On Friday night, the local Tea Party group in southern Alabama,
known as the Common Sense Campaign, is
throwing a (night after-) Valentine’s Day dance/fundraiser,
featuring “romantic, ballroom-style music.”
Quick: Call the Obama thought police! Call MSNBC! These Tea
Partiers are dangerous haters! They are reactionary in music as
well as politics. They probably even look down on Puff Daddy! And
dontcha know that ballroom dancing is inherently racist? This is
one step away from Jim Crow, and from there comes the imminent
danger of leg irons and the lash.
And what’s worse about ballroom dancing is that these extremists
actually do it with their clothes on — rather than going nearly
natural, as in Super Bowl halftime shows, so everybody can see
what’s underneath. Obviously the Tea Partiers are hiding something
under those clothes: machine guns, perhaps, or shoulder-fired
missiles, or maybe a dirty nuke or two. A fair number of the Tea
Partiers down here served in the military, you see, and the Obama
Department of Homeland Security has told us that ex-military people
might be domestic terrorists.
And obviously, nobody does the foxtrot or a waltz unless one is
up to no good. Cultural hegemonists like these are scary
people….
In addition to subversive activities such as dancing without
background lyrics full of scatological references and violence,
local Tea Partiers down here are of course guilty of engaging in
politics. They write letters to their state representatives. They
set up luncheons in the state’s capital city on the first day of
the legislative session so they can hear lawmakers talk about their
agendas. They even take positions on educational issues —
including
opposition to the Common Core standards initiative, an
oppositional position so extreme that even
George Will shares it.
Oh — and here’s one other thing the Common Sense Campaign
does: It actually serves the public weal in a non-ideological,
thoroughly non-partisan way. Numerous times throughout the year, in
various small towns across several counties in southern Alabama
(each of the coastal counties is larger than the state of Rhode
Island), various branches of the CSC host town hall meetings and
candidate forums for local elections. Open forums. Neutral forums.
The CSC doesn’t tilt the forums toward or against any particular
candidates. The group doesn’t turn them into voting caucuses or
contests where candidate organizations vie for endorsements or pay
to bus in voters. The CSC doesn’t even charge admission despite
having to pay for renting the community halls for the events —
although their volunteers do of course welcome discretionary
donations in return for the cookies and iced tea they serve free of
charge. Far from being some lavishly funded outfit, the CSC
scrambles for membership dues, and was forced to close its
headquarters this year in order to save the lease money.
When even the main local newspaper can barely be bothered to
remind people of special elections to fill vacant local seats, the
CSC is out there, trying to spread the word, giving the candidates
a forum, encouraging people to take their civic responsibilities
seriously. Or, if there’s no election, the town halls feature
several local officials — including some who may have been opposed
by most CSC members — with each taking questions from the floor,
in an entirely friendly atmosphere. If this isn’t pure public
service, nothing is.
“We’ve done these forums since we founded our group several
years ago, but since the presidential election, we’ve sort of
stepped it up because we felt we needed a way to reinvigorate folks
and get them back into the fight,” said Dr. Lou Campomenosi, a
political science professor who is president of the CSC.
“Washington is so far removed from any of our direct influence. The
feeling is that the state and local governments offer people the
best way to get involved.”
It’s not that the CSC is some sort of anodyne, toothless group,
however. It’s just that there is a time and place for direct
advocacy — of a decidedly, thoughtfully conservative bent — and
other times for listening, questioning, and learning. Besides, as
Campomenosi noted with a laugh and some pride, “the questions that
are asked at these forums are usually along the lines of getting
answers to particularly conservative concerns. They seek answers to
questions important to our members.”
Any intelligent public official should get the message, he said,
on the importance of “balanced budgets, localized education, and
states’ rights [on non-national issues].”
In other times and places, of course, the CSC will make
crystal-clear where it stands, all on behalf of an agenda straight
out of the old civics books — an
agenda of constitutionally limited government that respects and
protects individual freedom. The CSC activists may be polite, but
they are also admirably tenacious.
A core group of volunteers runs the show — but they “punch
above their weight,” as the saying goes. A few weeks ago, the
Fairhope CSC held a town meeting on a Wednesday night on the
eastern side of Mobile Bay, and on Thursday night there were
simultaneous meetings in Irvington and Semmes, 28 miles apart, on
the western side. A very impressive attendance of 75 citizens
showed up at Irvington, with another 40 at Semmes, on a random
January night in a “down season” for politics when national
elections were over, Congress was barely doing anything, and the
state Legislature wasn’t yet in session. But people do care about
self-government, they care about their communities, and they love
their country. The Tea Parties give people a voice, and perhaps
will turn that voice into a megaphone.
“We would hope they would leave with a sense that the Tea Party
has given them a voice and a forum,” said Kay Day, president of the
CSC chapter in South Mobile County and events coordinator for many
of those forums. “It is an honor to be able to provide that format
and to get people encouraged about their government and their vote.
We’re just hometown people that love our country and we work hard,
very hard to get that opportunity out to the public.”
All of this activity, of course, is very much in the spirit of
the best American civic traditions. Tocqueville would have
recognized it and approved, as would have Edmund Burke (from
abroad), Sam Adams, and Ben Franklin.
And when the CSC starts talking about “Charlie, Foxtrot, Tango,”
it’s not some sort of secret code for revolution. It’s just for an
old-fashioned dance, enjoyed by friends and neighbors, to raise
some money to rent facilities for their town halls and maintain
their web site. This is grassroots citizenship at its finest — and
it is the type of citizenship that forms bonds stronger than
anything Barack Obama or MSNBC can throw at them. When it comes
time to rebuild the United States after the sad Obama Interregnum
is complete, it will be groups like the Common Sense Campaign that
will be calling the tune.
JimH| 2.13.13 @ 8:18AM
‘All within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state’ - Benito Mussolini. This is the mindset of all totalitarians who want no organizations to be independent of State control. This is because, one, they need to control all activity and two, they don’t want people to think that the State is not necessary.
Who Knows?| 2.13.13 @ 11:36AM
"Is that all there is? If that's all there is, let's keep on dancing." Peggy Lee
cicero| 2.13.13 @ 3:43PM
The real danger is that what started out as the Tea Party, an aggressive political group, will morph into a social society with no teeth. Given the present state of the Republican Party, perhaps the Tea Party needs to become a viable political party, and run candidates in its own name. The Republican establishment seems to have survived the challenge of the past two cycles, and is reasserting its former state as a punching bag for the Dems.
Oldefarte| 2.13.13 @ 8:06PM
Well these tea partiers are great and patriotic Americans, but if and until enough of the STUPID AMERICANS that elected this POTUS not once but twice begin to wake up and stop fulfilling Forrest Gump's philosophy, it's sadly of little use. OMG, with a POTUS Romney we could have been on the raod to recovery by now. What utter stupidity, but we will all pay for it, that's for sure!!!!!
Oldefarte| 2.13.13 @ 8:12PM
Speaking of "music", I was today stopped at a traffic light when a BROTHER pulls up along side of me with the rap "music" blasting away at ear-shattering noise levels with the usual F-this and F-that lyrics [I did not look to see if the car's front was bobbing up and down similar to Denzel in 'Training Day'] and I thought to myself that THIS IS THE FACE OF TODAY'S AMERICA !!!!!
TodayInsure.com | 2.13.13 @ 11:53PM
First comment..really? Anyway, happy Valentine's day to all.