Web Only// Views » February 27, 2010
It Is Happening Here
Ignorance, no matter how embarrassing, doesn't get in Glenn Beck's way.
Let’s pause and give thanks to Glenn Beck.
No, seriously–because that’s what he’s due.
We owe this talk-show-host-turned-political-leader gratitude for using his televised keynote address to the Conservative Political Action Conference to so frankly outline what the conservative movement has become–and why it repulses so many Americans.
Coming days after an anti-tax terrorist kamikaze-attacked a government facility in Texas, and following Republicans like Sen. Scott Brown and Rep. Steve King expressing sympathy for that terrorist’s grievances, Beck’s homily stands as the moment’s most forthright manifesto on the right’s authoritarian objectives.
Beck began his speech posing as a libertarian against “big government.” Notice that most Republican icons are now doing this, though not all resemble Beck–not all of them previously pushed the big-government Patriot Act or the even-bigger-government bank bailout.
From there, Beck worked up a drenching sweat, criticizing Theodore Roosevelt’s notion that we should make sure the accumulation of wealth is “honorably obtained” and “represents benefit to the community.”
His porcine complexion verging on crimson, Beck called that concept of “community” a “cancer” that “is not our founders’ idea of America”–somehow forgetting the notions of community and solidarity inherent in the founders’ “Join or Die” motto.
But ignorance, no matter how embarrassing, doesn’t get in Beck’s way. To wild applause, he labeled this alleged tumor of “community” the supposedly evil “progressivism”–and he told disciples to “eradicate it” from the nation.
The lesson was eminently clear, coming in no less than the keynote address to one of America’s most important political conventions. Beck taught us that a once-principled conservative movement of reasoned activists has turned into a mob–one that does not engage in civilized battles of ideas. Instead, these torch-carriers, gun-brandishers and tea partiers follow an anti-government terrorist attack by cheering a demagogue’s demand for the physical annihilation of those with whom he disagrees–namely anyone, but particularly progressives, who value “community.”
No doubt, some conservatives will parse, insisting Beck was only endorsing the “eradication” of progressivism but not of progressives. These same willful ignoramuses will also likely say that the Nazis’ beef was with Judaism but not Jews, and that white supremacists dislike African-American culture but have no problem with black people.
Other conservatives will surely depict Beck’s “eradication” line as just the jest of a self-described “rodeo clown”–merely the “fusion of entertainment and enlightenment,” as his radio motto intones. But if Beck is half as smart as he incessantly tells listeners he is, then he knows it’s no joke.
In a melting-pot nation of slave descendants and immigrant refugees haunted by ancestral memories of despotic violence, Beck is deliberately employing coded and menacing language, warning his opponents not to believe Sinclair Lewis’ refrain that such horror “can’t happen here.” Beck wants adversaries to know that it can and it will–to them, and at his movement’s hands.
Really, the threat isn’t even veiled. To understand it, just ponder comparisons. For instance, ask yourself: What is the difference between Beck’s decree and that of Rwanda’s genocidal leaders in the 1990s? The former broadcasted a call to “eradicate” the “cancer”-like progressives; the latter a call to “exterminate the cockroaches.” Likewise, what separates Beck’s screed from a bin Laden fatwa? They may employ different ideologies and languages, but both endorse the wholesale elimination of large groups of Americans.
And so we finally see tyranny’s hideous image within our midst: It’s not a tightly cropped mustache in a beige uniform; it’s a clean-shaven baby face in a suit–a rodeo clown with a chalkboard who unfortunately speaks for modern-day conservatism.
We should thank him, at least, for admitting what his movement truly wants.
ABOUT THIS AUTHOR
David Sirota, an In These Times senior editor and syndicated columnist, is a bestselling author whose book Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now—Our Culture, Our Politics, Our Everything was released in March of 2011. Sirota, whose previous books include The Uprising and Hostile Takeover, hosts the morning show on AM760 in Denver. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com or follow him on Twitter @davidsirota.

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Reader Comments
Come on David, go back and read your own stuff. It appears to me you’re going OTT far more lately.
Check this: “Beck is deliberately employing coded and menacing language…”
and this: “What is the difference between Beck
Posted by whattheheck on Feb 27, 2010 at 8:36 AM
This is no drill!
I often ask myself why Americans don’t use the “F” word when describing the rhetoric and actions of Right-wing demogagues? I’m not referring to the word “FU*K”, but the word FASCIST! An answer was provided me within the first comment left here, for if the writer “whattheheck” reflects the Progressive mind and feels David Sirota is going too far, then I think Mr Sirota and I have more to fear from Progressives than Glenn Beck.
It is Progressives who block the light from revealing the true character of the Far Right, as they block themselves from admitting the quiescent and submissive character of President Obama. They will gladly walk into cattle cars if the guard is ethnic, politically correct and wearing a “Dem” badge.
Mr Sirota, if you read this, know that some feel as you. In fact, this writer has been warning of it for years. When it arrives, we can blame both the Conservatives AND the Progressives who enabled them!
If Mr Sirota is too extreme for readers in his dire interpretation of a future envisaged by the Right, I will outdistance him and suggest that able-bodied Americans who have health and resources available to leave the country (while they still can).
After 62 years of living in America, I see there is no resistance to the obvious, due in part to the total bankruptcy of the Left.
Unless organized resistance in the name of “anti-Fascism” erupts (and there is no such sign on the horizon), the Liberal and Progressive will awake to a new day and wonder what occurred while they were sleeping.
As I said: This is no drill!
Posted by M Thomas on Mar 3, 2010 at 6:46 PM
The problem with Beck and others of his ilk is that there are those here in this Country that take his message to heart.
And believe me, most of them wouldn’t know a hidden meaning if it slapped them in the face.
I live in East Texas and while these folks ain’t exactly ‘Deliverance’ types, they ain’t that far from ‘em.
Jesus Christ could come down, perform 5 miracles in front of them, and tell them that they are wrong ... and, with a deep sigh, they’d say, That damn Liberal Media done got to you too.
If all folks still had common sense, Beck and the rest would find no market for their tirades.
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