Today's Republican Party increasingly resembles an insane asylum where the inmates have taken over the asylum. It seems that just when you think things cannot possibly become more deranged, Donald Trump or Tea Cruz or some professional Christian spouts unbelievable batshitery. Such insanity is not a new phenomenon in some ways as a piece in Salon explains, but seemingly never before has a major political party been so controlled by rabid dog extremists. Here are some article excerpts:
Indigenous and deeply rooted in American
history, the paranoid politics Hofstadter described began with a panic among
Federalists, echoed in New England’s pulpits in 1789, when preachers warned of
the Bavarian Illuminati plots to undermine the new republic.
In the 1820s and 1830s the nation
was seized with a fear of Masons, who were perceived to be a threat to
republican government because Masonry was a secret society with its own system
of loyalty and its own jurisdictions. Public hysteria about Masonic plots was
followed by an anti-Catholic movement focused on the Society of Jesus, better
known as Jesuits. “Anti-Catholicism has always been the pornography of the
Puritans,” Hofstadter wrote.
All of this is understandable in
a young nation defining itself and defending itself from external and internal
threats. It’s when Hofstadter takes what he describes as the long jump to the
contemporary right wing that the paranoid style of politics he describes speaks
to our current political moment.
It doesn’t take much more of a
leap to conclude that the same rancid syndrome, which
Hofstadter chronicled as occurring in episodic waves in American political
life, is upon us today, and the political cranks and zealots are Republican
voters animated by Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, and Marco Rubio.
Hofstadter quoted Harvard professor
Daniel Bell’s description of “the modern right wing” of the 1960s. If Bell’s
description weren’t so articulate, it could be passed off as briefing notes for
Sarah Palin’s speechwriter.
America has been largely taken away from them and their kind; though they are determined to try and repossess it and to prevent the final destructive act of subversion. The old American virtues have already been eaten away by cosmopolitans and intellectuals; capitalism has been gradually undermined . . . the old national security and independence have been destroyed by treasonous plots, having as their agents not merely outsiders and foreigners but major statesmen at the very centers of American power.
The “modern right wing” of 2016?
You can find it at a Trump rally in a Birmingham stadium or a Cruz caucus in
Iowa—even with Palin on the hustings in New Hampshire—promising to take back
our country from the intellectual elites who have dispossessed “real
Americans.”
Like today’s Republican
presidential candidates, Hofstadter’s paranoids opposed the income tax and
worked to repeal it. They were anti-intellectual and anti-cosmopolitan. They
had a deep-seated aversion to “the democracies of Western Europe.” They
harbored a “nativist desire to develop in North America a homogeneous
civilization.” They envisioned the enemy eroding our values and undermining our
national security: “A perfect model of malice, a kind of amoral superman,
sinister, ubiquitous, powerful, cruel, sensual, luxury loving.”
Throw in “African-American”—which was beyond
even the most febrile delusions of the hysterical conservatives of the 1960s—
and you’ve almost got Rev. Raphael Cruz’s description of the sybaritic,
foreign-born Muslim pretender to the American presidency.
If political rhetoric is any measure of the
moment, a short excerpt of the speech Sarah Palin delivered when she
endorsed Donald Trump on January 19 illustrates how far around the bend the
extremists in the modern Republican Party have gone.
Palin might be considered a marginal figure by
sensible moderates in both parties. But she’s revered on the far right, and in
the 200 words above she addresses most of the paranoid fears of today’s right:
a treasonous government selling out our sovereignty, coming after our guns,
eroding religious rights, inviting aliens into the country to take our jobs,
treating the Constitution with contempt. Palin managed to include in one
over-the top speech most of what animates today’s Republican right wing—a
constituency of “political cranks and zealots” who have moved far beyond the
extremists Hofstadter described in an essay written half a century ago.
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