Tea Party Definition

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The celebration of free enterprise knows no limit in a country that developed without an overbearing State, but it has been more than a century since government intermediaries began to provide new forms of oversight and laws encouraging more private sector competition, not less. The Tea Partyassumptionof free enterprise as unassailable defies the necessity for regulation and reform when such enterprise becomes a license for exploiting others. Free enterprise has always had its excesses when those who espoused it have also sought to monopolize its benefits. Consider the events leading up to the financial swoon of 2008 and the continuing contest being played out on how “free” free enterprise should be. Tea Partiers would disentangle and eliminate …show more content…

Consider the history of the Southwest in which “Anglos” were not the first, but the last, to arrive on that ancient and complicated scene. Then there is the development of New York City as a rich and ever-changing story of immigrants from practically every corner of the world, making a new life for themselves. The contributions of such a heterogeneous mix in the Southwest and New York City are just two examples that challenge the Tea Party version of American history that ignores so many of a different color, faith, or country of origin. It is ironic that aging Tea Partiers would use a selective history to seek more political leverage in a country with a fast-growing immigrant and non-white population. Taking America back, however, for many Tea Partiers means not only going back in time to reconfigure what earlier periods of American history offered but somehow taking back their country from non-WASPs and immigrant newcomers who have robbed WASPs of their “cultural