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Chris Parker goes toe-to-toe with Tea Party (Compares to KKK and the John Birch Society)
Scarlet & Black, The Grinnell College Newspaper ^ | November 14, 2014 | Jon Sundby

Posted on 11/14/2014 2:28:39 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Chris Parker, a political science professor at the University of Washington, Seattle, spoke at Grinnell on Tuesday, Nov. 11, about his recent book “Change They Can’t Believe In: The Tea Party and Reactionary Politics in America.” Parker’s talk revolved around the rise and identity of the Tea Party within the American political system, with a particular emphasis on the psychology behind the movement.

Besides the unique and relevant nature of his book, Parker was invited to speak at Grinnell given his connections with the College. Fourteen years ago, Parker received a fellowship through the Consortium for Faculty Diversity in Liberal Arts Colleges that allowed him to teach two semesters at Grinnell while he finished his doctoral dissertation.

“Grinnell’s a very special place for me,” Parker said. “It has played an instrumental role in my career.”

As the head of Grinnell’s Political Science department, Professor Barbara Trish mentioned the continuing relationship between the College and Parker as she introduced Parker to the large audience.

“We touch base with him at conferences whenever we see him, [and] I think we’ve talked to him when we had job openings to see if he has any insights or ideas about candidates who would be good for Grinnell,” she said.

After Trish’s introduction, Parker dove into his talk outlining his research on the Tea Party and its relation to the mainstream political establishment.

“There is something that explains their distaste for Obama beyond politics, beyond even race,” Parker observed.

He identified several reactionary movements throughout American history, including the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s and the John Birch Society, which he thought closely resembled the role the Tea Party plays in our current society.

“These people are always there, they just need something in the culture to activate them,” Parker said.

The cultural trigger in the case of the modern Tea Party, Parker argued, was the election of Barack Obama in 2008. He backed up his point with a series of pictures of signs at Tea Party rallies, almost all of which had hysterical, and often racist, references to Obama.

Following the slide show, he put on a quick promotional clip created by Sarah Palin’s political action committee in praise of the grassroots movement. Despite the clip’s insistence that the movement was about small government, common sense policy and traditional morals, Parker claimed that in reality the Tea Party is a reactionary movement that was birthed from a pervasive fear of social change.

Quoting the cognitive scientist Douglas Hofstadter, Parker said, “The pseudo-conservative believes a vast and sinister conspiracy … is in motion to undermine and destroy his way of life.”

According to him, it is this fear, primarily emanating from people who are privileged in the social order, which is the driver behind of reactionary movements like the Tea Party. Much of Parker’s latest research dealt with the nature of the dialogue used in Tea Party circles. He found that many of the articles on Tea Party websites, and several personal statements by Tea Party supporters, revolved around conspiracy theories and irrational fear over the actions of the Obama presidency. This, Parker argued, differs greatly from the type of speech that was observed on more mainstream conservative sources.

While answering a question raised by an audience member on the perceived connection between moderate Republicans and the Tea Party, Parker clarified that “it’s not a difference in degree, it’s a difference in content.”

In closing his presentation, Parker elaborated on his future research plans, which include exporting his research on American reactionary movements to nations across the globe. He mentioned several foreign political parties, including France’s National Front and Italy’s Northern League, which he thought fit his description of a reactionary movement.

“The fact of the matter is that my data has worked really well in Australia, and I think it will work well in other nations as well,” Parker said.

Many of Grinnell’s faculty in the Political Science Department stated that they were excited to see Parker back on campus.

“Back then a lot of you were colleagues, but now I can call you friends,” Parker remarked.


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Government; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: conservatives; gop; idiot; iowa; jbs; obama; palin; racism; teaparty; whites
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To: wita
I think I would question the motives of anyone wanting to rule a country much less the world.

I quite agree.

41 posted on 11/14/2014 7:10:11 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Chris Parker goes toe-to-toe with Tea Party

I didn't notice any representative from any Tea Party organization referenced. How can one go "toe to toe" when the opponent is in absentia? It looks more like the little radical was lobbing stink bombs from afar, maybe because he is not equipped to deal with any objections. Seems likely.

42 posted on 11/14/2014 8:33:42 AM PST by Sgt_Schultze (A half-truth is a complete lie)
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To: Sherman Logan; woweeitsme

That’s actually already happening. When those on public assistance can afford a cellular phone, indoor plumbing, heating & air conditioning, big screen televisions, an automobile, fashionable clothes & shoes, the Internet & cable/satellite service, tasty & nutritious food, education, leisure time, vacations and a plethora of things that royalty, nobility and tycoons could scarcely dream of in centuries past, we’ve arrived at your destination.


43 posted on 11/14/2014 9:53:30 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me.)
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To: wita; Sherman Logan

Reason 1,234 why I haven’t joined MENSA.


44 posted on 11/14/2014 9:57:05 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Why I did not renew my membership.


45 posted on 11/14/2014 11:19:15 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan

I’ve heard from several people that it’s becoming a nerd prom and swinger’s hook-up.


46 posted on 11/14/2014 11:22:28 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me.)
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To: SWAMPSNIPER

If you think there is “nothing wrong with the Birch Society” then you must never have read the denunciations of the JBS written by prominent conservatives.

Robert Welch and the JBS declared since the inception of the JBS in 1958 that our nation’s most indisputably knowledgeable, authoritative and reliable source of factual information about the communist movement in the U.S. (and about internal security matters generally) was J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI.

So, it should be particularly significant to JBS admirers to learn that Hoover’s FBI falsified virtually every major JBS argument.

Hoover observed that:

“I think the extreme right is just as much a danger to the freedom of this country as the extreme left. There are groups, organizations, and individuals on the extreme right who make these very violent statements, allegations that General Eisenhower was a Communist, disparaging references to the Chief Justice and at the other end of the spectrum you have these leftists who make wild statements charging almost anybody with being a Fascist or belonging to some of these so-called extreme right societies.”

“Now, I have felt, and I have said publicly in speeches, that they are just as much a danger, at either end of the spectrum. They don’t deal with facts. Anybody who will allege that General Eisenhower was a Communist agent, has something wrong with him.” [Warren Commission testimony, Volume 5, page 101)

AND

“Personally, I have little respect for the head of the John Birch Society since he linked the names of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, the late John Foster Dulles, and former CIA Director Allen Dulles with communism.” [HQ 62-104401, #2381, 11/20/64 and HQ 100-114578-152, October 22, 1965 and 62-104401, #3865, 3/24/72.]

AND in 1962 and 1963, Hoover declared that:

“The Communist Party in this country has attempted to infiltrate and subvert every segment of our society, but its continuing efforts have not achieved success of any substance. Too many self-styled experts on communism, without valid credentials and without any access whatsoever to classified factual data regarding the inner workings of the conspiracy, have engaged in rumor-mongering and hurling false and wholly unsubstantiated allegations against persons whose views differ from their own. This is dangerous business. It is divisive and unintelligent, and makes more difficult the task of the professional investigator.” [Hoover statement in February 5, 1962 letter to Mrs. W.R. Brown of Bountiful Utah; also published as letter-to-editor in Tri-Cities Daily newspaper of Sheffield, Alabama on Sunday March 31, 1963. Copy of Hoover letter in FBI HQ file 94-1-369, serial #1676]


47 posted on 05/24/2015 7:48:33 AM PDT by searching123
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To: KC_Conspirator

The media and academia are working overtime trying to discredit the TEA Party. They’re scared shirtless of us. All they can do to counter the movement is to make weak people fearful of joining us. Which is fine. We don’t want weaklings among us anyway.


48 posted on 05/24/2015 7:54:03 AM PDT by uncitizen (The GOPE is bruisin' for a Cruz'n)
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