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Hedges Drops the F-Bomb - Pulitzer talent takes on the Right -- and comes up short.
National Review Online ^ | January 18, 2007 | Anthony Dick

Posted on 01/18/2007 10:12:56 AM PST by neverdem







Hedges Drops the F-Bomb
Pulitzer talent takes on the Right -- and comes up short.

By Anthony Dick

As a novice back in the 1960s, a professor I know made the rookie mistake of holding open a door for a female student. Seeing his attempt at chivalry, she froze with indignation — face reddening, fists clenching — and shrieked: “Fascist!” Then she wheeled around on her heel and stomped away.

The reality behind this vignette persists even today: the shrill, quixotic paranoia of the activist in search of a grievance. It is evoked anew by the latest literary venture of Chris Hedges, the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and leftist provocateur. His new book is called American Fascists — The Christian Right and The War on America, and, as the title suggests, subtlety is not its strong suit. The front cover bears an image of Jesus holding the American flag. The back cover launches straight into the Nazi comparison: It announces that the legions of “the Christian Right” — the “ideological inheritors” of the Third Reich — have “found a mask for fascism in patriotism and the pages of the Bible.” Inside, Hedges holds the line: Fanatical evangelicals are on the verge of seizing control of the U.S. government, dismantling our liberal democracy, and imposing a regime of theocratic fascism. This thesis is kept up for over 200 pages of hysteria that masquerades as a noble, sophisticated, principled defense of American liberty.

The obvious hurdle for Hedges to clear is the breathtaking outlandishness of his central claim. As he spouts one frantic line after another, the troublesome question leaps to mind: Is there really such a large and influential bloc of Americans who want to impose a political order that substantially resembles Nazism, or even some less murderous form of fascism? Is America’s liberal democracy really under such serious attack from within? Or is Hedges really as crazy as he sounds?

In an attempt to deflect this question, Hedges begins by defining the doctrine of “Dominionism” — a radical form of fundamentalism that contrasts sharply with his own, more enlightened, brand of Christianity. (He informs us at the outset that his own background is far from godless: His father was a Presbyterian minister, and he himself attended Harvard Divinity School — which, he fails to mention, has become the nation’s premier seminary for liberals who want to credential themselves as religious believers before heaping scorn on religion.) “Dominionism,” says Hedges, “preaches that Jesus has called on Christians to build the kingdom of God in the here and now, whereas previously it was thought that we would have to wait for it.” And this drags its adherents inexorably toward theocracy.

Getting down to political substance, Hedges declares that the dominionist movement “is openly hostile to democratic pluralism, and it champions totalitarian policies, such as denying homosexuals the same rights as other Americans and amending the Constitution to make America a ‘Christian nation.’” (Is he really suggesting that opposing gay marriage is a totalitarian position?) He also warns that, if the dominionists have their way, “Women will be removed from the workforce to stay at home, and all those deemed insufficiently Christian will be denied citizenship. . . . The only legitimate voices in this state will be Christian. All others will be silenced.”

Hedges ventures that “traditional evangelicals” — “true dominionists” of the totalitarian stripe — probably account for between 7 and 12.6 percent of the American population. He reminds us, of course, that “only a tiny minority” of Christians support “this darker vision of an intolerant, theocratic America.” But when he wants to sound dire about the scope of the threat, he puffs up the rhetoric: “A group of religious utopians, with the sympathy and support of tens of millions of Americans, are slowly dismantling democratic institutions to establish a religious tyranny, the springboard to an American fascism.” These proto-fascists have already “seized control of the Republican party,” and now hold 186 seats in Congress.

So this is what Hedges has concluded from his survey of the American political scene: The Republican party has been hijacked by religious fanatics who want the government to censor and deny citizenship to non-Christians, bar women from the workplace, do away with democracy, and replace it with some sort of Christian totalitarianism. For good measure, he even tosses in a bit of gratuitous moral equivalency: “The Christian Right and radical Islamists, although locked in a holy war, increasingly mirror each other.”

Now, what is most striking about this view is not its utter incredibility (though I’ll grant it’s a close call). More remarkable is that this thoroughly distorted vision of American politics is being espoused by such a solidly mainstream journalist. Chris Hedges worked for 15 years at the New York Times. He has won a Pulitzer Prize, and is now a bestselling author. He’s considered a respected writer and thinker in the liberal cocktail set on both coasts. And here he has written an entire book that is premised on delusion, riddled with paranoia, and positively dripping with sensationalism.

But of course, this is nothing new. All this dire talk about the ascendancy of theocracy and fascism in America is not Hedges’s invention. It’s an echoing old banality that has grown dull and tired with age, but has nonetheless been getting louder lately. Surely there is some explanation for this odd feature of the Left, so mindless and angry and eager to smear religious conservatives as aspirant theocrats.

Part of the obsession can be understood in terms of intellectual reassurance. Either because they legitimately can’t understand how any clear-headed person could disagree with them, or because they hunger to feel more secure about their own political beliefs, many on the left are anxious to dismiss their ideological opponents as irrational fanatics who have been seduced by superstition and power-lust. It has long been standard practice for liberals to say that their politics merely reflect objective rationality, so that only an ideologue could disagree with them.

This is evident in Hedges’s book when, in his typically measured tone, he says that traditional evangelicals are fighting “to crush and silence the reality-based world.” As it turns out, of course, “the reality-based world” is exactly that which conforms to the progressive social and political arrangements that Hedges favors. Because fundamentalist Christians focus so much on the afterlife, he says, their worldly politics are hopelessly irresponsible: “These believers can ignore their own social responsibility for inadequate inner-city schools, for the 18 percent of American children who don’t get enough to eat each day, for the homeless, for the mentally ill. They accept the curtailing of federal assistance programs and turn inward, assisting only within their exclusive Christian community and damning the world outside.”

In the first place, this claim about “damning the world outside” is flatly false. In fact, conservative Christians are among the most generous people in America today: Syracuse University professor Arthur C. Brooks just released a book reporting that conservatives give 30 percent more than liberals to charity, and religious believers are 57 percent more likely than secularists to help the homeless.

Putting that inaccuracy aside, it is revealing that Hedges here characterizes opposition to “federal assistance programs” as being motivated primarily by fundamentalist religious impulses. Indeed, throughout his book, he consistently caricatures conservative ideas as the loopy offshoots of a fanatical religious movement, and thus avoids engaging them seriously. He utterly ignores the fact that there are compelling secular arguments for conservative positions on practically every major political issue today — gay marriage, stem-cell research, abortion, foreign policy, education, Social Security, etc. Rather than deal with these arguments, he chooses to stamp his foot and yell “Fascists!”

Perhaps this is why Hedges misses the obvious truth that no significant part of the conservative movement, much less the Republican party, has any active political interest in establishing a fascist state that would overturn American democracy or curtail basic individual freedoms. Maybe he, like so many other liberals, just does not want to confront the prospect that some people could be intelligent, well-intentioned, rational, and even non-religious, and still fundamentally disagree with progressive political views. The problem of conservatism becomes much less tractable for liberals if they admit that it is not a type of crypto-Nazism, or a disease resulting from some intellectual or emotional deficiency. And so we have these absurd little books being published that tell vicious lies about entire swaths of the American public, and, in the process, make fools of their authors.

— Anthony Dick is an NR associate editor.





TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: ac; acpersecution; atheists; chrishedges; persecution
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1 posted on 01/18/2007 10:12:59 AM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Excellent post -- thanks.


2 posted on 01/18/2007 10:20:08 AM PST by Albion Wilde (...where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. -2 Cor 3:17)
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To: neverdem

Who is Hedges and why should I care?

The world is full of idiots. And full of idiots who know how to write.

If I use my precious, God given time to read such drivel, am I not an idiot too?


3 posted on 01/18/2007 10:21:38 AM PST by Al Gator (Refusing to "stoop to your enemy's level", gets you cut off at the knees.)
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To: neverdem

What continually amazes me is how much the tactics of the left in this country are beginning to resemble those of the NSDAP in late '20s/early '30s Germany. If any group in the US has taken up the "fascist" mantle, it's the radical left.


4 posted on 01/18/2007 10:24:05 AM PST by Doug Loss
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To: neverdem
Getting down to political substance, Hedges declares that the dominionist movement “is openly hostile to democratic pluralism, and it champions totalitarian policies, such as denying homosexuals the same rights as other Americans...

This sounds a lot like the atheist left.

It's the left that continues to find ways to cheat at the ballot box and keeps demanding, and getting, extra rights for homosexuals.

5 posted on 01/18/2007 10:28:15 AM PST by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: neverdem
Seeing his attempt at chivalry, she froze with indignation — face reddening, fists clenching — and shrieked: “Fascist!”

Trashist sow!

6 posted on 01/18/2007 10:30:10 AM PST by Graymatter
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To: neverdem
His new book is called American Fascists — The Christian Right and The War on America, and, as the title suggests, subtlety is not its strong suit. The front cover bears an image of Jesus holding the American flag. The back cover launches straight into the Nazi comparison: It announces that the legions of “the Christian Right” — the “ideological inheritors” of the Third Reich — have “found a mask for fascism in patriotism and the pages of the Bible.”

He's crazy. Certifiable! He should spend some time in Iran, or Korea, or Saudi Arabia to see some real fascists. An entire book on projection.

7 posted on 01/18/2007 10:31:06 AM PST by Rummyfan (Iraq: Give therapeutic violence a chance!)
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To: Al Gator

Alas, this idiot won a Pulitzer.

It seems to me that the liberal theologians are the true dominionists. They no longer believe in the afterlife or God's judgment and are obsessed with furthering their political agenda. Check out the website of the United Methodist or Episcopalian churches.


8 posted on 01/18/2007 10:32:34 AM PST by joylyn
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To: neverdem
dominionist movement

He also warns that, if the dominionists have their way, “Women will be removed from the workforce to stay at home, and all those deemed insufficiently Christian will be denied citizenship. . . . The only legitimate voices in this state will be Christian. All others will be silenced.”

What "movement" is this guy talking about?? I've read about the "Christian Reconstructionists" that hold these views, but I believe their international headquarters consist of a trailer out in the California desert. There is a war on freedom in America, waged both by the "secular" left and the "religious" right, but if it were a movie, the "dominionists" wouldn't even be extras.

9 posted on 01/18/2007 10:37:51 AM PST by Freedom_no_exceptions (No actual, intended, or imminent victim = no crime. No exceptions.)
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To: neverdem

10 posted on 01/18/2007 10:43:12 AM PST by Gritty (The MSM are active accessories to war waged against the free world–an enemy within-Melanie Phillips)
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To: Albion Wilde

ping for later.


11 posted on 01/18/2007 10:46:47 AM PST by bcsco ("He who is wedded to the spirit of the age is soon a widower" ? Anonymous)
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To: joylyn

"Alas, this idiot won a Pulitzer. "

Atlas Shrugged. There comes a point in time where the fools and inmates do overrun the asylum. I think we are at that point.

Therefore, wasting what is left of my time in this life looking at the gibberish of fools and idiots, is just not on the schedule.

Besides, after 40 years of resisting this nonsense, I already know, down to the dotted 'i' and crossed 't', what these barking moonbats believe.

No, me and John Gault are gone fishin.


12 posted on 01/18/2007 10:47:03 AM PST by Al Gator (Refusing to "stoop to your enemy's level", gets you cut off at the knees.)
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To: neverdem

More sobriety from the left.


13 posted on 01/18/2007 10:47:50 AM PST by Ieatfrijoles (110%)
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To: neverdem
“Dominionism”

This nonsense was espoused by Kevin Phillips in his book American Theology. It is in no way supported by anywhere near even 1% of American Evangelicals.

This is another publication in the genre of which Rabbi Lapin has warned.

Another Koolaid drinking author writing lies to make money.

14 posted on 01/18/2007 11:43:48 AM PST by happygrl
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To: Doug Loss

I have thought this for many years. It comes down to a lack of true training in history, we are about to make the same mistakes that the Germans, Italians and yes even the Fascist in France made in the 20's and 30's.

If you look at the platform of NAZIs and the progressive movement, they are pretty much identical except exchange Nationalist for Internationalist (or even no borders), Aryan for Multicultural (but still anti-Jew and anti-Evangelical (just like Hitler)). The NAZIs wanted to turn Poland into a vast natuaral wilderness for the Germans to visit and recreate in, much like the environmentalist of today. The NAZIs were really against capatilism (the real kind).

When I have gotten into debates with leftist on campus and point out that their views are very closely aligned with Der Frueher and mine are actually the exact opposite, they get very upset. Of course not all leftist are this extreme, but they are deceived in my opinion.


15 posted on 01/18/2007 12:22:14 PM PST by fatez
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To: neverdem

Hmph... I thought us Jews controlled America.


16 posted on 01/18/2007 12:23:09 PM PST by bruin66 (Time: Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once.)
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To: Freedom_no_exceptions
'There is a war on freedom in America, waged both by the "secular" left and the "religious" right, but if it were a movie, the "dominionists" wouldn't even be extras.'

I am not trying to start a debate here, but I am labeled by the left as part of the religious right. If you are referring to some attempts at 'decency laws' or restricting porn from getting to kids, then I guess I am trying to take away freedom. But I believe freedom requires some common sense and morality from the populace. John Adams, our second President (a right winger) said 'ours is a system that requires a religious and moral people'. The reason why the system is failing in my opinion is that we are no longer a moral or religious people.

That being said, I understand that people of my belief cannot force our beliefs on anybody, but we can try to persuade. I would be interested to hear from you on how people like me are trying to strip liberty away other than guarding kids from smut...
17 posted on 01/18/2007 12:32:14 PM PST by fatez
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To: neverdem

I thought Hedges was a leftist nut a few years back when he was hooted off a commencement stage after ranting about the "evil" U.S. He has now confirmed his insanity with this book.


18 posted on 01/18/2007 1:37:57 PM PST by driftless2
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To: neverdem
More remarkable is that this thoroughly distorted vision of American politics is being espoused by such a solidly mainstream journalist. Chris Hedges worked for 15 years at the New York Times. He has won a Pulitzer Prize, and is now a bestselling author. He’s considered a respected writer and thinker in the liberal cocktail set on both coasts. And here he has written an entire book that is premised on delusion, riddled with paranoia, and positively dripping with sensationalism.

Why is that remarkable? Delusion, paranoia and sensationalism are commonplace among elite journalists. Dan Rather, MoDo, Krugman, Jason Blair and Helen Thomas ring any bells?

19 posted on 01/18/2007 2:16:05 PM PST by LexBaird (98% satisfaction guaranteed. There's just no pleasing some people.)
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To: neverdem
I watched Chris Hedges do his ranting of a left stump speech this morning on C-Span.

I began to count the lies and then he began to distort, spin, twist, deceive, corrupt, embellish, and just plain bald faced lie so much that I began to wonder if he was a sane man. I am not speaking in hyperbole, the man really did come off as a man struggling with his own sanity and barely clinging to reality.

Almost every accusation he made toward the "religious right" was a lie.

However his hysterical accusations of power grabbing, constitution violating, court abusing, hate mongering, cursing, and baiting did match one particular group, that group is the one to which HE belongs.

Hedges is just your typical far left secular or religous fanatic who hates America.

20 posted on 03/17/2007 9:56:15 AM PDT by Old Landmarks (No fear of man, none!)
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