Courtesy of Salon:
There’s a large rural component. Although “the spread of far-right groups over the last decade has not been limited to rural areas alone,” writes Osha Gray Davidson, “the social and economic unraveling of rural communities—especially in the midwest—has provided far-right groups with new audiences for their messages of hate. Some of these groups have enjoyed considerable success in their rural campaign.” For many farmers facing foreclosures, the Far Right promises to help them save their land have been appealing, offering farmers various schemes and legal maneuvers to help prevent foreclosures, blaming the farmers’ troubles on Jewish bankers and the one-world government. “As rural communities started to collapse,” Davidson writes, the Far Right “could be seen at farm auctions comforting families . . . confirming what rural people knew to be true: that their livelihoods, their families, their communities—their very lives—were falling apart.” In stark contrast to the government indifference encountered by rural Americans, a range of Far Right groups, most recently the militias, have seemingly provided support, community, and answers.
In that sense, the contemporary militias and other white supremacist groups are following in the footsteps of the Ku Klux Klan, the Posse Comitatus, and other Far Right patriot groups who recruited members in rural America throughout the 1980s. They tap into a long history of racial and ethnic paranoia in rural America, as well as an equally long tradition of collective local action and vigilante justice. There remains a widespread notion that “Jews, African-Americans, and other minority-group members ‘do not entirely belong,’” which may, in part, “be responsible for rural people’s easy acceptance of the far right’s agenda of hate,” writes Matthew Snipp. “The far right didn’t create bigotry in the Midwest; it didn’t need to,” Davidson concludes. “It merely had to tap into the existing undercurrent of prejudice once this had been inflamed by widespread economic failure and social discontent.”
And many have moved from their deindustrializing cities, foreclosed suburban tracts, and wasted farmlands to smaller rural areas because they seek the companionship of like-minded fellows, in relatively remote areas far from large numbers of nonwhites and Jews and where they can organize, train, and build protective fortresses. Many groups have established refuge in rural communities, where they can practice military tactics, stockpile food and weapons, hone their survivalist skills, and become self-sufficient in preparation for Armageddon, the final race war, or whatever cataclysm they envision. Think of it as the twenty-first-century version of postwar suburban “white flight”—but on steroids.
They’re certainly Christian, but not just any Christian—they’re evangelical Protestant, Pentacostalist, and members of radical sects that preach racial purity as the Word of Jesus. (Catholicism is certainly stocked with conservatives on social issues, but white supremacists tap into such a long and ignoble tradition of anti-Catholicism that they tend to have their own right-wing organizations, mostly fighting against women’s rights and gay rights.) Some belong to churches like the Christian Identity Church, which gained a foothold on the Far Right in the early 1980s. Christian Identity’s focus on racism and anti-Semitism provides the theological underpinnings to the shift from a more “traditional agrarian protest” to paramilitarism. It is from the Christian Identity movement that the Far Right gets its theological claims that Adam is the ancestor of the Caucasian race, whereas non-whites are pre-Adamic “mud people,” without souls, and Jews are the children of Satan. According to this doctrine, Jesus was not Jewish and not from the Middle East; actually, he was northern European, his Second Coming is close at hand, and followers can hasten the apocalypse. It is the birthright of Anglo-Saxons to establish God’s kingdom on earth; America’s and Britain’s “birthright is to be the wealthiest, most powerful nations on earth . . . able, by divine right, to dominate and colonize the world.”
This is a chilling article, and one that needs to be read by everyone.
The racism, militarism, and anger create a potent, and most likely combustible, combination that is simply waiting for the spark that will light their fuse.
Combine that with a Right Wing talk radio hosts, Fox News pundits, and other rabble rousers who are constantly throwing lit matches at this powder keg and it is really only a matter of time before somebody gets hurt.
The only question is how many, and will this aggression expand into an actual civil war? Or will calmer heads prevail?
These guys are bad enough, and we all know plenty of them, especially in Alaska. But when they are women, women like Sarah Palin. . .it's uglier and more frightening.
ReplyDeleteHere's what we got going for us in the face of this type of social "uprising". They are old, in bad health and have no money. And they are dumber than dirt. They might be manipulated. But they can't be led - at least not far. (This past year has pointed that out. ) Oh, they'll cause trouble. But they will be overrun by the upcoming generation(s) and the main stream conservatives who have had enough of the Tea Party destroying their profit margin. Re: Gov. Shutdown and refusal of ACA.
ReplyDeleteThings have certainly slipped far to the right. I remember my father and male neighbors talking darkly about “middlemen in the big city” taking an unfair share of profits from grain, milk and cattle, but they were so busy working their farms, they didn’t dwell on it. They didn’t talk about Jews and welfare, except for the skinny little blonde woman in town with three kids and a drunken husband. The kids were given small jobs and the church helped out.
DeleteWhat I’m seeing are the children (grandchildren?) of farmers who were pushed out by factory farms, and descendants of the merchant who used to sell combines. They have nothing to do all day but sit in a café bellyaching or hanging around a shooting range. And you don’t want to become their target, because they desperately need a target. So no one moves to that community except likeminded people.
Once in a while one will run amok, but they’re usually just talk and sneak attacks. Most weren’t in the military, or they’d be more open-minded. They tend to see vets as welfare recipients. I don’t find them a major concern, but they do need watching.
@Darlene, it would be interesting to know where you are from. I know a great many farmers and to tell ou the truth, some have lost their farms, but mostly due to bankrupcy after a terminal diagnosis. But ALL the farmers I know and have known, including my Grandparents, worked hard to get an education for their children and grandchildren.
DeleteI come from a small farm (160 acres) eight miles east of Thief River Falls, Minnesota. My parents sold grain, cream, eggs, and a few cattle now and then.
DeleteYes, the neighbors wanted bigger things for themselves and their children; one of the local boys even got into Harvard. But underlying it all was the Norwegian feeling that humble was better. My mother made an exception for preachers, but Dad didn’t.
Another point; many of the neighbors were deeply in debt to the banks. They were little more than managers on the family land. Dad had very little debt and was his own man. He liked that.
This is the yawling death nell of men who are part of a subgroup that used to have every advantage over women and minorities. They are bitter and frightened and wrongly think that everyone in the world has something they don't have---and they got it because of their gender or race and the damned government. They can't accept that anyone got things because of hard work and diligence. And they are mad as hell to watch their privilege shift. They are pissed. What the hell is happening to the world when you have to treat other people AND women like they are your equals.
ReplyDeleteI'll be happy to see the back of all of them. And I agree with the other poster that they won't follow too many people. It is not in their nature. They will pick up their penis extenders and
fondle bullets---but they will only end up shooting themselves in the foot and whinging about how it is the guvmint's fault.
Or Obama's.
You are correct, they are scared shitless that once white's are not a majority they will be treated like they have treated minorities.
DeleteBTW I have more than once heard these little people say horrid things right in front of me, but at least now I can call in their foreman or employer and get their ass canned off of any construction job MY company is running.
"Pre-Adamic mud people"?? I gotta say, never heard that one before. I thought most Christian racists believed dark skin was a curse from god AFTER Adam. Guess that wasn't enough bullshit justification for their blind hatred and they had to create a back story to Genesis (wouldn't be the first time a religion did that).
ReplyDeleteThese rural people don't belong in the United States either. They are the descendants of the lowest of the low, indentured servants, or slave owners and they inhabit land that belongs to Native people. None of them would have had the right to vote at this country's founding. If they are the children of European immigrant groups, then they wouldn't have been considered "white" until the early 20th century. And if they descended from pre-Civil War settlers, chances are they're more than 15% African, like that racist Craig Cobb in North Dakota. These are the people who stifle innovation, advancement, and healthy competition. Because they are white, and get all the media attention, we're forever being sidetracked by wedge issues, silliness, and Sarah Palin. This country focuses on guns, abortion, and hatred when we should be focusing on living wages, health care for all, strong public schools, entrepreneurship, higher education, and innovation.
ReplyDeleteHey! Wasn't today supposed to be the next RWNJ million-man demonstration in DC? Did they get their million? Fifty? Ten?
ReplyDeleteThere's a slave, enslaved by his own arrogance and incompetence, who wasn't emancipated by Lincoln - but he does live in a big house that Lincoln lived in !
ReplyDeleteYou forgot to add "uppity".......I know you wanted to......
DeleteAmerica's enemies,and make no mistake a America has many,probably find all this turmoil as fortuitous....I think they should all be charged with aiding and abetting the enemy......but that's just me.America's friends probably find this dismaying and are doing their own WTF........
ReplyDelete