The "Tyranny" of Christine O'Donnell, et al.
Michael Scherer of Time, like everyone interested in the 2010 election, tries to read the tea leaves at the tea party.
Scherer begins with Christine O'Donnell's misattributing a remark about tyranny to Thomas Jefferson, a "citation" the recent college grad apparently lifted from the Internets. Scherer only notes that O'Donnell erroneously cited Jefferson. According to the scholars who wrote The Jefferson Encyclopaedia,
We have not found any evidence that Thomas Jefferson said or wrote, `when governments fear the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny.'... [T]he most likely source of this quotation appears to be a series of debates on socialism published in 1914. -- The Jefferson Encyclopaedia, via Monticello.org
On the morning he bombed the Murrah Federal Building, Timothy McVeigh carried some shibboleths with him, including a bumper sticker that read, "When the government fears the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny." The citation was there attributed to Samuel Adams. Underneath, McVeigh had scrawled, "Maybe now, there will be liberty!" (See footnotes 24 & 54.)
We should be alarmed that a Republican candidate for U.S. Senate inaugurates her campaign with a quotation cited by Timothy McVeigh as a reason to kill Americans & do violence against the government. Two days ago, the Republicans gave O'Donnell short shrift. Yesterday, Texas Sen. John Cornyn, who holds the NRSC purse strings, heartily embraced O'Donnell & sent her a $42,000 check.
This, then, is what the Republican party has come to: an organization with a prominent member who allies herself with violent, anti-American terrorists. There is a difference, of course. Timothy McVeign shoveled real fertilizer to commit his murders; so far the fertilizer O'Donnell is spreading is strictly rhetorical.
Then there's this from another Republican candidate for Senate:
Our Founding Fathers, they put that Second Amendment in there for a good reason, and that was for the people to protect themselves against a tyrannical government. In fact, Thomas Jefferson said it’s good for a country to have a revolution every 20 years. I hope that’s not where we’re going, but you know, if this Congress keeps going the way it is, people are really looking toward those Second Amendment remedies. -- Sharron Angle, January 2010, via the Las Vegas Sun
And let us not forget these ladies' popular mentor Sarah Palin, the most recent Republican nominee for Vice President, whose husband Todd belonged for years to a secessionist organization called the Alaskan Independence Party. Sarah Palin attended the secessionist party's convention in 1994, when she was a Wasilla city councilwoman, & in 2006 when she was a candidate for governor. In 2007, as governor, she delivered a taped welcome message for the party's convention.
These are dangerous women leading a dangerous anti-American movement. Both O'Donnell & Angle have adopted the language of revolution, invoking -- correctly or incorrectly -- the imprimatur of the founding fathers & the Constitution. Palin has aligned herself with a revolutionary party. Together, these women have a formidable following. We ignore them, & their infiltration of the Republican party, at our peril. -- Constant Weader