The Tea Party movement takes its name from the Boston Tea Party of 1773, when American patriots dumped British tea into Boston Harbor to protest British imperial power. But while New England was the center of resistance to the British empire, there are few New Englanders to be found in today's Tea Party movement. It should be called the Fort Sumter movement, after the Southern attack on the federal garrison in Fort Sumter in South Carolina on April 12-13, 1861, that began the Civil War. Today's Tea Party movement is merely the latest of a series of attacks on American democracy by the white Southern minority, which for more than two centuries has not hesitated to paralyze, sabotage or, in the case of the Civil War, destroy American democracy in order to get their way.
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Wednesday, August 3, 2011
The "duh" factor ...
Long suspected, now verified. Like the song says, "the South's gonna do it again". What the lyric doesn't relate is the other truism, "if I had to do it all over again, I'd do it all over you":
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2 comments:
Hello Fixer,
Wow. Double wow. A truly inspired post. If they get called "The Fort Sumter movement" or my additional choices derived from your post such as "the Fort Sunk-her movemen"t or "the Fort Sphincter movement" it would be much more descriptive and accurate.
Maybe we should restore slavery. It'd make the Southern fucks happy and maybe they'd shut up and a buncha Somalians would get to eat.
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