I bet I can guess which ones paid the tab.
Politics makes strange bedfellows.
Anybody who says I have 6% in common with a rat-ass ‘occupier’ just uttered fighting words.
Coming to general agreement on a few issues is one thing (eg crony capitalism, Washington D.C. insider trading, political corruption, etc), but agreeing on what needs to be done to “deal” with the issues is quite another.
I am paraphrasing, because I just can’t remember the original quote, but it goes something like this: (Attributed to Ben Franklin) “Beer is the proof that a knowing God loves us.”
Or something of the such.
Ben did say such a thing. Anyone with the for real quote, please correct me.
Wonder if it ever occurred to the Occupiers that both the beer they were consuming and the pub they were eating and drinking in are businesses that make money courtesy of our capitalist system?
It would be easy to dismiss this as the extreme left and extreme right meeting on the far end of the political spectrum with no relevance to the real world.
That would be a mistake.
We're conservatives. Go back to our history.
Three generations ago after World War II ended, conservatives decided that they could work with the non-Communist Left, on the grounds that they shared common commitments to free speech, representative government, and the rights enumerated by the Constitution. Yes, there were lots of differences, but it suited the purposes of pragmatic conservatives to divide the radical left from the moderate left based on whether they supported the Soviet Union and its denial of basic freedom.
That cooperation bore fruit in two ways.
One was the academic development of the neoconservative movement. Much has been written about that, but the key point is that when liberal intellectuals actually talked to conservatives, they found out that some of our arguments made sense and conservatives weren't knuckle-dragging troglodytes who couldn't think. The result is a fair number of liberals, even if they didn't agree with us, respected us. Men like Buckley and Gingrich are the fruit of that work, and hundreds of top conservative leaders today are former liberals who realize their liberalism was wrong because they personally examined the arguments being made by intelligent conservatives.
The other was at the blue-collar level and was most obvious with the rise of the Reagan Democrats. The attempt by the Soviet Union to crush the Solidarity free trade union in Poland was a wake-up call for many American liberal intellectuals that the Soviet Union really was evil, and for lots of American union workers and conservative Catholics, sent a strong message that the Republican anti-Communist agenda might not be all bad after all.
It's easy to demonize unions in the modern conservative movement, and in today's environment I understand that. Unions today are not doing a lot of good for anyone, but there was a day when unions were regarded by the average blue-collar factory worker as the reason his job lifted him into the middle class. I'm not saying they were right, but that's how unions were perceived by members. A generation ago, lots of union workers made up the backbone of the Reagan Democrats, voting for the former union president Ronald Reagan who supported the Solidarity trade union and religious freedom against the Soviet evil empire.
I don't know that the Occupy movement has a future. I'm inclined to think it's a flash-in-the-pan.
But if not, and if it's a true populist movement with staying power, events like this at CPAC may be of real help to conservatives in building the kinds of bridges that are needed to govern.
Our history is not an infallible guide to the future, but it is a helpful guide, and in any case, much can be learned by talking to our opponents on the other side of the political spectrum.
TEA Party is NOT “on the right”.
This is fantastic news and well overdue, IMO. The government has become the Ruling Class (Mark Levin) and corporations have learned they have to pay to play in D.C’s sandbox. The rest of us are left to pick with the chickens.
It’s about time we come to an understanding that we need to DEVOLVE government, i.e. Term Limits! Throw the ba$tards out of office, elect Citizen Representatives who serve at the WILL OF THE PEOPLE and go home when their terms are up! Put a stop to all the back room deals. We need to take our power back and it won’t happen until we’re all on the same page.
We’re ALL fed up!
Cooperation between the groups accomplishes one major goal, to make the Whitehouse nervous. In 1775, several groups that had little in common also came together for one goal, to make George III nervous. Tea Party and occupy agree on jobs, crony capitalism, ending the Fed, no more bailouts and a distain for the administration and Irish beer.
It started as a lark; Jim Gilchrist of the Minuteman Project, author Hudson Flynt and I decided to leave the comfort of the CPAC convention and see if the Occupiers protesting outside would be willing to engage in constructive dialogue. We walked down the long driveway to a crowd of people with signs standing around an inflatable Fat Cat and chanting something about Racist Teabaggers.
From the start the conversation tended to focus on the things we agree on rather than things we dont. The topics included jobs, no more bailouts, an end to crony capitalism and an end to the Fed. There was no shouting or personal attacks.
After an hour or so we invited a few of the organizers to come have a beer with us at the pub in the Marriott hotel. Although the security guards tried to stop them from entering the lobby, we explained that we were guests at the hotel as well as conventioneers and the Occupiers were our guests for dinner. After a quick walk through the lobby the beer summit began.
At the start there were eight of us sitting at two pushed together tables, but we were soon joined by Steve Eichler and Dale Robertson of TeaParty.org and several curious conventioneers of CPAC. One occupier identified as Rusty (real name withheld by request), jokingly mentioned that his side was beginning to be outnumbered, so he and I went back to the sidewalk and got a few more occupiers that looked like they could use a meal and a beer. We did our best to keep the numbers even.
Some of our discussions focused on the media; all three organizations had been portrayed badly by reporters. It is they that have painted Tea Partiers as racists and Occupiers as communists. It is the media that focuses its cameras on uninvited skinheads at the Tea Parties and Union bully thugs at the Occupy rallies. Movements are easily discredited by undermining interests and their media lapdogs; on that we completely agreed.
After about three hours Rusty and I went back out again to fetch his backpack and tent. I walked straight into the Occupiers lines without a single word or even a dirty look. As I waited for Rusty to gather his belongings a loud argument between a CPAC conventioneer and some of the Occupiers ensued to my immediate right. What happened next was captured on video at http://youtu.be/eDEnQ27v39s .
About an hour later, while we were getting along and enjoying good company in the Pub, several thugs from the local pipefitters union showed up outside and began causing trouble. These union protesters were bused in and paid to protest according to our occupy friends. To quote Rusty, They show up, cause trouble and leave before the cops do anything. Its us real occupiers that end up taking a beating from the cops, not them.
The summit lasted until the bar closed. We all took away from it an understanding and the hope that we could work together; at the very least we could support each others right to protest.
In the 1770s, a group of people met in a tavern with a lot less in common than we have. Together these rabble rousers, statesmen and patriots had but one goal, to make the British Crown nervous. What would happen if Minutemen, Occupiers and Tea party members stood united against the government? Do you think it might make the Whitehouse nervous?
An edited version of this video has gotten over 35k views on the CNN website. Lots of positive feedback.
This video was not a true example of what the "Occupiers" are really about - anarchy and socialism. THE only thing that the TEA Party and Occupiers have in common is crony-capitalism. If you follow the video to the end, it shows some liberal white woman complaining about racism and being the reason she joined the protest. Sheesh, will they never get past it?!
THEY ARE THE RACISTS! THEY BRING IT UP IN EVERY DISCUSSION! We need to start calling them on it. Every time some lib/soc brings up race, ask them how that even matters anymore. If they mention the numbers of black men in prison, then respond with yes, they commit more crimes per population. Sorry, but it's a statistical fact. You might also want to make the point that black boys/men attack blacks boys/men more than anyone else.
It's time to start fighting back with simple statistics!