Sunday, April 25, 2010

Ephphatha Poetry: "Imagine if the Tea Party Was Black" - Tim Wise

Ephphatha Poetry: "Imagine if the Tea Party Was Black" - Tim Wise

Posted using ShareThis

This blog post by Tim Wise is SO powerful! Not only does he help us to think more clearly about the Tea Party movements, but it also helps us to think about the reality of "white privilege" in a way that is undeniable.

I remember reading Peggy McIntosh's classic article, "White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences through Work in Women’s Studies," in college and being completely blown away by the experience of having been changed forever by a new way of seeing things. Using what Kenneth Burke called "perspective by incongruity," this new way of seeing was perhaps one of the most powerful motivators for me to study and understand and champion diversity and communication in my doctorate and career.

I wonder if Mr. Wise's post will do the same for a new generation of students . . . if nothing else, he has provided a powerful way to think about and talk about what's happening in this country today. It will be interesting to see what comes of this in the weeks ahead.

And this, my friends, is what white privilege is all about. The ability to threaten others, to engage in violent and incendiary rhetoric without consequence, to be viewed as patriotic and normal no matter what you do, and never to be feared and despised as people of color would be, if they tried to get away with half the shit we do, on a daily basis.

Game Over.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Tea Party's After-Party: More Extremism as Gun Rights Activists Hit Washington

Tea Party's After-Party: More Extremism as Gun Rights Activists Hit Washington

Posted using ShareThis

The wisdom of Lincoln . . .

I recently finished reading Gore Vidal's "Lincoln" and re-reading all of Lincoln's most important speeches. (See www.Americanrhetoric.com for transcripts).

If there was ever a voice that wisely appeals to our common grounds, who helps us to identify with being AMERICAN despite all of our many disagreements, it was President Lincoln who steadfastly, stubbornly, and successfully refused to let our Union be destroyed.

His first inaugural address in 1861 lays out his logic and reasoning on the matter, and it is wise and relevant in our rhetorical climate today as it was then - and perhaps just as politically unpopular to the same kinds of divisive voices and groups we encounter today.

"In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not assail you. You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You have no oath registered in Heaven to destroy the government, while I shall have the most solemn one to "preserve, protect, and defend it."

I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battle-field, and patriot grave, to every living heart and hearth-stone, all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature."

FOXNews.com - Clinton Warns 'Demonization' of Government Leads to Threats, Chides 'Right-Wing Media'

FOXNews.com - Clinton Warns 'Demonization' of Government Leads to Threats, Chides 'Right-Wing Media'

Posted using ShareThis

See also our posting about the genesis of this research on popular conservative political rhetoric: "We need to read Eric Hoffer . . . "

This type of rhetoric DOES have predictable material consequences.

New York Times/CBS News Poll: National Survey of Tea Party Supporters

New York Times/CBS News Poll: National Survey of Tea Party Supporters

Posted using ShareThis

Clinton draws parallels between 'upheaval' of 1995, today - CNN.com

Clinton draws parallels between 'upheaval' of 1995, today - CNN.com

Posted using ShareThis

Former POTUS Bill Clinton on radical anti-government rhetoric . . .

Bill Clinton looking back at the rhetorical climate of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing to compare and contrast with 2010 Tea Parties.

Interesting but seemingly rare example of someone on the left explicitly countering RW rhetoric with a direct argument rather than mockery or silence.

In an interview with the New York Times on Friday, Clinton warned of the affect that angry political rhetoric might have on antigovernment radicals like Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh; he pointed to Rep. Michele Bachmann calling the Obama administration and the Democratic Congress "the gangster government" at a tax day Tea Party rally on Thursday.

"They are not gangsters," Clinton told the newspaper. "They were elected. They are not doing anything they were not elected to do."

Clinton said that demonizing the government with incendiary language can have effects beyond just rallying a crowd.


I have trouble seeing the Tea Party as a social movement as long as there are so many anti-government radicals associated with it. Defining our democratically elected government as anti-American or making a false analogy with Britain''s King George is damaging our ability to find any common ground. To limit "American" to those on the right - or to identify the right in anti-thesis to the "un-American" left = is to spur a fanatical patriotism for many radical conservatives who may ultimately choose to take violent action against this supposedly "un-American" and uber-liberal government.

There is perhaps a fine rhetorical line between advocacy for better ideas and conditions to help groups and the kind of propaganda that merely seeks to demonize and destroy groups. I think as long as the Tea Party crafts and performs a political identity from what they are against rather than what they are for, and as long as their anti-thetical demon is this administration and government, then citizens will have to be extra alert to the possibility of hyperbolic rhetoric gone too far awry - and be prepared to speak more directly and firmly in return about common grounds and "American" values in the United States.

There can be no mere difference of opinion on this issue it seems to me. To turn Americans against one another by demarcating an "us" and a "them" and to refuse to share our common grounds as Americans is to open ourselves to civil warfare - be it verbally punishing or physically violent.

I think that rhetorical state of affairs in the United States today is unacceptable in light of our history and traditions - and the efforts of the Founding Fathers to provide us all with a SHARED democratic republic - and an enduring plan of harmony and unity - liberty and responsibility - reason and real debate. And any useful debate on the policies and future of the United States must begin at least with the common ground and understanding that we are ALL Americans. As such we have a right and a responsibility to pay attention to our government, but to portray the democratically elected government as un-American is outside the frame of useful or rational debate. It hurts us all.
Creative Commons License
RhetoricGoat.com by l.m. long and e.covington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.