Friday, April 16, 2010

The Boston Tea Party... not exactly what the tea party protesters think it was...

Dressed as American Indians, a group of Bostonians boards a British ship laden with imported tea.
Edward Gooch/Getty Images
 
I couldn't help but laugh yesterday on my way home from my Microeconomics test.  It was about 7pm and traffic by Georgia State was a mess because of the tea party protest at the Gold Dome.
 
So I'm tired, ready to get home, and am dealing with all these closed streets and mad drivers.  I got up for work around 2:30am so needless to say between the hunger pains and general annoyances of traffic I couldn't help but mumble to myself about the protesters in my way---gosh darn hippies protesting the man at the Gold Dome--with colorful flourishing of language included mind you. 
 
But then I paused and started to laugh outloud.  "God must have a sense of humor," I said to myself.  For context I have over a decade of protests and organizing under my belt.  In fact I wouldn't be involved in party politics if it weren't for my experiences with the anti-war movement in the run up to Gulf War II and my feeling that the protesters were taking the wrong approach in some ways.
 
Not too long after I held my nose and jumped head first into the lesser of two evils political structure and the rest is history so to speak.
 
But as I sat in traffic I kicked back and smiled--and actually enjoyed the rest of my afternoon drive home.  I had caused enough traffic shut downs in my life.  Suddenly the goah darn hippies in my way just seemed like nice Americans taking some time to voice their concerns rather than just sit at home and bitch--I have to admit its quite commendable though I find most of the protesters to be shockingly ill informed.
 
And low and behold once I got past the Grade Curve on 75-85 the traffic started to flow and I got home a lot quicker than I had feared.
 
I guess God was trying to get me to lighten up a bit and smell the roses...
Anyways the "Boston Tea Party" wasn't exactly what many of these tea party activists think it was.
 

April 15 is not a date that most Americans look forward to. And lately, the grumbling over paying taxes has been louder than usual.

The Tea Party movement has been staging major rallies around the country to protest taxes and government spending, including one in Boston, where the original Tea Party took place....

But are modern-day Tea Partyers carrying on the same ideals as the Founding Fathers?

Thorndike, who is also director of the Tax History Project at the nonprofit group Tax Analysts, says many people seem to think the Boston Tea Party was a protest about high taxes. But it wasn't; he says it was about that famous phrase in fourth-grade history books: "No taxation without representation."

The protest against British taxation on tea imports, depicted in the drawing above, brought the country one step closer to the American War of Independence.  

The protest against British taxation on tea imports, depicted in the drawing above, brought the country one step closer to the American War of Independence.

It was the idea of being taxed by a government that they didn't have any say in.

"What the original Tea Party was trying to drive home was that the British did not have a right to impose a tax on the Colonies, because the Colonies did not have representation in Parliament," Thorndike says. "That's a very different sort of message than saying, 'This tax is just too damn high for us.' I think the Tea Party today — at least it strikes me — is more about just taxes being too high."

Bailouts: Then And Now

The original Tea Party in 1773 was also sparked, Thorndike says, not just by a tax, but by a government bailout.

England was looking to prop up the British East India Company. So it gave a tax break that enabled the company to undercut Colonial tea merchants, which threatened to put a lot of them out of business.

"They wanted to help bail out this company, which was struggling under a big debt load, if that sounds familiar," Thorndike says, adding that this is similar to what has motivated the modern-day Tea Party movement.

The recent Wall Street bailouts got a lot of Tea Party activists upset. And in both cases people saw the government as favoring big business over the little guy.

Boston's Modern-Day Tea Party

The Greater Boston Tea Party is planning a modern-day demonstration. The president of the group, Christen Varley, says that a year ago she was a housewife who decided to get involved in politics.

"You know, I was very dissatisfied with bailing out banks, bailing out auto companies — too big to fail — and thought as a newcomer to Massachusetts, we should definitely be having one of these Tea Party things here, because this is where it all started," she says.

Varley says she feels a connection to the original Tea Party.

 Hhristen Varley is president of the modern-day Greater Boston Tea Party. The group is planning a rally on the Boston Common.  

Christen Varley is president of the modern-day Greater Boston Tea Party. The group is planning a rally on the Boston Common.

"The root of it is we believe in limited government and personal responsibility and individual liberty — those are our core principles," Varley says.

When it comes to taxes, the Obama administration has actually cut taxes for 95 percent of Americans through a federal income tax credit.

But Varley says she doesn't believe that — no matter what the government says. And regardless, she says she's worried about what's to come with the rising deficit.

Meanwhile, some historians say the modern Tea Party movement has become enough of a force in politics that it will probably garner at least a small mention in the history books.

Posted via email from Jim Nichols

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