Is
America ‘Yearning for Fascism’?
08 April 2010By Chris Hedges
The language of violence always presages violence.
I watched it in war after war from Latin America to
the Balkans. The impoverishment of a working class and
the snuffing out of hope and opportunity always
produce angry mobs ready to kill and be killed. A
bankrupt, liberal elite, which proves ineffectual
against the rich and the criminal, always gets swept
aside, in times of economic collapse, before thugs and
demagogues emerge to play to the passions of the
crowd. I have seen this drama. I know each act. I know
how it ends. I have heard it in other tongues in other
lands. I recognize the same stock characters, the
buffoons, charlatans and fools, the same confused
crowds and the same impotent and despised liberal
class that deserves the hatred it engenders.
“We are ruled not by two parties but one party,”
Cynthia McKinney, who ran for president on the Green
Party ticket, told me. “It is the party of money and
war. Our country has been hijacked. And we have to
take the country away from those who have hijacked it.
The only question now is whose revolution gets
funded.”
The Democrats and their liberal apologists are so
oblivious to the profound personal and economic
despair sweeping through this country that they think
offering unemployed people the right to keep their
unemployed children on their nonexistent health care
policies is a step forward. They think that passing a
jobs bill that will give tax credits to corporations
is a rational response to an unemployment rate that
is, in real terms, close to 20 percent. They think
that making ordinary Americans, one in eight of whom
depends on food stamps to eat, fork over trillions in
taxpayer dollars to pay for the crimes of Wall Street
and war is acceptable. They think that the refusal to
save the estimated 2.4 million people who will be
forced out of their homes by foreclosure this year is
justified by the bloodless language of fiscal
austerity. The message is clear. Laws do not apply to
the power elite. Our government does not work. And the
longer we stand by and do nothing, the longer we
refuse to embrace and recognize the legitimate rage of
the working class, the faster we will see our anemic
democracy die.
The unraveling of America mirrors the unraveling of
Yugoslavia. The Balkan war was not caused by ancient
ethnic hatreds. It was caused by the economic collapse
of Yugoslavia. The petty criminals and goons who took
power harnessed the anger and despair of the
unemployed and the desperate. They singled out
convenient scapegoats from ethnic Croats to Muslims to
Albanians to Gypsies. They set in motion movements
that unleashed a feeding frenzy leading to war and
self-immolation. There is little difference between
the ludicrous would-be poet Radovan Karadzic, who was
a figure of ridicule in Sarajevo before the war, and
the moronic Glenn Beck or Sarah Palin. There is little
difference between the Oath Keepers and the Serbian
militias. We can laugh at these people, but they are
not the fools. We are.
The longer we appeal to the Democrats, who are
servants of corporate interests, the more stupid and
ineffectual we become. Sixty-one percent of Americans
believe the country is in decline, according to a
recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, and they are
right. Only 25 percent of those polled said the
government can be trusted to protect the interests of
the American people. If we do not embrace this outrage
and distrust as our own it will be expressed through a
terrifying right-wing backlash.
“It is time for us to stop talking about right and
left,” McKinney told me. “The old political paradigm
that serves the interests of the people who put us in
this predicament will not be the paradigm that gets us
out of this. I am a child of the South. Janet
Napolitano tells me I need to be afraid of people who
are labeled white supremacists but I was raised around
white supremacists. I am not afraid of white
supremacists. I am concerned about my own government.
The Patriot Act did not come from the white
supremacists, it came from the White House and
Congress. Citizens United did not come from white
supremacists, it came from the Supreme Court. Our
problem is a problem of governance. I am willing to
reach across traditional barriers that have been
skillfully constructed by people who benefit from the
way the system is organized.”
We are bound to a party that has betrayed every
principle we claim to espouse, from universal health
care to an end to our permanent war economy, to a
demand for quality and affordable public education, to
a concern for the jobs of the working class. And the
hatred expressed within right-wing movements for the
college-educated elite, who created or at least did
nothing to halt the financial debacle, is not
misplaced. Our educated elite, wallowing in
self-righteousness, wasted its time in the boutique
activism of political correctness as tens of millions
of workers lost their jobs. The shouting of racist and
bigoted words at black and gay members of Congress,
the spitting on a black member of the House, the
tossing of bricks through the windows of legislators’
offices, are part of the language of rebellion. It is
as much a revolt against the educated elite as it is
against the government. The blame lies with us. We
created the monster.
When someone like Palin posts a map with cross hairs
on the districts of Democrats, when she says “Don’t
Retreat, Instead—RELOAD!” there are desperate people
cleaning their weapons who listen. When Christian
fascists stand in the pulpits of megachurches and
denounce Barack Obama as the Antichrist, there are
messianic believers who listen. When a Republican
lawmaker shouts “baby killer” at Michigan Democrat
Bart Stupak, there are violent extremists who see the
mission of saving the unborn as a sacred duty. They
have little left to lose. We made sure of that. And
the violence they inflict is an expression of the
violence they endure.
These movements are not yet full-blown fascist
movements. They do not openly call for the
extermination of ethnic or religious groups. They do
not openly advocate violence. But, as I was told by
Fritz Stern, a scholar of fascism who has written
about the origins of Nazism, “In Germany there was a
yearning for fascism before fascism was invented.” It
is the yearning that we now see, and it is dangerous.
If we do not immediately reincorporate the unemployed
and the poor back into the economy, giving them jobs
and relief from crippling debt, then the nascent
racism and violence that are leaping up around the
edges of American society will become a full-blown
conflagration.
Left unchecked, the hatred for radical Islam will
transform itself into a hatred for Muslims. The hatred
for undocumented workers will become a hatred for
Mexicans and Central Americans. The hatred for those
not defined by this largely white movement as American
patriots will become a hatred for African-Americans.
The hatred for liberals will morph into a hatred for
all democratic institutions, from universities to
government agencies to the press. Our continued
impotence and cowardice, our refusal to articulate
this anger and stand up in open defiance to the
Democrats and the Republicans, will see us swept aside
for an age of terror and blood.
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