America's mistaken image of the filibuster |
[1]The repeal vote is not the only theatre planned by the so-called Tea Partiers. New House leaders will allow the reading of the entire Constitution into the record. The recitation will cost an estimated $1 million, but it plays well with the "hicks" who were hoodwinked yet again by well-heeled corporate sycophants posing as populist saviors of the Republic. A prominent Washington lobbying firm held an invitation-only fiesta for incoming GOP Congressmen featuring a country western singing star as entertainment. A book of tickets fetched a donation of $50,000. The hegemony of pecuniary interests in American politics goes back to the original 1773 "Tea Party" at Boston harbor, when William Molineux, a sometime hardware merchant, embezzler, smuggler and "first leader of dirty matters", led a mob of 500 to intimidate Boston merchants expecting consignments of British tea into supporting a boycott. Eight of the original 30-150 'indians', who tossed more than 9,000 lbs of tea into the harbor possibly under the control of Molineux, were hired by one radical merchant according to historian Dirk Hoerder. The dedication of modern Tea Partiers to the Constitution is only skin deep, since they vociferously oppose parts of our charter. They have problems with the 14th Amendment's guarantee of citizenship by birth, and several prominent extremists want repeal of the 17th Amendment allowing the popular election of senators. In essence, they stand for democracy for those white natives who can pay for it.
[2] Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) has introduced the "Mr. Smith Bill" requiring senators to physically hold the floor to sustain a filibuster. Life imitates Art.