Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

Princess Kate Looks So Festive in Her Favorite Holiday Cardigan At Surprise Christmas Party – Harper’s BAZAAR

When several London children and their mentors planned a small Christmas tea party, its safe to say they did not have a visit from Princess Kate on their bingo card. But, alas, when it comes to events that celebrate the achievements of young people and the adults who inspire them, there is no better person than the princess to make a surprise appearance.

Last month in London, the Princess of Wales snuck through the side door of a Christmas celebration to greet three adults working in childcarea music therapist named Ray, a retired mental health nurse named Brenda, and a soccer coach named Russelland the kids theyve positively impacted.

Princess Kate took to

The princess beams as she holds Brendas hand and listens to the children and adults discuss how theyve influenced each others lives. The princess later gave the children gifts.

Three inspiring people making a real difference to the lives of young people, Princess Kate captioned the post. It was so lovely to join Rico, Arwyen, Jenson, Poppy, Henry and George for a special surprise celebration for the people in their lives who have helped shape them. Russell, Ray and Brenda, it was a pleasure to meet you!

The tea party will appear in Royal Carols: Together At Christmas, the broadcast of her third carol service at Westminster Abbey, which took place on December 8. The Princess of Wales dedicated the carol service to all those who support and uplift children. She took time to recognize her inspiring guests in attendance, including midwives, health visitors, nursery teachers, and baby bank volunteers, and their dedication to the cause.

The service and surprise visit are linked to Princess Kates Shaping Us campaign, which aims to raise awareness about the developmental and social significance of a childs early years.

Only by valuing and supporting the vital role of the adults in a child's world can we hope to make a difference, she said in her special introduction of the broadcast.

Royal Carols: Together at Christmas will air today at 7:45pm on ITV1 and ITVX in the U.K.

Christina Perrier is a NYC-based freelance writer who covers culture and lifestyle topics. When shes not writing, shes probably watching TikToks of dogs, experimenting in the kitchen, or curling up with a book.

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Princess Kate Looks So Festive in Her Favorite Holiday Cardigan At Surprise Christmas Party - Harper's BAZAAR

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A look back at the Boston Tea Party – The Daily Iberian

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A look back at the Boston Tea Party - The Daily Iberian

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What to keep and what to toss in how we view the Boston Tea Party – The Boston Globe

How I wish history could be taught like this in schools, where it is desperately needed. Many immigrants know more about our governmental processes than those born here. American education must include civics classes emphasizing that we are a nation of laws and explaining how that works. This event awakened my sense of responsibility at holding government accountable as it becomes more ideologically tone-deaf.

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The crowd at Atlantic Wharf cried, Huzzah! as costumed reenactors decried injustices. I can almost hear this cry becoming the new Bostonian shout at sporting events.

Marilee Meyer

Cambridge

As a former college professor who had a yearly lecture called, Was the American Revolution inevitable? Could we have been Canada? I give two thumbs up to Jeff Jacobys take on the Boston Tea Party (The Boston Tea Party was a crime, Opinion, Dec. 14). As Jacoby rightly pointed out, many people of the time were doubtful of the whole endeavor. He also mentions the way he was taught about the event as a heroic blow for freedom, inspired by a righteous opposition.

What happened in between the events of Dec. 16, 1773, and Jacobys time in the classroom was the 19th century. Only decades after what participants called the Destruction of the Tea, or the Destruction of the Accursed Tea, did the nighttime raid become known as the Boston Tea Party. By the 1830s, events and people around the patriot cause and the subsequent Revolution were regarded with reverence and even as guided by divine providence. That included reducing an act of extralegal violence to something as domestic, as unthreatening, as a tea party.

In our current exhibit, The Dye is cast: Interests and Ideals that Motivated the Boston Tea Party, we aim to restore the complexity that Jacoby points out by focusing on six individuals with various loyalties and perspectives. This event meant something different for everyone. Other historical institutions around town, notably Revolutionary Spaces, are taking on these very questions with programs, exhibits, and interactive events.

As the Commonwealth gets ready to commemorate the 250th anniversary of events leading up to the Revolution, continuing through 2026, we need to remember that we 21st-century Americans are inheritors of those 19th-century traditions. Lets embrace complexity and deepen our understanding of the past and the many lessons of history.

Catherine Allgor

President

Massachusetts Historical Society

Boston

In a recent column, Jeff Jacoby condemns the massive and costly act of vandalism that was carried out in the Boston Tea Party, and he extends that concern over destruction of property to modern protest movements.

What was terrible about the Boston Tea Party, Jacoby says, was its financial impact. The dumped tea cost nearly $2 million in todays money. Poor East India Company. Later he writes that destroying other peoples property to advance a political cause is wrong whether the cause is racial equity, climate change, opposing a war, overturning an election, or denouncing Wall Street. It is wrong in 2023 and it was wrong in 1773.

Is it, though?

The Boston Tea Party wasnt so much about tea as it was about the fact that those affected by British laws had no say. Hence the slogan no taxation without representation. Similarly, many citizens today dont feel they have a say in government. Our laws are written by lobbyists; presidents, members of Congress, and justices are bought by billionaires. Our collective voice is subverted. When traditional routes for change are useless and the government is deaf to peoples demands, why not go after the coffers? Even if that means dumping some tea.

Ian Evans

Boston

We can all be thankful that the patriots who dumped er, damaged tea in Boston Harbor on Dec. 16, 1773, were not named the Sons of Asking Permission.

John Bluthardt

Boston

If Jeff Jacoby thinks the Boston Tea Party was a crime, wait until he finds out about Lexington and Concord.

Ken Johnson

Easton

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What to keep and what to toss in how we view the Boston Tea Party - The Boston Globe

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The 250th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party – Rochelle News Leader

Paul Petrick

By: Paul Petrick

Updated: 2 days ago / Posted Dec 22, 2023

We can sarcastically thank Benjamin Franklin for reminding us of the inevitability of death and taxes. But genuine gratitude is due another Founding Father whose objection to the latter established a new precedent in human historythe tax revolt. The historical record is unclear as to Samuel Adams precise role in the Boston Tea Party, but Adams was undoubtedly the foremost apologist for what took place in Beantown 250 years ago this month. The destruction of 342 chests of tea belonging to the British East India Company by an unknown number of the Sons of Liberty was described by Adams as an action of pure and upright principle.

The taxes that Adams protested were not onerous. Tea was taxed at the low rate of three cents per pound. Adams rebelled against the notion that Parliament had the power to tax the American colonists absent American participation in Parliament. Since then, we have traded the low, nonconsensual taxes of the 18th Century for the high, consensual taxes of the 21st. How did this happen?

It happened because American taxpayers are still inadequately represented. Sure, every taxpayer in the 50 states is entitled to one U.S. representative and two senators. But representation on Pennsylvania Avenue is not as important as representation on K Street. Among the capitals lobbying corps, only one man represents the general interest amidst the innumerable special interests. That man is Grover Norquist.

Like Adams, Norquist is a Bostonian who, despite undergraduate and graduate degrees from Harvard, lives modestly. He also shares with Adams a singular focus on making government accountable to taxpayers. Since 1985, Norquist has carried out that mission as the president of Americans for Tax Reform (ATR), an organization founded at President Ronald Reagans direction to build support for what became the Tax Reform Act of 1986.

That landmark legislation lowered marginal tax rates and consolidated tax brackets through the elimination of tax deductions and credits. It was a rare triumph of the general interest over the special interests.

Even as a young man, Norquist was wise to the ways of Washington. He knew that because special interests are concentrations of power and the general interest is diffuse, any 1986-like victory for taxpayers is in danger of being rolled back. To counter this inherent disadvantage, Norquist provided taxpayers with a method of self-defense called the Taxpayer Protection Pledge.

With elegant simplicity, the Taxpayer Protection Pledge, or simply The Pledge, is a straightforward, no loophole contract offered by ATR to every state and federal office seeker. It is an opportunity for politicians to make a written commitment to taxpayers that they will not support any net tax increases. Politicians are keen on avoiding responsibility for actions that draw the voters ire. The Pledge gives taxpayers an indispensable metric by which to hold their elected representatives accountable.

Adams spent much of his time organizing secret meetings and committees of correspondence to coordinate opposition to Parliament throughout the 13 colonies. For the last 30 years, Norquist has presided over an invitation-only meeting every Wednesday at ATR headquarters in Washington for activists strategizing to protect taxpayers from the relentless abuse of the spending interests. Analogs to the Wednesday Meeting now exist in almost every state and in many foreign countries.

Like the Wednesday Meeting, The Pledge has also gone international. Javier Milei, the newly-elected president of Argentina, enthusiastically signed The Pledge on national television.

At every congressional budget fight, Norquist is excoriated by the spending interests for having the temerity to advocate for American taxpayers. Despite his best efforts, taxpayers routinely lose out to the special interest spending project du jour. But the spirit of Samuel Adams is alive in Norquists efforts to make government accountable to taxpayers by giving them a voice among the cacophony of calls for more government spending. And wherever that struggle is replicated around the world, the American Revolution rolls on.

Paul F. Petrick is an attorney in Cleveland, Ohio.

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Robert Rupp: A tea party 250 years ago (Opinion) – Charleston Gazette-Mail

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