Posted on 05/10/2010 7:36:44 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
What do you get when tea party activists team up with Ron Paulbots?
A nightmare:
The official platform for the Republican Party of Maine is now a mix of right-wing fringe policies, libertarian buzzwords and outright conspiracy theories.
The document calls for the elimination of the Department of Education and the Federal Reserve, demands an investigation of collusion between government and industry in the global warming myth, suggests the adoption of Austrian Economics, declares that Freedom of Religion does not mean freedom from religion (which I guess makes atheism illegal), insists that healthcare is not a right, calls for the abrogation of the UN Treaty on Rights of the Child and the Law Of The Sea Treaty and declares that we must resist efforts to create a one world government.
It also contains favorable mentions of both the Tea Party and Ron Paul. You can read the whole thing here.
Dan Billings, who has served as an attorney for the Maine GOP, called the new platform wack job pablum and nutcase stuff.
I would say that Mr. Billings sums it up nicely, although most of the really objectionable stuff is straight out of the Ron Paul playbook. Ridding ourselves of the Fed is the first step on the road back to a gold standard, a dubious idea that Milton Friedman pointed out would increase government regulation of the economy:
With no Fed, inexpert Congress will bear the onus of alleviating economic suffering. With deeper, longer recessions, Congressmen will inevitably succumb to pressure for more spending and regulation of the economyas they did during the Great Depression.
How about eliminating the Department of Education? When first proposed by Ronald Reagan, the Department was in its infancy, only sucking up $6 billion dollars of taxpayer monies and serving as a repository for federal education programs that previously had existed in the various departments.
No more today. The Department is now a $60 billion behemoth with almost every school district in the country dependent on its largess. Cutting it down to size while gradually getting the feds out of the education business might be more to the point. But for our tea party patriots, no half measures and nothing gradual allowed.
But it is the conspiracy mongering that should give us the most pause. Putting paranoid loons in charge of the GOP in Maine who believe in a global warming conspiracy involving industry and government and that there is any possibility on planet earth that we would be yoked under some kind of one world government is madness.
Are all tea party patriots inclined to believe this whack job pablum? Certainly not all, although if you spend much time listening to them, similar sentiments are expressed by many. As a free-standing group of activists dedicated to fiscal sanity and constitutional principles, the tea party movement has a vital role to play in any American revival. But as purely political animals, they are a washout. There are a sizable number of birthers among them, and a significant number who believe Obama is a Muslim, or favors Muslims, or is working for their interests. I hate to bring up the R word but yes, there is a small but significant number who are racists as well.
In short, while the majority of tea partiers are average, normal Americans with pretty standard views, there is a sizable segment of the movement that makes them a political liability. Another case in point was the tea party revolt in Utah that ousted Senator Bob Bennett. For someone who has a lifetime rating of 85 from the ACU, it is amazing to think that Bennett wouldnt be conservative enough for any state in the union. But Utah Republicans had a few beefs with the senator and not even a last minute plea from Mitt Romney popular in the state for his stewardship of the Salt Lake City Olympics could save his political hide.
Other factors besides Bennetts obvious conservatism were in play. Bennett, along with his Democratic colleague from Oregon Ron Wyden, made a serious attempt to address the health insurance problem in America with a flawed, but earnest effort at comprehensive reform. Called The Healthy Americans Act, the bill incorporated some standard liberal thinking like an individual mandate, but was also innovative in the way costs would be shared and how the program would be administered at the state level. It would also have done away with Medicaid a plus in any conservatives book. In short, it was a good old-fashioned senate compromise on a thorny issue that, in another less mindlessly partisan time, would have served as a starting point for the two parties to work out their differences.
It wasnt just his dalliance with the enemy that angered right wingers in Utah. Bennett courageously voted against the Constitutional amendment to prohibit flag burning back in 2006 one of only three GOP senators to do so. He also supported comprehensive immigration reform. While there was a lot wrong with that bill, the guest worker provision had broad bipartisan support and Bennett worked tirelessly to improve it. As for the rest of it, the best that could be said of the measure was that it was attempting to address a problem for which there are probably no good answers. That Bennett felt responsible enough as a legislator to lend his name and support to the bill reveals much about how he views his responsibilities.
To get rid of a senator of Bennetts seniority and experience is the most unconservative thing the tea party movement has done to date. To effect change simply to realize change is the antithesis of conservative thinking and the excessive partisanship demonstrated by activists in Utah who hated Bennett for working with the enemy does not serve the interests of their state.
Maine and Utah are the first stirrings of tea party activists flexing their muscles in the political arena. They see success where failure is the real outcome.
Rick moron.
Who is this jerk?
That platform sounds OK to me!
You can reason with these people. You just need to run over them (electorally that is).
whack job pablum?
This is one of the comments after this article-
"
Mitt Romney popular in the state for his stewardship of the Salt Lake City Olympics
" Don't try to kid yourself, or us, there is a much larger reason why Mr Romney is "popular" in Utah than his stewardship of the 2002 Olympics. I agree with the point, the Republican party is being taken over by a radical fringe that seems to be willing to "eat-their-own". I'm hoping that the GOP will split and become a Center-Right party and the Tea Party will become a far-right party. Mirror this on the Left and I think we'd be much better off with four parties than just the two we have. I know many people who describe themselves as part of the "Tea Party Movement" and most of them are very sane with a few who have a mild case of consipracy-theory-ism but nowhere near as wacko as some of the leaders.
The Tea Party clearly is the new wave. It seems to me that it's an asymetrical party. No leaders. Decentralized. Mobile. Motivated. It's got all the elements of a winning movement. Reminds me of the Cuba scene in Godfather 2:
Michael: We saw a strange thing on our way here. Some rebels were being arrested, and instead of being arrested, one of them pulled the pin on a grenade he had hidden in his jacket. He took himself and the captain of the command with him. Now, the soldiers are paid to fight; the rebels aren't.Hyman Roth: What does that tell you?
Michael: They can win.
The Tea Party movement has all the best qualities of a successful insurgency. And it's being done by regular folks.
No more!
Half-measures and gradualism are the province of the likes of Bill Frist and Denny Hastert - may they never see the light of elected office again!
Seven "yes" and two "maybe". Not bad.
9 of 9 here
Party platforms are not binding. We know this.
But if this causes the establishment so much angst maybe we should work to see the same happen in all 50 states.
We could even recommended punishments for those that stray from the platform. I favor a RINO dunce cap being worn for a period of one week for each “sin”.
It doesn’t matter what ME does. It is forever socialist.
Center-right won’t endure; Reagan already tried that.
“I was impressed by the momentum and the continued strength of the movement. “
Don’t be.
There is no “Tea Party” - there are just millions of patriots who have done a number of things as an amorphous blob of like-minded concerned citizens.
The minute “they” can Freeze It, Tag It, Identify It ... they can demonize it, limit it, destroy.
“t seems to me that it’s an asymetrical party. No leaders. Decentralized. Mobile. Motivated.”
Stay amorphous and there is nothing for them to attack. Assymmetric Politics.
The only questionable item is the elimination of the Federal Reserve.
If this was not so ignorantly arrogant, it would be funny!
Both Senator Snowe and Collins attended the Convention - they originally had planned on a “video” presentation but apparently got the word that there was going to be a record turn out of Delegates - many of us Tea Activists and disenfranchised, discouraged conservative Republicans coming out of political retirement - they jumped aboard their planes and scooted on up here.
I didn’t pay much attention to either of their bloviations; Snowe has a voice like fingernails on a chalkboard to me, and Sen. Collins has a mild speech impediment which isn’t her fault of course, but it can kind of get to you after a while.
During the Gubernatorial Candidate debate, where most of the Teapers were gathered enthusiastically cheering on our favorite (by and large; about 98% of Maine Teapers support Waterville Mayor Paul LePage for Governor), Snowe sat only a couple of rows of chairs behind us and was taking it all in.
There was some discussion about asking the Candidates to sign a pledge to support the new platform and holding them publicly accountable, but I for one don’t think that will really fly very far if at all.
Politicians always ignore these platforms, and I fully expect this one to become just as irrelevant as all the rest.
It is, however, a symbolic indication of an aroused population increasingly concerned about the direction our Country is being taken in and our passionate commitment to doing something about it.
Nothing endures forever, and each new generation must fight the same battles against tyrany. There was a time when this was taught in the schools.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.