To the tenther power

To the tenther power

by digby

The great Charles Pierce (whose Esquire blog is the best new blog of the last few years, as you might expect) points out that the wingnut fringe isn't fringe anymore:

In 1996, Kenneth Stern wrote a terrific book called A Force Upon The Plain, about the rise of the militia movement in America, particularly in the west. At one point in the book, Stern quotes a militia-connected Colorado state senator named Charlie Duke, who tells a gathering of "patriots" in Indianapolis, that members of Congress "don't seem to know what the Tenth Amendment is about." Duke, Stern reports, also was the driving force behind non-binding "Tenth Amendment Resolutions" in 15 states. These resolutions, writes Stern, "exalted states rights over the laws of the federal government." Recall now that, in 1994, this was the thinking of a guy who also believed that the federal government was implanting microchips into American infants.
Recall it because now, in 2012, every single one of the four remaining Republican candidates for president essentially have signed onto Charlie Duke's program. Oh, they've shined it up. It's not draped in camo any more, and the four of them are considerably less well-armed than the people who were pushing this 20 years ago, but they've all come around to the basic notion. What was once the province of people who were flirting with armed sedition is now a position that any Republican who wants to have a serious chance at national office has to take. Rick Perry based his entire campaign for presidency on this very point, and now he's heading up a group of Tenther SuperFriends on behalf of N. Leroy Gingrich.


It's amazing what persistence can do, isn't it?

And don't forget, the most famous tenther of them all.

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