The TEA (Taxed Enough Already) movement in the US has been ridiculed in the press as "right wing" and "racist." Unfortunately for the traditional press around the world, who have been trying to assign these labels, the world is very connected via the internet and the truth does find its way into our screens.
TEA party activists in the US are from all walks of life and from all races. To claim that it is a racist movement is ridiculous. Take the example of Kenneth Gladney in St. Louis, Missouri. Kenneth, a black gentleman, was passing out Don't Tread on Me flags at a town hall meeting hosted by Congressman Russ Carnahan. Members of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) - one of the most powerful unions in the States and close allies of the Democrats - savagely beat Kenneth while hurling racial epithets at him. The media ignored this as well as many press conferences and other forums where black TEA partiers have asserted their presence as it doesn't fit the media's template that conservatives by definition are racists and Democrats and Unions are not. The media spin falls apart, however, when millions can watch these events on YouTube.
The most striking thing about the TEA party movement in the US is the number of women evolved. From women business owners to stay-at-home mothers, female faces dominate the gatherings. And, in nearly all states women make up the majority of the leadership of the local movements. You would think the world's media would trumpet women being the driving force in a new political movement as a truly remarkable moment in the history of our world.
This movement is spreading across the world to the UK, Israel, and Australia. A TEA party has recently been founded in Australia. The Australian movement (
www.austeaparty.com.au) has succinctly stated the ideals of the movement:
"A worldwide movement, united for Free Markets, Fiscal Responsibility, Constitutionally Limited Small Governments, and Individual Freedoms"
Those are certainly words that strike fear in the hearts of Brussels!
Have we been Taxed Enough Already? I would say we have. Yes, tightening the belt on the spending side can be painful, but it is an exercise by which we can redefine what role the government should play in our lives and examining how to better allow the Individual to be an entrepreneur.