Dialectic: Weakening Tea 0
Michael Weiss, writing at the Guardian, compares Teabaggery to the “Great Awakening” and other movements in American history, arguing that it is, by its nature, ephemeral and contains the seeds of its own dissolution.
In doing so, he indulges in a false equivalency (I think that’s the buzz word of the moment).
Several of the examples that he cites as “liberal-left” reaction to Bush League politics–“comparisons of the chief executive with Hitler, conspiracy theories about the furtive ‘truth’ of 9/11, the publication of a novel by a well-regarded author which envisaged Bush’s assassination as being in the public interest”–were never considered anything but the fringiest of the fringe by anyone except their adherents (see the excerpt below). Indeed, “truther” is a term of derision outside of truther circles.
To ascribe them to the “liberal-left” en masse is malpractice in punditry of the highest order, akin to equating mild health insurance reform with government ownership of the means of production (which is the definition of “socialism,” by the way). It’s a manifestation of the punditocracy’s belief that they haven’t pundited properly unless for every either they make up an or.
With that proviso, though, his column is worth a read. A nugget:
What defenders of the Tea Party have failed to understand is that this movement, like every creedal passion before it, is liable to extinction by its own hand.
(snip
Humdrum history impends again. If Whittaker Chambers could remark of the sleepy and nostalgic right of the 1950s, which pinned its hope on dismantling the New Deal, that it was a “literary whimsy” masquerading as a politics, then surely the Tea Party is something more ephemeral for these caffeinated and amnesiac times: a Twitter feed in search of an ideology.