Thursday, May 6, 2010

Curious George Attends a Tea Party

“Fascism is not a set of ordered beliefs… it is essentially an emotional protest, partly of those members of the middle class (such as small shopkeepers) who suffer from modern economic developments… It is irrational, in the sense that it cannot achieve what its supporters desire… If it could succeed, the results would be widespread misery…” (Bertrand Russell, “Scylla and Charybdis”).

“The decay of reason in politics” is due in part to the “classes and types of individuals to whom the world as it is offers no scope, but who see no hope in Socialism…” (Bertrand Russell, “The Ancestry of Fascism”).

My friend George, a white Italian-American male in his mid-fifties, has found a home with like-minded people who make up the tea-party movement. In April, the Tea-Party Express held a rally in Boston that drew approximately ten thousand spirited protestors whose most enthusiastic moments came when they applauded the crowd-pleasing punch-lines delivered by a gushing Sarah Palin.

Nonetheless, the beliefs which motivate George and thousands of others go far beyond the rather tepid notions of a Republican ex-governor.

For years, George has been looking to Fox News for information and ideas, as he still does. He is also a believer in chain-mails, that perverse subculture of political pornography, which he takes as good coin. These emails, written to incite fear, send a chilling message: the Democrats are creating in the U.S. the same social conditions that led to Nazi Germany. This email as George will quickly point out, was “written by a history professor, you know” – thus, it must be true.

So, the circumstances are dire. Totalitarianism is the likely future of the United States unless the “Demofascists” are stopped by stout-hearted patriots. Preposterous? Of course. Unbelievable? Yes. But google “Obama is Hitler,” and see for yourself.

Thus, George’s near-visceral hatred is directed primarily against the “unholy trinity” of Obama, Pelosi, and Reid. This contemptuous dismissal of politicians who are merely moderate Democrats is also summed up in the word “Obamunists.”

Now, George has found a political home in the ranks of the tea-partiers who affirm his social resentments and anger and who seem to offer a way out of “the mess this country is in.”

Like them, George detests and fears the “Three Bigs”: big government, big business, and big labor (never mind that the union movement today is at an all-time low). He hates illegal immigrants who he believes are the cause for the economic collapse in the housing market and who are largely responsible for the overall economic troubles in the United States. In some vague way George “knows” that Jews are guilty, too.

George would not appear to be a likely recruit to a movement that contains many of the essential elements of mid-twentieth century, European fascism. His years on a job and his experience in the class struggle might have led him into a different direction.

George recently retired from the United Parcel Service (UPS). After many years as a laborer, in his last decade with the company he occupied a position that might be described as lower level middle management. This promotion, or this circumstance – the phrase “caught in the middle” is accurate - left him emotionally twisted, tangled, and confused. He despised “the big bosses” at UPS, especially the managers, and he deeply resented the company rules that were (and are) mechanically applied without reason or compassion, much less common sense.

George had ideas which he believed could have improved efficiency at UPS and made more money for the company. He hoped to gain a hearing, get recognition, and maybe even earn a small bonus. Nothing like this ever happened. At UPS, the ideas flowed in only one direction: from the top to the bottom. For George, continued frustration led to lingering disgust and permanent resentment with the bosses and their system.

Not infrequently, adherence to company rules rendered George unproductive or even counter-productive, yet he lacked the authority to make even the most modest of changes that would have benefitted the company. Like most workers, George wanted to be of use. He offered ideas in a work environment in which ideas were forbidden. His requests and pleas were routinely ignored, until, finally, he shut up. It didn’t do him much good; George’s feelings were transparent, and before long he was labeled a “troublemaker.”

George daily endured multiple humiliations, in matters small to large, from a management that did not even derive satisfaction from the humiliation it inflicted on its workers: to enjoy the debasement of its workers, UPS would first have had to notice them as people. Instead, workers were “resources,” not unlike loading docks or a fleet of trucks.

Yet, George would not look for help to fellow workers, the union, or the labor movement. If he despised the arrogance and stupidity of the bosses, he especially feared the power of the union. After all, George was a junior member -- but still a member -- of management.

During the UPS strike in 1998, the company assigned George to drive delivery trucks through picket lines as part of a failed effort to defeat the Teamsters union. He did as he was told. For his troubles, George was rewarded by rocks and bricks hurled at the windshield of his truck. Caught, literally, in the middle of the class struggle, George blamed the workers for violence and excused the policies of the company which provoked it. Siding with established authority was the easiest thing to do.

Today, the tea-party movement is becoming that “authority” with which it is easy to side. Its members largely consist of people who look like George, who live in neighborhoods like his and who share his experiences -- not the “immigrants and scum,” who unfairly receive the benefits of the Obama government which is leading America to ruin.

Politics never occurs in a vacuum. With the continuation of an economic crisis in the United States and the increase of fear among the millions of Georges whose financial and social stability are not at all assured, comes an anxiety and panic that resembles the fear of people in turbulent waters about to be drowned. In desperation, hoping to become survivors instead of victims, they clutch at anything, whatever is at hand, in hopes of keeping afloat.

In times of social turmoil, when financial institutions collapse, when companies dissolve, when pensions disappear, when homes lose the value of their cost, people feel themselves victims of incomprehensible, inexplicable but overwhelmingly powerful forces. “All that is solid melts into air” – and who can explain why?

With the absence of a left alternative, with the numerical weakness, especially, of the socialist left, frightened people retreat to identity, religion, and scapegoating. They embrace false solutions. It’s like taking poison to cure an illness.

It’s not the first time in history that poison has been mistaken for medicine. George’s fear and resentment of immigrants, Blacks, and some of the most exploited among the working class resembles the picture Karl Marx drew of the self-defeating beliefs of the English workers in the 1870s. Writing in a letter to a friend, Marx observed:

“And most important of all! All English industrial and commercial centres now possess a working class split into two hostile camps: English proletarians and Irish proletarians. The ordinary English worker hates the Irish worker because he sees in him a competitor who lowers his standard of life. Compared with the Irish worker he sees himself a member of the ruling nation and for this very reason he makes himself into a tool of the aristocrats and capitalists against Ireland and thus strengthens their domination over himself. He cherishes religious, social and national prejudices against the Irish worker…

“This antagonism is artificially sustained and intensified by the press, the pulpit, the comic papers, in short, by all the means at the disposal of the ruling classes. This antagonism is the secret of the impotence of the English working class, despite its organization. It is the secret which enables the capitalist class to maintain its power, as this class is perfectly aware.”

(Karl Marx, The First International and After, “Marx to Mayer and Vogt, 9 April 1870,” p. 169).

It’s a lesson confirmed more than once by history: People frightened enough will grasp at any solution – even false ones. After all, a false solution at least seems to resolve social and personal turmoil by providing an apparently satisfactory explanation of the troubles that beset a nation and its people. So, the tea-partiers rally in favor of the Constitution, call for lower taxes, and demand a smaller government – a smaller government with an ever-growing military budget and with iron-clad guarantees of continuing Medicare and Social Security benefits. And, meanwhile, blame the “illegals,” the Mexicans, and Jews, the unions and the liberals, including the moderate Republicans or RINO’s (Republican In Name Only) for every one of the real social ills.

Unfortunately, false solutions can lead to real consequences. Instead of joining with others who suffer from the same social system, instead of building and strengthening links to workers, national minorities, and immigrants, George and those like him confuse their enemies with their friends.

George and his tea-party crowd march along a well-defined road, unaware of and unwilling to see their ultimate destination.

4 comments:

Dan King said...

By completely misstating the goals of the tea-party movement, you can make your "friend" George look just as pathetic as you want.

Outside of the liberal press, there is zero evidence that the tea party is racist. While mostly white, it has too many African-American and Latino members to qualify as xenophobic. This accusation is just a slander.

Second, it beggars belief that a movement which believes in small government, free markets, term limits, and the rule of law (even for the powerful) is fascist. Fascists don't believe in any of those things. Indeed, it would be much more logical to call Obama or you a fascist, but since the word doesn't really mean anything any more anyway, I won't do that.

Third, at least as represented by Sarah Palin, the tea party is not a religious movement. Sarah has pointedly not been campaigning on social or religious issues. Abortion does not come up in her stump speech or interviews with her. She comments on it only when explicitly asked.

Finally, speaking for myself, I am very much in favor of immigration. I'm the son of an immigrant, and I'm married to an immigrant. I think immigration keeps our country young and vibrant. But I am not in favor of illegal immigration - any nation has a responsibility to control its borders. I strongly advocate a much larger influx of legal immigrants.

It is an affliction of the Left to attribute either stupidity or mental illness to their opponents. Please go ahead and underestimate us like that - that's how we will win elections and take back the country. Most on the Left thought Ronald Reagan was an idiot; actually, it was the Leftists that were stupid. Today they accuse Sarah Palin of being a female airhead. She's not - she is one hell of a lot smarter than you are.

Northlandiguana said...

Dan--

Check out what the radically Liberal (I'm being fecetious, btw) New York Times has to say about the Tea Party according to their poll.

Choice quotes from the article and the poll:

"The 18 percent of Americans who identify themselves as Tea Party supporters tend to be Republican, white, male, married and older than 45."

"Tea Party supporters are significantly more likely than all adults to say that too much has been made of the problems of black people (58% of TP vs. 28% of general pop. -CS)."

Tea Party is 89% white, 8% non-white. But as staggeringly uni-racial as this statistic is, I don't see how the numbers of non-whites has much to do with anti-immigrant attitudes, other than that oppressed minorities are often more likely to identify with the plight of other oppressed minorities. This doesn't mean that there aren't xenophobic non-whites, especially those who identify with the middle or upper classes.

As for what constitutes fascism, I would direct you to this excellent article by the author of this post.

On Sarah Palin I'm not going to bother to comment much, because you can't discredit someone's prophet no matter what you say about how politically opportunistic and out of touch with scientific reality they are.

Dan King said...

Adam,

Thanks for the comment - I enjoy the discussion.

The NYT is the ultimate liberal mouthpiece. They have been hostile to the Tea Party movement since its inception. Nevertheless, the statistics you cite mostly prove my point.

I did say the TP was mostly white - I think minorities are probably more than 8%, but since the whole thing is amorphous anyway, there's no point in quibbling about the numbers.

I disagree that it's mostly male. Certainly the leadership is female, from Palin on down. Polls show that women are more sympathetic to the movement than men.

Xenophobes are in every movement - yours, for example, is full of anti-semites. Xenophobia is human nature. But the Tea Party is surely less xenophobic than most. Indeed, they are quite proud of the contribution made by African Americans, and try to feature them prominently in their programs. This is similar to what anti-war rallies do.

I think you need to read Jonah Goldberg's book, Liberal Fascism. This is a much clearer discussion of the movement than your article. Mussolini is the prototypical fascist, and as Goldberg points out, he considered himself a socialist from the day he was born until the day he died. His politics has almost nothing in common with the Tea Party. Accusing the TP of fascism renders language meaningless - rather like accusing the Israelis of being Nazis.

I am very much pro-immigration, and in this I may actually differ from the Tea Party. But then again - maybe not: the TP has no real problem with legal immigration. Illegal immigration is another story - and I think it is a slander to say that people who oppose illegal immigration are "xenophobic." This leap of illogic is, again, tantamount to accusing Jews of being Nazis because they support Israel.

Enough.

Peace,

Dan

Cliff Englewood said...

On a factual point -- Sarah Palin has spoken quite clearly in defense of the belief that the U.S. is "a Christian nation" and has criticized President Obama for suggesting otherwise. Check the ABC News website, among other sources, including Bill O'Reilly's tv show.
And who is the author of the "Curious George" blog?