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1 First As Tragedy, Then As Farce  Oct 15, 2010 6:03:04pm

“When facism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross.”

Sinclair Lewis, 1935
It Can’t Happen Here

In the novel, a candidate running on a foklsy populist platform and supported by a hugely popular anti-intellectual radio host is elected President and turns America into a Fascist regime that is openly racist, forbids women to hold jobs, retools the education system to remove literature and most science, and all sorts of things. The whole book is online at Project Gutenberg.

Read at least Chapter 8, in which some of the Fascist’s platform is laid out, and see if you don’t think a lot of it could get entirely too much traction today.

2 Decatur Deb  Oct 15, 2010 6:08:19pm

re: #1 negativ

I think my kid showed us how to upload Gutenberg text to a Kindle. Will check.

3 Mark Pennington  Oct 15, 2010 6:16:28pm

re: #1 negativ

“When facism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross.”

Sinclair Lewis, 1935
It Can’t Happen Here

In the novel, a candidate running on a foklsy populist platform and supported by a hugely popular anti-intellectual radio host is elected President and turns America into a Fascist regime that is openly racist, forbids women to hold jobs, retools the education system to remove literature and most science, and all sorts of things. The whole book is online at Project Gutenberg.

Read at least Chapter 8, in which some of the Fascist’s platform is laid out, and see if you don’t think a lot of it could get entirely too much traction today.

I’ll check it out too. Thanks!

4 First As Tragedy, Then As Farce  Oct 15, 2010 6:41:52pm

And who were his supporters?

Most of the mortgaged farmers.

Most of the white-collar workers who had been unemployed these three years and four and five.

Most of the people on relief rolls who wanted more relief.

Most of the suburbanites who could not meet the installment payments on the electric washing machine.

Such large sections of the American Legion as believed that only Senator Windrip would secure for them, and perhaps increase, the bonus.

Such popular Myrtle Boulevard or Elm Avenue preachers as, spurred by the examples of Bishop Prang and Father Coughlin, believed they could get useful publicity out of supporting a slightly queer program that promised prosperity without anyone’s having to work for it.

The remnants of the Kuklux Klan, and such leaders of the American Federation of Labor as felt they had been inadequately courted and bepromised by the old-line politicians, and the non-unionized common laborers who felt they had been inadequately courted by the same A.F. of L.

Back-street and over-the-garage lawyers who had never yet wangled governmental jobs.

The Lost Legion of the Anti-Saloon League—since it was known that, though he drank a lot, Senator Windrip also praised teetotalism a lot, while his rival, Walt Trowbridge, though he drank but little, said nothing at all in support of the Messiahs of Prohibition. These messiahs had not found professional morality profitable of late, with the Rockefellers and Wanamakers no longer praying with them nor paying.

Besides these necessitous petitioners, a goodish number of burghers who, while they were millionaires, yet maintained that their prosperity had been sorely checked by the fiendishness of the bankers in limiting their credit.

These were the supporters who looked to Berzelius Windrip to play the divine raven and feed them handsomely when he should become President, and from such came most of the fervid elocutionists who campaigned for him through September and October.

Pushing in among this mob of camp followers who identified political virtue with money for their rent came a flying squad who suffered not from hunger but from congested idealism: Intellectuals and Reformers and even Rugged Individualists, who saw in Windrip, for all his clownish swindlerism, a free vigor which promised a rejuvenation of the crippled and senile capitalistic system.

In other words, the Tea Party.


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