Monday, October 09, 2006

Quote of the day: It turns out Richard Hofstadter had the people who run our gov't pegged 40 years ago--when their kind were still fringe loons

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"Does Mr. Hastert really believe that George Soros and his operatives, conspiring with the evil news media, are responsible for the Foley scandal? Yes, he probably does."

"The immediate response by nearly everyone in the Republican establishment--wild claims, without a shred of evidence behind them, that the whole thing is a Democratic conspiracy--may sound crazy. But that response is completely in character for a movement that from the beginning has been dominated by the paranoid style. And here's the scary part: that movement runs our government."


--Paul Krugman, from his NYT column today, "The Paranoid Style"


Today's QOTD is a no-brainer. It's really the whole of the Krugman column. Treat the above as just a tease.

October 9, 2006
Op-Ed Columnist

The Paranoid Style
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Last week Dennis Hastert, the speaker of the House, explained the real cause of the Foley scandal. "The people who want to see this thing blow up," he said, "are ABC News and a lot of Democratic operatives, people funded by George Soros [pictured at right]."

Most news reports, to the extent they mentioned Mr. Hastert's claim at all, seemed to treat it as a momentary aberration. But it wasn't his first outburst along these lines. Back in 2004, Mr. Hastert said: "You know, I don't know where George Soros gets his money. I don't know where--if it comes overseas or from drug groups or where it comes from."

Does Mr. Hastert really believe that George Soros and his operatives, conspiring with the evil news media, are responsible for the Foley scandal? Yes, he probably does. For one thing, demonization of Mr. Soros is widespread in right-wing circles. One can only imagine what people like Mr. Hastert or Tony Blankley, the editorial page editor of The Washington Times, who once described Mr. Soros as "a Jew who figured out a way to survive the Holocaust," say behind closed doors.

More generally, Mr. Hastert is a leading figure in a political movement that exemplifies what the historian Richard Hofstadter famously called "the paranoid style in American politics."

Hofstadter's essay introducing the term was inspired by his observations of the radical right-wingers who seized control of the Republican Party in 1964. Today, the movement that nominated Barry Goldwater controls both Congress and the White House.

As a result, political paranoia--the "sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy" Hofstadter described--has gone mainstream. To read Hofstadter's essay today is to be struck by the extent to which he seems to be describing the state of mind not of a lunatic fringe, but of key figures in our political and media establishment.

The "paranoid spokesman," wrote Hofstadter, sees things "in apocalyptic terms. ... He is always manning the barricades of civilization." Sure enough, Dick Cheney says that "the war on terror is a battle for the future of civilization."

According to Hofstadter, for the paranoids, "what is at stake is always a conflict between absolute good and absolute evil," and because "the enemy is thought of as being totally evil and totally unappeasable, he must be totally eliminated." Three days after 9/11, President Bush promised to "rid the world of evil."

The paranoid "demand for total triumph leads to the formulation of hopelessly unrealistic goals"--instead of focusing on Al Qaeda, we'll try to remake the Middle East and eliminate a vast "axis of evil"--"and since these goals are not even remotely attainable, failure constantly heightens the paranoid's sense of frustration." Iraq, anyone?

The current right-wing explanation for what went wrong in Iraq closely echoes Joseph McCarthy's explanation for the Communist victory in China, which he said was "the product of a great conspiracy" at home. According to the right, things didn't go wrong because the invasion was a mistake, or because Donald Rumsfeld didn't send enough troops, or because the occupation was riddled with cronyism and corruption. No, it's all because the good guys were stabbed in the back. Democrats, who undermined morale with their negative talk, and the liberal media, which refused to report the good news from Iraq, are responsible for the quagmire.

You might think it would be harder to claim that traitors are aiding our foreign enemies today than it was during the McCarthy era, when domestic liberals and Communist regimes could be portrayed as part of a vast left-wing conspiracy. What does the domestic enemy, which Bill O'Reilly identifies as the "secular-progressive movement," have to do with the religious fanatics who attacked America five years ago?

But that's easy: according to Mr. O'Reilly, "Osama bin Laden and his cohorts have got to be cheering on the S-P movement," because "both outfits believe that the United States of America is fundamentally a bad place."

Which brings us back to the Foley affair. The immediate response by nearly everyone in the Republican establishment--wild claims, without a shred of evidence behind them, that the whole thing is a Democratic conspiracy--may sound crazy. But that response is completely in character for a movement that from the beginning has been dominated by the paranoid style. And here's the scary part: that movement runs our government.

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Note: Richard Hofstadter's The Paranoid Style in American Politics and Other Essays is available in paperback for (gasp) $23.95 from Amazon.com. (There are used copies too, but I'd expect them to be snapped up pretty quick in the wake of PK's column.)

3 Comments:

At 1:37 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Whenever I hear one of these right wing rants about George Soros I laugh. I wonder how they would feel if a light were shone on the two main right wing financial backers. Phyllis Schafly and Richard Mellon-Scaife. These two have done more to harm our democracy than any one else in our history. These two are the classic paranoid types as well. Over the years these two have spent many millions of their own money setting up think tanks and funding action groups and the like. Every Right Wing organization we know of today owes their very existence in one way or another to these two. The reason for their efforts was their belief that the country was going to hell because of all those liberal pinkos in the media and government who were intent on turning the country into some kind of socialist dictatorship. Because of their paranoia our institutions have been under assault. That assault has led us to the precipice we now face. Warrantless wiretapping, sneak and peak searches, Torture, Habeas corpus... Control of the country has always been their ultimate goal and not neccessarily through democratic means. You know, Big Brother.

So I'm calling on all journalist who have had enough. Do you want these extremist right winger that you have to deal with every day to go away? Do you want to help bring some sanity back to American politics? Then get out your flashlights. It's time to start shinning a light into the dark places. It's time to do the kind of in-depth investigative reporting that Schafly and Scaife deserve. Granted the movement is much larger than those two now but had it not been for them our political discourse and perhaps the very course this nation is on would be much different now.

Can any of you argue against that? Of course you can't.

 
At 3:19 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Read Hofstatder's essay online:
http://karws.gso.uri.edu/JFK/conspiracy_theory/the_paranoid_men tality/The_paranoid_style.html.

 
At 1:03 PM, Blogger KenInNY said...

Thanks for the tip, anon.

Ken

 

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