Feeling The Love

So I wasn’t sure whether I would call attention to some of the responses to my most recent Huffington Post item, but they’re really getting interesting and worthy of sharing.

First, I should note that the majority of the responses I’ve received have been overwhelmingly positive. Lots of people who have witnessed the ugliness lurking just below the surface of the tea party movement first-hand and agree that while not all tea party members are genuinely racist, there is a racial motive to the movement. Unfortunately, it doesn’t take much searching, either. The videos and the photographs are real.

And so is the Southern Strategy. That’s what’s at play here. Powerful astroturfing groups stoking racial animosity for their own nefarious ends — inciting white people under the guise of contradictory and nonsensical “causes.” Race and xenophobia is absolutely at the heart of the tea party movement. This is nothing new, and my observations aren’t unique or imagined. There’s a long shadow cast behind this movement. A long history dating back centuries in America.

Anyway, this News Busters piece generally represents and summarizes the outraged responses I’ve been receiving.

There’s also this one. Though he’s violating digital copyright laws by reprinting my entire essay without permission.

On the other side of the coin, Lee Stranahan’s Facebook wall is, not surprisingly, all kinds of weird. There’s definitely some sort of bizarre Mobius Loop connected certain elements of the left with the tea party people. And of course I don’t mind it when people disagree with me, but when they, as Lee has, appear to pull a quote from my piece, slap quotation marks around it as if I wrote it, and pass it off as something I’ve penned, I get a little pissed. But I don’t expect a correction.

I think the counterpoint I’ve heard most often is “not all tea party people are racists.” Fair point, and I never made that specific claim. I do believe, however, that race is a major component of the movement. As I said, it’s the Southern Strategy all over again. It was used during the campaign, and it’s in use now. My headline, “all about race,” by the way, refers specifically to what is ultimately fueling the tea party movement as its leaders attempt to reacquire political power. Racism isn’t never the goal, you see, it’s always a means to attaining or preserving dominance. And it’s often wrapped in more innocuous packaging. But not always.

We’ve heard the dog whistles from the wide array of leading voices in and around the movement. If race wasn’t at the core of this thing, I would like to think that maybe the tea party people would rise up against Beck and Limbaugh’s “reparations” argument against healthcare, for example. Or how the president was only elected because of “affirmative action.” It’s the White Hands ad applied to the president. This argument doesn’t occur in a vacuum, and it wouldn’t be in the mix if it didn’t actually work — if it didn’t actually press certain buttons — stir up sufficient levels of anger and outrage among talk radio’s predominantly white audiences.

Whether it’s Limbaugh or Beck or the astroturfing lobbyist groups who are behind large chunks of the movement, they’re exploiting racial biases for the sake of a political and socioeconomic agenda. That agenda: to destroy the president and return a white Republican to the Oval Office.

Some of the rank and file people, meanwhile, are being tricked into thinking that the anti-government rhetoric — the contradictory bumper-sticker sloganeering and such — is genuine, and maybe they deserve some sympathy for being so easily mislead. But it doesn’t take much observation to realize what’s going on. They’ve been corralled into a movement that’s exploiting fear of “the other,” and so therefore they’ve become part of a movement — regardless of whether or not they’re explicitly racist — that exploits racial and cultural divisions.

I challenge anyone who disagrees to read up on the origins of the Southern Strategy. Read up on the southern white “fire-breathers” from the Civil War era. Then have a look at the White Hands ad. Have a look at the Willie Horton ad. Have a look at the 2006 “Harold! Call me!” ad. Have a look at the lines outside the Sarah Palin rallies. For what it’s worth, I detailed many of these things in my book: the chapter titled “The Great Fear of 2008.” Also read Dave Neiwert’s The Eliminationists. Then take a listen to any random hour of the Rush Limbaugh show, or a wide variety of racially-motivated signs and agitprop at a tea party rally.

It’s all part of the same twisted theme.

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  • Tommy

    I have news for you, Bobby-boy. Millions don’t like obama. You throw the racism charge around so loosely it makes you look like such a hysterical fool.

  • http://www.bobcesca.com Bob_Cesca

    I assume, at the next rally you attend, you’ll be instructing the guys with the witch doctor signs to cut the shit. I assume you’ll be calling the Glenn Beck show to tell him that the reparations talk isn’t helpful and that it’s racially insensitive.Right?

  • brutlyhonest

    Ooooh, he called you boy. Guess he emasculated you!

  • keithalso

    Bob, I think what you are seeing is a perfect example of “stupid is as stupid does.” The tea party movement is made up of people that are in fact as stupid and gullible as the racist tea party people you see on video and carrying ignorant signs. They are not all racist. But they are exactly as stupid as the racist versions so it’s very difficult to tell the difference.

  • Emily Jacobs

    Tommy–your rudeness and disrespect just proves Bob’s point. There is a strong undercurrent of hate that drives Teabaggers and dare I say, you? The more you say the more you just prove what Bob is saying is true. Get over your trolly self.And one more thing…there are millions MORE who DO like the President, so….your “point” is ridiculous and you know it. If you don’t like what Bob says and you cannot form a constructive argument, why are you here?

  • http://www.bobcesca.com Bob_Cesca

    To wit. I just received the following email.”I just read your Tea Party/race article. Or as much of it as I could stomach. Absolute tripe. You are the exact liberal idiot whose type of thinking is crumbling the foundation of the nation. Move to Cuba or Africa and eat a bag of dicks.”Nope. No racism there.So let’s recap. I’m an idiot for suggesting that race is a motivator behind the tea party movement. And yet I should move to Africa and suck dicks.Got it.Huh?

  • brutlyhonest

    You are the exact liberal idiot whose type of thinking created the foundation of the nation.

    Fixt

    Also, I suspect he thinks Africa is a country, like Cuba is and sarah does, and wants you to eat dicks, not suck them. sheesh.

    PS: Why are all the homophobes so obsessed with dicks?

  • http://nappydiatribe.blogspot.com HumanityCritic

    The main problem that your garden variety Tea Party apologist faces when claiming that the movement isn’t about race is their inaction in terms of trying to root it out. Even people who claim that a majority of the people in said movement have the purest of intentions will surely admit that they have seen racist signs or two at many of the rally’s. Hell, you’d figure that at least for PR purposes they would do whatever they could do to dissuade people from bringing signs that made them looked like mouth-breathing racists. But no, nothing. Their silence on the matter is deafening.Also, I like Lee, but what is up with that Terri DiMatteo chick littering his page with anti-Cesca screeds? Watch out Bob, it looks like she wants to be your Yolanda Saldívar something awful.(Serena Quintanilla reference)

  • Dr. Squid

    I have news for you, Bobby-boy. Millions don’t like obama. I got news for you, boy. In a country with 300 million people, that’s inevitable. The only reason that millions don’t like you is because you’re an obscure do-nothing.

  • http://tarackian.deviantart.com/ J M Ashby

    I think the biggest driving force behind the confederate tea-party movement is absolute ignorance. Racism is a very close second and in some ways a bi-product of their absolute ignorance.Ignorant mobs who are nervous and aggitated by a weak ecnomoy created by their own masters (which they are also ignorant of) are dangerously easy to exploit.

  • TGM

    Bob – The column was excellent and needed to be said. It’s just a little pathetic (but not especially surprising) that no one from the right will call out Limbaugh or Beck for their violent and racist rhetoric.If there ever comes a time when the rhetoric turns violent I hope Beck and Limbaugh are held accountable.

  • eve

    In addition to the tea party folks who are blatantly racist and proud of it, I believe we can add the people who are furious that we have Obama as president but do not realize their anger is there because he is black.A lot of racism is at a subconscious level. Still, they are willing to be part of a group that is happy to accept racist antics.I’m sure there are some who identify with the tea party who are not racist. But they have joined a racist movement!If I say I am all for gun control and am a member of the NRA, you might not think I’m really serious about supporting gun control.Same as someone saying they are not racist and joining a racist organization like the tea party. One loses their claim to not being racist if they support a group when it becomes obviously racist.

  • NavyChief04

    Must have struck a nerve; your Wikipedia entry now starts off with “Bob Cesca is an Anti-American…”

  • luke643

    I was most struck by the ‘marxist’ label.What on earth makes you a marxist? If you are, I wouldn’t be able to determine it from your postings.The hard right acts as if we on the left are hoping and waiting for the final proletarian revolution and establishment of the true communist world order, in the same way in which they are waiting for the rapture.

  • eve

    Bob, I am so glad you are writing about the Southern Strategy. Wonderful piece.

  • Curly Lasagna

    “…Move to Cuba or Africa and eat a bag of dicks.”Hmmmm……..I thought dicks came in a box. Ba-dump-bump……Keep up the good work rattling their cages, Mr. Cesca……

  • JackDanieL

    A bag of dicks?Is it like a plastic bag and they’re all mushed together in there like chicken parts? The date written on it with Sharpie, keep it in the freezer?Or is it a paper bag and they’re stickin out like baguettes kinda?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CzbURUrgQao

  • Nicole473

    Ya hit a big nerve, Bob. These people are largely motivated by race. If they are not, if they disagree with racism, they would speak out against it, and would not wish to be associated with a group which waves racist signs, et al.I have no racist friends, and this was a choice. Just like joining a group is a choice.I would tell ‘em to go fuck themselves. But that’s just me. :)

  • Nicole473

    @ BOB…….I am going to email you 2 screenshots from the second nitwit’s blog that you linked to.The guy is editing comments.Feel free to use them as you see fit.

  • JackDanieL

    Honestly, my opinion is that, just like how the entire ‘philosophy’ of the ‘movement’ is astroturfed, so is this latest push back against the racism accusations. I, like many of you, have been calling out this blatant racism since the election year of 2008, but it wasn’t until a week or two ago that people started to “take offense” to it. All at the same time. From the nightly news to my facebook friends list.

  • Bull Schmitt

    One minor quibble – they don’t want to “return a white Republican to the Oval Office”. They want to elect a blank vessel that would be malleable enought to restore their neo-conservative agenda.When 2000 was coming around, George W. Bush wasn’t even in the top two ranking for constitutionally eligible Presidential timbre in his immediate family. Yet that’s who the big shots chose as their golden boy.If the people behind the tea parties thought the only way to win in 2012 was the election of Michael Steele, they’d find a justification to try and engineer just that. Of course, Palin is infinitely more palatable as a figurehead President.

  • http://www.windonwater.net QueenTiye

    I’m so sorry to see this rift between Bob & Lee. :( It is very discouraging.And, I think the term for claiming someone said something they didn’t say so as to argue that point instead of the point made is called “strawman fallacy.”QT

  • jane

    It was mildly painful to read some of the gio- tool’s blog, and I threw up a little when I saw he’s in NC.I especially like his own comments on his post:”Tea-Partier patriot? You betcha! LOL.Racist? With a blog like this one… http://iamnotaracist.wordpress.com/ I seriously doubt it!Gio-”And:”Being called a racist really gets under my skin (applause pause for intended pun). The lefties may have overplayed the race card, but I still don’t like it one bit. The policies of the Democrats in congress over the last 40 years have always been to keep minorities on one plantation or another. This way the Dems can blame the plight of minorities on the GOP to garner their vote…”Or, How Can I Be Racist When I Have Black Friends?Got it.

  • MrBrink

    I remember during the last weeks of the election Drudge Report ran a big headline(“Obama goes door to door to drum up votes in Ohio”).When Colin Powell, once hailed as the next Republican party president, decided to endorse Barack Obama, like 70 million other registered voters in America, it was attacked by conservatives as a “black thing.”See, according to nearly 60 million Conservative voters, Colin Powell only endorsed the president because they’re both black-ish. Not because the Republican party nominee was/is a creepy, smirking, knee-jerker, with anger issues being intimately advised to do unpredictable things like ‘smart nuke’ Iran and bomb Russia for some tool named Saakashvili, or maybe even just continue torturing human beings for some new trumped up Curvball intelligence based on the odd G. Gordon Libby-aided and abetted world view of John “That One” McCain.Remember the wise latina supreme court confirmation hearings? Yeah. Justice Sonia Sotomayor is a racist and a threat to democracy(not the Conservative justices’ opinion in Caperton V. Massey Coal or the majority in Citizens United). Jefferson Beauregard ” Jeff” Sessions III said so. So did Honduras coup-supporting Jim DeMint(R-Confederacy).Remember the white firefighters and their life-long struggle with being white and oppressed in America? Conservatives had a good time with that.Or the Harvard professor vs. the cop? What’d Conservatives call that…? “talking out your differences and misunderstandings is for liberal race-pimping pussies!?” “why’s it gotta be the white guy that acted stupidly, and not the black Harvard professor on his own property?”When Glenn Beck’s quote about the president being a racist was blasted through the media, right wing America stood up in their living rooms and hearts and applauded.They have a funny idea of what it means to be a racist. I do not think it means what they think it means.Would a racist kiss a white woman? =)Right wing America isn’t racist. The racists are! And for the radical libertarians just tuning in from the Alex Jones show– it’s the racists that are bringing down Ron Paul’s message of 1776 Freedom!!!A question to ask any Ron Paul people who claim to be the REAL Tea Party:Can you get a president elected without Southern white males?

  • Deb Morgan

    I’m a bit of newbie here so I hope I’m not ‘preaching’ to the choir – I am on a ‘mission’ to see that every time Beck’s name comes up people are reminded that he is a CONVERT to the Mormon church. Now for those of you who do not grasp the significance that this plays in his personality and powerful forces behind this guy (and his beloved Teabaggers, whether they like it or not), I ask you to educate yourself a bit.I am an ex-mormon (left at 15 when I couldn’t swallow the hypocrisy anymore) and I can tell you that to be born into it is one thing (wake up poor dears) but to convert to the insanity spewed by this cult is a very telling thing about him. I do not feel that I have an axe to grind but I do feel strongly about the insidious reach of Mormons in politics and business – worldwide – don’t think that this is just a quirk with which Utahns have to live (I live in France).Whether Beck truly believes or is slimy enough to convert in order to tap into the money machine doesn’t make much difference. He has a very powerful lobby behind him . . . do not underestimate its reach. For those of you not familiar with the Mormon beliefs it would behoove you to read up on the John Birch Society.Beck is playing for one of the (if not the most) dangerous groups of all – and he has just jumped out to lead their parade. Trying to convert you is the least of your worries (they’ll just baptize you after you’re dead). It’s what they believe and what they are willing to sacrifice that is terribly disturbing. Arm yourself with the facts and don’t turn a blind eye to what he’s doing because of we are taught to hold a ’freedom of religion’ bias. I prefer freedom FROM religion in my life and my government.The Mormon church has a history rooted in racism and has never had a problem duping nitwits to carry their banner – looks like they’ve hit the trifecta with this one. And they won’t be running out of money to keep the ball rolling any time soon.

  • JackDanieL

    Deb Morgan, right on!Having done 3 years hard time in Utard, I agree wholeheartedly. Every Mormon convert I ever met had selfish personal reasons, having nothing to do with faith, fueling their decision. 9 times outta 10, it was just so they could “fit in” better.I was working on a mortgage with a client who happened to be (sort of) LDS. He had decent income, good credit, and with a new baby on the way, was looking to move “up” a bit. His new payment was going to be about $600/month higher than what he was accustomed to. But his wife had a successful home hairstyling biz (almost as popular as trampolines in Utah), and once the baby squirted out, he was more than confident that her income would cover the higher payment. It was the last 3 months of her pregnancy, when she couldn’t work, that he was concerned about.So we sat down, as he drank a pepsi, and wrote down ALL of his expenses to see where maybe he could pinch for a few months. I saw him write “tithing”, and put $500 next to it. After reviewing the list, it was clear that he really had nowhere to pinch, so I suggested that he either lower, or cease, his tithing payment to the church for a few months. Oh my gad, if looks could kill…He was arrested 3 months later and hit with 10grand in bail for filling fraudulent prescriptions.

  • Robert Shaub

    There are other people call out the teabaggers on their racism:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/axel-woolfolk/mexicans-are-filthy-stink_b_487347.htmlSo don’t feel alone, Bob. You have a lot of supporters.

  • bibimimi

    Low hangin’ fruits:Sandpoint, ID the home town of the White Aryan Resistance……oh! and Coldwater Creek Clothing.

  • bibimimi

    Oh, and the Southern Strategy went away like Leno went away. There’s rotten apples all over this orchard. Who knew u could flush ‘em out with a weak cup of piss-warm tea?

  • FIONA

    The truth always hurts Bob, more power to your elbow.can’t wait for your next essay.