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Welcome to Glennbeckistan: Where the Tea Party Rules and Tea-hadis Roam
What if the Tea Party ruled? Imagine a land, let's call it Glennbeckistan, where white, patriarchal, religiously zealous, Tea Party-type patriots hold a super-majority in both houses of the legislature, sit in the governor's mansion, and control most local governments. It's a place so out of sync with the rest of the nation that states' rights and even secession are always on the agenda. It's a place where gun-ownership trumps all other rights, climate change is considered an insidious socialist conspiracy, and a miscarriage can be investigated as a potential crime. Welcome to Utah.
Our rightwing red-state legislature just finished its annual 2010 session. So-called message bills challenged the federal government's right to govern federal lands, enforce gun controls, legalize abortion, and mandate health reform. In addition, Utah's lawmakers cut the education budget, raised tuitions, and slashed services to the disabled. In fairness, state legislators across the nation, faced with disastrous drops in revenue, have likewise slashed social services and balanced budgets on the backs of the poor. In Utah, however, they also shelved pensions for public employees. That they could take such draconian action is instructive -- organized labor is weak here, unions being another manifestation of creeping socialism. Utah's history of labor organizing, or grass roots and civil rights organizing for that matter, is anemic compared to most of America. This is the place, after all, where IWW radical Joe Hill was arrested and executed.
Although Utah may be unique in some ways, Republican leaders here want the rest of the nation to be more like us. In fact, a survey of the 2010 Utah legislative session could be considered a trailer for a movie the national Republican base would like all Americans to star in. This movie would be for the Tea Party movement what Avatar is to tree huggers.
Hot-Tubbing With a Naked Fifteen-Year-Old
Before we get to this movie's best scenes, let's identify some of the actors: The posse that goes after the bad guys -- the black-hatted Obamacrats -- are easy to identify. They wear white hats (and skins). They also wear their superior principles like shiny badges, and they claim to be the underdogs in this script, even while acting like schoolyard bullies. And the bad guys? In our state, they're nowhere in sight unless you're looking at Glenn Beck's chalkboard.
Demonizing opponents is a creative activity for the posse and paranoia comes in endless variations, so the bad guys could be tax-and-spend liberals, illegal immigrants, gays (or at least those following "the gay agenda"), non-Republican blacks, federalists, socialists, environmentalists, pornographers, feminists, or those nature worshippers who believe in evolution. The cast of evil-doers changes each year. So this year, for example, immigrants and gays got a break. Proposed bills to scuttle Salt Lake City's new nondiscrimination ordinances were shelved until a future session of the state legislature -- the Utah-based Mormon church is already catching enough flack for its support of Proposition 8 that banned same-sex marriage in California. Further antagonizing the national gay community just now was deemed unwise. Immigrants were beaten up enough in last year's session.
The good guys are easy to recognize because they're the ones constantly telling the audience how good they are. Sadly, as is so often the case with holier-than-thou-heroes, there are visible stains on the white hats. In fact, the 2010 session was bookended by scandal. As the doors opened, Sheldon Killpack, the State Senate majority leader and an outspoken proponent of tougher drunk-driving laws, was busted for... drunk-driving. He promptly resigned.
On the last night of the session, Kevin Garn, the House majority leader, dramatically stood before packed chambers and declared that years earlier he had shared a hot tub with a naked fifteen-year-old and then paid her $150,000 to keep quiet. He could no longer "live a lie," he insisted, and so was confessing and apologizing -- as it happened, right after the young woman reneged on that deal and went public. His colleagues were "shocked," but gave him a prolonged standing ovation anyway. Apparently, they find honesty inspiring, even from pedophiles. Hey, at least he wasn't a polygamist.
So the white hats are a bit soiled, but by now that's an old story -- hypocrisy seems to be the evil twin of self-righteousness. Recent examples are too numerous to list.
Miscarriage Cops
Perhaps the most outrageous legislative move the posse made this year was to turn miscarriage into a crime. State Representative Carl Wimmer's bill was admittedly directed at a very specific case of miscarriage. In 2009, a woman who had been abused by her boyfriend and feared his reaction if he discovered she was pregnant paid some dirt bag $150 to beat her up so she'd abort.
The crime was as rare as it was horrific and didn't need its own bill. A rational person might reason that if the woman had access to affordable healthcare, including abortion, or if she had alternatives to living with an abusive partner, she might never have taken such drastic measures. Not Representative Wimmer, who was frank about his desire to challenge and "whittle away" at Roe v. Wade. Every year some Utah legislator takes a shot at limiting abortion or making women who get abortions feel guilty and scared.
The bill was, in the end, amended to ensure that only a woman who repeated the specific act that generated Wimmer's concern could be prosecuted. Lawmakers, however, seemed oblivious to the fact that, although only a self-arranged, beating-induced miscarriage could land a woman in jail, all women who miscarry are potentially subject to investigation. If you miscarry in Utah, you'd better be sure you have an alibi ready. So much for keeping the damn guvmint off our backs.
Health Reform and Climate Change Banned
It looks like that woman will wait a long time for access to health care. Legislators passed a bill aimed at preventing Obamacare, as it is popularly known here, from coming to Utah without their explicit permission, no matter what the U.S. Congress does. They made it clear that if Utah's citizens are required to buy insurance, the state will challenge the federal government's right to mandate that in court. Opposition to health care reform is a centerpiece in a broader "states' rights" campaign that even includes the weather.
So anti-climate change resolutions passed despite pleas from Brigham Young University and University of Utah professors to heed an overwhelming scientific consensus on the subject. Representative Mike Noel, a rancher, was successful in convincing his colleagues that global warming is just a hoax. They called on the Environmental Protection Agency and Congress to avoid carbon dioxide regulation until "a full and independent investigation of climate change science" is conducted. Give them some credit: language was stripped from the resolution accusing global warming advocates of "conspiracy" because, hey, they don't want to come across as nuts.
Another resolution called on Governor Gary Herbert to pull Utah out of the Western Climate Initiative, organized by a group of governors concerned about how climate change might affect fragile Western ecosystems. Then the posse passed another bill to protect utilities and energy producers from potential lawsuits claiming damage from greenhouse gasses. And they warned those pesky professors to shut up, too.
We Don't Need No Stinkin' Wolves... or Stinkin' Rangers Either
Legislators also tried to ban wolves. There is little evidence wolves have migrated south from Idaho or Wyoming into Utah -- but they might. And if they do: bang! The lawmakers were actually using the assault on the (prospective) wolves to aim at another Big Bad Wolf, the federal government, which reintroduced the dang critters up north, protects them, and obviously cares more for the animals, fish, and reptiles on the endangered species list than it does for real human beings with guns and jeeps that will be more or less useless if pointy-headed Beltway types are allowed to boss the good people of Utah around. Advised by their lawyers that their wolf bill was clearly unconstitutional, they turned it into a strongly worded letter to the Interior Department instead.
Another bill challenged the power of federal law enforcement on roads running through federal lands, like our newest national monument, Grand Staircase Escalante. Local commissioners are still ticked off at President Bill Clinton for declaring a monument in southern Utah and so locking up large coal deposits owned by a foreign corporation that wanted to dig it up and send it to Asia.
And if telling forest rangers to take a hike wasn't enough, yet another bill aimed to take over federal lands altogether, wielding the right of eminent domain. They know many consider that one laughable, but they've vowed to fight for it all the way to the Supreme Court, if they have to. Some $3 million was designated for lawyers in a year that saw education budgets slashed. You can look forward to oil derricks in national parks if they win.
Each region of Tea Party Nation has its own peculiar reasons for feeling oppressed. Westerners complain that they are bullied by big, distant bureaucracies like the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service that oversee most of their open lands. Law enforcement on public lands is intermittent and timid. Under Bush, the federal agencies kowtowed to local politicians. Nevertheless, rangers are right up there with the IRS on the posse's most-wanted list. Oddly enough, Utahans did not object when, during the Cold War era, the military bombed, poisoned, and irradiated their vast land holdings in the Great Basin Desert.
Mr. Browning's Holiday and the Ghost of Patrick Henry
It's only right in a culture that celebrates guns for John Browning, the inventor of the automatic rifle, to get his own holiday, especially since he was born in Utah. State lawmakers originally intended to make his holiday the same as Martin Luther King's -- so they'd feel better about taking the day off, I suppose. Knowing that would cause controversy, though, they finally moved the date. In a more substantive show of support for gun owners, they just officially declared that guns made in Utah were not subject to federal regulation. So there. That one is also headed for the courts. (After all the lawyers are paid, we'll be lucky if we have funds left over to pay teachers, but at least we have our priorities straight.)
Utah's states-rights advocates even have their own caucus now. They call it the Patrick Henry Caucus, and they have a website with videos extolling their own patriotism and love of liberty (unless you miscarry, are gay, or enjoy the idea of a future benign climate). Also featured is a Glenn Beck interview of Representative Wimmer, a self-described "9/12er," who proudly declares, "no doubt we're going to add to that terrorist watch list." It isn't clear if he is talking about the potential actions of the caucus's most militant supporters or if he wants to label his opponents as terrorists. Another featured video shows Beck interviewing a Texas state legislator who describes a project to pass "sovereignty" legislation and, like Utah, declare federal gun control null and void in the state.
The Ghost of Lester Maddox
The last time we witnessed such a hyperbolic states' rights rebellion, it was led by strident segregationists like George Wallace and Lester Maddox. As Alabama's governor, Wallace blocked the integration of the University of Alabama, and Maddox, who was later elected governor of Georgia, closed his restaurant rather than serve black customers. Back then, states' rights was clearly a cover for shameful racism. Maddox was not a constitutional scholar -- he ran a fried-chicken joint. Advocating states' rights was the means to resist federal mandates to integrate restaurants, swimming pools, and schools. Is today's talk of states' rights and secession a response to the integration of the White House?
Proponents howl with indignation when that charge is made, but the Tea Party crowd that hurled racial epithets at a civil rights icon and spit on a Black congressman the day before the big vote on healthcare reform made mincemeat of such claims of innocence. Clearly, some of them see health-care reform as a scheme to make white taxpayers pay for services to blacks. Their resentment taps into old hatreds and fears from the days of Maddox and Wallace. Let's hope that it doesn't also tap into the old violence and terror that went with them.
Usually, however, the prejudice is subtler. For several years, Utah's lily-white legislature defiantly insisted on opening its session on Martin Luther King Day, which they refused to call by its name (substituting "Civil Rights Day" instead). There are no powerful black leaders here in our state, where African Americans were excluded from the dominant Mormon church until 1978, and our miniscule population of African Americans is not a significant voting block, so politicians who disdained Dr. King felt unconstrained. And unguarded: last year, Representative Chris Buttars stood on the floor and denounced a bill he opposed as a "black baby -- a dark and ugly thing."
The states' rights movement here is also rife with "Birthers" who understand that saying Barack Obama can't be president because he wasn't born here is a more socially acceptable stance than saying a black man cannot be president because he is... well, black. If you take Birthers at face value -- that their complaint is constitutional in nature and not merely bigoted -- then it is fair to ask: Were they also outraged in 2000 when George Bush lost the popular vote, tied in the Electoral College, and won by one vote among Supreme Court judges appointed by his daddy? No, at that time they were counseling Democrats to be good losers and quit whining. The question is: If not racism, why the double standard?
Fightin' Words!
There was little talk of secession in this session of the legislature, but the rural newspapers and talk-radio shows that fan Tea Party sentiments in the state regularly entertain the notion that we should go our own way. Such talk is delusional. Utah is a net recipient of federal largesse. We can't pay for our kids' education by ourselves; we certainly couldn't afford all those dams and pipelines that bring us life-giving water. Forget about maintaining the highways that run over a vast horizon. Most rural communities have fire stations, water tanks, community centers, and medical clinics made possible by federal grants. Utah's economy is wedded to jobs generated by Hill Air Force Base. Why, then, so much animosity towards the hand that feeds us?
Because feeding from that hand radically contradicts our cherished image as independent, self-reliant, freedom-loving cowboys who don't need stinkin' handouts. We are proud to embody an American way of life that is seen mostly in the rear-view mirror, John Wayne westerns on Netflix, and in our own imaginations. The worst thing you can call a cowboy is a "welfare rancher," especially when it's true.
Coming Soon to a Theater Near You
Utah's legislators are self-conscious about their image. For example, a bill sponsored by Chris ("Black Baby") Buttars a few years ago to force the teaching of creationism was killed, not because his colleagues didn't share his anti-evolution beliefs but because they feared more ridicule. After all, our Mormon majority has already suffered the embarrassment of Jon Krakauer's best selling Under the Banner of Heaven and an ongoing, less than flattering television series, Big Love, about modern day polygamy.
Although it's easy to scoff at the state's buffoonish legislators, it would be a mistake to look at their shenanigans, outrageous as they are, and think: it can't happen here. Maybe not all of it, but if the Republican base and its Tea Party allies can get their hooks into your state or local government, some of it will come your way, too. Utah, after all, is where the right wing shows its hand. Right-wing jihadis get their training in Glennbeckistan and then march off to places like California to battle gay marriage.
Guess where polluters will go if Utah exempts itself from environmental laws that the rest of the country decides are reasonable to protect your health? If Utah-made guns are exempt from federal regulation, guess where guns will be made? And that's the idea -- to create "nullification sanctuaries" where congressional laws and presidential directives cannot be enforced. Asserting state rights is not simply a way of pursuing regional independence and expressing differences, it is a means of avoiding and undermining the national consensus on any number of important issues.
States-rights legislators are not shy about their long-range goals. Representative Keith Grover said of the 2010 session, "It doesn't end at midnight." Members of the Patrick Henry caucus have already contacted lawmakers in Nevada, Montana, Wyoming, Texas, Arizona, and Virginia to trade ideas and strategies. South Dakota and Wyoming have also declared their gun-makers exempt from federal law, and Oklahoma's legislature will also try to block health-care reform.
Better pay attention: tea-hadi warriors from the Republic of Glennbeckistan could be coming soon to a legislative theater near you.
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31 Comments so far
Show AllLike I have said before, the right wing and center dwellers in this country have made stupidity acceptable. We have given up the middle and working classes, for a moron class.
Welcome to America.
Hoa binh
Sioux Rose
JILL: Excellent posts. Thank you for sharing your erudite analyses.
A few friends offered the following analysis of the "Tea Bag Phenomenon":
The Tea Party is a distraction.
The Tea Party/Teabaggers is not really a movement, but rather a relatively small number of right-wing extremists who have been used by the Democrats as a scapegoat for their own hypocrisies.
It's an Astroturf movement by such figures like Dick Armey and other Republican and conservative lobbyists who are manufacturing right-wing dissent to distract from the real left-wing dissent that is ignored by the media.
Think about it; what better way of getting the right-wing fascist message out there than giving it media exposure? And indeed, that is what we have.
If you follow the media narrative in America, there is no left-wing dissent. There is only right-wing dissent. This simultaneously legitimatizes the right-wing narrative and gives justification for the Obama administration to crack down on ANY dissent-because a handful of right-wing fanatics are given media exposure.
The point is to get liberals to react, and it keeps working again and again.
No tea bagger or Limbaugh or Fox news nonsense can stand up to a strong left wing narrative for even a minute. How any of us could ever lose a debate with those talking points, or be frustrated or worry about it is a mystery to me.
The worry is the potential for violence from the right wing media, it is not the "ideas" they present that are the worry. Those ideas only have traction because so many are chicken shit scared to be real leftists, for fear of being too radical or something, because they are too weak and confused and cowardly.
Teabaggers et al, are moving into the vacuum created by this timidity and confusion and playing on liberal/progressive identification with the Democrats.
The reason people like Fox news, Glen Beck etc. is because it is entertaining and because they can pick up talking points that will drive liberals crazy. For the ruling class agenda to be advanced, it requires BOTH the right wing media AND the predictable liberal reaction.
That said, it is dangerous. We contribute to the danger by taking it so seriously (the "opinions," not the pandering to bigotry and hatred - that needs to be taken very seriously) and reacting so predictably.
What better way to "legitimize" the center-right policies of the Obama administration than to contrast them to the full-blown, ultra-right insanity of Sarah Palin-like Teabaggery.
Democrats are using the tea baggers' antics as a tool to stifle dissent from the Left. How dare we criticize Obama when doing so is to be on the same side as the tea baggers? Obama apologists won't even listen to any argument from the Left against Obama's policies, they automatically categorize it in the same category as the crap being spewed by tea baggers.
The tea bagger thing serves the purpose of making sure the intellectual liberals get all worked up about Palin et al and are therefore estranged from and irrelevant to the general public. It works like a charm, every time, to decapitate the working class.
"If you follow the media narrative in America, there is no left-wing dissent. There is only right-wing dissent. This simultaneously legitimatizes the right-wing narrative and gives justification for the Obama administration to crack down on ANY dissent-because a handful of right-wing fanatics are given media exposure
The reason people like Fox news, Glen Beck etc. is because it is entertaining and because they can pick up talking points that will drive liberals crazy. For the ruling class agenda to be advanced, it requires BOTH the right wing media AND the predictable liberal reaction"
Very good point.
It's time the Left set it's own agenda rather than being nothing but responders to the right.
Sioux Rose
MCOYOTE: Excellent post. Seasoned analysis.
How about 'Dumbfuckistan?'
These people have one unifying factor and source of energy, friends, it's their hatred for us, you, me, the folks reading this site, or any site like it, or anybody who thinks 'that way.'
They're not driven by ideology, they're driven by their distaste for trappings _ intellectualism, arts, diversity, sexuality _ of Liberalism.
They have instead made virtues of ignorance, mediocrity, dullness and ugliness _ and they want to kill anything that might rise above this sick, morbid version of 'equality.'
They're headed beyond all reason, and there is scant hope of reconciliation in their horrifying world. In it, the two versions of America are mutually exclusive.
In their world, it's us or them.
Pretty good assessment
Jill,
Hi, Thanks for the recommendation. I read Sharlett's brilliant, frightening work on 'The Family' in Harpers some years back, would certainly recommend it as essential reading for anyone with interest in contemporary US affairs.
It's true the ruling powers, for their material gain, suppress Liberals.
My concern is that our Tea-baggers _ a substantial bloc of the US population, energized by hatred for anyone outside their Norman Rockwell worldview _ have become footsoldiers to make that suppression more thorough and, probably, violent.
The thing that makes them dangerous is their Kamikaze mentality. They will repeateadly intentionally vote against their own interests to spite us, if their interests are perceived to coincide with ours _ e.g., labor issues, healthcare, industry regulation, etc. Their hatred has superceded all reason. They _ also their high-profile leaders _ publicly identify us as threats to America. They publicly put us in the same category as terrorists, in a period when there is a very clear 'War on Terror.' This is a dangerous situation. I would hope folks on Left recognize it as such, and do act appropriately.
Zell March 30th, 2010 3:42 am, while I appreciate what both you and Jill wrote on this subject, I'd disagree that the Teabaggers are a 'substantial bloc' of our population and that they are really that dangerous.
In Washington for the 'Code Red Alert' passage of the health care reform bill, the tea partiers could only manage to amass fewer than a five hundred people to protest. In contrast, just a few blocks away, 200,000 gathered for a progressive immigration reform rally. Also, as has been pointed out elsewhere here, not every teabagger agrees with the racism and violence of a small number of the tea partiers. (Many are Ron Paul libertarians and non-violent.) The nasty teabaggers are a tiny fraction of the 20-some percent who still admit to being Republicans, magnified by our Big Media -- always chasing 'if-it-bleeds-it-leads' style controversy -- into a mass movement.
As far as being dangerous, take a good look at most of these bitterly angry teabaggers -- they have snow on the roof and are collecting SS checks and Medicare. True, anyone with a gun can be dangerous, but these people look a little too used to Dr. Scholl's slippers, 50-inch plasma TVs and La-Z-Boy loungers to risk putting themselves in jail. Others are simply GOP hacks or staffers, like the crowd of fake Floridians who intimidated vote counters in Miami-Dade County in 2000 -- the infamous 'Brooks Brothers Riot.'
I view all of this as the last gasp of a political party teetering on the brink of collapse, having run out of everything but anger, fear and obstructionism as their policies have failed across the board. As ex-Bush speechwriter David Frum truthfully said on Nightline March 22nd, "Republicans originally thought that Fox [News] worked for us, and now we are discovering we work for Fox." http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/201003230020
When you have to kowtow to crazy, irresponsible 'shock jock' talk show hosts because you can't afford to lose what's left of your shrinking base, and espouse ideas repellent to the majority of Americans to sidle up to ignoramuses wearing Revolutionary War costumes, you're in big trouble, and the Republicans are.
One might suggest cutting off federal funding to states like Utah, but there is a good chance they'd just be turned into martyrs. Idiots like the ones that populate so much of America would rather suffer in despair than admit that they were wrong.
Also because of people like me would be hurt since I don't buy into their bullshit
You were right the first time - cut off federal funds, which are our tax dollars. In fact cut-off all these little redneck states. These people are going to live on our tax dollars while they spit in our faces and call us the enemy? Time we taught these yahoos a lesson.
When Bill Maher talks about the "hillbilly half of America," this is the acme of it.
Can we schedule Utah to leave about 48 hours after Texas does?
"tea-hadi warriors from the Republic of Glennbeckistan could be coming soon to a legislative theater near you."
It is demeaning to use Muslim places and religious manes as instruments of ridicule. It further entrenches the negative associations toward Muslims that have been fostered in the MSM for years. There ought to be no place for such religious/ethnic insults on a progressive site or by a progressive commentator.
Why not: 'tea-moroni warriors from the Republic of Glenbeckifornia?' Probably because we aren't used to hearing our own homegrown places and religious names used in such a derogatory way. I suggest that we get used to doing that rather than making gratuitous insults towards other cultures.
Sorry, but I use the term "the Talibeck" or "Talibeckoid" because given the right conditions, these people would descend to the same level and be almost indistinguishable from the theocratic fanaticism of the Taliban.
True, the outer forms would differ, but the theocratic pov would be similar.
For decades, Utah has been called the Mississippi of the West. But personally, I still like SLC and Moab.
"The worst thing you can call a cowboy is a "welfare rancher," especially when it's true. "
I love how Chip Ward writes. This article is chock full of zingers like the one above!! Makes me almost welcome the approach of GlennBeckistan. Maybe it'll be like that great Buck Henry spy-parody 'The Russians are coming, the Russians are coming'. Keep observing, Mr Ward. The shenanigans of the Utah state legislature must be entertaining indeed, and this countries whole, sorry slide into GlennBeckistanianism needs some levity.
This article is fucking stupid. Do you really what this kind of publicity, Chipster? huh?
Sorry I disagree with some of the posters here.
One can oppose Obamas policies and the rightwing crazies simultaneously. If you havent noticed, left-wing dissent always already gets smashed by the police, while the teabaggers wear guns to obama events and threaten to go violent at every turn. What do you think would have happened had antiwar demonstrators pulled the kind of stunts these teabaggers have been pulling for the past year? They would have gotten their asses kicked by the police AND the teabaggers, with repub congresspeople and Fux News screaming "traitors" and threatening execution.
And THAT would have been for opposing mass murder, not healthcare reform. If the teapeople want to protest the wars and the MIC, Ill walk right along with them. funny how they dont huh?
No, what might happen is both parties may look the other way as teabaggers attack progressives.
You are also forgetting how deeply fundamentalist christianity has infiltrated the military. Who do you think all these brainwashed soldiers who "support the mission" and enjoy killing "Hadjis" and "towel-heads" are? When these guys get home to a country where they have no future and their demagogues tell them it is the evil progressives who stabbed the country in the back and caused its ruin, who do you think they will be pointing their weapons at?
"One can oppose Obamas policies and the rightwing crazies simultaneously."
That would be me Kitaj.
These articles on Glenn Beck, The Tea Party, Sarah Palin give me headaches anymore. I can't finish them. And it's so easy to pick these ignoramuses apart.
Call me naive, but I think they're losing. They're getting louder because they are dwindling in numbers.
I really don't think they stand a chance in the coming elections.
And I hope they ramp up the rhetoric. Asking them to "play fair" is a joke. The more hateful and stupid they get, the more they expose themselves for what they are and alienate people from them. The worse they get, the harder it is for them to defend, dismiss, or excuse it. Let them embarass themselves.
I'm not saying that they shouldn't be monitored like other hate groups are. They should be.
At first, I thought the 'tea party' people referred to the historical act of civil disobedience in Boston Harbor. However, as things get "curiouser and curiouser" I am more inclined to think that they are really modeling on Alice's teaparty with the March Hare, the Mad Hatter, and the doormouse.
" Twinkle, twinkle little bat!
How I wonder what you're at!"
If Utah succeeds from all American laws, shouldn't the feds just declare eminenet domain on the whole state and make it all a national park? It is a beautiful state, if you can overlook the people.
Utah must have learned from Texas. The two of them are the laughing stocks of the nation. Our governor wants to secede; has the worst performing education system in the states and refuses to take educational money declaring that the money comes with new rules which the state clearly needs, and the list goes on.
@ Chuck Drinnan March 30th, 2010 1:38 am: Mississippi and Alabama used to exist to make Texans feel good -- whatever it was, MS and AL always scored lower. Has the Texas educational system, after years of right-wing tinkering and 'Bushonomics,' finally dropped below the Black Holes of Old Dixie?
Utah is & always has been a backwash, so I don't know why any of this surprises us (there is no real difference between Utah & the "Deep South" states).
They had to make their "Curious Institution" (polygamy) officially illegal to even be allowed to become the "welfare rancher" land they are now.
A strikingly beautiful place, Utah, if the people who live there would just go away ......
We have a crisis of 'thinking' in America. We have now overcome the crisis of 'survival' and shortly thereafter in all cultures comes the crisis of 'thinking'. As the effort to 'think' our way thru problems does require work, it truely can be said of those who live on in the bubble of 'non-thought', that they are being 'lazy'. It is 'work' to actually think your way thru all these complex issues a melting pot like America comes up with. Don't think, easy way out!