(Note: This is the third and final segment in a
three part series under the general heading of Recent Currents: From the
"Tea Party" to the 2012 Election. Click here to view the first segment and second segment.)
What will be the primary features of life among the ordinary following a Teavangelical victory in the 2012 presidential election? What are the critical flaws in their ambition to amass material wealth? Is there any room for tolerance and inclusion? Or is opposition to Obamacare but a smokescreen for other unreasonable sentiments?
The election of 2012 contains enormous implications for
ordinary citizens. Should the
Teavangelicals be permitted to run their play unimpeded, what ordinary citizens
may experience is the real agenda,
designed to “repeal” virtually every aspect of F.D.R.’s New Deal social
order. It is a huge undertaking, understood
to be a reverse social engineering project of revolutionary magnitude. And “replace” with what?
The real
“Teavangelical” agenda appears to begin and end with the same basic
principle. It envisions an unregulated
system of capitalism with a select few individuals sitting atop. This is coupled with a strong national
military to facilitate the transportation of goods and services and to protect
investments in furtherance thereof. Period. The
social safety net is effectively eliminated.
It’s every man for himself in a land where every man is slave to a wealthy few.
It is big government, Tea Party style. Unfortunately, it is best suited to serve the
occasional rich man who lives on an exclusive
island than the masses of ordinary citizens who live in an inclusive democracy. It is a bridge to the past, genuflecting
before the foot of that runner who has already crossed the finish line, while
the masses of ordinary citizens remain tethered to the starting block. And coming as it does less than a handful of
years following the failed priorities of the Neocons, attempting to target and obstruct the
Obama administration as the scapegoat, the agenda is audaciously brazen.
In what is seen as an increasingly narrow vision of the
democratic ideal, the theory of American capitalism favors materialism and
material accomplishment first and foremost.
To protect material interests, it champions the legal protection of
property rights, corporate and special interests over the interests of human
welfare. It also tends to favor the
cementing of private material gains in perpetuity. This gradually and
unacceptably concentrates equality of opportunity which is supposed to be
available to all citizens into the hands of fewer and fewer individual beneficiaries
of special privilege.
Over the succeeding generations, the present rules of the game have been utilized to create a class of numerically small but extremely
wealthy conservative citizens which today we call Teavangelicals. If the rules can never be modified to correct
inequities by the very same government that created those rules, the formula
will continue to favor growing economic disparity and class division.
And so it is little wonder as to why the Teavangelical
platform wants less government. When
government attempts in good faith to call a foul and change the rules,
government is portrayed as the evil.
Finally, claiming the moral high ground, it is said that both the
existing plan and its material beneficiaries have the blessing of God. Therefore, no effective impediment can be
placed in their path. Their victory is
complete.
But the argument is sophistry, since the Teavangelical
agenda contains at least two critical flaws.
First, any platform which favors property rights over human welfare by
definition fails the basic litmus test of adherence to the disinterested
ethical obligation to serve others before self.
Teavangelicals are unable to effectively reconcile that a Christian God,
in fact, appears to advance quite the opposite claim. And secondly, the main interest which binds
Teavangelicals together is selfishness.
So when they are attacked, they divide their energies into individual
fits of independent, self-possessed despotism and are thereby degraded.
On occasion, a situation occurs which provides a glimpse
of what American society might look like in a future world where ordinary
citizens live in perpetual subjugation to their Teavangelical “brethren.” Might a bit of room be allotted for tolerance
and inclusion in the rich man’s continuing obsession to acquire even greater
material wealth? [i] Don’t count on it.
A final story may best serve to illustrate. Angry over the proposed national health care
bill prior to its passage, some demonstrators, mostly Tea Party activists outside the
US Capitol shouted “nigger” at US
Rep. John Lewis, D-GA, civil rights icon.
Lewis was nearly beaten to death during an Alabama civil rights march in the
1960s. The protesters also shouted
obscenities at other members of the Congressional Black Caucus, lawmakers
said. “They were shouting, sort of
harassing,” Lewis said. “But, it’s okay,
I’ve faced this before. It reminded me
of the ‘60s. It was a lot of downright
hate and anger and people being downright mean.”
But it
didn’t stop with racism. Protestors also
used a slur as they confronted US
Rep. Barney Frank, D-MA, an openly gay member of Congress (Frank also happens
to be left handed and Jewish). A writer for the Huffington Post said the
crowd called Frank a “faggot.” Frank
told the Boston Globe that the incident happened as he was walking from the
Longworth office building to the Rayburn office building, both a short distance
from the US Capitol. Frank said the
crowd consisted of a couple of hundred people and that they referred to him as “homo.”
Frank told
the Globe:
I’m disappointed with the unwillingness
to be civil. I was, I guess, surprised
by the rancor. What it means is
obviously the health care bill is proxy for a lot of other sentiments, some of
which are perfectly reasonable, but some of which are not.
The challenge of ordinary citizens, then,
is to be a proponent of progressive ideas to improve our democratic ideal, regardless of the politics, regardless of the political party. This means striving toward that elusive goal
of achieving meaningful equality of opportunity for all citizens, not just the
wealthy or privileged few.
-Michael D’Angelo
[i] “It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a
rich man to enter the kingdom
of God.” – Matthew
19:24; Mark 10:25; Luke 18:25.
How might billionaire
individuals such as Rupert Murdoch and the Koch brothers attempt to
justify their conduct alongside this particular Biblical quotation? Each man is understood to be among the
richest known men in the world.
Murdoch is the Australian American global media baron and the Chairman and CEO of News Corporation, the world's second-largest media conglomerate. In 1953, Murdoch became managing director of News Limited, inherited from his father. He acquired troubled newspapers in Australia and New Zealand during the 1950s and 1960s, before expanding into the UK in 1969. He moved to New York in 1974, expanding into the US market, and became a US citizen in 1985. By 2000 News Corporation owned over 800 companies in more than 50 countries with a net worth of over $5 billion.
Murdoch has been
listed three times in the Time 100 as among the most influential people
in the world. He is ranked as the 13th
most powerful person in the world in The
World's Most Powerful People list, published by Forbes in 2010, with a personal net worth of
$7.6 Billion.
In July 2011
Murdoch faced allegations that his companies had been regularly engaged in the
illegal practice of hacking the phones of
private citizens, including the cell phones of deceased victims of “9/11”. He also faces police and government
investigations into bribery and corruption in the UK
and FBI investigations in the US.
The Koch (pronounced coke) family is most notable for control of Koch Industries, the second largest privately owned company in the US. Fred C. Koch was born in Texas, the son of a Dutch immigrant. He started the family business in the 1920s,
developing a new method for refining heavy oil into
gasoline. In 1927, Koch developed a more efficient thermal "cracking" process for turning crude oil
into gasoline. This process led to
bigger yields, higher octane and helped smaller, independent oil companies compete. The larger oil companies filed some 44
different lawsuits against Koch, Koch winning all but one. That verdict was later overturned when it was
revealed that the judge had been bribed.
The Koch
brothers, David H. and Charles G., R are two of four sons of inherited wealth who have funded conservative and libertarian policy and
advocacy groups in the US. The Koch family
foundations have given more than $100 million to think tanks like the Heritage Foundation and the Cato Institute, as well as more recently Americans for Prosperity. Americans for Prosperity and Freedom Works are Koch-linked organizations that have been involved in the Tea Party movement.