It Can Happen Here. It Might Be Happening Now.
The best sign at my hometown "tea party" was a giant banner that
spelled out in huge letters: $12,000,000,000,000. It took at least
ten people standing in a long line along the highway to hold it.
I'd add two more parallels between the USA now and the Soviet Union then.
In 1985,
America
viewed the
Soviet Union
as a frightening, formidable villain. That summer,
Chevy Chase
accidentally started WW3 with a Soviet missile in Spies Like Us.
That fall, Soviet monster Ivan Drago killed Apollo Creed with an
iron-fisted right hook in Rocky IV. The year prior, Patrick Swayze and Charlie Sheen went guerrilla on
the conquering communists in Red Dawn, and the year before that
Matthew Broderick came within seconds of torching the earth in Wargames. At the same time, the dawning of the information age made it increasingly difficult for the central state to prevent outside news from seeping in. Soviet citizens were learning for the first time that the rest of the world wasn't destitute like they were. Pope John Paul II fueled the fire by challenging Catholics in the republics to put God before Gorbachev. As Moscow ran out of funds, it could no longer contain the resentment that had been brewing in the republics. The entire empire came crashing down in a matter of weeks. Let's review those parallels between the American empire and the Soviets.
Those five points bankrupted Moscow . They've bankrupted Washington too. But in order to collapse, the bankrupt central state first had to be abandoned by localities who resented the central authority. In early 1990, Lithuania held a giant independence rally. 250,000 people assembled to express their anger at Moscow . I drove to my local tea party last Wednesday more to check it out than to participate. I strongly expected to be disappointed. And while there were lots of people in attendance who didn't get it (one guy had a sign that read "Tax All Imports"), the huge crowd was mostly united in a common message: Washington is out of control and must be stopped. This is from The Dallas Morning News last week: Rick Perry Doesn't Rule Out Texas Secession: Texas
Gov. Rick Perry fired up an anti-tax "tea party" Wednesday with
his stance against the federal government and for states' rights as some
in his audience shouted, "Secede!" Between
the communists parachuting onto the high school in Red Dawn and the
neighborhood getting vaporized in The Day After, my elementary
school classmates and I were convinced the Soviets would invade and kill
us all before we made it to our next summer vacation. Before we got
out of middle school, Gorbachev had resigned and the Soviet flag was
lowered for the last time over the Kremlin.
One senses that the existing power structure knows something is up, but
intends to go on with life in confidence that this will all sort itself
out. |
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