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-Caveat Lector-

February 3, 2003

THE KOOK FACTOR
Never mind the antiwar movement's marginal elements � our warmongers have 
their own nutballs to explain.
Justin Raimondo
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/j020303.html



We've heard much about the "radicalism" of the antiwar movement, even as it 
becomes more mainstream. The War Party focuses on the most marginal 
elements in an effort to characterize the movement as kooky. This is not 
only a smear, but an effort to divert attention away from the essential 
craziness of their own movement, the religious fundamentalist sources of 
pro-war sentiment in this country.

You want pro-war kooks? Then try this Washington Post article on for size: 
". . . And Armageddon Tops the Bestseller List." It's all about the "Left 
Behind" novels, by evangelist Tim LaHaye and writer Jerry Jenkins, that 
sell like hot-cakes here in the Vale of Modernity:

"Come spring, many Americans will turn their attention to the battle of 
Armageddon. Whether or not it coincides with an actual war in the Persian 
Gulf, "Armageddon," the 11th entry in the best-selling series � will appear 
in stores April 8. Almost certainly, it will debut as No. 1 on bestseller 
lists � as have each of the last four "Left Behind" books. This time, the 
most popular adult fiction series in recent memory is going to war � a 
cosmic battle between good and evil that will pit Satan himself, who rules 
the world from New Babylon, Iraq, against Israel and its Christian allies."

Let's be clear about the theme and context of these "novels": they're all 
about how God is going to "rapture" up into the sky all those trailer park 
"Christians" who give money to Pat Robertson. The rest of us depraved 
sinners will be left behind. But not before all the world's Jews are 
gathered together in Israel, where the great battle of Armageddon is 
supposed to take place � signaling the End of History (Francis Fukuyama, 
take note!) and the Return of Christ the King. According to the 
"dispensationalist" con men who preach this clap-trap, Israel will take the 
place of the Church on earth, and a new "dispensation" (or era) will be 
inaugurated, as mankind approaches the "End Times."

And they say the Muslims are mired in "medievalism"!

Millions of Americans believe this pitiful nonsense. They pine for a 
nuclear Armageddon because it will fulfill their "prophecies." They ignore 
the national interests of their own country, and worship at the altar of 
Israel, functioning as a far more effective � and dangerous � fifth column 
than any commie "conspiracy" ever did. They are worse than Aum Shinrikyo, 
that nutball Japanese cult that unleashed sarin gas in the Tokyo subway, 
not only because they are more numerous, but because they are a potent 
political force in the U.S., and practically dominate the Republican party.

It's pathetic, really, to read the sniping smears of the War Party, who are 
trying to tar the antiwar movement with the "Communist" brush � what about 
their nutballs?! What about Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, who called the 
9/11 attacks "God's punishment" because all us evil queers have been 
partying like it's � the end of the world? This is not some marginal sect, 
with less than a few hundred members, like the Workers World Party, which 
so much has been made of, but a mass friggin' movement, one that forms the 
heart and soul of the War Party.

The followers of a genocidal "Christian" heresy, who number in the 
millions, are determined to drive their country into World War IV. They 
just can't wait for that mushroom cloud to billow up over the horizon � and 
we're supposed to worry about a couple of dozen Communists whose ideology 
is about as relevant as phrenology?

God, I just love the restrained tone of the Washington Post writer, who 
avers: "The timing may be perfect for the publisher, but disconcerting for 
others." To say the least! "Just as Europe's literature of the horrors of 
war has fostered pacifism and war wariness there," the Post reports, "these 
novels must be influencing the American view of war today."

The Europeans, in other words, have been shaped by their experience. They 
have gone through two world wars and the threat of a third, having lost 
millions of lives and seen their civilization practically destroyed. This 
has shaped an outlook that might be described as more patient than 
"pacifist," one that sees the gradual evolution and spread of the rule of 
law and civil society throughout the world, rather than via some radical 
eruption of moral righteousness. We, on the other hand, are shaped in our 
attitudes toward war not by recent experience but by the worst sort of pulp 
fiction: a cheap novel authored by a couple of religious fanatics whose 
moral universe is steeped in the same obscurantist mindset as Osama bin 
Laden's.

The thesis of Samuel Huntington is much bruited about, especially by our 
war birds, who claim that this is a "civilizational" war, pitting the 
Western values of democracy, modernity, and cultural diversity against the 
authoritarian medievalism that supposedly characterizes the Muslim world. 
But obviously the real civilizational war is going on right here at home, 
between our war-maddened Rapturists and the rest of the American people, 
religious and non-religious alike.

It is not an overstatement to describe the Rapturists as crazed. They live, 
after all, in a world peopled by hallucinations. They see everything as a 
portent, an ominous confirmation of their elaborate fantasy life: every 
time Ariel Sharon farts, they breathe it in with gusto, convinced that it 
represents the fulfillment of some prophecy regarding the "sacred" land of 
Israel. In their nightmare view of human existence, the immolation of the 
world in a bath of nuclear fire is an event to be anticipated with joy, not 
horror. These are the initiates of a death cult, just as surely as any 
suicide bomber.

If this is "Christianity," then I say: Hail, Satan!

Fortunately, the real Christians in this country, represented not only by 
the Vatican, of course, but also by the National Council of Churches and 
the mainstream Protestant denominations � including dispensationalists who 
disagree emphatically with the Armageddonites � reject this dangerous 
"Christian jihadism," as the Post calls it. And their voices are now being 
heard, much to the dismay and even panic of the War Party. The Catholic 
Church recently slapped the Italian defense minister on the wrist for 
jumping on the bandwagon for war, and the National Council of Churches is a 
key component of the United for Peace campaign, which has become the 
fulcrum of antiwar activism in the U.S.

As I pointed out in my piece on the antiwar movement in the Feb. 8 issue of 
The American Conservative � hey, it's out now, and already making waves 
(scroll down) � the opposition to World War IV is going way beyond the 
Left. This has the War Party in a panic, and they have deployed their Smear 
Brigade in full force.

Accuracy in Media was first out of the gate with a critique of my article, 
and, no, they didn't like it. Somebody with the made-up sounding name of 
Cliff Kincaid penned a screed stupidly entitled "Antiwar Conservatives?" As 
if he would even be writing about them if they didn't exist. Since 
Kincaid's outfit is so concerned with "accuracy," then let them take a look 
at the numbers: A recent Gallup poll shows nearly thirty percent of 
self-identified conservatives oppose invading Iraq. A minority, yes, but an 
articulate and increasingly vocal one.

This is precisely what scares Kincaid and the brigade of neocon smear 
artists like David Horowitz, Ronald Radosh, and the P. J. O'Rourke wannabes 
over at National Review. Their strategy is to caricature the antiwar 
movement as a bunch of far-out lefties, Iraqi spies, and burnt-out hippies, 
but they are generals fighting the last war. A Republican businessman and 
contributor to the Bush campaign recently shelled out $170,000 to pay for a 
full-page antiwar ad in the Wall Street Journal. And what about all those 
soccer moms waving American flags on January 18? I was not the only 
observer to note that the most popular slogan was "Peace is Patriotic."

Kincaid quotes my criticism of the Workers World Party-controlled 
A.N.S.W.E.R. group, and cites "I Ain't Marchin' Anymore" as proof that I 
"flip-flopped" by calling for "All Out on January 18." But the whole point 
was that the January 18 event, as I anticipated, would be so big as to 
overshadow the organizers, a signal that the antiwar movement had outgrown 
the Left. A.N.S.W.E.R. has been undone by their own success. The hundreds 
of thousands who demonstrated all over the country, on January 18, did so 
on account of the President's escalating war rhetoric, not because of 
anything coming from the organizers of the event. No one could even hear 
the speeches in Washington and especially San Francisco, that day, anyway: 
that's how big the crowds were.

Kincaid acknowledges that groups like the National Council of Churches are 
now taking the lead in the new United for Peace group, but, according to 
him, they, too, are Commie stooges. As proof, he points to their alleged 
support for "a communist-run conference on 'liberation struggles' in 
southern Africa." Opposing apartheid, it seems, makes one a "communist."

Kincaid cites some neocon front group, the "Institute on Religion and 
Democracy" � virtually all these neocon outfits have the word "Democracy" 
in their titles, just like the commies used to refer to their "Democratic 
Peoples Republics" � descrying the NCC's contention that we are seeing "a 
rise of militarism under President Bush." Why, only a commie would say that 
� right? Never mind that only a catatonic could deny it. The NCC has also 
noted that "the war on terrorism has 'sacrificed' principles of 'justice, 
fairness and accountability.'" No doubt that commie Phyllis Schlafly and 
that left-wing radical Bob Barr would agree. Another crime of the NCC is 
that it challenges the radical increase in military spending, which puts it 
in the same league as the Cato Institute, the Democratic congressional 
caucus, and even the "cheap hawk" faction of the GOP. Off with their heads!

Kincaid's tiresome tirade notes my efforts to transform the leadership of 
the antiwar movement, and makes this prediction:

"Raimondo will fail. He won't succeed because the communists are hard 
workers and started this movement. Their alliance with radical American 
Muslims is strong, firm, impressive and obviously dangerous."

Fortunately, the transformation of the antiwar movement doesn't depend on 
little old me. If it did, we'd really be in trouble. It isn't me who is 
driving the movement's exponential growth, broadening it beyond the dubious 
categories of "left" and "right" � it is the President of the United 
States, who has embarked on a crazed course for war no matter how many 
times the Iraqis try to surrender. What is driving this transformation is 
that decent people, the world over, no matter what their politics, aren't 
fooled by the crude propaganda coming out of this administration: our 
friends and allies abroad, Democrats and Republicans at home, all want to 
avoid a catastrophe in the Middle East. Antiwar sentiment goes way beyond 
the organized antiwar movement, and that is what has the War Party tossing 
and turning at night�.

Another problem for Raimondo is that there's just not that many right-wing 
opponents of the war willing to overlook the crazies, kooks and 
hate-America zealots. I don't know how many libertarians and anti-war 
'conservatives' marched in San Francisco, but I saw less than ten 
identified as such who were at the Washington event."

How the heck does Kincaid know what the politics of the tens of thousands 
of antiwar protestors are? Is he a mind-reader? So he went around 
photographing the banners of each and every obscure leftist outfit that 
showed up on January 18 � big friggin' deal. And, speaking of kooks�.

When I saw this article and looked at the byline, I remembered where I had 
heard Kincaid's name before: he interviewed me on his radio program during 
the Kosovo war, a war he opposed. I remember the interview because it was 
so ... weird. Kincaid kept talking about "the Insiders" (it sounded like he 
was capitalizing it...) and, finally, after the third or fourth reference 
to a mysterious "cabal" that was supposedly behind the Kosovo war, I asked 
him what the heck he was talking about. I can't recall his exact words, but 
it was clear, from what he said, that he meant A Certain Ethnic Group � he 
was trying to get me to agree that the Jews were behind the "globalist 
conspiracy" to drag us into war! I don't remember his exact words, but that 
was the definite implication of his remarks. My reaction was pure 
revulsion. I thought, for a moment, that I should just hang up the phone, 
and cut his hate-fest short. But that would've been rude, so, instead, I 
told him I thought he was full of baloney, and the interview soon came to a 
merciful end.

You want pro-war kooks? You want real haters? Here's the "Justin Raimondo 
Watch" page of the Jewish Defense League website. The JDL is a terrorist 
organization famous for its bombings as well as ordinary street thuggery: 
their most recent terrorist escapade involved a plot by their nutball 
leader and an accomplice to bomb a southern California mosque and the 
office of Congressman Darrell Issa. JDL leader Irv Rubin committed suicide 
in jail: his accomplice has pled guilty. Take a good look at the filth 
peddled by these people. Not to mention the rich fantasy life they seem to 
enjoy, as evidenced by their wholly fictional portrayal of the most mundane 
details of my life.

Oh, I almost forgot to mention Richard Poe's curious piece, accusing me, in 
effect, of sedition. The target of his ire is a recent column, entitled 
"Listen Up, Soldier," that, according to Poe amounts to "reckless 
incitement" of the military against Bush's rush to war. And this isn't the 
first time I've been guilty of a crime punishable, by 20 years in prison 
and a $10,000
fine: he reminds readers that, during the fracas over the Florida vote 
count, I "urged soldiers to come out of their barracks," and, presumably, 
take the White House. The truth is that I did no such thing, either then or 
now. What I wrote, when the Democrats were disqualifying three out of four 
military ballots on technicalities, was this:

"Should the military just shut up and take it? Clearly, the answer must be 
an emphatic no. Soldiers are citizens, too, and if they fail in that aspect 
of their duties then they have failed the test of their vocation. At this 
crucial moment in our history, a turning point � and not for the better � 
Americans in uniform could play a key role and an entirely legitimate and 
constitutional one, merely by exercising their First Amendment right to 
free speech."

And that is it. No tanks in the streets, no Seven Days in May: just 
soldiers exercising their God-given right to free speech. U.S. soldiers are 
American citizens: they aren't slaves. They have the right to participate 
in the democratic process, and, most specifically, to vote. They also have 
the right to speak out on the issues of the day, especially those that 
involve their own lives: this is guaranteed by the Constitution, a document 
that has been over-ridden, in many respects, but not completely abolished. 
In "Listen Up, Soldier," I did directly address U.S. military personnel, 
urging them to read the comments of General Norman Schwarzkopf, General 
Anthony Zinni, and other high-ranking officers critical of our warmongering 
chicken-hawks. If referring my readers to this material is sedition, then 
so are the opinions of Schwarzkopf, Zinni, et al. Why not accuse them, too?

I knew, while I was writing that column, that somebody would charge me with 
"sedition." Too bad it was only Richard Poe, the former editor of David 
Horowitz's Frontpage website, and not the Attorney General of the United 
States.

C'mon, you guys: make my day!

� Justin Raimondo





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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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