Countdown — Six Days Until the World’s Biggest Teabagging

Filed in National by on April 9, 2009

That title isn’t Family Friendly, right? Oh well. While we wait for what looks like a practice run for the Rapture from here, take a look at some Teabagging News:

teabaggin_med

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"You don't make progress by standing on the sidelines, whimpering and complaining. You make progress by implementing ideas." -Shirley Chisholm

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  1. nemski says:

    Most people don’t know what tea bagging is. Thank goodness. The other night I had to explain it to my parents. Geez, even my pre-teen knew what it was.

  2. Unstable Isotope says:

    I thought Alan Keyes was going to be at the D.C. “tea party.” Does that make anyone else think of children playing dress up? Or rich people with their pinkies in the air?

    I’m really interested in the Fox News angle of the tea parties. Is Fox News trying to become like the liberal netroots – the place for organizing activism? If so, won’t that be a fail because grassroots activism really needs to start from the bottom up, not the top down. Maybe it’s different for conservatives since they tend to be more authoritarian than liberals.

    Also, why are conservatives copying the most ineffective types of protests from the left (IMO), street theater? The most effective form of activism involves getting involved with candidates, giving money and running for office, doesn’t it?

  3. Tom S. says:

    “The most effective form of activism involves getting involved with candidates, giving money and running for office, doesn’t it?”

    Word, but this is the off season.

  4. liberalgeek says:

    I wonder if we should solicit couples to show up in Wilmington to “misunderstand” what they are expected to do when told that it is time to start teabagging.

  5. JimD says:

    A couple of things people teabagging America fail to realize:

    The original Boston Tea Party was used to protest taxation without representation, which isn’t an issue for anyone in this country outside of the District of Columbia, so what is the symbolism?

    In the original Boston Tea Party, the colonists dressed up as Native Americans (poorly) to hide their identity, making this not an act of bravery but one of cowardice, if you really think about it.

    Finally, I’d once again like to wonder out loud just how good for the environment throwing stuff you really don’t have to into bodies of water is.

  6. Von Cracker says:

    So I guess 95% of the protesters will return the funds from their tax cuts to the Treasury, right?

  7. nemski says:

    JimD wrote Finally, I’d once again like to wonder out loud just how good for the environment throwing stuff you really don’t have to into bodies of water is.

    LOL. I think only 12 people are going to show up at The Riverfront and when they open their tea bags, all the tea will blow back into their face. Kind of ironic given that they’ll teabag themselves.

  8. pandora says:

    This is just so embarrassing.

  9. cassandra_m says:

    If they show up at the Riverfront throwing stuff in the water, they may get whacked upside their heads with a paddle from one of the crewing boats out for practice. Those people don’t play.

  10. JimD says:

    I’d still like to know if they’re going to dress up like Native Americans, to keep the spirit of the original Tea Party.
    Maybe instead of signing up couples to go get arrested for lewd conduct, we should get local actors to go out and pretend to be British and cry as they ruin perfectly good tea. I’d say get real British people to do it, but I’m not sure what a real British person would do if they saw tea being wasted in this way.

  11. Unstable Isotope says:

    Jim,

    They’d probably help them along if it’s some of the crappy American stuff. I’m sure they’re not throwing good tea away.

  12. Geezer says:

    The Bostonians tossed the tea because the tax was on tea.

    Will today’s teabaggers toss their paychecks in the river to protest the income tax?

  13. pandora says:

    I do not understand the point of these tea parties. It would make sense if the participants were wearing Armani…

  14. anon says:

    I guess they are going to burn their Medicare cards and Social Security checks, and throw their state paychecks into the river. Developers will sign a pledge not to take any stimulus money.

    … right?

  15. Unstable Isotope says:

    Yeah, anon, it’s a big problem with these tea parties. What are they protesting, exactly? They just got a tax cut. They’re protesting raising the top rate by 4% and it hasn’t even started yet? They’re protesting the stimulus package that’s already passed? What’s the point?

  16. pandora says:

    A warning would have been appreciated with that link, VC! Loved the comment section. 😉

  17. jason330 says:

    I’m excited to go to the Leg mall in Dover. expect to see a reporter from the DSN and maybe ten wingnuts.

    The over/under line is 10. Anybody want the over?

  18. cassandra_m says:

    I thought the idea of this teabagging thing (wingnut version) was that you were to dump your orange pekoe into the nearest body of water. Is there a fountain or something at Leg Mall where these people are dumping their tea into?

  19. Von Cracker says:

    The sacrifice those morons will make for wealthy people they never met is priceless!

    sorry for the lack of warning, P. 😉

  20. pandora says:

    And now they’re warning the tea party participants to NOT SIGN ANYTHING!

    Apology accepted, VC!

  21. jason330 says:

    Cassandra,

    No. There is the weedy muddy St Jones River a few blocks away. BTW thanks for that link.

    Yes, wingnut paranoia has jumped itself as it was already preparing to jump the shark. In their rush to outsmart the nonexistent, double-secret double agents (also!), the teabagging nutters are now warning one another not to fall for any dirty tricks like sharing basic contact information with one another, lest they be unwittingly included in petitions supporting administration positions, or (in their fevered dreams) be reported as dissidents!

    Ah, me! The treacherous politics of teabagging!

    Let me just state here and now that I wish I had thought of this myself. What could be better than watching wingnuts deny themselves the most basic of organizing tools purely out of their own paranoia?

    Too funny!

  22. cassandra_m says:

    I totally stole that graphic!

  23. Unstable Isotope says:

    So, these tea parties are pretty much worthless now. It’s just a bunch of people upset that they lost the election getting together to whine. They’re not even getting a list together? Do they know how dumb they sound?

  24. Von Cracker says:

    that jpeg is gross.

    it looks like a set.

  25. Unstable Isotope says:

    I think it’s hilarious, VC.

  26. anon idiot says:

    That math’s not a fail. Look again. The top 1 percent is part of the top 50 percent. So the figures still total 100 percent, not 139 percent.

  27. Von Cracker says:

    No really, it’s brilliant.

    Still, it’s a little creepy.

  28. Von Cracker says:

    the thought of wet tea bags on the face, that is….. 😀

  29. cassandra_m says:

    OK, ai — the sign does work as you see it. I would quibble with the numbers though — I think that the 1% number is right, but the others don’t seem right by what I remember the CBO numbers to be.

    The sign is still a signage fail — there is no way you drive by that, see if for a few seconds and have enough time to suss out what that guy is trying to communicate. Besides, who advocates to pay more taxes so that the 1% don’t have to?

  30. anon idiot says:

    VC – You would prefer dry tea bags?

  31. Von Cracker says:

    On my face? Yes, a. idiot.

  32. LANCE says:

    Why isn’t King Bag, Rush Limpb*lls attending?

    The teabaggin’ is really about Rush. Just ask him.