Gary’s Note: Whiskey
& Gunpowder has discussed the national Tea Parties. Our own Byron King,
editor of Outstanding Investments attended the Pittsburgh Tea Party
on April 15. His report follows. If you care to report on your own local Tea
Party, please send your comments to
Gary@WhiskeyandGunpowder.com
By Byron King
April 22, 2009
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Yeah, we
drink tea in Pittsburgh. But really, Pittsburgh is more of a shot-and-a-beer
kind of town. What else would you expect from the place that — back in 1794
— challenged the authority of the newly established national government in
the Whiskey Rebellion? I wrote about it five years ago, in one of my first
articles for Whiskey (hence the name) and Gunpowder.
You can reread it here.
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Old Whiskey
Rebellion and Modern Tea Party
During the
Whiskey Rebellion of old, irate Western Pennsylvanians burned down the house
of George Washington’s appointed tax collector, General John Neville. This
wasn’t without provocation, of course. The bonfire started after one of
Neville’s federal marshals shot and killed an unarmed tax protester. Lesson
to the feds: Be careful who you shoot, especially when they can shoot back.
The recent
Pittsburgh Tea Party was far less inflammatory, although some of the issues
and basic sentiments are much the same as those of the 1790s. The original
Whiskey rebels opposed a distant and aloof government that reflected the
interests of an East Coast cultural aristocracy. Despite the personal
popularity of George Washington, his federal government was imperial and out
of touch. To answer a summons in federal court, for example, a Western
Pennsylvania farmer had to trek near 300 miles across the mountains to
Philadelphia. And the lack of a useful national currency — one of the key
functions of any government — handicapped economic growth. In fact, for lack
of real money on the western frontier, people used whiskey as a form of
currency.
The final
straw came in 1792 when Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton proposed
raising revenue by taxing the capacity of stills. And in those days, stills
were no mere means of making recreational moonshine. By 1794, the draconian
collection of Mr. Hamilton’s new tax placed at risk the ability of farmers
to transform their surplus grain into more transportable and saleable
whiskey.
In other
words, the whiskey tax damaged the farm economy, which was about all there
was west of the Alleghenies. Inept government economic and monetary policy
placed the future at risk. Thus did many citizens rebel. And rightfully so,
some say.
Rooted in
Citizen Anger and Frustration
What’s behind
the modern “Tea Party” sentiment? I believe that it’s rooted in citizen
anger and frustration that the federal government just spends and spends and
spends, with no evident heed for tomorrow.
The
justification for heedless increases in government spending — even worse,
increased spending with borrowed money — is along the lines of Pres.
Franklin Roosevelt’s famous comment that “If we borrow funds, then we owe it
to ourselves.” The modern justification, as a Federal Reserve official once
explained to me, is that “As long as we can afford to pay the interest on
the debt, it’ll be OK.”
But the
people are not blind, let alone stupid. It is clear that the federal debt
just grows and grows. How much longer can this last? Today many informed
citizens understand that the national debt is way too big. The rate of
growth is out of control. We don’t “owe it to ourselves.” We owe it to the
Chinese, the Japanese, the Middle Easterners. And we cannot afford to pay
the interest anymore. Well, not if we want to be able to do anything else as
a nation except work like tax-slaves to pay interest on past debt.
By any
technical measure, the federal government is insolvent — except for that
quaint custom of inflating the currency with fiat dollars. So really, the
nation is long overdue for a national discussion on the fundamental nature
of its money. Hence the Tea Parties.
The Pittsburgh
Tea Party Crowd
In Pittsburgh
a crowd of several thousand (estimates range from 2,500 to 5,000) formed
last week in the city’s old, historic Market Square. Market Square dates to
the 1700s, and perhaps the bedrock still recalls the events from the days of
George Washington. The mid-April weather was characteristically lousy, with
drizzle and rain falling in 50-degree temperatures. If you were there, it
was because you wanted to be there.
The Tea Party
attendees struck me as a cross section of Western Pennsylvanians. There were
many Steelers jackets, and ball-caps with military logos and veteran
patches. I asked around, and met business owners and office workers, factory
workers, lawyers, health care providers, restaurant workers, and a few
people who are, as they put it, “between jobs.” There were off-duty cops and
firefighters, courthouse employees, bus drivers and even a few bikers
resplendent in their leather and tattoos.
The Tea Party
brought out the creative side of attendees as well, with people dressed in
Colonial period costumes. To my observation, it was an orderly and
respectful crowd, filled with sincere people who appeared to know their
American history. My gut feeling was that the Tea Party attendees understood
why they were out standing in the cold rain. (One 30-something woman told
me, “I’ve never been to a political rally in my life. But I’m just scared
for the country’s future. We’re going to be broke.”)
The makeup of
the crowd was young and old, men and women. There were retirees (as
indicated by their hats and T-shirts), middle-aged people, and young people
complete with pink hair and metal in their ears. There were parents with
children. (One participant told me, “I brought my son with me because I want
him to remember this day. I think we’re at the beginning of something that’s
going to change the country.”) There were white and black, Asian and
Indians.
Many Tea
Party attendees carried signs, all apparently homemade. The verbiage ranged
across a conservative to libertarian political spectrum. Some signs were
historical, with deep roots in
the 1913 coup d’etat of American Progressivism under Pres. Woodrow Wilson.
(“The Fed is Illegitimate.” and “Abolish the 17th Amendment.”) You don’t see
many signs like that these days, that’s for sure.
Other signs
were rock-ribbed statements of protest about taxes and spending. (“Give me
Liberty, Don’t Give Me Debt.” and “Born Free, Taxed Beyond the Grave.” and
“Abolish the IRS, Support the Fair Tax” and “Wall Street Banks Got Billions,
and All I Got Was This Lousy Sign.”)
Other signs —
not many — knocked Pres. Obama; but I would not characterize the Tea Party
as just an anti-Obama rally. There were indications of deeper
dissatisfaction with the federal government, at a systemic level. One sign
knocked the “Bush-Obama Ripoff.” Other signs were along the lines of
“Abolish Congress,” which is not exactly realistic, considering the wording
of the U.S. Constitution. (Vote the bums out, maybe?)
One sign hit
on the corruption of the process of governance, stating, “Big Fraud from
Little ACORN Grows.” These were not the usual mass-produced, “union-label”
signs that you see at those “other” kinds of political rallies. I’m sure you
get the idea.
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The Tea Party
Organization
The 2009
Pittsburgh Tea Party was organized by a suburban housewife, albeit one with
an MBA from the Harvard Business School. From what I heard, a few
politicians volunteered to speak. The terse reply from the organizers was
along the lines of, “No, this is where the people will speak. You
politicians need to shut up and listen.”
There was no
indication that the Tea Party was an “Astroturf” event. The Tea Party
received almost ZERO media coverage in the days leading up to it. It had all
the markings of a “flash rally,” organized on the Internet. The local talk
radio guys scarcely mentioned it, to my knowledge. (If they did, I missed
it.) The local newspapers gave no advance publicity. The local TV stations
were too busy covering the usual pabulum about car crashes and house fires.
If it doesn’t bleed, it doesn’t lead.
It seemed to
me that the attendees of the Pittsburgh Tea Party were there of their own
volition. I sensed no mind-control from the evil Fox-News Network, and I
wasn’t even wearing my radio-blocking aluminum skull-cap. Contrary to the
defamatory stereotype pushed by the incompetent mainstream media (the LA
Times characterized Tea Party attendees as “insane”), the Tea Party
people seemed to be decent folk, able to think for themselves and form
independent opinions. And many Tea Partiers have apparently formed the
opinion that the federal government is spending the country into ruin. To
those of us who follow the issue, it’s a valid point.
The Tea Party
Festivities
The Tea Party
stage was decked out with flags. Festivities began with a musical mixture of
patriotic tunes and Country-Western music. The Tea Party kicked off with a
brief welcome from the organizers, followed by a moment of silence in memory
of three Pittsburgh police officers who were killed in the line of duty a
couple weeks ago. Then a prayer. Then the Pledge of Allegiance. Then the
national anthem. In other words, it was as patriotic as the 4th of July.
Nothing radical.
The first
speaker discussed the ever-expanding federal budget. If you’ve seen the
movie I.O.U.S.A., produced by Addison Wiggin of Agora Financial,
then it was nothing new except that this was a Tea Party protest in downtown
Pittsburgh. And criticizing federal spending in downtown Pittsburgh is not
something that happens very often.
Another
speaker gave a spirited history lesson about the origins of the Federal
Reserve. It was Creature from Jeckyll Island-kind of stuff. It was
surprising (to me) how much of the discussion the crowd appeared to
understand. It was astonishing, really. I think that most of the Federal
Reserve scholars in town must have been in the audience, because people
seemed to know exactly what the guy was talking about.
A third
speaker gave a solid speech about the evils of ever-expanding government.
This guy is a multi-millionaire who built his own nationally-ranked
high-tech business and made a fortune. He’s met a few payrolls in his
career. He discussed the exploding levels of federal expenditures. He hit on
the ballooning national debt, and asked rhetorically how the nation ever
intends to pay just the interest, let alone the principal.
And so it
went, with more speakers giving talks along the same lines.
The Hecklers in
the Crowd
Of course, a
few hecklers showed up to make noise. While one of the early speakers was
discussing how federal borrowing is crowding out private investment, a group
of five (I counted them) people started to chant, “O-Bam-A! O-Bam-A!
O-Bam-A!”
At first, the
crowd ignored the hecklers. Then the hecklers realized that they were having
no effect, so they yelled louder. Eventually, it was kind of hard to hear
the speaker. A few members of the Tea Party crowd turned to the hecklers and
told them to shut up, have some respect, etc. That was like throwing
kerosene on a fire. Now the hecklers were hollering at the top of their
lungs.
There were a
few TV cameramen from local stations covering the event. Needless to say,
the camera-guys rushed over to film the hecklers in action. By now the five
hecklers were having a great time, yelling and making enough noise to
disrupt the proceedings. Then some Pittsburgh cops and event organizers
walked over to tell the hecklers to keep it down.
The cops must
have said something, because the hecklers broke up and started walking
around the edge of the Tea Party crowd, yelling epithets like, “You’re all
racists. You can’t deal with a black man in the White House.” To which a
black guy standing next to me said, “I’ll bet these punks are ACORN
activists.” He turned and talked right at one of the hecklers, saying, “Why
are you causing a disturbance? Get out of here. Go home to your mama.” So
the heckler called the black guy an “Oreo,” as well as a few other words
that I thought were banned from modern vocabulary. Then a Pittsburgh cop
walked up to the heckler and politely asked him to “move along, unless you
have some other reason to be here.” Pittsburgh’s finest.
Media Coverage
The local
media gave almost no coverage to the Pittsburgh Tea Party. The TV stations
focused on the hockey playoffs between the Pittsburgh Penguins and the
Philadelphia Flyers. One station ran a short, insubstantial fluff piece,
with plenty of attention to the five hecklers.
The
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, located three blocks from Market Square,
buried its next-day coverage within a critical, anti-Tea Party story
distributed by the Washington Post. The photo on the inside pages
of the Post-Gazette was from a Tea Party in Cincinnati. On its
editorial page, the Post-Gazette ran an insulting cartoon by the
predictable and pedestrian Rob Rogers. The cartoon showed three raw-looking,
hirsute men sitting around a table, sipping tea and bellyaching (get it? Tea
Party?) Meanwhile, the circulation of the Post-Gazette is falling
and the newspaper is laying off staff. Gee, I wonder why people don’t bother
to read the Post-Gazette?
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What Were the
Tea Parties About?
But it’s not
just the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that’s missing the boat. The
talking-head androids of Big Media also missed the point of the Tea Parties.
To the extent that there is any remotely accurate reportage going on, the
focus seems to be that the Tea Parties are well-off people bitching about
high taxes. Even the Gallup Poll organization took the bait, publishing a
recent report stating:
“A new Gallup
Poll finds 48% of Americans saying the amount of federal income taxes they
pay is ‘about right,’ with 46% saying ‘too high’ — one of the most positive
assessments Gallup has measured since 1956. Typically, a majority of
Americans say their taxes are too high, and relatively few say their taxes
are too low.”
But focusing
on the level of taxation is the wrong issue for Gallup to track. It struck
me that the Tea Party attendees in Pittsburgh were worried more about the
use of their tax dollars, and the explosion in federal deficit spending. The
Tea Party movement strikes me as more about the dangerously growing size of
the federal government. From what I could gather, the Tea Party attendees
opposed the unalterable trend of endless federal growth. And coupled with
this there is, of course, a deep fear about the eventual decline in value of
the dollar.
Like I said
earlier in the article, it’s about time for the U.S. to have a national
discussion about the nature of its money. What is a U.S. dollar any more?
Where does national wealth come from? We ought have that national chat while
we still have some money, and while we can still create wealth. Because a
lot of people appear to sense that something important is coming to an end.
And when
things fall apart, we’ll be in for a generation or two of very tough times.
So the political class, and its Big Media androids, are ignoring the Tea
Party movement at their peril.
Until we meet
again,
Byron King
As always it’s a
pleasure to have Byron tend the bar.
If you’d like
to hear from Byron more regularly — and get the benefit of his extensive
knowledge of the resource investment world —
just click here.
Here’s one
last report from Wisconsin…
My wife and I
attended the Tea Party held in Appleton, Wisconsin. A delightful event with
much the same feelings expressed by Don Stott.
There were
several thousand people there, which of course were reported as several
hundred by the local leftist paper. One of the speakers was the head of the
local chamber of commerce who at one point asked those in the crowd who were
or had been in small business to raise their hands. From where I stood over
half of those present raised their hands. These folks all realize what is in
store for them and it bodes bad for our economy. Gold and silver is the
answer, lead is the last resort.
I am shocked
— shocked! — to find that the leftist media have been painting all
the protesters as patsies of the right wing media. I’m also a little hurt
that they’ve been downplaying the turnout.
And that
about wraps up our coverage of the Tea Parties. But these demonstrations are
a sign o’ the times…and maybe just the tiniest taste of things to come…
Regards,
Gary Gibson
Managing Editor, Whiskey & Gunpowder