Monday, July 04, 2011

Rush, bring the tea, but leave the tea party at home

(The following is my latest blog for the Huffington Post.)

For those of us who live in Joplin, Missouri, the arrival of President Obama in our tornado-ravaged community May 29 was a godsend.


Even most of those who are in total disagreement with the president’s policies (and in this corner of the state, the numbers are legion) received a moral and spiritual uplift from the words provided by the president, Gov. Jay Nixon, and Aaron Brown, minister of St. Paul’s Methodist Church, a casualty of the fierce fury that nature wreaked upon our community.

For some, the visitor who will arrive Monday, July 4, to appear at a celebration at Landreth Park is even bigger than the president.

At 8 p.m. on the 135th anniversary of our nation’s birth, Rush Limbaugh, as part of his “Two if by Tea” advertising promotion, will speak to city residents and the hundreds upon hundreds of volunteers, both from within the city and from across the nation who have banded to help Joplin recover.

I have no problem with Limbaugh arriving with a refrigerator truck filled with iced tea from his sponsor. I am grateful that people from all over the United States, and not just from within our city limits, asked Limbaugh to send his truck of tea to Joplin.

On the same Friday show in which he announced he would be in Joplin, Limbaugh said the following:

"I'm gonna tell you something else is gonna happen at Landreth Park in Joplin on Monday night: We're gonna grow the Republican Party. It's a Fourth of July celebration. We have the Harvard survey from yesterday: Fourth of July parades breed Republicans. Young kids at Fourth of July parties tend to end up being Republican. Fourth of July celebrations do not have any patriotic impact on Democrats. This is from a Harvard survey. We had it yesterday. Now, you Democrats, you can try to throw cold water all you want on what we're doing Monday night in Joplin, but I just want to remind you what's actually happening Monday night in Joplin, Missouri. Not only the continuing rebirth of a great community, and not only the joining of people coming together for a singular purpose (well, actually multipurpose) but we're also growing the conservative movement. Try that!"

During another segment of the program, Limbaugh repeated his earlier criticism that the president waited a week to come to Joplin while he was in Europe.

Limbaugh has a First Amendment right to criticize those whose opinions differ from his. No one questions that. But hopefully, he can see that a Fourth of July celebration at Landreth Park is not the time nor the place to do it.

The people who came to Joplin immediately after the tornado and in the days and weeks afterward were not just rock-ribbed Republicans, though undeniably they were here. Liberals by the thousands were also cleaning up debris, helping salvage treasured belongings, and offering moral support to people when they needed it the most.

When President Obama arrived seven days after the tornado, he offered support to people who were suffering and it did not matter that this community voted solidly against him three years ago. There was no hint of the divisiveness that has darkened so much of the day-to-day discourse in our nation.

Hopefully, when Rush Limbaugh makes his presence felt in our city July 4, it will be in the same spirit. A park in the middle of an area that has seen 158 people killed and thousands of homes and businesses wiped off the map does not need to be a site for growing the Republican Party, the Democratic Party, or any other political organization.

The only thing we need to be growing is together.

When you come to Joplin, Rush, please bring the tea and leave the tea party behind.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Rush - I'm sure you don't need Randy to tell you what to do. He doesn't know it, but he's not an elected official or for that matter anyone of great importance - just a common blogger, who I guess had crowned himself king of joplin. You and anyone else can come to Joplin anytime you want and bring anything you want with you.

Prairie Rose said...

Well, I love Rush, Hannity, etc., but have to agree with Randy. Rush has to say what he feels, but hopefully, the party building with take a back seat to encouragement and celebrating a survival for many and self-reliance, as well as a joining together, volunteerism and compassion shown by thousands, and indicative of what it means to live in the United States. Happy Independence Day.

Anonymous said...

Anon 11:14

If he's that irrelevant, why are you here?

Anonymous said...

The level of hypocrisy in this entire mess AND the level of irony is amazing to me.

I'd left their tparty asses to their own devices personally and Rush could have them a fundraiser or whatever the hell he wanted. He could bring in the Hannity's and the rest of those ding a lings and raise tons of money (AFTER the 'entertainers' and the 'host's' got paid of course). That's what they should have gotten, ah, but alas that nasty big government doesn't see it that way.

They should have reaped what they sowed.

There are far too many Republicans down there for this NOT to turn into a money making Whine-Fest for some. Watch and see. And then, in true Republican style they'll blame Obama for busting them and say it's political. It's coming, just a matter of time. You cannot have that many Republicans in one place and NOT have them exploiting someone or something for money.

Anonymous said...

No doubt Rush Limberbaugh left town knowing that everyone there was saved, baptised and converted into the cult of the tea party. He knows he has done a good job. FEMA according to him should have been outlawed years ago, then where would all the help and money come from?

I'm sure it would just fall out of the sky and rain down on Joplin. Vote Republican next time and when the next disaster comes, sit down by the curb and wait for FEMA ....and wait and wait and wait.

Anonymous said...

Here's the thing about waiting for FEMA:

We didn't. We got up, brushed ourselves off and started making a difference in our community LONG before FEMA got into the act.

THAT, by the way, is what much of the country saw in us immediately after the devastation hit the news: that we weren't waiting around for a government handout like some other communities had.

MOST of the repairs are being paid for by insurance.

Anonymous said...

Randy I'm surprised you don't get punched in the nose everyday. You talk about Hawley asking for money,but I guess it's different when you do it.