Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Hedges on the Evangelical Rebellion

Chris Hedges, author of American Fascists, has written the most astute and foreboding essay on the significance of Mike Huckabee's presidential candidacy to date. Here's a quote:

The Christian right is the most potent and dangerous mass movement in American history. It has been controlled and led, until now, by those who submit to the demands of the corporate state. But the grass roots are tired of being taken for rubes. They are tired of candidates, like Bush or Bill Clinton, who roll out the same clichés about working men and women every four years and then spend their terms enriching their corporate backers. The majority of American citizens have spent the last two decades watching their government services and benefits vanish. They have seen their jobs go overseas and are watching as their communities crumble and their houses are foreclosed. It is their kids who are in Iraq and Afghanistan. The old guard in the Christian right, the Pat Robertsons, who used their pulpits to deliver the votes of naive followers to the corporatists, is a spent force. Huckabee’s Christian populism represents the maturation of the movement. It signals the rise of a truly radical, even revolutionary force in American politics, of which Huckabee may be one of the tamer and less frightening examples.

4 comments:

Asinus Gravis said...

Very interesting essay by Hedges--and a bit scary. While I tend to think Hedges is a bit overboard on the Fascist thing, he does give reasons for being concerned about a Huckabee presidency.

An examination of the people supporting Huckabee--the LeHayes, Scarborough, Jenkins, Falwell, Wildmon, Draper, Vines, Farris, Hotze, et. al.--is freightening.

The issues Huckabee has apparently staked out positions on--creationism, homophobia, anti-Islam--and his cuddling up to "Christian" Reconstructionists,is all cause for great concern.

If he is in fact opposed to free trade, low taxes, and corporate welfare, that is more encouraging.

I've had enough of government by corporations, of corporations, and for corporations!

Bruce Prescott said...

Asinus,

I was very skeptical about Hedges use of the "F" word myself until I read his book on American Fascists. It's still a little overblown, but not as much as you might think.

He defines his terms carefully and makes considerable use of warnings by James Luther Adams -- who observed close-up the rise of fascism in Germany in the '30's.

Hedges, as a journalist, has himself witnessed the rise of authoritarian regimes around the world.

Asinus Gravis said...

Bruce, I read his book about a year ago, and am still skeptical, although somewhat worried.

Bruce Prescott said...

Asinus,

I'm with you. It is "worrisome" to see the "f" word being used by so many people these days.

Now even Ray McGovern is using it.