thegreekdog wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:thegreekdog wrote:
There is no official Tea Party position clearly.
Exactly my point, but then you say I "don't understand" the Tea Party?
As Phatscotty indicated, there are certain ideas that the Tea Party movement supports - less taxes, less government spending for example. These ideas are supposed to be supported by the Republican Party. However, as we have seen in at least the last few Republican presidencies and Republican Congresses, clearly the Republicans do not support less government spending. Therefore, the Tea Party movement was appropriate.
No. its a spoiled children's demand.
What it REALLY means is that average people are to take very serious cuts in everything from education to road repairs to the military to medical assistance to social security.. namely every single service people recieve from the government.
It means heavy cutting in any and ALL enforcement and regulatory bodies, even though failure to fund those groups lead directly to huge disasters ranging from the securitizing of mortgages to deep water drilling without appropriate safegaurds. Halliburton alone is a "poster child" for why we need more oversite and why shoving every government service into private contracting is NOT really a good answer (unless you want to make lots of money by investing in Halliburton)
AND.. far from meaning "no taxes for all", it really means "we keep paying what we pay.. or more, while the rich keep paying almost nothing". Further, in many cases these costs are simply being passed down the chain onto states and localities. I, myself, am
literallybeing asked to help feed local people here. We qualify for food supports ourselves, but I grow a garden, am very budget-conscious (was TAUGHT how to be), etc. Know who is not paying a dime? My husband's old boss who made millions selling his factory. He gave a few bucks to the local kid's football team, stuff like that.
THAT is what really happens when the "Tea Party agenda" gets passed.
thegreekdog wrote:
Okay, I have some follow-up questions (to which I will provide my own answers before you provide yours):
(1) Why do we have people who are not willing to "work things out?" The answer, from my point of view, is that the people that are elected to Congress have not and continue to not represent the people that voted for them. The people elected to Congress do not do what their constituents want or what is best for their constituents; rather, the people elected to Congress do what their biggest donors want them to do. Therefore, when 90% of Congress is not representing their constituents, but is instead continuing to spend money, making small cuts instead of large ones, the constituents get angry. Instead of thinking about this as a Republican vs. Democrat thing (which is what you're doing), think of it as a constituent vs. government thing, which is what it is. When your elected officials stop listening to you, why should you "work things out" with them? Why should you continue to bend over when your representatives no longer represent you?
Wrong. Congress IS representing constituents, but what constituents want is "more more more for me"... and don't make me pay for it!
meanwhile, the groups that actually have been able to talk "sensibly" and "make deals" to a poin were the big players.. the lobbiests, etc. Faced with a bunch of toddlers screaming and a nice old man with "a plan".. the congressmen follow the "nice old man"... and don't bother or cannot see that this "nice old man" has a very evil heart. Or rather, has a bunch of toxic waste on his shoes.. whether he knows or doesn't...that he persists in spreading around.
thegreekdog wrote:
2) Regarding the debt ceiling - Why is it bad if the US government defaults?
Because we ARE the government. Why does it matter if you are late to pay your bills? If the US defaults, the ALL of our interest rates, etc go up.
But here... link:
http://articles.boston.com/2011-07-10/b ... bt-ceiling
thegreekdog wrote:(3) Regarding the debt ceiling debate - Why are the Tea Party movement members (and their associated members) the group that must compromise? Why are you not railing against the people who want to raise the debt ceiling so that they may spend more money?!
The Tea Partiers are the ones who seem to think this is all just a big joke.. and keep wanting to pretend that there is something called the US government that is somehow apart from the rest of us, instead of being this country and very much tied to us all.
thegreekdog wrote:(4) Why do you think Tea Party members won't discuss the Tea Party? It seems to me there are a number of frequent posters on this website who are perfectly willing to discuss their political views.
They can discuss their views, but disccussing "the Tea Party views" beyond the "footstomping toddler tantrum "no new taxes" garbage, is impossible because there IS no Tea Party.. and yes, that is very much the point of those who came up with the whole thing
thegreekdog wrote:I listen to a radio show every morning that discusses Tea Party type views (although the host is more libertarian). I have yet to see a comprehensive interview done by any major network with an actual, intelligent Tea Party representative.
There are NONE. That is, there are no true Tea Party
representatives. There are intelligent people who claim to be part of the Tea Party or who would like to be representing it, but they cannot because there is no Tea Party.
thegreekdog wrote:(I mean you have a guy running for president who basically is the Tea Party yet I have not seen any substantive interview on any major network. All you (Player) hear about the Tea Party are the terms "radical," and "racist," and "anti-government," and "subversive."
No. Not even close. I have read everything you have said, here various politicians cite the Tea Party, etc, etc. The problem is that because there is no tea party the idiots can and do have just as much a claim to the title. Second, becuase there is no real uniform platform, people argue all over the place and like here, the debate winds up being not so much about the topic as about the Tea Party (or whether this idea is really a tea party idea), In amongst that , you do get some actual talk of ideas, but any reference to the Tea party usually means just "I stand here".. "I will not compromise"... and "if you don't like it, I have millions behind me".
thegreekdog wrote:
(5) Why is the Tea Party movement the only group that is being uncompromising?
Never said they were the only party. I said they have taken this trend to an extreme.
thegreekdog wrote:(Clearly your own political views have colored this argument. The Tea Party movement shouldn't have to compromise because it's not a political party in the same vein as the Republicans or Democrats. You think the Tea Party movement is the death of congeniality and compromise in politics? Oh please...
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We need to be taken seriously, because we are a legitimate view (not that we have any true leaders ), but we should not compromise because we are not a party..
