Skip Navigation

FALL 2009 , Featured Articles, Extreme Religious Right

A Method to their Madness

Sun, Sep 13, 2009

It's not difficult to ridicule the American right. Its peculiar blend of paranoia, mania, fantasy and misanthropy has been given full rein these past few months.

It's not difficult to ridicule the American right. Its peculiar blend of paranoia, mania, fantasy and misanthropy has been given full rein these past few months. Those who demanded in July to see Obama's birth certificate (which does exist) ended August invoking the British healthcare system's "death panels" (which do not). That most of their claims were verifiably false was of little consequence--to them at least. At one point they insisted that if scientist Stephen Hawking were British and subject to the National Health Service, he would be dead, even though Hawkingis British, alive and grateful to the NHS for his care.

So progressives could be forgiven for branding the right as stupid and crazy. But they would also be wrong. For if this is madness, there is great method in it. It is well organized and well funded. It has proven effective in mobilizing support, creating "controversy" where little exists and disrupting and disorienting whatever national conversation there is. If it is stupid, then what does it say about us, since time and again it manages to outmaneuver the left? Annoying, bizarre, incoherent, divisive, intolerant, small-minded, misinformed, ill informed and disinformed, certainly. But stupid and crazy--anything but. It takes considerable skill to convince people that something that is clearly good for them--like universal healthcare--is not. If the right is crazy, it is crazy like a Fox News presenter. Reducing a political strategy or belief to a psychological disorder to dismiss and ridicule its proponents may be comforting. But it also abandons any hope of defeating it or stymieing its influence beyond therapy.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE BY GARY YOUNGE AT "THE NATION"

Please login to post your comments.

More Featured Articles

Behind the Obama-HItler Slur

Max Blumenthal traces the origins of this bizarre comparison back to an early leader, Lyndon LaRouche.

Palin and America's Paranoid-Style Politics

Santa Cruz writer and filmmaker Geoffrey Dunn is currently at work on a book about Sarah Palin and American politics, to be published next year by Macmillan/St. Martin's.

Inside Sarah Palin's Church

An excellent look into the church and movement that helped to form Sarah Palin's ideals, goals and personality.