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Teabags vs. Douchebags
Why this may not be the second coming of the New Deal after all.
If you were a working journalist in Washington worth your weight in banality, you had made at least 10 giddy references to “nothing to fear but fear itself” and the prospects for a “new New Deal.” 
The FDR-Obama comparisons seemed so appropriate—here was another Democrat elected during an economic emergency created by decades of conservative mismanagement. But to make such a direct comparison in 2008 meant you didn’t know your ass from your teabag, or, more precisely, the difference between a teabag and a douchebag, and how that difference explains why all the New Deal nostalgia may prove foolish.
Teabaggery takes its name from the Boston Tea Party of 1773. Mythologized high-school history texts tell us that colonists tossed British tea into Boston Harbor in America’s first populist revolt. Today, as evidenced by the April 15 protests, the original Boston Tea Party has become a transcendent icon of pugilistic radicalism—a symbol of patriotic resistance against unresponsive government and elite douchebags.
Which brings us to douchebaggery, defined by the Urban Dictionary as a philosophy “holding that no one other than [oneself] matters in the least bit, and thus that others can and should be treated like excrement for little or no reason.” In Washington, douchebaggery has become synonymous with milquetoast political platforms, soulless candidates and anti-populist Establishmentarian politics. To wit, Comedy Central’s South Park substituted an oversized douchebag (named “Giant Douche”) for John Kerry in an episode about the 2004 presidential campaign.
The birthing of the most famous political periods and the success of their transformative agendas almost always hinge on struggles between Radical Teabaggers and Establishment Douchebags. And typically, the teabaggers of a prior era have defined the next epoch’s politics.
The Manichean history of teabags and douches
It’s easy to think that the revolutionary birth of America materialized from the momentary benevolence and foresight of colonial aristocrats gathered in Philadelphia. But that break from the monarchy of King George III, and the populist Jeffersonian and Jacksonian eras that succeeded it, came from the first of the Manichean struggles between Teabags and Douches that mark American history.
Through pamphleteers like Thomas Paine and rabble-rousers like Samuel Adams, the radical colonial teabaggers who fought the British douches during the Revolutionary War sowed the political terrain for independence, adoption of the Bill of Rights, and then for the (relatively) radical pre-Civil War eras.
Likewise, decades of activism by abolitionists (teabaggers) forced the president to take on the South’s agricultural oligarchy (douchebags) and begin the process of ending the institution of slavery. Teabaggers like William Jennings Bryan, rural populist parties and labor activists railing against “crosses of gold” set the stage for Theodore Roosevelt to break from fellow Republicans and begin trust-busting the corporate douchebags of the early 20th century. And those same teabaggers helped set the stage for Franklin Roosevelt’s transformative douchebag rout in the 1930s.
Though the 30-year period between the two Roosevelts’ presidencies is portrayed as a halcyon era of country club Republican douchebaggery, the decades were also marked by teabaggers organizing on the left. Reactionary forces like the Ku Klux Klan and the right-wing nativists made their presence felt, but the zeitgeist of the period was embodied in militant labor activism, socialist and communist agitation for a bigger welfare state, Bonus Army revolts for veterans benefits, and feminist activism for suffrage and equality.
Thus, when the Great Depression hit, a political infrastructure and ideological ferment had already created the conditions that would channel the cataclysm’s angst through the prism of a progressive economic program. Progressives had laid the groundwork during the 1920s for the kind of political dynamic that moved the debate leftward and led to New Deal.
Hiding douchebaggery inside a teabag
Progressives remained the dominant rabble-rousing teabaggers from the Great Depression until the 1970s, winning battles not only for the New Deal, but for civil rights legislation and the end of the Vietnam War. Slowly, however, through icons like William F. Buckley, Barry Goldwater and ultimately Ronald Reagan, conservatives figured out how to package their Establishment agenda of tax cuts, deregulation and privatization in the argot of outsider populism. By claiming “extremism is no vice,” railing on “welfare queens,” and insisting “government is the problem,” the Right discovered how to wrap corporate douchbaggery in a teabag.
With the help of conservative think tanks, columnists, television pundits and talk radio hosts, this sleight-of-bag created the politics of perpetual outrage predicated on the contradictions detailed by Thomas Frank in What’s the Matter With Kansas?,: impoverished rural states electing Senators on promises to cut inheritance taxes on millionaires and blue-collar workers supporting lawmakers who back job-killing trade deals—as Frank puts it, a country ”nailing itself to that cross of gold.”
Today, Republican congressmen champion a flat tax and embrace anti-immigrant xenophobia, media voices like Glenn Beck infuse their rhetoric with violent themes, and Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) endorses the concept of secession—all while a so-called “tea party” movement against government is manufactured via Fox News and a team of lobbyists from FreedomWorks, a corporate front group in D.C.
This might be unimportant during times of relative prosperity. But if, as many economists predict, the current financial crisis becomes the second Great Depression, the period between 1980 and today will have been a crucial pre-depression era—the era whose teabaggers, like those of the pre-depression 1900-1932 period, could drive the policies that emerge from the crisis.
The road to Douchedom could be paved with teabags
In terms of tactics, yesterday’s pre-New Deal labor organizers, Bonus Army marchers and communist agitators have become the militias, tax deniers, Ron Paul-followers and Minutemen who populate the right. And these new voices are being amplified by a powerful Fox News/talk radio noise machine that no teabagger ever had before.
The first 100 days of the Obama administration, the main target of the teabaggers ire has been punctuated by persistent establishment douchebaggery. Specifically, the new White House has supported another bank bailout, considered an attempt to undermine autoworkers’ unions, resisted implementing tough Roosevelt-esque financial regulations, and competed with Republicans to see who can float the biggest tax breaks.
Certainly, President Obama’s budget includes some progressive priorities, but the framing and overall direction of the policy debate reflects the pull of right-wing populism. The administration is still trying to out-tax-cut the GOP, still citing defense budget increases as proof of “toughness,” and still laughing off criminal justice reform proposals for fear of losing “tough on crime” battles.
In the lead up to and aftermath of the April 15 tea parties, progressives used their limited media resources (MSNBC programs, Air America shows, blogs, newspaper columns, etc.) to make fun of the conservative protestors. Many voices lamented that in railing on government and demanding more tax cuts, conservatives continue to champion the Establishment’s wish list—not genuine teabag populism.
On its merits that is true. The April tea parties were organized by corporate lobbyists and backed by the same moneyed Republican douchebags that drove the economy into the ground. But with stagecraft defining so much of contemporary politics, and with such a powerful media machine behind the image of conservative teabaggery, the truth doesn’t really matter.
That means until progressives stop spending their time ridiculing teabaggery and start co-opting it through their own brand of full-throated populism, we will continue to be portrayed as the inept douchebags in the Manichean struggle—and we may see any “new New Deal” opportunity pass us by. n
GET INVOLVED
A New Way Forward is organizing around the demands of “Nationalize, Reorganize and Decentralize”
www.anewwayforward.org

24 Comments so far
Show AllI saw yesterday that consumer confidence is WAY UP, by more than half! Fort Wayne radio is all atwitter that the work force at the local GM plant is being called back A WHOLE WEEK EARLY!!!! (Aprox. Second week of July instead of third week of July.)
I also heard a report that the residential real estate market is continuing to FREE FALL in America’s major cities. Unemployment is still going up, energy prices are going up...Yet most economists are predicting that the recession will end in a matter of months... A prediction that has filled the airwaves for nearly a month and no doubt is the reason for the boost in consumer confidence... Unfortunately these same economists also predict that unemployment, as measured by Uncle Sam, will hover between 9% and 10% after “the recovery”...which means that the real rate of unemployment will stabilize above 15%.
The new economic reality is that the United States will now be a society of three classes, the overwhelming majority who will limp from one minimum wage job to another as they struggle to survive well below the poverty line. The new middle class, that handful of technically skilled workers it takes to staff the high-tech industries which will earn a living wage and the ultra-wealthy, who will have more money than God.
Any hope of changing the direction of this nation before this new reality sinks into the brains of the majority of Americans is futile. So long as the main stream media is able to feed the masses a sense of hope, no matter how hollow, the political surge that will force change upon the politicians is never going to form.
The author summarizes; "A New Way Forward is organizing around the demands of “Nationalize, Reorganize and Decentralize” and while the “feel good” part of my brain wants to say yes, the mean son of a bitch part of my brain is telling me that wresting the media from its function as the propaganda arm of the wealthy elite is a better strategy.
This new strategy has an opening as the newspaper industry is collapsing creating an opening for small, community based, newspapers to fill the void created as the major dailies fall the way of the dinosaur.
"So long as the main stream media is able to feed the masses a sense of hope, no matter how hollow, the political surge that will force change upon the politicians is never going to form."
very good point!
bush told Joe to "keep shopping"
0 tells him to "keep hoping."
Sirota wrote:
"Today, Republican congressmen champion a flat tax and embrace anti-immigrant xenophobia"
____________________________________________________________
I am baffled why liberals or progressives or whatever you want to call them support illegal immigration which is deterimental
to the average Joes/Janes in this country. That only benefits
the corporate elites who get unending supply of cheap
labor and election votes from angry Joes/janes who lost
their jobs to illegals. That is real stupidity from liberals.
The illegal Immigration thing has been portrayed in leftist circles as a racial issue not a Nat'l one. Many simply see it as a LEGAL issue ( me for one). These people from wherever are here without papers. Try staying in many if not all of their homelands without papers five mins. past your visitors permit and believe me they find you and they either throw u in jail and kick u out or fine u , and throw u out. We on the other hand allow u to stay work , etc. This is wrong. It's not about race, it's about the LAW. Get papered or go home.
This is the most hilarious article I have read on CD...!
Especially when one considers the sexual meaning of the term "tea-bagging"...
that long pre-dated the current faux-populist movement...
No wonder the republican rank & file can't see what is going on...
For they are wearing nut-sack eye pillows...
"Especially when one considers the sexual meaning of the term "tea-bagging"..."
Which is a term not contained in the article. Grow up.
Sex IS for grown-ups...
Sexual innuendo is normal...
Puritanism leads to reactionary sexual deviance...
The organizers of the teabagger "movement" had to have known about the sexual connotation of the term...
They are probably laughing their asses off at all the useful idiots who don't have a clue...
The author set the tone by using socially taboo terms like "douchebag"...
Grow a sense of humor... Sheesh...!
"Sex IS for grown-ups..."
Making jokes about oral sex as a substitute for all the legitimate issues that you could take issue with is juvenile. Check Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow who did this repeatedly for 4-5 days one their programs, as an example.
"The organizers of the teabagger "movement" had to have known about the sexual connotation of the term..."
Please provide an example on an "organizer" who endorsed the use of the *verb* "teabagger", then explain how that particular individual "had to have known".
"Grow a sense of humor"
There were plenty of other legitimate areas to joke about, besides the double meaning of a term they never used.
"There (are) plenty of other legitimate areas to joke about"
Funny will get you through times of no hope better than hope will get you through times of no funny.
The problem we're facing isn't a dying economy, it's a dying planet due to our economy...
Teabags? Douchebags? We need garbage bags! Let's clean up, and start growing wonderful food everywhere...
David Sirota - not sure he's on our side, definitely know he's on the side of the Democratic establishment.
He's for it as long as it helps the Democrats.
A conservative friend, typical FOX/talk radio fan, is convinced that "health reform" means being allowed to see only doctors personally approved by Obama, 5 year waiting lists for all operations, and free everything for any immigrant (she means Mexican) who makes it over the fence.
When I try to point out that she, in fact, cannot afford health insurance and is suffering credit problems due to her unpaid ER visits, she counters that at least the government isn't controlling her choices...
She also believes BO is both a secret Muslim who secretly supports terrorism and a closet Marxist/fascist whatever determined to destroy capitalism, and that liberals are building internment camps for all non-liberals for the day they declare all guns illegal and start the gun-owner round-up.
No kidding.
On his blog, Paul Krugman has recently pointed out that very few Canadians come to the US for health care, while huge numbers of Californians travel to Mexico for their health needs. There's quite a few looney left-wingers too, but it's hard to top the right-wing fringe for uber stupidity.
Your friend is the prototypical product of corporate propaganda. I've spoken with many people who also hold this common set of manufactured misconceptions - their fears, feelings of oppression, and economic woes are manipulated to work against their own objectives and directly for the very corporate elite who are exploiting them. It's like some bizarre form of Stockholm Syndrome.
It's like some bizarre form of Stockholm Syndrome. So true and chuckle worthy.
Joe
there is nothing to hope for but hope itself.
Ha!
Ah.
Hope is what you have when you do not have what you hope for.
Time for Sirota and the rest of the knownothings to admit to
themselves and the public, that it was Bill Clinton with the
help of former Senator {R} Phil Gramm and Senator Chris Dodd,
that they deregulated the Banking Industry and other industries. They under the term "Free Trade" sold out our
industrial base To China and other countries. Gramm and Dodd have become millionaires, while Bill Clinton has become a
maybe a Billionaire, from the donations he is recieving from
other countries that might have gained from Free Trade.
Clinton answers to no one from this hauling in of millions of dollars..His quirky sneaky smile seems to fool the ladies.
We must start another movement and do away with Move-on which
seems to have become an apparachic for AIPAC..
Workers Unite. Pass the word around
The teabaggers are complete idiots. Some of their signs called for more defense and at the same time less government spending and taxes. What do they think their taxes are being spent on? It would be wise for the "left," Democrats, Progressives whatever to understand more the movement of libertarians like Lew Rockwell, Justin Raimondo, Mises Institute, Rothbard which is where Ron Paul and his supporters are coming from. The perspectives of progressives and these libertarians are not particularly different. Of course, the Koch family organizations like Cato, Reason, Institute for Justice, and Friedman, Buckley, Goldwater, Reagan etc... are or were corporatist mendacious douchebags.
Progressive writers are always mistakenly lumping all of these "right" movements together though. There's a strong populist message somewhere between the progressives like Kucinich, Nader, Naomi Klein and libertarians like Ron Paul. If that bridge can be made I think we'd have some real change in this country and be done with douchebags from both the left and right from Krugman to Limbaugh.
The point is the progressives don't need their own brand of populism to fight the teabaggers they need to do what all successful political movements do which is find a way to combine what might seem to be disparate voices into one big powerful uniting message. And the way to do this, is by fighting fire with fire and using their similarities with some libertarians to create a message to counter the douchebaggery of the teabaggers and the corporatists behind them with some of their same messages.
You could find plenty of people on liberatrian forums ridiculing the teabag morons too. And these people are anti-war, pro-small organic farming, pro-gay marriage, pro-choice, pro-renewable energy, anti-drug war, suspicious of police abusing power, anti-crony capitalism etc.. etc... some would call themselves atheist anarchists... Rothbard tried to bridge this gap, what about the left trying to bridge the gap to create a powerful new populist voice?
Klein and Paul are so far apart rhetorically and ideologically that I'd be interested in hearing how you would make this work.
I do think there may be some compromise based on unions and cooperatives.
It is also important to remember that the term "libertarian" is not a right-wing term. It actually originated in the context of left-anarchism, and its right-wing connotation is a relatively recent phenomenon which exists only within the US.
I agree with much of what you say here, but I also think it is wise to bear in mind that left-libertarians and right-libertarians are on opposite poles of the spectrum when it comes to the most fundamental issue, which is the issue of economics - whether the means of production ought to be publicly or privately owned. Nevertheless, genuine libertarians on the left and right share many social principles, and I think in this area you are absolutely right that the two sides could seriously benefit from joining together to protest common aspects of the prevailing authoritarianism. However, the left's biggest weakness in modern times seems to be its stubborn sectarianism and inability to create solidarity, even on issues where everyone on the left agrees. I often am amazed by how overwhelmingly difficult it is to get, say, Marxists and anarchists to cooperate for a common cause, even though they have a wide variety of causes in common. I absolutely respect your suggestion for libertarian solidarity on certain issues, I'm just not quite sure how to get there.
THE NEWSPAPER INDUSTRY IS AN OPPORTUNITY. SO IS THE POSSIBILITY OF BANDWIDTH FOR THE REST OF THE COUNTRY OUTSIDE OF BIG CITIES FOR BROADBAND AND LOW-POWER RADIO
I think we need to use the gap in newspaper availability to grab some more of the media space to spread a new-way-forward message. Local groups should start now organizing for some stimulus money to institute local, citizen owned broadband. Same with other media. We could have more local radio if we grab it also. The thing is we have a narrow window to lay claim on some of this territory for the commons. The money goes out in early 2010!
I have serious disagreements with the teabaggers, but at least they're trying to put pressure on the Administration, and they are opposed to the bank bailouts. They are active and involved citizens rather than passive consumers of whatever the system serves up. If the left doesn't make a serious effort to push Obama in a more progressive direction both by activism and by building the Green Party, it will be in the same situation that it always is: "Sure the Democrats are seriously flawed, but the Republicans are even worse! What can we do but support the lesser evil?"