Excuse me, but there's some prejudice on your face

 

Photo of a large-ish man with a banner reading "Patriotic Resisance" across his back

Photo credit:  Pargon, Flickr Creative Commons

There are plenty of negative things to be said about the Tea Party, particularly in the wake of Glenn Beck's "Restoring Honor" rally:  that the movement's appropriation of the words and images of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Frederick Douglass, and Abraham Lincoln represents the deployment of unreconstructed white privilege at its worst, that it is controlled by corporate and media elites with a vested interest in obstructing a Democratic agenda (note the Tea Party's inexplicable support of the Citizen's United decision, which seems completely out of step with their populist ethos though perhaps somewhat consistent with the libertarian ideal of unfettered markets). 

Yet I'm noting, with increasing annoyance, a problematic elementary school nastiness in criticism of the Tea Partiers and their ideologues.  Note the photograph above, which was posted on Flickr as part of a series called "Teabonics."  The argument of this particular photo and a few others like it seems to be that Tea Partiers are fat and stupid and therefore don't deserve to be taken seriously.  Such a reading seems to be confirmed by the first comment, which says, "Resisance is Conservative for Fat Ass."  And while, yes, I agree that there is a dismaying irony in signs like the following, given the draconian new anti-immigration laws in the Southwest, I find myself asking, "Really?  Is this the level to which we must descend?" (Forgive the hackneyed syntax.  I did not want to be accused of ending my sentence with a preposition).

 

Sign reading "ENGLISH IS OUR LANGUAGE NO EXCETIONS LEARN IT"

Photo credit:  Pargon, Flickr Creative Commons

Such tactics might not merit concern if they weren't being legitimized in corners of the blogosphere that I had previously found quite lucid and respectable.  I came across the first photo on the widely popular humor site Political Irony, which accompanies the image with a link to the site LOLGOP, a blog (which is designed to look like the Drudge Report, performing a sort of rhetoric before you even get to the content) that makes the claim that "there may have been only 87,000 people there, but they ate for 1,000,000."  LOL indeed.  As far as I can tell, that claim is as unsubstantiated as Michelle Bachmann's assertion that 1,000,000 attended the rally and appears to be simply a jab at the rotundness of certain attendees. 

Let's take stock of everything that's wrong with that, shall we?  First of all, this line of critique makes several aggressively sizest assumptions about the relationship between larger body size, intelligence, and human worth.  Furthermore, it eclipses the presence of the many progressives who happen to be fat (or poor spellers).  Then we have the Flickr album labelled "Teabonics," obviously a pun on the term "ebonics," which was used for a time to describe African American vernacular speech.  In other words, this pun posits a relationship between the quality of one's grammar or spelling, intelligence, and worth as a human being, a logic that has historically been used to exclude African Americans and other minorities from the public sphere.  Given the relationshisp between illiteracy and poverty, this is also a logic that erases anyone from a lower socio-economic background. 

In other words, this critique--"LOL, Tea Partiers are fat and uneducated"--enacts the same forms of prejudice found within the Tea Party itself by making overt arguments about what types of people and voices count in the political arena, i.e. no fatties, no poor and/or uneducated people, and by extension no one who fails to embody hegemonic ideals of middle class respectability.  And don't worry, there's sexism in there to.  Among the taglines on LOLGOP is the following:  "Sarah Palin is the porn industry's idea of what a businesswoman looks like."  Ok, sure, this could be a critique of the way in which Palin has been sexualized by the media, but I doubt it.  Devoid of context (and there is no link on that entry), this appears to be a dig at Palin's appearance.  How droll.  As Melissa McEwan of Shakeville so aptly states, the sexist attacks (most recently in the Vanity Fair piece) on Palin's appearance and performance of motherhood are infuriating precisely because they "compel feminist/womanist women to come to her defense, or, at minimum, point out the absurdity of the coverage. (Bauerlein also tweeted: "'Sarah, these aides say, seemed comforted by having the children around, and she seemed lonely when they were gone.' Truly a monster.") To have feminist writers mock the paucity of legitimate criticisms in a hit piece on Palin can't have been the point."

As the wise man said, before removing the splinter from your friend's eye, first attend to the log in your own.

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