Commentary By Ron Beasley
Populist movements like the Tea Party are dangerous in times of economic instability. We have to look no farther than Mussolini's Italy or Hitler's Germany to see how oligarchs can encourage frightened masses to revolt. In the case of the Tea Party those oligarchs are the Koch brothers and their front man Dick Armey. Historical Sociologist Michael Mann defines Fascism:
Fascism is the pursuit of a transcendent and cleansing nation-statism through paramilitarism.
- Transcendence: Belief that the state can transcend social conflict and blend all social classes into a harmonious whole. Belief in the power of political ideology to transcend human nature and produce a better world.
- Cleansing (political): Silencing the political opposition so that the transcendent aims of fascism can be realized. Restricting the freedom of speech, outlawing opposition parties, imprisoning political opponents (or worse) and indoctrinating youth in fascist principles.
- Statism: Promoting a high degree of state intervention in personal, social, or economic matters. Belief that the state can accomplish anything.
- Nationalism: Belief in the inherent unity of a population with distinct linguistic, physical, or cultural characteristics and its identification with a nation-state. Belief that the nation possesses special attributes that make it superior to other nations in some or all ways.
- Paramilitarism: "Grass roots", populist squadrism aimed at coercing opponents and obtaining popular approbation by acting as a supplementary police force.
Does this sound familiar?
The "tea party" movement is, in my view, a mirror image of
the Republican Party generally. There are some diverse, heterodox
factions which compose a small, inconsequential minority of it (various
libertarian, independent, and Reagan Democrat types), but it is
dominated -- in terms of leadership, ideology, and the vast majority of
adherents -- by the same set of beliefs which have long shaped the
American Right: Reagan-era domestic policies, blinding American
exceptionalism and nativism, fetishizing American wars, total disregard
for civil liberties, social and religious conservatism, hatred of the
minority-Enemy du Jour (currently: Muslims), allegiance to
self-interested demagogic leaders, hidden exploitation by corporatist
masters, and divisive cultural tribalism.
Glenn's written a widely circulated piece this morning in which he rightly points out, as I and others have as well, that the Tea Party is not something new, it is just the far right of the Republican Party. It's an amalgam of all the fringes, from John Birchers, to neo-confederates to the Christian Theocrats, all coming together with the help of some very wealthy benefactors. After decades of moving the party ever rightward, they are now finally reaching the fringe.
One thing to remember, however --- while these people have been around forever, this is the first time they have become a truly powerful institutional force in the Republican party. They have moved smartly into the vacuum left by the Cheney failure and they have done it in a time of crisis, which gives them opportunities they wouldn't normally have. They are more dangerous today than usual and if they win these seats this fall they cause some very serious trouble.
While Digby recognizes the threat I'm not sure she sees the historical threat:
Inspired by the military prowess and black uniforms of the Arditi, Italy's elite storm troops of World War I, the Fascist Blackshirts were organized by Benito Mussolini as the military tool of his political movement.[1] The founders of the paramilitary groups were nationalist intellectuals, former army officers, young landowners opposing peasants' and country labourers' unions. Their methods became harsher as Mussolini's power grew, and they used violence and intimidation against Mussolini's opponents.
Although the tea party members haven't taken up arms yet the majority of them are well armed and they have talked about it. The Republican elite created this monster and they are having regrets. While the elite are more than happy to use the peasant class they don't appreciate sharing power with them. Glenn gets it right:
Much of the patronizing derision and scorn heaped on people like
Christine O�Donnell have very little to do with their substantive views �
since when did right-wing extremism place one beyond the pale? � and
much more to do with the fact they�re so . . . unruly and unwashed. To
members of the establishment and the ruling class (like Rove), these are
the kinds of people � who struggle with tuition bills and have their
homes foreclosed � who belong in Walmarts, community colleges,
low-paying jobs, and voting booths on command, not in the august United
States Senate.
I can't help but think the elites of the Republican Party are hoping for tea party defeats in November so they can take their Republican party back from the "unwashed." Ironically it may be those same elites who save us from the new blackshirts. It's only fair since they created them in the first place.
"Although the tea party members haven't taken up arms yet..."
ReplyDeleteThat's a pretty big "yet." I think a lot of these people are borderline crazy and all of them are just plain wrong, but organized violence is something I really don't expect from them -- they're neo-Confederate credentials are substantial, but physical courage is another matter altogether.
karl
ReplyDeleteI hope you are right but fear that you are not.
I think you overestimate the togetherness of Tea Party types. The Tea Party is an inherently negative organization; it does not stand for but against. This reflects the conservative movement more generally - a fractious coalition of folks who would happily cut each others throats (ever put a Randist in a room with a pastor?) and find themselves united only because they fear the liberal menace more than they hate each other.
ReplyDeleteI think it would be more difficult than you imagine to channel such discordant groups into a viable and sustainable fascist movement. Moreover, as most conservatives (certainly the libertarian branch of the movement) are uncomfortable with 'statist' anything, fascism proper would be a difficult proposition. They turn a blind eye to state intervention in social affairs, but protest violently to small movements on the economic scene.
Better for the oligarchs to keep the masses uniformed, chasing dreams and fighting ghosts. Why exchange oligarchy for fascism? It would only disturb the stable (and lucrative) hierarchy that already exists. There is no reason to build the world of Orwell. Americans already live in Fahrenheit 451.
At this point the tea party zombies are a bigger threat to the republican establishment than anyone else. They are all political amateurs that are defeating party loyalists and offering a windfall to the dems in November. And in addition should they get elected (long shot) they will no doubt be profoundly unwelcome in aristocratic DC village. More than anything, this right wing populist thing is conformation that the republican party is out of (ideological) gas and the lunatics have taken over their (throne) asylum.
ReplyDeleteGood post and comments.
ReplyDeleteThere is too much to talk about in a comments thread, but I commend readers further to the work of Naomi Wolf. Her book a few years ago, "Fascist America, in 10 easy steps," was prescient to events now current.
I want so much for us to be wrong, but having personally seen hateful, thoughtless ugliness in my life, I have no illusions about the boundaries of human behavior. Arendt's banality of evil may soon apply.
Seems very confusing to me. However from the outside it looks like a clash between elites and the elites include both the GOPers and Democrats. Neither parties' elites have any answers or a narrative to explain the mess both have engineered over time for the US. Though Bill Clinton's people get pissed if it's mentioned, clearly and visibly, starting with him there really has been little difference in whether an admin is run by either party. Both parties grovel for corporate bucks in the same way and some voters seem to have finally recognized that they might already be living back in the 'good old days' when only [white] males with property had the vote. The property restriction has now just morphed into being big corporate [persons] cash. Nice situation and sort of ripe for agitation, and wasn't it started by the elites themselves i.e. the SCOTUS.
ReplyDeleteI doubt the US will slip into a fascist model like Italy or Germany in the 30's as I suspect some so-called progressives or self styled 'liberals' would help tame the clearly mad elements in current movements and maybe produce a modified Italian model sans the militarism. [I'm thinking that some people maybe lots of people would be willing to give up their personal freedoms in return for the promise of peace, prosperity or security: http://bit.ly/freedomforsale ]. Maybe Franco's Spain of the 50's & 60's or Singapore under Lee Kuan Yew is something to shoot for.
I can't get over some of the vague similarities between the current tea-party movement and the Boston Tea Party for real. Wasn't the latter really just a dispute between one group of New England merchants and another. And weren't the 18th century tea party faux Mohawks hoodwinked into thinking they were going to pay a higher price for tea when it actually would have been lower just some merchants wouldn't get their usual cut of the profits. Reminds one a bit of the Kockopus involvement in the present uproar. The earlier uproar got out of hand because of elite over reaction it'll be interesting to see what happens this time.