The Tea party is in political science terms an anti-system party and so, to the chagrin of any Tea Partiers who understand this, they are similar in many ways to the world’s preeminent and most successful anti-system party of the last 100 years which was undoubtedly the Bolsheviks during the late tsarist era in Russia.
"The Tea Party is but one example of a common form of political insurgency—one that almost always loses in the long run. This kind of counter-establishment movement is common enough that comparative politics has a term for it: the “anti-system party”—a group that seeks to obstruct and delegitimize the entire political system in which the government functions. As explained by Giovanni Sartori, the Italian political scientist who coined the term in 1976, an anti-system is driven not by “an opposition on issues” but “an opposition of principle.”
“An anti-system party would not change—if it could—the government but the very system of government,” Sartori wrote. “[A]n anti-system opposition abides by a belief system that does not share the values of the political order within which it operates.”
It is unlike the Bolsheviks in that it is almost certain to fail, to dissolve and die. To succeed would almost certainly mean violent revolt because the TP is a minority (and an astroturfed one at that). This doesn't mean it won't have impact and some of its values will be distributed into the electorate and government, but ultimately it is most likely to expire fairly soon. The process has already begun which gives the TP only a very slight chance, probably not even 1% of revitalizing and taking over. To do so would really mean that it would destroy the U.S. government in any semblance of its current incarnation.
Read the rest of the article here or rant at me below, your choice: http://www.politico.com/magazine/sto...#ixzz2tfcEjUDl
Anybody want to take bets on it?