Category Archives: Culture war

The tragic tale of oppressed billionaires

Glenn Greenwald has a must-read piece on Continetti’s apologia thingy to the Koch brothers in the Weekly Standard regarding how influential billionaires are being cruelly victimized by bloggers and the like. It’s a tragic tale. http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/03/27/koch/index.html

And Benen quotes Charles Koch and comments…

“”His father was a hard core economic socialist in Kenya… So he had sort of antibusiness, anti-free enterprise influences affecting him almost all his life. It just shows you what a person with a silver tongue can achieve.” 

Now, Koch’s vast wealth proves that one need not be intelligent to get rich, but remarks like these are still just embarrassing.” http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2011_03/028649.php

Not merely embarrassing in getting details wrong, I’d point out. Consider the stunning lack of self-awareness here. Obama is profoundly influenced by a father who was absent and played almost zero part in Obama’s life. On the other hand, the Koch boys who were raised by and gained their millionaire to billionaire fortunes from a co-founder of the John Birch Society, that’s invisible to the dork.

God’s bow tie

This is one of the images following on a repair of the Hubble.  More here

What, one wonders, would a child who has been home-schooled on a curriculum of fundamentalist christian ideas, make of such photos? Just take the concept of ‘light years’. If the world and creation are merely about 6,000 years old, then any number of sciences have to be deemed erroneous to make way for that single belief.

I had a conversation a couple of years ago with someone who had been convinced that carbon dating was bad science, that it was undependable. Carbon dating, of course, is a method of establishing the age of a thing which is carbon-based, such as wood. I explained to her that there’s a very simple and elegant way in which to test whether this science is accurate (and in fact, it was this cross-checking which showed us that the carbon dating readings had a predictable error which grew over time, and knowing this error, we can account for it). The test involves using samples of wood taken from tree rings.

She decided, this information not withstanding, that carbon dating still couldn’t be trusted.

Rebellion to Tyrants is Obedience to God

h/t Washington Independent

Another ‘family values’ republican with weiner waving

We’ve all seen those stories where a careless politician gets a little too candid when speaking into a hot mic. But this one’s really in a whole different league.

Michael Duvall is a conservative Republican state representative from Orange County, California. While waiting for the start of a legislative hearing in July, the 54-year-old married father of two and family values champion began describing, for the benefit of a colleague seated next to him, his ongoing affairs with two different women. Invery graphic detail.

For instance…  TPM has the juicy hypocrisy detailed

I’m not even going to bother theorizing on the psychology of this sort of thing.  I’ll just share my utter disgust with the ‘family values’ movement, its proponents and the cynical hypocrisy that marks the modern conservative movement and the party who uses it to gain and maintain power.

Quote of the day – “Jumping the kosher shark” category

One of the things I find most interesting is that generally Evangelicals are so much more supportive of Israel than the American Jewish community. - Mike Huckabee

“And if Israel disagrees with this obvious fact, then we’ll bomb the shit out of it until Jesus comes”, Huckabee might have added.

I’ll let Josh Marshall (yes, he’s Jewish) at TPM explain this bit of madness.

This is true on many levels. But it also gets at deeper issues. One of which is the inability of the Republican party to attract substantial numbers of Jewish voters. This is treated as odd by many political observers, reasoning that the GOP has adopted such hard line positions on the Arab-Israeli conflict that surely this should lead to an increasing number of American Jews voting for the Republican party.

Some would say that the failure is explained by the fact that Jews are Americans and they’ve got a lot of other issues that matter to them beside Israel. Which is, of course, true. And needless to say, moonbat wailing to the contrary notwithstanding, the Democratic party is also extremely pro-Israel in its policies.

But the nature of GOP support for Israel is simply not aimed at or shaped by the support of Jewish voters. It’s support is aimed at a vastly larger evangelical Christian constituency. And the aims, mores, values, etc. of each group are profoundly different. (The most obvious difference is that American Jews tend to support Israel because of a mix of nationalism, ethnic identification, religious belief and democratic values while the religious right tends to support Israel because its existence will hasten the apocalypse when God will vanquish the Jews en masse in hellfire and turn Israel into a vast evangelical theme park. So the two groups sort of come at the issue from different perspectives.)

At one level, this is obvious: we know the religious right is a huge constituency for uber-hawk policies on Israel. But I’m not sure we think through its implications as clearly or as deeply as we might.

Another one of those big fucking surprises

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette pours through Tom Ridge’s new book and offers the relevant passages where the former Homeland Security chief discusses the Bush administration’s desire to increase the terror threat level for political reasons. Ridge reveals that Attorney General John Ashcroft and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld argued in favor of raising the threat level by noting the correlation it had with Bush’s approval rating…

http://thinkprogress.org/2009/08/20/ridge-book-ashcroft-rummy/

Anyone watching the behavior of that administration at that time understood this.  Well, anyone not a crazed ideologue or a happy-to-be-paranoid-at-all-times consumer of fear-inspiring propaganda, that is.

But it is encouraging to see Ridge, a rare individual in that administration who seemed to have a smidgeon of integrity, state what was so obvious.

Income inequality trend – what matches it?

Paul Krugman (and others) have noted recent income inequality figures from  Emmanuel Saez at Berkeley.    Here is the historical perspective graphed…

Two major trends are immediately evident – downwards from the 20s and then upwards from the the mid-70s.  We know what brought the trend down from “the guilded age” but what brought it back up?

I’ve previously noted here Lewis Lapham’s essay “The Tentacles of Rage”. What Lapham describes in this essay matches yjod rise and does so far better than any particular individual or party holding the Presidency or the inititation of any particular policy or the establishment of or dismantling of any particular institution related to governance in the US.

Further, one can see quite clearly how what Lapham describes is presently in full bloom in the broad campaign underway to kill healthcare reform in the US and to bring down a President who likely will, if he is able, move the country back towards the sorts of regulations and perspectives which caused or facilitated the downward trend mentioned above.

I encourage everyone to read the essay with care and with attention to the correspondences between the timeline demonstrated in the graph and the correspondences between the thesis Lapham advances with what we have all experienced since the mid 70s and are still experiencing now.

Obama and failure

I’ve written about this elsewhere but I thought I ought to put it down briefly here as well.

There is, you’ll know this if you follow the rightwing media, a concerted effort to create the narrative that “Obama is failing”.  A variation of this began even before he was sworn in, of course, with Limbaugh openly stating that he wanted Obama to fail.  He was merely stating openly what the conservative movement broadly was wishing at the time and merely because if Obama was to be successful in instituting progressive policies that would almost certainly mean minority status for a relatively long period of time for Republicans and a serious blow to the conservative movement.

From this perception has also arisen the broad and ubiquitous effort to obstruct Obama legislatively.  Obviously, this constitutes a bald struggle for power and the good of citizens or the good of the system plays no part in the equation (except where conservative ideology is so firmly and unreflectively in place that it is believe, axiomatically, that anything but a certain version of conservatism must inevitably lead to an unhappy civic situation).

In tandem with this legislative strategy of obstruction is a propaganda strategy which has as its goal the forwarding (and hopefully, broad public acceptance of) a narrative which suggests Obama is/has/will fail as a leader.  This notion is absolutely everywhere across the rightwing media presently and has been all along.  It’s being pumped now with great zest and vigor.

Why?  The final goal of all these efforts is simply to have enough of the electorate believe that Obama’s progressive policies have failed to make life better for citizens such that he (and Dems) suffer defeats in subsequent elections.  In order to get to that goal, there has to be a progression towards it in place and building.  And that’s the simple reason why this narrative is being pushed presently.

Here, as a very typical example, is a subhead to a Michael Novak piece today at NRO…

After six months in the Oval Office, Pres. Barack Obama is failing on multiple fronts.

What the hell is it about the South?

h/t Washington Monthly

Update: Andrew Sullivan, back in Sept of last year, noted a contemporary polling result…

A new poll released Thursday (Sept. 11) finds that nearly six in 10 white Southern evangelicals believe torture is justified, but their views can shift when they consider the Christian principle of the golden rule.
The poll, commissioned by Faith in Public Life and Mercer University, found that 57 percent of respondents said torture can be often or sometimes justified to gain important information from suspected terrorists. Thirty-eight percent said it was never or rarely justified.

Christ’s message of empathy is clearly no longer operational. Get the revelation here

Update 2:  Matt Yglesias makes a wonderful observation on the graph above and on Mike Weigel’s further breakdown showing that this southern phenomenon is due almost entirely to white folks…

“I think Republicans have basically given up on the battle of trying to win more Hispanics over to their side. Which leaves them with the medium-term objective of trying to get non-southern whites to act more like southern whites.”

Quote of the day – “‘Umble. We Heeps are a very ‘umble family” category

As “Cabaret” gives us a necessary peak into the sordid corners of 1930s Berlin, the National Review is a necessary complement to our understanding of the more vulgar aspects of modern American political culture.

Let’s take today’s contribution there from Andrew McCarthy.  We’ll start with this wonderful bit mid-way through the piece…

The mission of National Review has always included keeping the Right honest…

We ought to be thankful, no?  Then, let’s head back up to the very first sentence of the piece…

Throughout the 2008 campaign, Barack Hussein Obama claimed it was a “smear” to refer to him as “Barack Hussein Obama.”

Links/citations to this multitude of instances unfortunately aren’t provided by McCarthy.  A possible reason they aren’t is because he’s lying.

We’ve come a long way, baby

Hostility to the concept [of same sex marriage] was widespread and blatant. In 1971, when Michael Wetherbee of the Minnesota ACLU argued that a gay couple had the right to marry under that state’s constitution, one judge on the Minnesota Supreme Court actually turned his chair around and refused to face Wetherbee as he delivered his argument. Not a single judge asked a question. The court’s unanimous decision denying the claim cited the book of Genesis to support its conclusion that marriage is properly limited to the union of a man and a woman.

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/22791

Bill Kristol, lying, and Straussian neoconservatism

Glenn Greenwald has written a typically exceptional piece this morning.  As he notes up top, what he’s written here was motivated by comments from Bill Kristol, comments of a deeply dishonest (very purposefully dishonest) nature.  What follows is an excellent precis on neoconservativism, Leo Strauss, the Staussian father/son duo of Irving and Bill with nods to others (like Shadia Drury) who have written extensively on Strauss and on neoconservatism.  If you’d like to better understand this whole subject better, I couldn’t point to a better example than Greenwald’s piece.  I’m going to paste it in full here.

Bill Kristol condemns lying for political ends: Seriously

(updated below – Update II)

On Fox News yesterday, NPR’s Juan Williams — who, just by the way, dutifully spouts GOP talking points more reliably than any Fox commentator other than Karl Rove — condemned President Obama for telling ”lies” about the Gates controversy.  That prompted this observation from Bill Kristol, in which he head-pattingly quoted Williams:

Amid all the blather about “teachable moments,” I don’t recall anyone else making this simple but profound observation: “You can’t have a teachable moment if it’s based on a lie.” Another way of putting it might be to say that it’s not a “moment” that’s teachable, it’s the truth that’s teachable.

So a moment in which everyone colludes to obscure the truth (which seems characteristic of most “teachable moments” in contemporary America) is not a moment of teaching; it’s a moment of deception, of misdirection, of obfuscation. Call it an obfuscatable moment.

It’s hard to remember a statement in American politics as deceitful and obfuscating as this one from Bill Kristol, pretending to condemn politically-motivated lies.  It’s not hyperbole to say that the central political tactic of neoconservatism is the “noble lie” — exactly what Kristol self-righteously condemns here.  The political philosopher most revered by neoconservatives, Leo Strauss, explicitly advocated such lies, as Philosophy and Political Science Professor Shadia Drury documented:

[Strauss] therefore taught that those in power must invent noble lies and pious frauds to keep the people in the stupor for which they are supremely fit. . . . Like the Grand Inquisitor, he thought that it was better for human beings to be victims of this noble delusion than to “wallow” in the “sordid” truth. And like the Grand Inquisitor, Strauss thought that the superior few should shoulder the burden of truth and in so doing, protect humanity from the “terror and hopelessness of life.

Though that may be a bit of an oversimplification of Strauss’ views, Kristol’s dad, Irving, the so-called Godfather of Neoconservatism,was a devout follower of what he understood to be Strauss’ beliefthat feeding lies to citizens is necessary for good political ends:

Kristol has acknowledged his intellectual debt to Strauss in a recent autobiographical essay. “What made him so controversial within the academic community was his disbelief in the Enlightenment dogma that ‘the truth will make men free.’” Kristol adds that “Strauss was an intellectual aristocrat who thought that the truth could make some [emphasis Kristol's] minds free, but he was convinced that there was an inherent conflict between philosophic truth and political order, and that the popularization and vulgarization of these truths might import unease, turmoil and the release of popular passions hitherto held in check by tradition and religion with utterly unpredictable, but mostly negative, consequences.”

Based on that understanding, Irving Kristol explicitly advocated that ordinary citizens be lied to for their own good and the good of society:

There are different kinds of truths for different kinds of people. There are truths appropriate for children; truths that are appropriate for students; truths that are appropriate for educated adults; and truths that are appropriate for highly educated adults, and the notion that there should be one set of truths available to everyone is a modern democratic fallacy. It doesn’t work.

As Professor Drury notes based on Bill Kristol’s writings on such topic, Kristol himself, just like his dad whose life he followed, is a “Straussian clone.”  That’s why Bill Kristol’s public career is filled with too many lies to count.  Lying is a justifiable tactic to them, which is what explains typical Kristol statements like this:

What the Bush administration did say–and what so many reporters seem to have trouble understanding–is that Iraq and al Qaeda had a relationship that, by its very existence, posed a potential threat to the United States.

Another by-product of Kristol’s fervent belief in political lies was when he pretended to support evangelical Christians in the Terri Schiavo travesty (Straussian neoconservatives love to manipulate and inflame mass religious beliefs, especially Christianity, feigning sympathy with it, as the ultimate form of control) and said this:

After all, we are a “maturing society,” as the Supreme Court has told us. Perhaps it is time, in mature reaction to this latest installment of what Hugh Hewitt has called a “robed charade,” to rise up against our robed masters, and choose to govern ourselves. Call it Terri’s revolution.

This is what was always most striking (and revealing) about The New York Times‘ hiring Kristol as a columnist (and The Washington Post‘s immediately swooping him up after he was let go by the NYT):  Kristol is someone who not only lies constantly, but who quite obviously believes in lying as a legitimate and important political weapon.  In general, there are far too many instances of extreme hypocrisy and deceit in our political culture to bother noting them when they arise.  But reading Bill Kristol — the living, breathing embodiment of deceitful propaganda — condemn the use of lies for political ends is really too much to ignore. It would be exactly like reading Saddam Hussein condemn human rights abuses or Dick Cheney condemn torture or George Bush condemn lawbreaking or Michael Gordon condemn mindless, government-serving stenography or Cokie Roberts condemn conventional-wisdom-spouting punditry, etc.

UPDATE:  As CarolynC notes in Comments, the Straussian endorsement of “noble lies” is completely consistent with the two-tiered system of justice that dominates our political culture (the subject of today’s first post), as only some people — the elite — are permitted to tell such lies, while ordinary citizens who do so must be punished.  From Harper‘s Earl Shorris in July, 2004:

For Strauss, as for Plato, the virtue of the lie depends on who is doing the lying. If a poor woman lies on her application for welfare benefits, the lie cannot be countenanced. The woman has committed fraud and must be punished. The woman is not noble, therefore the lie cannot be noble. When the leader of the free world says that “free nations do not have weapons of mass destruction,” this is but a noble lie, a fable told by the aristocratic president of a country with enough nuclear weapons to leave the earth a desert less welcoming than the surface of the moon.

That Harper‘s article also notes that Bill Kristol, like his dad Irv, is a devoted Straussian. Indeed, when Kristol pretends to reject politically-motivated lies, that in itself is an example of a Straussian lie:   Obama should be condemned for “lying” because he’s not noble, whereas Kristol and his comrades are free to lie because they are devoted to noble ends.

UPDATE II:  I’m well aware of, and explicitly referenced, the debate over whether Kristolian neoconervatives faithfully summarize Strauss’ views or whether they distort them.  Contrary to the assertions of several commenters, that debate is hardly clear-cut.  In addition to the above-cited Drury and Harper‘s articles arguing that neocons reflect exactly what Strauss believed, here is arestrained and very well-informed condemnation of Strauss fromHarper‘s Scott Horton.  Horton notes that “even among those who love him, there seems to be a very catty rage over just who are the proper ‘Straussians’”; that “the Neoconservative movement [] properly claims roots in the writing and thinking of Leo Strauss”; and that Strauss, at least early on, “sees real appeal in fascism, Mussolini style.”  Also according to Horton:

One of the pillars of liberal democracy is the embrace of the Rule of Law, and the notion that no one, even the king or Executive, stands above the law. For Strauss this idea was foolishness. . . . Strauss applies this criticism to law; law spells weakness; law is a trick of the weak to tie down the strong. Hence, Strauss applauds the decisive leader who acts outside of the law to achieve his goals.Nevertheless, the consequences of Strauss’ dismissive attitude towards the Rule of Law can be seen today in the Neocon advocacy of jettisoning traditional norms of the law of armed conflict and in allowing the president to operate outside of clear criminal statutes (like FISA) as an aspect of his war-making powers.

And see here for some short though seemingly incriminating Strauss quotes (citation is here).

As a former philosophy major, I could find that debate interesting if I wanted to, but it has little to do with anything I’ve written here.  As a contemporary political matter, that debate over Strauss matters little.  Leo Strauss isn’t subsidized by Rupert Murdoch to spew propaganda on Fox News and at The Weekly Standard; doesn’t write columns in virtually every major American newspaper and magazine; and doesn’t exert substantial influence in our political debate.  Neoconservatives do.  What matters is how they understand and embrace Strauss, regardless of whether that interpretation is or is not faithful to Strauss himself.  As the excerpts from Irving Kristol make conclusively clear, neocons cite Strauss to support their belief that lies in pursuit of noble political ends are justifiable (indeed, Bill Kristol sits on the Advisory Board of the Leo Strauss Center at the University of Chicago, along with Harvard Professor and Machiavelli lover Harvey Mansfield, who explicitly rejects the rule of law as a constraint on Presidents, or at least on George Bush).

That’s what matters:  what neoconservatives believe.  And what they believe is the virtue of political lies when spouted by certain people (themselves) in service of certain goals (their own), and relatedly, the complete absence of any limits on what they can do in pursuit of those “noble” goals.

So, a Rabbi with a Lugar, an Evangelist with an AK47, and a Buddhist with a shotgun walk into a bar…

Changes in gun legislation in Arizona and Tennessee comes despite bloody rampages in recent months

Is Republican Senator Jim DeMint losing it?

Plugging his new book last night, DeMint said:

Part of what we’re trying to do in Saving Freedom is just show that where we are, we’re about where Germany was before World War II where they became a social democracy. You still had votes but the votes were just power grabs like you see in Iran, and other places in South America, like Chavez is running down in Venezuela. People become more dependent on the government so that they’re easy to manipulate. And they keep voting for more government because that’s where their security is. When our immigrants get here, they’re worried, because they see it happening here.

How do people this utterly stupid manage to get elected?  It’s no small puzzle.

h/t TPM

Krugman asks the question

July 3, 2009, 9:00 AM

Secrets of the WSJ

This morning’s Wall Street Journal opinion section contains a lot of what one expects to see. There’s an opinion piece making a big fuss over the fake scandal at the EPA. There’s an editorial claiming that the latest job figures prove the failure of Obama’s economic plan — something I dealt with in the Times. All of this follows on yesterday’s editorial asserting that the Minnesota senatorial election was stolen.

All of this is par for the course; the WSJ editorial page has been like this for 35 years. Nonetheless, it got me wondering: what do these people really believe?

I mean, they’re not stupid — life would be a lot easier if they were. So they know they’re not telling the truth. But they obviously believe that their dishonesty serves a higher truth — one that is, in effect, told only to Inner Party members, while the Outer Party makes do with prolefeed.

The question is, what is that higher truth? What do these people really believe in?

Haley Barbour – Today’s lying liar and another typical media failure

Barbour is clearly weighing a run for the Presidency. Tim Pawlenty likewise (who has a looming problem as governor of Minnesota where, given the expected Minn Supreme Court decision on Frankin/Coleman, he will either have to certify Frankin or refuse to and send that case on to the federal SC, either way making powerful enemies). On the matter of Mark Sanford and Ensign (family values conservatives who just got busted for humping women other than their christian helpmeets), Pawlenty has described the two, accurately, as “hypocritical”. Haley Barbour, on the other hand, refused to make a moral or ethical indictment against Sanford saying,

“I just don’t talk about people’s personal problems. I don’t think it’s appropriate, I don’t think it’s polite, and I don’t think it achieves any purpose,”

Right.  A man of admirable principle.  But as Kos notes (with video footage), in 98 Barbour’s principles pointed in a quite different direction.

And now we have this president who treated Monica Lewinsky in such a way that it makes prostitution look dignified and ennobling. I mean, he made her a sex toy, a sex object. And now what do these women say? That it doesn’t make any difference?
The American people hear that with a voice louder than a bolt of lightning and thunder when these same people never say one word about the way that this young woman was treated, when they’ve spent their whole careers complaining about it when it was the president of a company or a Republican Senator or a possible judge? The public sees through that like nothing you ever saw.

Journalism as stenography.  I mean, for fuck sakes.  Do some research prior to your show.

Quote of the day – “project much?” category

Karl Rove, on O’Reilly, discussing the attention paid by the media and Dems to the recent infidelity scandals of family-values Republicans Sanford and Ensign…

What we saw last night was the coarseness and ugliness in American politics, carried forward by people who claim not to be political actors, but commentators and observers. And they gave the lie to their so-called neutrality or objectiveness last night.

h/t Crooks and Liars

Quote of the day – “Decorative floats in the Adulterer-Pride parade” category

Whenever the latest Republican politician is caught with his zipper undone, a predictable moment of introspection on the right inevitably ensues. Pundits, bloggers and perplexed citizens ruminate over the lessons they have learned, again and again, about human frailty, false piety and the temptations of flesh and power. They express concern for the damaged family and lament the fall of yet another promising young hypocrite. They resolve to restore the purity of their movement and always remember to remind us that this is all Bill Clinton’s fault. What they never do is face up to an increasingly embarrassing fact about themselves and their leaders.

They’re really just liberals in right-wing drag.

Joe Conason

Republican Party – victims dispossessed (but they know who dispossessed them)

From Rush Limbaugh’s radio show yesterday…

“…if ever a civil rights movement was needed in America, it is for the Republican Party… If ever we needed to start marching for freedom and constitutional rights, it’s for the Republican Party. The Republican Party is today’s oppressed minority.”   see here

This notion or sense of victimization has been an abiding undercurrent in the new conservative movement.   For example, Christianity is commonly held to be under dire threat even while constituting 75% of the American population (atheists at four tenths of one percent).  Or, if we were attending to the last several days’ complaints from the modern right re Sotomayer’s nomination to the SC, one gets the clear notion that the Court and American society just has no place for white men of European descent.  The end, clearly, is nigh.

This isn’t new in American culture.  But Limbaugh and others in the modern conservative movement have merely tuned it to a high pitch.  From Richard Hofstadter’s famous essay, The Parnaoid Style in American Politics…

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.”)
As a member of the avant-garde who is capable of perceiving the conspiracy before it is fully obvious to an as yet unaroused public, the paranoid is a militant leader. He does not see social conflict as something to be mediated and compromised, in the manner of the working politician. Since what is at stake is always a conflict between absolute good and absolute evil, what is necessary is not compromise but the will to fight things out to a finish. Since the enemy is thought of as being totally evil and totally unappeasable, he must be totally eliminated—if not from the world, at least from the theatre of operations to which the paranoid directs his attention. This demand for total triumph leads to the formulation of hopelessly unrealistic goals, and since these goals are not even remotely attainable, failure constantly heightens the paranoid’s sense of frustration. Even partial success leaves him with the same feeling of powerlessness with which he began, and this in turn only strengthens his awareness of the vast and terrifying quality of the enemy he opposes.
The enemy is clearly delineated: he is a perfect model of malice, a kind of amoral superman—sinister, ubiquitous, powerful, cruel, sensual, luxury-loving. Unlike the rest of us, the enemy is not caught in the toils of the vast mechanism of history, himself a victim of his past, his desires, his limitations. He wills, indeed he manufactures, the mechanism of history, or tries to deflect the normal course of history in an evil way. He makes crises, starts runs on banks, causes depressions, manufactures disasters, and then enjoys and profits from the misery he has produced. The paranoid’s interpretation of history is distinctly personal: decisive events are not taken as part of the stream of history, but as the consequences of someone’s will. Very often the enemy is held to possess some especially effective source of power: he controls the press; he has unlimited funds; he has a new secret for influencing the mind (brainwashing); he has a special technique for seduction (the Catholic confessional).
It is hard to resist the conclusion that this enemy is on many counts the projection of the self; both the ideal and the unacceptable aspects of the self are attributed to him. The enemy may be the cosmopolitan intellectual, but the paranoid will outdo him in the apparatus of scholarship, even of pedantry. Secret organizations set up to combat secret organizations give the same flattery. The Ku Klux Klan imitated Catholicism to the point of donning priestly vestments, developing an elaborate ritual and an equally elaborate hierarchy. The John Birch Society emulates Communist cells and quasi-secret operation through “front” groups, and preaches a ruthless prosecution of the ideological war along lines very similar to those it finds in the Communist enemy.* Spokesmen of the various fundamentalist anti-Communist “crusades” openly express their admiration for the dedication and discipline the Communist cause calls forth.
On the other hand, the sexual freedom often attributed to the enemy, his lack of moral inhibition, his possession of especially effective techniques for fulfilling his desires, give exponents of the paranoid style an opportunity to project and express unacknowledgeable aspects of their own psychological concerns. Catholics and Mormons—later, Negroes and Jews—have lent themselves to a preoccupation with illicit sex. Very often the fantasies of true believers reveal strong sadomasochistic outlets, vividly expressed, for example, in the delight of anti-Masons with the cruelty of Masonic punishments.

Obama world vs Cheney world

A typically right-on-the-money view from Eugene Robinson.