Is The Tea Party Movement Racist?
Yesterday, the Washington Post reported that the Tea Party
movement is "struggling to overcome accusations of racism," some of
which has been perpetuated in its editorial pages. Yesterday's New
York Times, home to the most obsessively anti-Tea Party editorial
page in America, was stunned to discover that "at least 32
African-Americans are running for Congress this year as
Republicans, the biggest surge since Reconstruction, according to
party officials."
Previously, The Times reported that Tea Partiers are, on average,
people with a high levels of education and higher than average
incomes. So it would seem that they aren't, as some editorialists
and pundits contend, simply a gang of subliterate militia men or,
as actress Janeane Garofalo recently told MSNBC's Keith Olbermann,
a subsection of the white power movement.
Wandering the recent Tax Day tea party in Washington DC with
Reason.tv's Meredith Bragg, we saw some stupid signs--though none
that could be considered offensive or racist. We talked to some
people that claimed President Obama was both a Czarist and
Bolshevik. We spoke to a former star of Saturday Night Live who has
previously claimed that president might, in fact, be the
anti-Christ. Or a communist. Or both. There were those who fretted
that the United States were morphing into a Stalinist state. And
there were countless protesters concerned that the Obama
administration was spending recklessly, interested in auditing the
Federal Reserve, and seething about the General Motors
bailout.
So did we find that the Tea Party was motivated by race, by the
fact that we now have a black president? Did it seem as if their
stated concerns about health care reform and a ballooning national
debt simply a smokescreen, designed to concealing a racist agenda?
Here is what we found.
Produced by Michael C. Moynihan and Meredith Bragg. Edited by
Meredith Bragg. Approximately 2 mins.
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