Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

If you’re shouting at tea then you need to calm down, says Anthony Clavane – Yorkshire Post

NewsOpinionColumnistsTea is not only a beverage. Its also a culture. A way of life.

Friday, 28th February 2020, 6:00 am

In Japan its about encouraging people to connect on a spiritual level. In China, a ceremony is a blend of Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism. In India, a tea party is a space to socialise, discuss and debate.

In modern-day Britain, it seems, it has become the latest way of telling the world youre mad as hell and just cant take it any more.

How has it come to this? Putting the kettle on for a brew has, traditionally, been a way of calming things down not expressing rage.

And yet, a week ago, Chancellor Rishi Sunak posted an innocuous photo of himself at a Treasury meeting next to a large bag of Yorkshire Tea and it sent Twitter into apoplexy.

One tweeter, called Sue, thundered: The last thing I want to do when Im making a tea is to think about what the Tory, who was blatantly advertising your tea, paid or otherwise, will be doing to continue to grow the rich/poor gap.

To which the company pointed out: Sue, youre shouting at tea.

Howling at this particular tea brand is not a new phenomenon.

A year-and-a-half ago a Brexiteer was outraged to learn that Yorkshire Tea was not grown in Gods Own County. ****ing disgraceful, he raged at Taylors on Twitter. Wont be buying from you again.

I think everyone should calm down.

Not since the 1773 Tea Act, which prompted the Boston Tea Party and sparked a revolution across the big pond, has there been such a kerfuffle.

And what about a sweetener? George Orwell took time off from fighting fascism and warning about the dangers of totalitarianism to denounce sugar enthusiasts.

How can you call yourself a true tea-lover if you destroy the flavour of your tea by putting sugar in it? he wrote. If you sweeten it, you are no longer tasting the tea, you are merely tasting the sugar.

Tea rage, however, has in 2020 reached a new level. And its no coincidence that the rage has been directed at our beloved county.

As always, jealousy is involved.

Two years ago, Rachel Conroy, curator at Temple Newsam, discovered a document which revealed that the mid-17th century inhabitants of the Tudor-Jacobean west Yorkshire house were among the very first people in Britain to pop the kettle on.

And in the last four decades, Yorkshire Tea has ignited a consumer revolution, metamorphosing from a regional blend into one of the countrys most successful exports, being sold as far afield as Australia and China.

The overall market for tea might be shrinking but our no-nonsense brew is bucking the trend, overtaking its main rival, PG Tips, as the nations favourite cuppa.

Who could not be impressed at the way the brand has subverted the norms of celebrity advertising by giving menial roles to the likes of Sir Michael Parkinson, the Brownlee brothers and the Kaiser Chiefs in their campaigns?

No wonder there has been a backlash on social media. No wonder the rival brands are seething at all this free publicity for Yorkshire Tea.

No wonder West Yorkshire Police had to issue the statement: Just to confirm, shouting at tea is not a crime.

And no wonder Rob Hastings, a columnist with the i-paper, felt obliged to sneer: It tastes like warmed-up sand. Its so thick

and gravelly. Its as if you have taken a cheese grater to a brick and added boiling water.

I bet Mr Hastings drinks a fruit tea. Or, worse still, a trendy frothy coffee.

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If you're shouting at tea then you need to calm down, says Anthony Clavane - Yorkshire Post

Bernie Sanders, democratic socialism, and the 2020 primary – Vox.com

On Saturday, Sen. Bernie Sanders won the Nevada caucuses, with ease. Before that, he won the New Hampshire primary, and before that, he won the most votes though not the most delegates in the Iowa caucuses. He is the favorite among Democrats in national polls and is heavily favored, at this point, to win the nomination. And so I have been hearing the same sentence, spoken in sharply different emotional registers, from thrilled young leftists, nervous moderate Democrats, gleeful Republicans: Democrats are about to nominate a socialist for president!

In 2015, I asked Sanders what being a socialist meant to him. Democratic socialist, he quickly corrected me. What it means is that one takes a hard look at countries around the world who have successful records in fighting and implementing programs for the middle class and working families.

When you do that, you automatically go to countries like Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, and other countries that have had labor governments or social democratic governments. And what you find is that in virtually all of those countries, health care is a right of all people and their systems are far more cost-effective than ours, college education is virtually free in all of those countries, people retire with better benefits, wages that people receive are often higher, distribution of wealth and income is much fairer, their public education systems are generally stronger than ours.

This is Sanderss standard answer, and its a good one: It makes his political program legible, concrete. He doesnt want to turn America into the Soviet Union, he wants to turn us into Denmark. But it still, I think, leaves out something important something key to understanding Sanderss philosophy and appeal.

In his book Why You Should Be a Socialist, Nathan Robinson makes a distinction between the socialist ethic, which he defines as anger at capitalism over its systematic destructiveness and injustice, and socialist economics, which rearranges the way goods are produced and distributed.

During a conversation on my podcast which is worth listening to in full if you want to understand how the rising generation of young leftists understands their movement Robinson expanded on that distinction.

Theres the great Eugene Debs quote, he said, which is, While there is a lower class, I am in it. While theres a criminal element, I am of it. And while there is a soul in prison, I am not free. And thats not a description of worker ownership, right? Thats a description of looking at the world and feeling solidarity with people who are at the bottom with the underclass, with the imprisoned.

Cutting away the socialist ethic from socialist economics is both frustrating and useful. Its frustrating because it defines socialism in vague, expansive terms a socialist, essentially, is someone who believes injustice is bad, equality is good, and solidarity is morally necessary. Lots of people who dont define themselves as socialists believe those things to be true. But its useful in that it correctly describes Sanderss ethic and appeal, and makes clear why hes been able to build a coalition among people with no interest in a centrally planned economy.

What sets Sanders apart from many liberal Democrats isnt his voting record or even his policy proposals. It is an animating belief that our political and economic system is unjust, and its successes do not remotely blunt its failures. In that same 2015 interview, I asked Sanders about the Democratic Party which he was, then as now, running to lead and his reply was unsparing:

The Democrats, to a much too great degree, are separated from working families. Are the Democrats 10 times, 100 times, better on all of the issues than the Republicans? They surely are, but I think it would be hard to imagine if you walked out of here or walked down the street or went a few miles away from here and you stopped somebody on the street and you said, Do you think that the Democratic Party is the party of the American working class? People would look at you and say, What are you talking about?

Sanderss longtime insistence that he is a democratic socialist, not just a Democrat, is a way of holding himself apart from the political system. That includes the party he has worked with for 30 years, much as Donald Trumps attacks on the GOP and his angry populism separated him from the Manhattanite billionaire class he actually represented.

The closest analogue to Sanderss democratic socialism is the 2010 rise of Tea Party Republicans. Critics argued that the Tea Party was little more than a rebranding effort to rescue conservative Republicans from responsibility for the failures of governance, organizing, and messaging that afflicted actual Republican officeholders.

They were right, but they were right in a way that missed the power of their own insight: There were a lot of conservative Republicans who didnt want to answer for the catastrophes of the Bush administration, who were disgusted by the compromises their supposed leaders had made. The Tea Party gave them a home. A few years later, Trump went even further and gave them a candidate.

Sanderss critics inside the Democratic Party argue that hes a liberal Democrat who has branded himself a socialist to maintain distance from the compromises, concessions, and coalitions the party has had to make to govern.

Their sense that Sanders is somehow playing unfairly is only compounded by the fact that Sanders, a reliable Democratic vote during his three decades in Congress, has supported many of those compromises, concessions, and coalitions, even as key members of his movement now treat them with contempt. These critics are right, but they are right in a way that misses the power of their own insight. There are lots of liberals tired of defending the compromises and concessions past Democrats have made.

In 2016, Molly Ball, now a national political correspondent for Time magazine, made a sharp observation on why Trump was beating the rest of the Republican field. All the other candidates say Americans are angry, and I understand, she wrote. Trump says, Im angry.

Sanders, too, is angry. And that sets him apart. Democrats who believe in, and in some cases built, the political and economic system balance a celebration of its successes think of former Vice President Joe Biden repeating the Obama administrations accomplishments during each and every debate with an ongoing recognition of its failures. They recognize that Americans are angry about those failures, and these Democrats understand that anger.

Sanders helped build parts of that political and economic system, too, but he doesnt celebrate its successes. He lives in fury over its failures. The more you learn about what life is actually like for people at the top and bottom, the more grotesque everything seems, Robinson writes, in what could serve as a simple, one-sentence summation of Sanderss worldview.

The difference between the socialist ethic and its absence isnt the recognition of that moral fact many agree with it abstractly but the emphasis of it, the refusal to look away from it. Anger is the core of the socialist ethic. And Sanders is angry.

The term socialist remains unpopular. A Quinnipiac poll found that only 28 percent of Americans have a favorable view of socialists, and that number falls even further if you concentrate on older Americans. When older Americans hear the word socialist, they think of socialist economics specifically, the planned, failed, economies of the 20th century, and the totalitarian nightmares they birthed not the socialist ethic. A February Gallup poll found a majority of Americans say they wouldnt vote for even a well-qualified socialist.

But Sanders continues to best Trump in head-to-head polls, and I suspect thats because when voters look at him, what they see is his socialist ethic, not Soviet-style socialist economics.

When they hear him, they hear someone who wants universal health care, not totalitarianism. And when they look at his record, they see someone who has compromised with the system, but not been compromised by the system. There is a natural psychological tendency, when working inside a system, to defend your accomplishments in a way that slowly turns you into a defender of the system. That hasnt happened to Sanders.

Perhaps, if he is elected president and has to disappoint his base by signing compromises into law and failing to fix some of the injustices he sees, it will. But thats in the future.

For now, Sanderss vulnerabilities lurk in the unpopular parts of his platform: tens of trillions in implied tax increases, abolishing 160 million private insurance plans by government fiat, decriminalizing unauthorized border crossing. His strength lies in his ability to be both inside and outside the political system at the same time, to understand how politics actually works and what passing legislation actually requires, without losing his primal sense of identification with those the system has failed.

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Bernie Sanders, democratic socialism, and the 2020 primary - Vox.com

Limbaugh and Kudlow blamed Obama for 2008 bear market. Now, theyre protecting Trump – AlterNet

Furious over the Dows 1,900 point plunge over the past three days, President Trump held a press conference Wednesday to try to calm markets. Echoing the comments of his National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow that we have contained Coronavirus and the American economy is holding up nicely, Trump declared the pandemic risk to Americans is very low because were very, very ready for this. Not content to rest there, the President predictably tried to lay blame for the steep slide on Wall Street on Democrats:

I think theyre very upset when they look at the Democrat candidates standing on the stage making fools out of themselves.

Of course, with that slander the President was only regurgitating the sound bites vomited up by right-wing media. On Monday, Fox Business host Charles Payne proclaimed, The Bernie factor is finally rearing its head in the stock market. Bond king Jeff Gundlach, too, attributed the stock markets natural reaction to global supply chain disruptions to Bernies rejection of a market based economy. Meanwhile, Rush Limbaugh and other of the usual suspects on the right are accusing Democrats and even the deep state of weaponizing the COVID19 outbreak to damage Donald Trump politically.

If you have the nauseating feeling that youve seen this GOP fraud before, thats because you did. As the United States financial system teetered on the brink of total collapse in the summer and fall of President George W. Bushs last year in office, the conservative commentariat instead blamed Democrats and Barack Obama.

The conservative propaganda machine began perpetuating the Obama bear market myth long before the 44th President even took the oath of office. The first installment of the Republicans previsionist history unsurprisingly came from CNBC host and former Reagan advisorLarry Kudlow. That right-wing water carrier, who in April 2008 compared the deepening recession to an enema (calling it an economic cleansing and crowing that recessions are therapeutic), blamed a one-day 242-point drop on the Democratic Convention:

Are the Denver Dems downing the stock market today? The Dow is off 230 points, starting right from the get-go. So-called market analysts are blaming financials and the credit crunch as they always do. But theres more.

Obama and Biden gave us plenty of class warfare in their Springfield, Ill., get together on Saturday. Tax the rich. Redistribute income and wealth. Go after all those corporate meanies. Trade protection

With the Denver Dems strutting their stuff, this could be a bumpy week for stocks. Did anyone say free-market capitalism is the best path to prosperity?

WithObamas election on November 4th, that warning shot turned into a barrage. Within 48 hours, the mullahs of right-wingistan didnt merely blame Obama for two days of market declines; they traveled back in time to lay the entire Bush recession at his feet.

Echoing CNBCs Kudlow,Dick Morrisclaimed the markets will continue to tanknot just because hes a radical, not just because hes a Democrat, but because hes going to raise the capital gains tax. While Fox NewsGretchen Carlsonannounced, theres a lot of feeling in the market not reacting very well to the election of Barack Obama,Fred Barnesproclaimed, There is great uncertainty out there about [Obamas] policies. And that Thursday, the always execrableRush Limbaughon November 6, 2008 laid it all at Obamas feet:

The Obama recession is in full swing, ladies and gentlemen. Stocks are dying, which is a precursor of things to come. This is an Obama recession. Might turn into a depression. He hasnt done anything yet but his ideas are killing the economy. His ideas are killing Wall Street

The markets down today because of the jobless numbers. Thats how the Drive-Bys see it. Uhhhhh, we have the largest market plunge after an election in history. Thank you, man-child Barack Obama.

As the Dow Jones continued its slide below 7,000 in March, 2009, the conservative catcalls become a chorus. Lou Dobbs, the self-proclaimed Mr. Independent then on CNN, announced on March 9, 2009, This is now the Obama bear market. That same day, theWall Street Journaldeclared, The dismaying message here is that President Obamas policies have become part of the economys problem. House Minority LeaderJohn Boehnerwas among the Republican leaders bemoaning the Obama economy and insisted that since Obamas inauguration six weeks earlier, Certainly the stock market hasnt acted very well. Later that month, the JournalsDaniel Henningerblasted Obamas radical presidency:

A Democratic Party that was always anti-Wall Street is becoming anti- Main Street.

Thedrumbeat hardly ended there. On March 8, 2009, Fox News hostChris Wallaceasked an uncomfortable John McCain, Can this now fairly be called the Obama bear market? That propaganda only echoed the Republican talking points regurgitated two days earlier byBloombergin article titled, Obama Bear Market Punishes Investors as Dow Slumps and theWall Street Journalrant, Obamas Radicalism is Killing the Dow. On March 6th,Sean Hannitywas nearly orgasmic as he trumpeted the declines on Wall Street:

And our headline this Friday night: Welcome to Day Number 46 of Obamas Bear Market. Now, thats what some news organizations are calling it tonight as the Dow Jones industrial average actually finished up about 30 points today at the end of a disastrous week.

According to Bloomberg News, the Dow has now dropped faster during the first six weeks of the Obama administration than any other administration in at least 90 years. But is that a surprise after weeks of talking down the economy?

But then a funny thing happened on the way to the Obama poor house: the stock market started its steady, upward swing. But for the conservative commentariat, of course, credit for that progress did not go to President Obama.

OnApril 18, 2009, Fox News displayed an on-screen caption proclaiming, Stocks Rally as Tea Party Rallies Take Nation by Storm. Host Brenda Buttner described the surge on Wall Street as a Tea Party rally. As Media Matters recounted:

Buttner later asked Bulls & Bears commentator Gary B. Smith: [P]art of the tea party was having voices heard. For so long, all we were hearing about was nationalizing banks and socialism and all that. Just having this out there, does that help Wall Street? Does that help the bulls? Smith responded: Absolutely, Brenda. You know, first of all, you heard for so many weeks and months that, you know, the whole country, you know, Obama won overwhelmingly, and it looked like, you know, we were going to go lockstep down this, you know, this socialist path. He continued: And then we started having these tea parties, which, according to Smith, shows that the normal, average American is just kind of sick of all the, you know, the tax-and-spend culture. He concluded: So, I think its all a good thing, and I think that its helped the rally.

But it wasNeil Cavutoof the Fox Business Channel who takes the cake for trying to claim that, well, black is white. Asthe Dow soared past 10,000 by October 2009, Cavuto asked:

What was once the Bush recession is now the Bush recovery?

And so it went. On his March 18, 2010 show,Larry Kudlow asked CNBCs Jim Cramerabout his belief that Obamacare will topple the stock market. Since then, the Dow has jumped another 27 percent. But with George W. Bush in the White House inApril 2007, Kudlow expressed a different view of what the Wall Streets performance said about presidential leadership on the economy. In April 2010 and again last month,Paul Krugmanhelpfully recalled Kudlows words:

I have long believed that stock markets are the best barometer of the health, wealth and security of a nation. And todays stock market message is an unmistakable vote of confidence for the president.

A month before the 2012 presidential election, the Republicans best and brightest gave the Obama Bear Market myth one more try. Crowing that Mitts strong performance in that years first debate heralded the Romney Rally. CNBC announced, U.S. stocks have been in rally mode today. Weve had some guests who feel it has a lot to do with Mitt Romneys strong debate showing last night. Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal gleefully asked:

Can we call this the Romney rally?

Considering stocks have been higher all day despite a dearth of catalysts, some market participants are pointing to Republican candidate Mitt Romneys perceived victory over President Obama in last nights

debate as a potential catalyst for the rally.

U.S. equities are getting a Romney push, says Andrew Brenner, global head of international fixed income at National Alliance. Seems like the marketplace believes Romney is better for stocks and the economy.

As it turned out, not so much. Barack Obama not only defeated Republican Mitt Romney, he presided over a robust economic expansion that he bequeathed to his successor. And the supposed Obama Bear Market? During Barack Obamas eight years in office, the Dow mushroomed from 7,949.09 to 19,804.72, a jump of 149 percent. Thats an achievement Larry Kudlows boss has yet to match.

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Limbaugh and Kudlow blamed Obama for 2008 bear market. Now, theyre protecting Trump - AlterNet

World’s biggest tea party in Pakistan! you all are invited – BOL News

Pakistanis are throwing worlds biggest tea party to celebrate 27 February a supersize day when Pakistan Air Force (PAF) shot down two jets and captured one Indian pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan under Operation Swift Retort.

Pakistani mix tea or chai is an integral part of Pakistani culture and is one of the most highly consumed beverages in the entire country which is consumed by nearly everyone, anytime and in any weather.

When it comes to happiness Pakistanis are happy nation as we already beat India in World HappinessReport we do not spare a chance to celebrate any event.

Pakistan in the 67thposition, and India in the 140thpositionnear the bottom of the list of the 156 countries ranked.

People are hosting tea parties and celebrating 27 February,

February 27, 2019, a memorable day for Pakistan asPakistan Air Force(PAF) shattered Indian dream of invincibility and military supremacy by shooting down two Indian air craft and above all capturing an IAF pilot.

Indian Air Forces sabre rattling after a suicide attack on February 14, 2019 in Pulwama district of occupied Jammu and Kashmir.

It resulted in dangerous escalation between two nuclear armed countries in South Asia in February last year.

on February 26 Indian fighter jets crossed the Line of Control and the countrys military claimed to have conducted a surgical strike in Balakot area in Pakistan.

PAF jets on the other day crossed the LoC in a tit-for-tat move to Indian territory.

Later, in a dogfight an Indian MiG-21 was shot down on the Pakistani side of the border.

After striking down the Indian fighter jet, Pakistan arrested the pilot, who ejected himself after he hit in the airspace of Pakistan in Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

That came as an unexpected setback for India exposing the countrys claims of supremacy in the military power.

Hours after shooting down the IAF jets, Pakistan military released a video statement of the captured Indian pilot.

Im wing commander Abhinandan and my service number is 27981, the arrested Indian pilot said in his video statement.

Im a flying pilot of the Indian air force (IAF), he continued in his statement.

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World's biggest tea party in Pakistan! you all are invited - BOL News

Disney’s Cinderella-Themed Tea Party Comes Complete With Glass Slipper Chocolates And A Carriage Cake Pop – Delish.com

Its no secret that Disney has the amazing ability to take something ordinary and make it magical. But every once in a while, they roll out something thats so ridiculously amazing, its breathtaking. Case in point: the spread at the Cinderella tea meal at Disneyland.

Instagrammers @OnlyCatsAndFood and @DininginDisney went to high tea at Disneyland and snapped some photos of food that are basically next-level art.

In one photo, you can see a three-tiered tray of goods that are definitely not your standard fare. Theres some kind of Mickey Mouse-eared puff pastry covered in icing, little tea cakes, and pretty blue chocolate-covered strawberries.

But then theres stuff that you kinda just want to smuggle out of the place and keep in your freezer forever, like the carriage cake pop and white chocolate glass slipper with some kind of yummy-looking pink filling.

The show stopper, according to @OnlyCatsAndFood, was a magical dress sandwich that looks nothing like a sandwich, but features a delicious-looking spread on top of a blue bread with a spiral on top. Oh, and there were pretty cocktails in the mix, too (one of which actually glittered), and they looked perfect.

Evidence:

There are actually a few different ways to approach high tea at Disneyland, according to the official website. A classic tea party and kids tea party features traditional scones, tea sandwiches, desserts, and teas, while a premium tea party features all of that along with sparkling wine, salad, and a farewell truffle. The classic tea party is $55 per adult (along with gratuity and tax) and the kids tea part is $35, but the premium tea party will set you back $70.

Interested in going to one of these during your upcoming Disney vacation? Book it now. Reservations are highly recommended, Disney says, and you can book your chance to dive into your own carriage cake pop up to 60 days in advance.

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Disney's Cinderella-Themed Tea Party Comes Complete With Glass Slipper Chocolates And A Carriage Cake Pop - Delish.com