP rebranding campaign, using the same faux-grassroots angle that the Obama campaign did, mixed with an aping of lefitst protest culture of the 90's and 00's. The funding for organization comes from the same deep pockets that have been funding right wing PAC's and lobbyist groups for years, and by publicizing the same right-wing populist angst that's existed for decades it creates the illusion of a genuine uprising. It's a joke but then again so is most of American political discourse so they're just as effective as the next group.
1/5/2011 1:52:12 PM
that's some straight-up foolishness
1/5/2011 2:31:33 PM
Alternative narrative: A national assemblage of grassroots activists wheeled their Rascal scooters up to the computer, logged into their AOL accounts, and organized a series of protests that caught the eye of Fox News for their tenacity and unique, original message of lower taxes and smaller government.
1/11/2011 1:52:36 PM