Someone who claimed fellowship with the tea party movement cut gas lines, held derogitory signs, etc. I said I believe the tea party movement has some merit... therefore I must be a crackpot. At least that's how it felt from my end.
They were asking you to denounce the officially recognized founder of the current Tea Part organization, an avowed racist and stone-thrower. Having just read through this hurricane-in-a-bottle of a thread, you have not done so. You have repeatedly insisted that the
recognized founder is a member of the "movement" fringe, and while I certainly believe that you are not of one mind with him, you can't seem to bring yourself to call him and his organization wrong. I recognize that you want to draw a difference between the Tea Party as a modern organization, and the anti-tax sentiment behind it (some parts of it anyway). Fine, let's use some capitalization. Have your tea party, but
denounce the Tea Party.
It's a fantastic example of Astroturf anyway. I'm sure the yokels waving signs of Obama with a Hitler mustache
believe they're "grassroots" or whatever the new word for spontaneously angry is. But the larger function of the Tea Party as an organization, especially their rockstar rallies, mail campaigns, and TV ads are paid for largely by corporate lobbying and advocacy firms. Namely,
FreedomWorks, a thin veneer of populism stretched over a baldfaced corporate-law thinktank, run and funded by Dick Armey and Steve Forbes, and formerly famous for making up medical research for Philip Morris Cigarettes in the 1990s.