Thursday, April 29, 2010

Is The Tea Party A Reaction To Capitalism?

A reader at The Daily Dish writes:

"...we are in a point in history when institutions that appeared solid are dissolving. The internet has thrashed the old information asymmetry, the monopoly on data that institutions used to have back when the boomers were young and new models aren't appearing fast enough. And of the models that do arise, not one is going to dominate. It'll be, for good or bad, a world of choice.

The costs of organizing people has fallen through the floor, so large institutions, while still extant, are going to have to shrink and take up new policies of transparency in order to survive. We’re going through a cycle of demystification, so it makes sense that folks are clinging to symbols.

It doesn’t help demographics are going bonkers through movement of people, changing birth rates, rates and types of technology adoption, anchor industries disappearing or shrinking, and that this disruption will be semi-permanent because the rate of innovation is going nowhere but up and the price of innovation is next to nothing. This is life in the big city.

The tea-partiers are actually responding to the creative force of CAPITALISM, which despite the temporary straits we find ourselves in now, is churning along with more vitality than at any point in history.

Think about how short the cycle of innovation is these days! And think about how alienating it is to people who have other concerns than keeping track of technology trends. One downside to all the constant tidal pressure of innovation that is our postmodern condition is it becomes very easy to cling to outmoded ideologies (I mean ideology in the broadest sense here, not just politics, but modes of life).

When the world you knew is upended, all you can depend on is your grievances.

The country is moving ahead, some people are going with the flow, some are clinging to the old days. Some are a mix. You can't stop progress. A multi-racial, multi-faith, gay-inclusive, women-friendly, majority-minority country is what America is becoming.

[We also have to admit America loves cheap labor. No one would come illegally if it were not so easy to make money.]

The pathological nostalgia of Tea Baggers, the largely white members in their fifties and older, ironically determined to get every penny of social security and Medicare, is the new Boomer revolt. They used the 1960s to change their world, now they want to go back to it. The cultural revolution they wanted is now the one they want to stop.

Posted via web from liberalsarecool.com

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