@ Daryl If it will help you orient yourself, I am fond of taking quizzes which place you on the spectrum of American politics based upon the positions you hold and the intensity to which you hold them. I almost always wind up just to the right of center, primarily due to the intensity factor.
Most of the positions which the tea party espouses are very popular in the mainstream right (outside of Washington DC). Where they have drifted away from the mainstream is in the intensity. The tea party is much more uncompromising and purist than the mainstream.
They have brought pluses and minuses to the system. On the plus side pre-tea party there was a big problem with Republicans from safe districts. Since it was a safe district, they would never lose to a Democrat and no Republican would challenge them in a primary due to party loyalty. Thus once elected the position is theirs for life. As a result, once elected it was "Voters? What voters? Who cares what the voters think?" and basically did whatever they wanted whether or not their voters approved. The tea party does not believe in party loyalty, only in loyalty to ideals and is more than willing to embark on a serious primary challenge. As a result, safe seat polticians are paying attention to the voters for the first time in decades. The voters like this. The DC establishment hate these guys with a passion. They can't say so openly without offending the voters they now have to care about, so they get their friends in the press that they've known for years to do the attacking for them.
On the minus side, while many of the tea party backed candidates are doing OK, others lacked the political skills to be successful. Letting some ad guy convince you that one of the first ads you should run to introduce yourself to voters as a senatorial candidate is "I am not a witch" shows a serious lack of political skill.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxJyPsmEask They also in their drive toward ideological purity, overdo it and damage candidates who are genuine conservatives but less pure than the ideologues would prefer.
The drone thing was a serious controversy. The Obama administration wouldn't agree to disavow the use of drones to kill US citizens on US soil in situations that did NOT involve an imminent threat. I guess they wanted to keep all options open? It created a major firestorm for a while but has been ignored in the news lately due to the Obamacare disaster, the continuing unemployment problems etc. I'm considerably less concerned than smr but I am a bit nervous wondering what they are up to on this issue now that it is off the front pages.
The tea party is a racist vs prove it on video and get $100,000 created a minor firestorm at the time but has since been ignored, in favor of the concerns about the economy. The economy really is dominating everything here and most other stories are quickly overwhelmed by more bad economic news.
The USA is a more religious society than Australia and a generation or two ago, it would not have been at all unusual to see someone choose to bring a Bible to school. A 100 years ago, the Bible may even have been the textbook that the teacher used to teach students to read. There has been a steady pressure from the left to de-Christianize American society since the 1960s. Religious Americans deeply resent the marginalization of their beliefs. While not the norm for most school districts, some of the more radical school districts actually punish grade schoolers for expression of religious thoughts, drawing a cross in art etc. Christmas is being replaced by the generic winter holiday season etc. This resentment is especially strong when the same people who want to deny Christians the right to express their beliefs, go out of their way to accommodate Ramadan, Muslim prayer rooms etc. Church attendance is often used by pollsters as a rough measure of intensity of belief (it's only a rough measure but they haven't been able to come up with anything more accurate). This nation to nation comparison is interesting.
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/rel_c ... attendanceThe facts are the majority of people feel like we are being led into economic, political, and diplomatic suicide. Our government is acting like a despot.
Fairly common belief in the US not just among the tea party. The latest realclearpolitics poll avg indicates that
63% of Americans believe that the country is on the WRONG track.
Of course that's a summary of the problems. Ask about what the solutions should be and there is huge disagreement!
All I know, I concerned for the future and feel like I am living in George Orwell's [url]1984.[url]
OK. That's not commonly held. Americans are unhappy with government overreach but that's more extreme than most.
We are cross roads to another civil war! Yes my last statement is a projection of what's going to happen in 10 to 20 years down the road. Hopefully, my statement about a civil war are an hyperbole because the consequences will be dire to the world if I am correct.
Definitely not commonly held belief.
I was of the opinion that some of the GFC architects had gone to prison, just not enough of them
Most of them were smart enough to use legal loopholes to insure that what they did was legal. It should have been illegal but it wasn't so they are getting off the hook. Basically bad laws were in place with way too many loopholes that these clever crooks could slip through. Congress ignored the problem until it was too late. Business as usual in DC.