Fox News "war games" the coming civil war

by Glenn Greenwald


Bill Clinton's election in 1992 gave rise to the American "militia
movement":  hordes of overwhelmingly white, middle-aged men from
suburban and rural areas who convinced themselves they were defending
the American way of life from the "liberals" and "leftists" running
the country by dressing up in military costumes on weekends, wobbling
around together with guns, and play-acting the role of patriot-warriors.  

Those theater groups -- the cultural precursor to George Bush's
prancing 2003 performance dressed in a fighter pilot outfit on Mission
Accomplished Day -- spawned the decade of the so-called "Angry White
Male," the movement behind the 1994 takeover of the U.S. Congress by
Newt Gingrich and his band of federal-government-cursing,
pseudo-revolutionary, play-acting tough guys.

What was most remarkable about this allegedly "anti-government"
movement was that -- with some isolated and principled exceptions --
it completely vanished upon the election of Republican George Bush,
and it stayed invisible even as Bush presided over the most extreme
and invasive expansion of federal government power in memory.  

Even as Bush seized and used all of the powers which that movement
claimed in the 1990s to find so tyrannical and unconstitutional --
limitless, unchecked surveillance activities, detention powers with no
oversight, expanding federal police powers, secret prison camps, even
massively exploding and debt-financed domestic spending -- they meekly
submitted to all of it, even enthusiastically cheered it all on.  

They're the same people who embraced and justified full-scale,
impenetrable federal government secrecy and comprehensive domestic
spying databases conducted in the dark and against the law when
perpetrated by a Republican President -- but have spent the last week
flamboyantly pretending to be scandalized and outraged by the snooping
which Bill Moyers did 45 years ago (literally) as part of a Democratic
administration.  

They're the people who relentlessly opposed and impugned Clinton's
military deployments and then turned around and insisted that only
those who are anti-American would question or oppose Bush's decision
to start wars. 

They're the same people who believed that Bill Clinton's use of the
FISA court to obtain warrants to eavesdrop on Americans was a grave
threat to liberty, but believed that George Bush's warrantless
eavesdropping on Americans in violation of the law was a profound
defense of freedom.  

In sum, they dressed up in warrior clothing to fight against Bill
Clinton's supposed tyranny, and then underwent a major costume change
on January 20, 2001, thereafter dressing up in cheerleader costumes to
glorify George Bush's far more extreme acquisitions of federal power.

In doing so, they revealed themselves as motivated by no ideological
principles or political values of any kind.  It was a purely
tribalistic movement motivated by fear of losing its cultural and
demographic supremacy.  

In that sense -- the only sense that mattered -- George Bush was one
of them, even though, with his actions, he did everything they long
claimed to fear and despise.  Nonetheless, his mere occupancy of the
White House was sufficient to pacify them and convert them almost
overnight from limited-government militants into foot soldiers
supporting the endless expansion of federal government power.


BUT NOW, only four weeks into the presidency of Barack Obama, they are
back -- angrier and more chest-beating than ever.  Actually, the mere
threat of an Obama presidency was enough to revitalize them from their
eight-year slumber, awaken them from their camouflaged, well-armed
suburban caves.  

The disturbingly ugly atmosphere that marked virtually every Sarah
Palin rally had its roots in this cultural resentment, which is why
her fear-mongering cultural warnings about Obama's exotic, threatening
otherness -- he's a Muslim-loving, Terrorist-embracing,
Rev.-Wright-following Marxist:  who is the real Barack Obama? --
resonated so stingingly with the rabid lynch mobs that cheered her on.

With Obama now actually in the Oval Office -- and a financial crisis
in full force that is generating the exact type of widespread, intense
anxiety that typically inflames these cultural resentments -- their
mask is dropping, has dropped, and they've suddenly re-discovered
their righteous "principles."  

The week-long CNBC Revolt of the Traders led by McCain voter Rick
Santelli and the fledgling little Tea Party movement promoted by the
Michelle Malkins of the world are obvious outgrowths of this 1990s
mentality, now fortified by the most powerful fuel:  deep economic fear.  

But as feisty and fire-breathing as those outbursts are, nothing can
match -- for pure, illustrative derangement -- the discussion below
from Glenn Beck's new Fox show this week, in which he and an array of
ex-military and CIA guests ponder (and plot and plan) "war games" for
the coming Civil War against Obama-led tyranny.  

It really has to be seen to be believed.

Before presenting that to you, a few caveats are in order:  There is
nothing inherently wrong or illegitimate with citizens expressing
extreme anger towards the Government and the ruling political class. 
There isn't even anything wrong or illegitimate with citizens
organizing themselves into a movement that -- whether by design or
effect -- is threatening to entrenched elites.  If anything, we've had
too little of that.  

In fact, it's only a complete lack of fear of a meek, passive and
impotent citizenry on the part of political and financial rulers -- a
certainty that there will be no consequences no matter what they do --
that could have given rise to the endless corruption, deceit,
lawbreaking, destruction, and outright thievery of the last eight
years.  A political and financial elite that perceives itself as
invulnerable from threat or consequence will inevitably vest itself
with more power and more riches.  That's what we've had and, largely,
still have.

But this Rush-Limbaugh/Fox-News/nationalistic movement isn't driven by
anything noble or principled or even really anything political.  If it
were, they would have been extra angry and threatening and rebellious
during the Bush years instead of complicit and meek and supportive to
the point of cult-like adoration.  

Instead, they're just basically Republican dead-enders (at least what
remains of the regional/extremist GOP), grounded in tribal allegiances
that are fueled by their cultural, ethnic and religious identities and
by perceived threats to past prerogatives -- now spiced with
legitimate economic anxiety and an African-American President who,
they were continuously warned for the last two years, is a Marxist,
Terrorist-sympathizing black nationalist radical who wants to
re-distribute their hard-earned money to welfare queens and illegal
immigrants (and is now doing exactly that).

That's the context for this Glenn Beck "War Games" show on Fox News
this week -- one promoted, with some mild and obligatory caveats, by
Michelle Malkin's Hot Air.  

In the segment below, he convened a panel that includes former CIA
officer Michael Scheuer and Ret. U.S. Army Sgt. Major Tim Strong. 
They discuss a coming "civil war" led by American "Bubba" militias --
Beck says he "believes we're on this road" -- and they contemplate
whether the U.S. military would follow the President's orders to
subdue civil unrest or would instead join with "the people" in defense
of their Constitutional rights against the Government (they agree that
the U.S. military would be with "the people"):


Fox News Video: http://snipurl.com/chomc


They don't seem very interested in bipartisanship and in transcending
ideological divisions.

Immediately prior to that segment, Fox viewers were warned (as usual)
that the unruly, uncivilized, violent Muslims are coming, and only
Benjamin Netanyahu will be able to subdue them with a massive attack:


Fox News Video: http://snipurl.com/chou7


In one sense, all of this drooling rage is nothing more than the
familiar face of extreme right-wing paranoia, as Richard Hofstadter
famously described 45 years ago:


---The paranoid spokesman sees the fate of conspiracy in apocalyptic 
terms—he traffics in the birth and death of whole worlds, whole 
political orders, whole systems of human values. He is always 
manning the barricades of civilization. He constantly lives at a 
turning point. 

Like religious millenialists he expresses the anxiety of those who 
are living through the last days and he is sometimes disposed to set 
a date fort the apocalypse. ("Time is running out," said Welch in 
1951. "Evidence is piling up on many sides and from many sources 
that October 1952 is the fatal month when Stalin will attack.")---


But it's now inflamed by declining imperial power, genuine economic
crises, an exotic Other occupying the White House, and potent
technology harnessed by right-wing corporations such as Fox News to
broadcast and disseminate it widely and continuously.  At the very
least, it's worth taking note of.  And I wonder what would happen if
MSNBC broadcast a similar discussion of leftists plotting and planning
the imminent, violent Socialist Revolution against the U.S. Government.

UPDATE:  Charles Johnson of Little Green Footballs and "Pajamas Media":

Glenn Beck: The End is Nigh . . . .

Is it irresponsible for Fox News to be airing 
this over the top, creepy alarmist stuff during a 
financial crisis? Well, yeah, I think so.

If someone like that -- like this -- thinks that Fox News is being
irresponsibly, even dangerously, inflammatory, then that's a pretty
compelling sign of how far over the line they actually are.

Multiple links within text at link: 
http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/02/22/militias/index.html






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