Acerbic acrimonious verbal
exchanges that have dominated sizable segments
of the conservative right over the past several
weeks demonstrate little, if any signs of
abating. When bona fide conservative individuals
and outlets such as Cal
Thomas, Rod Dreher, and National
Review are
penning blistering op-eds denouncing and
decrying the antics of segments of their
movement, a serious crisis is definitely
brewing. Indeed, recent events have
inspired a disturbingly troubling examination of
the alarmingly enthusiastic embrace of White
nationalism and antisemitism by the ideological
right in America. Several million viewers viewed
Tucker Carlson’s acerbic
interview with White
supremacist and avowed anti-Semite Nick Fuentes in a recent
episode of Carlson’s podcast.
Fuentes has a history of making
anti-Semitic comments such as “I
love Hitler,” denying the Holocaust, and
espousing other odious views. His commentaries
are very popular among segments of the
conservative far right. Kevin
Roberts, president of the Heritage
Foundation, seen by many in the conservative
movement as being in the vanguard of traditional
conservatism, has established a highly congenial
relationship with the Trump administration.
Roberts defended Carlson, saying he “remains . .
. and always will be a close friend of the
Heritage Foundation.” Fuentes - who, until
recently, was anathema to mainstream
conservatives for his repellent views - has
suddenly gained political currency with a
growing number of young right-wing members of
Gen Z, referred to by some as zoomers (1998–2014). He is also
considered part of the alt-right.
American right-wing extremism
did not emerge overnight. Indeed, it has a
lengthy and intense history that starts with the
genesis of the modern American conservative
movement during the New Deal era in the 1930s.
Notable figures such as H.
L. Mencken, Albert
Jay Nock, Father
Coughlin, Charles
Lindbergh, and Henry
Ford, known for their rabid and
abhorrent anti-Semitic views, led the first
cohort of anti-New Deal activists (often labeled
the Old Right). They never hesitated to express
their vile opinions. Once Europe was plunged
into war in late 1939, some of these men became
vocal proponents of the pro-isolationist
movement. To clarify, this was a movement
representing people from across the political
spectrum, including conservatives, liberals, and
socialists who harbored no degree of
antisemitism. In contrast, an antipathy toward
Jews consumed the anti-interventionist faction
that made up the Old Right.
A few decades later, during the
late 1950s/early 1960s, Robert
Welch, another avowed racist and
anti-Semite and head of the infamous John Birch
Society, managed to successfully populate the
movement. William F. Buckley Jr., founder of the
conservative publication National
Review, harbored complex attitudes
toward race were and publicly challenged Welch’s
more extremist views. He managed to purge many
Birchers from the magazine and the larger
conservative movement.
After their disastrous and
humiliating defeat in November 1964, the
right-wing segment of the Republican Party -
who by this time had wrestled control of the
party away from the more moderate
Stanton/Rockefeller wing during the 1964
Republican Nation Convention that summer - was
emotionally and psychologically shell-shocked
and even more determined to have its collective
voices and ideas represented on the national
stage. Additionally, motivated by the passage of
the historic Civil
Rights Act of 1964, a mass exodus occurred from
the Democratic to the Republican Party of
conservative Dixiecrats such as South Carolina
senator Strom Thurmond. Richard Nixon’s 1968
presidential campaign brazenly trumpeted the
racially unambiguous message of “law and order”
as part of his infamous southern strategy.
A dozen years later, former
California governor and B-list actor Ronald
Reagan continued this strategy of appealing to
right-wing, segregationist-minded Whites by
launching his 1980 presidential campaign in
Philadelphia, Mississippi, and pledging support
for states’ rights. Philadelphia is in Neshoba
County, where White supremacists murdered three
civil rights workers - two White Jewish men,
Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman, and one
Black man, James Chaney - in 1964. Racially
coded messages - welfare queens, crime, forced
busing - were widely disseminated by the
Reagan campaign, which was also enormously
successful in garnering the religious right’s
fierce support. This assorted grouping of
largely reactionary conservative republicans of
varied strands - political, social, cultural,
and economic - eagerly endorsed the Reagan
campaign’s far-right platform during the 1980
presidential election. Right-wing resistance
toward racial, political, and social equality
came as no surprise.
Similarly, the racial and
religious drama that occurred in Charlottesville in 2017, when hundreds of
primarily preppy young White men and a few women
with tiki torches marched on the University of
Virgina campus chanting, “You will not replace us. Jews
will not replace us,” did not play out
overnight.
There has always been a segment
of primary White Americans who have, whether
overtly or covertly, harbored rabid levels of
hostility and hatred toward individuals they
view and perceive as “the other.” These people
were largely forced to discuss and reaffirm
their racist and bigoted viewpoints with
like-minded individuals for much of our recent
history. Their outpourings were confined to
secret conferences; White supremacist
communications; underground newsletters; obscure
far-right magazines and radio programs; and, in
more recent decades, the darkest, racially most
sordid corners of the web. However, current
climate has emboldened many of these people to
publicly and brazenly espouse their rancid,
reactionary, and retrograde opinions. The Old
Right’s conspiracist and racist fantasies had
been beyond the pale for Republicans since the
1960s, but the New Right has adopted the Old
Right’s platform: restrictive isolationism,
reactionary racism, irrational anti-Semitic
paranoia, and suspicion of the federal
government.
As the first quarter of the 21st
century draws to a close, traditional
conservatives, and the evangelical wing of the
Republican Party especially, face a challenge
similar to what their counterparts in the 1960s
did. Will they shun and shift aside the more
decadent and degenerate elements of the right
wing or endorse and embrace them?
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