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The Resurgent Right: Why Now?
"...we have to say to the counterculture: Nice try, you failed,
you're wrong. And we have to simply, calmly, methodically reassert
American civilization and reestablish the work ethic."
-Newt Gingrich Contract with America
"Our political landscape is a toxic dump."
-Bill Moyers Perspective, NBC News, March 7, 1995
by Jean V. Hardisty, Ph.D.
For those who have worked to further social justice and democratic values
in the United States, the election of November 7, 1994 was a defeat.
The election results indicate that the American public has repudiated
the liberalism that has been the dominant method of social reform since
the New Deal. The resurgent right has consolidated its power and is now
implementing its agenda. There appears to be a new mood of meanness that
expresses itself in spiteful ridicule of liberals, feminists, environmentalists,
and those in a weak or dependent position, such as welfare recipients
and immigrants. The response from liberals, progressives, and centrists
alike has been a mixture of anger, disbelief, denial, and paralysis.
This is not the first time the United States has swung dramatically
to the right. Periodically throughout US history, right-wing forces have
thrived, promoting such themes as white supremacy, scapegoating of Jews,
violent opposition to unions, and rabid anti-communism. During Reconstruction
in the South after the Civil War racial hatred was mobilized to destroy
gains made by Blacks, and then in the 1920s racial scapegoating created
a period of unchecked lynchings of Black men. Immigrants, Catholics,
and Jews were scapegoated as "carriers of socialism" and "Papal
loyalists" during the first several decades of this century, and
union members were violently attacked during the 1930s. The communist
witchhunts of the McCarthy era in the 1950s is a recent example of rightist
resurgence.
The history of US government repression of dissenters, the imperialistic
adventures of the 19th and 20th centuries, the grim record of racism
directed against people of color that dates to slavery, and the resistance
to extending full rights to women are consistent and persistent themes
in US history. In truth, a close examination of that history reveals
it is more often out of sync with democratic values than aligned with
them.
Just 20 years ago it looked as if this dismal historical record might
be overcome. Certain commitments to equality and justice had been established
in American political culture. These commitments were expressed in policy
reforms, such as guaranteed access to the vote, legal services for the
poor, or food and shelter for the elderly, the disabled, and those who
cannot provide for themselves. These reformist policies tended to cluster
under the general heading of liberalism, with those who saw liberalism's
reforms as inadequate to bring about real equality and justice- the left
and progressives- acting as agents of conscience to expose the failings
and shortcomings of liberalism.
Now the political swing to the right is so complete that liberalism
has become a political orphan: not because it is a compromised ideology
of reform, but because it has been painted as socialism in disguise.
Secular humanism- one ideological source of enlightened liberal reformism-
is now under attack from religious fundamentalism. The left, defeated
and in disarray, is unable to exploit the widespread disillusionment
with liberalism to promote its own analysis. Altogether, these political
conditions add up to a formidable package of reaction which has an iron
grip on the country.1 It is not surprising that those least able to protect
themselves will suffer most from the right's power grab. The growing
gap between rich and poor is simply the most obvious indicator of the
fate of the poor and dependent.
Mindful that we have been here before, the obvious question is Why
Now? This is not a moment created simply by the hard work of a
few right-wing white male leaders; nor is it entirely a product of
the potential for repression and inequality inherent in capitalism;
nor is it merely a swing of the political pendulum, a backlash against
women, a result of the collapse of the family, a spiritual crisis;
or any of the other magic bullet explanations that have been popularized
since the alarming political debut of the New Right in 1980. Each of
these explanations gets at an aspect of the country's rightward
swing.
This discussion will address the US right within the electoral sphere,
and right-wing movements that operate within the Republican Party. Variously
called the New Right, the new Republicans, the Religious Right, or the
hard right, this sector does not include the extremist, paramilitary
right, such as the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazi groups, the Aryan Nations,
and other violent white supremacist groups. Violent members of the anti-abortion
movement, Christian Reconstructionists, David Duke, Pat Buchanan, and
Pat Robertson represent "bridges" that link these two sectors.
Though the paramilitary right is not discussed here, much of what is
said in this article applies to that sector as well.
The complexity of a full explanation cannot be exaggerated. There are
too many factors at play to say with certainty what they all are, or
how much each contributes. However, that must not prevent a good-faith
effort to lay out ideas and interpretations that hold the potential for
insight. In order to chart a course for the next decade, it is important
to assess the 1994 election, the mood of the country in general, and
especially the apparent sweeping success of the right in hopes that such
an understanding will provide some guidance for action.
An explanation that attempts to be comprehensive must take into account
the widespread public sentiment that is finding expression in the right,
and also the role of the leadership of the right in creating and mobilizing
that sentiment. This discussion will draw on both factors in attempting
to explain the contemporary rise of the right. To organize the discussion,
I suggest that we take one step back in the causal chain and focus on
five major economic, social, and political forces that provide the setting
for the expression of a rightist agenda, and thereby underlie the success
of the resurgent right. These forces are:
- a conservative religious revitalization,
- economic contraction and restructuring,
- race resentment and bigotry,
- backlash and social stress, and
- a well-funded network of right-wing organizations.
Each of these conditions has existed at previous times in US history.
While they usually overlap to some extent, they also can be seen as distinct,
identifiable phenomenon. The lightning speed of the right's rise can
be explained by the simultaneous existence of all five factors. Further,
in this period they not only overlap, but reinforce each other. This
mutual reinforcement accounts for the exceptional force of the current
rightward swing.
In fact, the right has created a juggernaut- an overwhelming force that
has now gained state power. For many progressives and liberals, the specter
of fascism is alarming. That alarm is justified. We must remember that
fascism begins as a mass movement that combines reactionary political
policies and revolutionary fervor. The contemporary right combines a
set of reactionary social policies with the fervor provided by fundamentalist
religious beliefs and long-standing racism. That is hauntingly similar
to the Weimar Republic in Germany, where the fervor was provided by nationalism
rather than religious convictions. Further, the alienation created by
a restructuring of the economy that is negatively affecting large numbers
of workers can be compared with other economic settings in which fascism
has attained power. Howard Phillips, an early New Right leader who is
a right-wing ideological purist, has said, "The French Revolution
was, to some degree, fueled by economic concerns. So I think what will
trigger [a right-wing Christian revolution] is the economic problems." (Stan:
1995)
One important distinction between the US setting and other settings
in which fascism has risen is that the US right's leadership is driven
by fairly rigid ideological principles. Fascist leadership is characterized
by craven opportunism- an apparent lack of consistent political principles
that allows the leadership to change its ideology in order to adapt whatever
strategy is necessary to attain and consolidate state power. Another
distinction is that in the contemporary right there is not one leader
who serves as the strongman. These differences are important, but it
is not far-fetched to fear that the appearance of a right-wing charismatic
leader with exceptional political skills might create the environment
that would transform the current right-wing resurgence into fascism.
RELIGIOUS REVITALIZATION
In the United States, as in many places throughout the world, there
is a dramatic growth in the number and influence of people who identify
themselves as religious fundamentalists. In fact, it can be argued that
the US is in the midst of a religious revitalization. The term "revitalization
movement" has been used by anthropologist Anthony F. C. Wallace
in a classic 1956 essay to describe a conscious, organized effort by
members of a society to construct a more satisfying culture by seeking
to bring about change in the whole cultural system, or at least substantial
parts of the system (Wallace, 1956, 264-281). 2
People create a revitalization movement because they perceive that a
part of the society's cultural system is unsatisfactory. Their discontent
leads them to commit themselves to work with urgency for an intended
shift in the society's worldview. The catalyst for dissatisfaction can
be social stress caused by outside forces (such as war or famine) or
social imbalances caused by changes within the society. That is, when
people feel ill at ease within their society, or feel that they are losing
ground relative to their expectations, they will often turn to religion
as a vehicle for the restoration of meaning, purpose, and comfort in
their lives. Their explicit goal is to revitalize their society through
movement activism.
Wallace identifies a type of revitalization movement which he calls
a "revivalistic movement." We are all familiar with the American
religious tradition of the "revival meeting"- part entertainment,
part inspiration, and often depicted as a traveling "show" that
came to small towns. The meetings featured charismatic preachers who
won converts to a very conservative version of Christianity. It is associated
with an earlier, more innocent and less sophisticated time, when people
were less influenced by the media and peer pressure was the major disciplinary
force in small-town and rural settings.
Revivalistic movements are an extension of the concept of a revival
meeting. They are movements that appeal to large numbers of recruits
because they emphasize the customs, values, and even the natural world
that were thought to have been characteristic of previous, more satisfactory
times. The movement's strength comes from its promise that it will restore
these characteristics which have been lost in the corruption of the contemporary
world. When revivalistic movements are religious in nature, it is religious
values revered in the past, such as the importance of adherence to a
literal reading of biblical teaching, that inspire people's interest
in religious values as a source of healing and restoration. The movement's
message may even create a sense of longing for qualities now lost.
The contemporary movement known as the Religious Right is such a revivalistic
movement. Based on evangelical, fundamentalist, Pentecostal, Charismatic,
and Reconstructionist religious practices and values, it is made up of
a broad array of very conservative Christian sectors, augmented by much
smaller conservative religious sectors of Judaism, Catholicism, and Islam.
The political power of the Religious Right is nearly unprecedented in
US history. With the exception of mobilizations against the teaching
of evolution, a prominent role in the promotion of the restrictions of
Prohibition, and the supportive efforts of many Black churches in the
civil rights struggle, Christian fundamentalists and evangelicals have,
in 20th century US history, most often been only marginally involved
in politics and political activism. Though Father Charles Coughlin, the
reactionary and anti-Semitic "radio priest" of the 1930s, and
a few other charismatic, firebrand preachers rabble-roused for political
goals, rank-and-file fundamentalist and evangelical religious sects have,
for the most part, stayed out of the power struggles of the political
sphere.
There were solid theological reasons for this lack of involvement in
politics. For those who read the Bible literally, the focus is on the "end
times"- an area of Christian theology formally known as eschatology.
There is an important theological debate about the nature of the end
times, a debate between those who are pre-millenialists and those who
are post-millenialists. The differences between these two positions are
so important that it was previously very difficult to bring the two groups
together.
As predicted in the Book of Revelations certain events will happen when
the world ends. These include the Rapture; a period of chaos known as
the Tribulations; the return of Christ; and a thousand years of peace
and harmony under his rule or that of his saints. For those who take
the Bible literally, the prescription for a virtuous life is one spent
in preparation for this Second Coming of Christ. Thus, involvement in
day-to-day political struggles in contemporary secular society held little
interest. Focused on the future, the moral health and godliness of this
material world was somewhat irrelevant.
When the New Right began its political recruitment of Christian evangelicals
and fundamentalists in the 1970s, it faced the question of how to bring
them into the political sphere. It was crucial that shrewd organizing
skills and convincing theological arguments be developed to inspire and
justify their political involvement. A further complication lay in the
division between pre-millenialists and post-millenialists about the nature
of the Second Coming. For pre-millenialists, great events will precede
the return of Christ- perhaps a rapture of Christian believers into heaven,
but definitely a period of Tribulation which will culminate in the final
battle of Armageddon. Only then will Christ return to rule on earth for
one thousand years; this period's end will mark the end of history. For
post-millenialist evangelicals and fundamentalists, the great events
of Rapture, Tribulation and Armageddon will follow the millennium.
During the millennium, which some post-millenialists believe has begun,
God's elect will rule the earth. God's elect are self-evidently Christian,
and they bear a heavy burden to rule in a way befitting Christian principles.
(Diamond; 1989)
Each theological position (and I have named only two here) dictates
a different order of commitments in the conduct of daily life. In order
to capture the large US evangelical and fundamentalist population for
a massive political mobilization, the New Right's religious leadership
had to develop arguments that harmonized the differences and placed political
activism at the top of all those different lists of commitments.
Two such arguments have achieved wide acceptance. First, whether one
is a pre-millenialist or a post-millenialist, it can be argued that to
do God's work here on earth is to oppose earthly evil at all times. Because
moral decay and behavior not consistent with biblical teachings are evil,
they should be actively opposed. Second, agreement has emerged that it
is Christians who have been given dominion (rule) over the earth by God.
Thus it is wrong and worthy of opposition when secular persons inappropriately
take that dominion. These arguments compel the involvement of evangelicals
and fundamentalists (and charismatics and Pentecostals) in contemporary
politics. Further, they resonate strongly with the "values" questions
that are at the center of the agenda of both the religious and secular
right.
Certain individuals, especially Robert Billings, Ed McAteer, Jerry Falwell,
Paul Weyrich, and, most recently, Pat Robertson get credit for recruiting
Christian fundamentalists and evangelicals into politics. They organized
in the 1970s, at a time when the number of citizens identifying themselves
as born-again Christians was skyrocketing. By the 1980s, Christian revivalism
had become a movement: a locus of righteous fervor, individual meaning,
and political organizing. As early as 1981, a Gallup Poll found that
38 percent of the population claimed to have been "born-again." (Gallup
Opinion Index, 184: 1-77) While not all those born-again Christians are
fundamentalists, nearly all are evangelicals.3
As this growth occurred, so too did the political sophistication of
the Christian Right leadership. The strategic decision in the 1970s to
take the movement into electoral politics, specifically within the Republican
Party, was evidence of this growing interest in political power. (Diamond:
1995) Mainstream Protestant and Catholic churches, meanwhile, were plagued
with low growth, dwindling finances, and a decline in those entering
the priesthood or ministry.
The footsoldiers of the Religious Right precisely meet Wallace's definition
of members of a society who are dissatisfied and driven to introduce
a new worldview. In this case, dissatisfaction over "moral decay" which
they see as resulting from secular values was augmented by decline in
their own status in society. Many evangelicals and fundamentalists felt
that their lifestyle and values had become devalued and in many cases
nearly invisible, at least in popular culture. Such feelings of status
deprivation and conflict with the dominant values are powerful forces
that promote a sense of alienation.
Equally important is the positive pull of the Christian Right. Membership
in a movement- in this case one with a spiritual dimension- offers an
antidote to a sense of alienation. Further, the theological authoritarianism
characteristic of New Right Christian groups provides rules to live by
and answers to life's problems with absolute clarity, not fuzzy relativism.
Thus, it is no surprise that activists in the Christian Right score exceptionally
high on tests of intolerance. In a 1990/91 stratified random sampling
of members of Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family, one of the largest
Religious Right organizations, and activists in Beverly LaHaye's Concerned
Women for America, researchers associated with the Bliss Institute at
the University of Akron found that only 2 percent of Concerned Women
for America activists and 6 percent of Focus on the Family members agreed
with the statement, "A diversity of moral views is healthy." (Smidt
et al: 1994) This is a frightening statistic to those who rely on, or
simply support, social tolerance and open-mindedness.
What does a growing and politically powerful Christian revivalistic
movement mean for Jews in the US? Many conservative Jews may feel a similar
sense of alienation from secular society and threat to their traditional
religious practices, but it is unlikely that the Christian Right can
provide answers that are satisfactory for Jews.
Certainly there are Jews who align themselves with the Christian Right-
an example is the conservative Jewish group Toward Tradition, headed
by Rabbi Daniel Lapin. Lapin argues that the proper practice of Jewish
faith dictates a belief in moral values that are more closely aligned
with those of conservative Christians than with those of liberals whose
secular humanism runs against the grain of religious practice.
Another argument for Jewish support for the Christian Right is its consistent
support for Israel. Because conservative Christian biblical teachings
maintain that the Jews must return to Israel in order for the Second
Coming to occur, the Christian Right has firmly supported US aid to Israel.
The role of Israel as a buffer against communism in the Middle East was
another appealing aspect of this alliance. For Jews who equate support
for Israel with support for Jews, the Christian Right is a dependable
and valuable ally.
Nevertheless, the relationship between Jews and the Christian Right
is a source of considerable debate within the Jewish community. For,
in fact, the political platform of the Religious Right promotes the return
of America to its Christian roots. The slogan "America is a Christian
country" has been the Christian Right's motto. Their advocacy for
prayer in schools and the erosion of a separation between church and
state inevitably implies discrimination against Jews. Worse yet is the
Christian Right's belief that those who are not born-again are not in
an appropriate relationship with God.
Even in its support for Israel, the Christian Right has simultaneously
pursued a greater Christian presence in Israel and proselytized for Jews
to convert to Christianity. (Mouly: 1985)
Despite the recent Christian Right practice of referring to their religious
beliefs as "Judeo-Christian," and the recent statement by Ralph
Reed that he had not realized that the slogan "America is a Christian
country" might be offensive to Jews, there is a substantial part
of the Jewish community that remains suspicious that the Christian Right
is anti-Semitic. A recent, long-overdue publication by the Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith presents a thorough and accurate review of the
beliefs and practices of major Religious Right organizations. This book, The
Religious Right: The Assault on Tolerance and Pluralism in America,
presents clear evidence of the latent and active anti-Semitism that runs
throughout the Christian Right. (Cantor: 1994)
The writings of Rev. Pat Robertson, whose Christian Coalition is now
the pre-eminent organization of the Christian Right, are especially revealing.
In his 1994 book, The New World Order, Robertson presents his
own variation on a long-standing anti-Semitic conspiracy theory- a sinister
plot by secret elites to rule the world, financed by Jewish bankers.
Thus we see the leader of the Christians Right's largest and most powerful
organization publishing blatant anti-Semitic rhetoric as "education" for
his members. (Lind: 1995)
Much like its anti-Semitism, the misogyny of the Religious Right is
not always explicit. Women appear to be accorded very high respect within
the tenets of conservative Christianity. In fact, one of the Christian
Right's largest and most active organizations is Concerned Women for
America, a Christian women's organization headed by Beverly LaHaye. LaHaye
teaches that it is in her religion and her family that a woman finds
her greatest fulfillment, not in the incorrect and misled principles
of feminism. She leads her members to demonize and mobilize against liberal
women by portraying them as pleasure-seeking, man-hating, and secular-minded
purveyors of sex, abortion, and divorce.
For conservative Christian women, the proper place of the woman in the
home is beneath the authority of her husband, who in turn is beneath
the authority of God. Far from being a place of subservience, this is
a woman's life in its natural form, as intended by God and by a Godly
society. Leadership should be in the hands of men; thus, it is entirely
appropriate that in the case of the anti-abortion movement- perhaps the
first of the New Right's "social issues" to bring together
a coalition of secular and religious rightists- the movement has consistently
been led primarily by men.
In addition to its opposition to a range of reproductive rights that
give women some control over their own bodies, the Religious Right opposes
equal pay, single motherhood, sex education in the schools, lesbianism,
feminist curriculum, and even daycare. Logically then, the women's movement's
struggle for equality and independence for women is considered to be
wrong by conservative Christian women. It is, in fact, seen as threatening
to the health of the society as a whole.
The Christian Right's agenda for women is explicitly anti-feminist,
but perhaps more dangerous is its implicit attack on poor women. Because
women are divided into those who are worthy (living by Godly practices)
and unworthy (engaging in an ungodly lifestyle), many poor women who
receive AFDC assistance, are single mothers, or are otherwise independent
of men but dependent on the state, are also to be condemned. The Christian
Right's support for welfare "reform," given that a majority
of welfare recipients are women, belies any claim of concern for all
women.
In fact, even conservative Christian women can become targets within
the Christian Right. The evangelical men's organization known as The
Promise Keepers, which draws tens of thousands of men to its rallies
in big-city stadiums, encourages men to take back the leadership within
the family that they have given over to their wives through their own
weakness and sloth. If the wife is not willing to give back the leadership
of the family, then the Promise Keepers are urged to "take it
back." (Italics in original) (Evans, 1994)
To the extent that mainstream feminist goals are associated with liberalism,
both the secular and religious right can be expected to portray feminists
as abnormal, predatory, and dangerous. That is not surprising. It is
notable, however, that conservative Christian women collaborate in the
demonization of poor women, especially women receiving welfare, and women
who are judged to have made mistakes. In their respect for and trust
in authority, right-wing women find dignity and a sense of security and
order in their proper and natural place under the authority of men. It
is far less virtuous to pursue a wrong-headed notion of equality than
to behave appropriately and be assured of respect. (Dworkin: 1983) For
those women who do not understand the need for women to remain in their
place and make the necessary sacrifices, there is disapproval that often
turns to disgust and disdain.
ECONOMIC CONTRACTION, REDISTRIBUTION, RESTRUCTURING
The US economy, once based in industrial capital, is being structurally
transformed by the declining significance of industrial production and
the increasing role played by finance capital and the service and information
sectors of the economy. The loss of US blue-collar industrial jobs, as
even small corporations now locate production facilities in Third World
countries, combined with the downsizing of lower and middle management
corporate structures, have left a large part of the US workforce dislocated
and disillusioned.
Much of the motivation for this restructuring comes from greater international
competition, which has necessitated increasingly speculative business
behavior in order to maintain a high level of profits. Profits now are
chased with increasingly arcane schemes- including the takeovers, mergers,
and buy-outs of the 1980s, which have continued in the 1990s.
How does the contemporary right-wing political movement relate to the
changing US economic scene? In order to understand a part of the political
motivation of the right, it is important to identify the economic interests
it represents. It is clear that the right's economic agenda (corporate
tax cuts, changes in tax rates to benefit the wealthy, deregulation,
privatization, anti-union legislation, and defunding the left) benefits
business interests and high-income individuals. Yet there is conflict
within the economic elite- with some corporate interests aligning with
the right, while some align with the moderate wing of the Republican
Party, and some with the Democrats. It is not until the differing interests
of various sectors of business are distinguished that this conflict makes
sense.
In the late 1970s, when the New Right became the focus of media attention,
its leadership openly declared its allegiance to venture capitalism.
Based largely in the West, especially the Southwest and California, and
to a lesser extent in the South, venture capitalism represents a sector
of corporate business that is young, often small and independent, and
characterized by high risk. Oil, electronics, software, and some pharmaceutical
companies are examples. In contrast, larger, older, multinational corporate
entities, such as the "blue chip" companies often located in
the Midwest and North Atlantic regions, represent a sector of capital
with a different identity and different needs from the political system.
The two sectors are sometimes called the Cowboys and the Yankees.
Liberalism pursued an agenda that, for some years, could be tolerated
by the Yankee sector of capital. Large, older corporate structures needed
the stability that unionization provided, and could afford to "buy" that
stability with benefits and relatively high wages. Thus, during much
of the post-WW II period, liberalism and corporate America were able
to co-exist in an uneasy alliance. However, with the arrival of national
economies that threatened US hegemony (such as Japan, Germany, Western
Europe and the emerging Pacific rim countries), the larger, multinational
corporate sector could no longer afford liberalism's programs and, in
the later 1970s, began its own assault on regulatory laws and labor's
pay rates and benefits packages. When the unions objected, they were
eliminated.
Simultaneously, the venture capital sector of capital was represented
by the New Right. 4 For this sector, stability was less important than
an economic environment that was hospitable for fast growth. Therefore,
deregulation, deunionization, and lower corporate taxes were the agenda.
As the 1980s progressed, the needs of the two sectors converged, until
there was no voice left to defend the economic policies of liberalism-
regulation, strong unions, and corporate taxation. (Lyons, 1994) The
attack on these policies was most viciously mounted by the New Right
(and continues to be central to the agenda of the "new Republicans"),
but it is also supported, though more quietly, by big business.
The result has been the preservation (even inflation) of profits, but
at a high social cost. The right's economic agenda has been the equivalent
of a "shock" treatment for the US economy. In order to maintain
slipping profits, a formula of increased economic speculation, downsizing
of the labor force, and concentration of profits in the hands of upper
management and stockholders has been followed. The result is a redistribution
of wealth, so that profits are maintained but at a punishing cost to
the average wage-earner. Thus, some are getting richer, many are getting
poorer, and the American dream- the belief that hard work will equal
success and a better standard of living for the next generation- has
been shattered. (Sklar: 1995)
The discontent that inevitably results from such a blow to the working
and middle class has taken the form of a right-wing populist political
revolt. We have seen the appeal of rightist rhetoric in the midst of
economic decline elsewhere- in Germany during the rise of National Socialism,
and more recently in England during the rise of Margaret Thatcher's Tory
movement. Some political themes are common to all three cases: nationalism,
tax protest, anti-government rhetoric, a nostalgia for a more "moral" time,
and scapegoating.
RACE RESENTMENT AND BIGOTRY
White supremacism and racial bigotry pervade the economy and culture
of US society, taking different forms at different times. Yet, when discussing
the right, many journalists do not refer at all to race and racism. Others
see racism as the principal social, psychological and economic motivation
for right-wing politics. Certainly the theme of white resentment of a
perceived increase in the power of racial/ethnic minority groups plays
heavily in the agenda of the right. That resentment is fanned and augmented
by the decreased sense of economic security of many working and middle
class white people (such as suburban, white, Republican males, white
rural males, or women whose status is attached to those men) as a result
of economic restructuring. There is no doubt that racial resentment and
racial bigotry are major factors in the current resurgence of the right.5
But how does it work? It is easy to see why so much contemporary analysis
of the right does not discuss racism. The New Right in the early 1980s
explicitly renounced racism, claiming to turn its back on its past association
with the Ku Klux Klan and the George Wallace Presidential campaign. Whenever
a racist slur, or an indiscreet racist joke is made public, apologies
are made, and the culprit is chastised. It appears that, in public political
discourse, only David Duke and his ilk are allowed to "speak race," and
even there, the Republican Party national leadership creates a public
distance and disavowal. 6
Another factor that obscures the right's racism is the intersection
of race and class in the US. Because there now exists a substantial Black
middle class (and increasingly a Latino and Asian middle class, though
as yet only a tiny Native American middle class), there are groups of
people of color who are less culturally threatening to the right. In
an effort to broaden the tent of Republican voters, these middle class
communities of color have, in some cases, been courted and promoted by
the right. (Toler:1993)
Most journalists, working within the institutional racism of their own
newspapers or television stations, often accept right-wing politicians'
self-portrayal as non-racists at face value, and because Americans get
most of their information from journalists, the racial motivation of
much of the current right's program is not properly understood. What
is needed in order to accurately assess the racial politics of the right
is an examination of the consequences of the right's political
agenda for people of color.
Three public policy initiatives sponsored by the right are examples
of the important role of racial bigotry and resentment in the right's
political agenda: welfare "reform," the anti-immigrant campaign,
and the attack on affirmative action. Here, racist language is barely
concealed. Stereotypes such as the "welfare queen," used to
attack welfare recipients, "illegal aliens" to attack immigrants,
and "reverse discrimination" to misrepresent affirmative action,
are promoted for the political punch inherent in the equation of people
of color and negative qualities. If people of color are grouped under
the umbrella of unseemly characteristics, then to disdain or dismiss
them is less easily identified as racism.
In many cases, the racist results of right-wing policies are built on
racially encoded concepts. A sampling of some of the most powerful are:
individual responsibility, states' rights, and dependency. In both blatant
and encoded racial slurs, the central political and psychological ploys
used are stereotyping and scapegoating. Scapegoating is fixing blame
for social stress, economic loss, or loss of political power on a target
group whose constructed guilt provides a simplistic explanation. Scapegoating
in turn depends on stereotyping- assigning characteristics (usually negative)
not to individuals but to entire groups of people. In a society experiencing
painful economic contraction, anger increases, lines harden, and hated
stereotypes increasingly become scapegoats. When the dominant political
force is actually promoting scapegoating and stereotyping, as the right
has done so effectively, the practice is bound to thrive.
In a society founded on the system of enslavement of Blacks, the target
of scapegoating is most often the African American population. The dominant
culture- white, Protestant, and male- has historically held power in
part by oppressing people of color and other hated out-groups, understanding
that in order to maintain dominance it cannot tolerate true pluralism.
As always, the effectiveness of the hold of those in power depends in
part on the strength of those challenging that control. Currently, the
political cohesion of communities of color is diminished. The leadership
of the African American community has been in a weakened and fragmented
state for some time, and the results of civil rights and anti-poverty
legislation, while significant, have not fulfilled their promise of transformation
in the fortunes of Black people. Among Latinos, Asian Americans, and
African Americans, economic competition and cultural differences create
divisions that are easily exploited and make a movement across race and
ethnicity difficult to hold together.
For many whites of all classes, however, the advances that have been
made by people of color seem to hold particular symbolic significance.
In a climate in which many whites feel anxious and vulnerable, there
is a simmering racial resentment of those who appear favored by affirmative
action, so-called "preferential treatment," and a perception
that Blacks have made gains faster than whites. Bilingualism, multiculturalism,
and other hard-won gains are now the focus of white backlash. This backlash,
often expressed in a form sanitized of racist slurs, attacks African
American gains by arguing that Blacks no longer suffer discrimination
and therefore do not "deserve" a helping hand. This dismissal
of the continuing racism within US society, when combined with the anxiety
and anger created in whites by economic contraction, results in whites
scapegoating Blacks and other people of color for the slip in status
of groups of whites.
In the world of the far right, of course, white supremacism is endemic,
and no obligation is felt to obscure it. The far right is more extremist
and ideologically alienated than the sector of the right that works within
the political power structure. While there is important cross-pollination
between the far right and the electoral right, this discussion is not
addressing the racism and bigotry of the paramilitary far right.
Would the right have such success with its stereotyping and scapegoating
if the economy were expanding? Perhaps not, simply because the economic
pain would be less severe and scapegoating would be less needed as a
foil to draw anger away from more accurate targets.
BACKLASH/SOCIAL STRESS
An important factor in explaining the success of the right is a shift
in the values held by the majority of the US public. Since the end of
the 1970s, a climate of stress and discord has reflected the confusion,
resentments, and fears of a society undergoing rapid social change. That
climate has been nurtured and exploited by the organized right to promote
social conservatism and capture power. One method has been to encourage
cynicism about the intentions of government, and especially the evil
of liberal reformism. The right's success in transforming public attitudes
is a testimony to its own self-conscious organizing, as well as the failure
of liberalism to counter with an emotionally compelling vision.
A central goal of the right is to restore the norms of social conservatism
that dominated in the 1950s. In the late 1970s, the New Right's leadership
skillfully identified deep strains of discontent within the American
public: fears, resentments, hatreds and confusion that bubbled beneath
the surface of public life. By organizing this public unhappiness and
confusion into anger targeted at the liberation/reform movements of the
1960s and 1970s, they both built on and aggravated social strain. An
important vehicle for this organizing was the promotion of a romanticized
view of what seems a simpler and more manageable time. The resulting
change in public attitudes is a shift in political culture.
This shift is in the core values held by people in both the public sphere
and in their private lives. Of course, there is enormous variation in
the political culture of any society- by class, race, gender, ethnicity,
and by idiosyncratic preferences. But what is identified as a society's
political culture is the body of values and attitudes held by the bulk
of people as expressed in the voting booth and captured in randomized
opinion polls and focus group research. The concept of political culture
is too broad a generalization to reflect the vast numbers of subcultures
in the US.
Generalization though it is, to talk about a shift in the political
culture of the US does capture a real social transformation. It should
not be surprising that such a shift is not a matter of smooth transition.
The potential winners and the potential losers are locked in struggle,
as those who were dominant try to hold on and the challengers try to
consolidate power. The power struggle is easiest to track in the political
sphere, and in the economic sphere. It is harder to track in the social/cultural
sphere- though this is a vital part of the struggle. For this reason,
it is a mistake to watch only the right's success in public policy. It
is equally important to pay attention to the "values questions." For
without capturing the cultural sphere, no economic and political shift
will hold.
The struggle is between the liberalism that traces its roots to the
New Deal and a right-wing countermovement that opposes the values and
policies of that liberalism. The liberal reforms now under attack- for
example, legalization of abortion, gains in rights for lesbians and gay
men, public support for free expression, and the extension of civil rights
protections to people of color- are matters of public policy, but also
of values. Those who support these reforms, and the values that underlie
them, are prime targets for this countermovement.
Movements and countermovements do battle at almost any period. In a
complex dance that journalists describe as the swinging pendulum, progressive
and reactionary forces vie for dominance and influence, and each works
to expose the other's agenda. When the Republicans dominate, the pendulum
is said to have swung to the right. When Democrats dominate, it has swung
to the left. Occasionally, however, there is a shift in the "center"-
the majority of voters who act as the fulcrum or anchor for the swinging
pendulum. This is a period of enormous confusion, when scapegoating increases.
Political science literature makes much of the strength of the center
in US politics. It is often lionized as the reason for US political stability.
The durability and common sense said to characterize the center is also
often associated with the large US middle class. Common sense is thought
to reside in that stable body of average Americans, whose wisdom keeps
a democracy on course.
For nearly 20 years, the US political center has been moving to the
right, attracted by the right's platform of family values, nationalism,
race resentment, and a rhetoric of the work ethic. The most skillful
of the right's strategists, especially Paul Weyrich and Howard Phillips,
targeted areas in which liberalism was vulnerable, and with great skill,
identified the themes of dependence, crime, taxes, and family values.
Crucial to the right's success is the mix of these themes known as the "social
issues"- such as sexual promiscuity, the decline of the family,
the rights of children, the legitimacy of a gay or lesbian sexual orientation,
etc. The right has appealed to age-old American cultural strains: Calvinism,
self-reliance, patriarchy, Christian worship, and patriotism, to create
a backlash countermovement of enormous effectiveness. The right's organizing
has been documented in a number of cases, perhaps most impressively by
Ellen Messer-Davidow in her articles on the right's attack on higher
education. (Messer-Davidow, 1993)
A move to the right usually means a shoring up of the "establishment." But
the contemporary US right's conservatism is not of the system-supporting
type. Classical conservatism favors respect for government, reverence
for the church as an institution, support for the nuclear family, and
free market economics. It holds the individual as the most important
unit in society. In major respects, the shift now occurring does not
conform to classical conservatism. The right- both religious and secular-
is more extreme in its ideology. It fosters suspicion- if not hatred-
of government, dismissal of the mainstream Protestant churches, and a
punitive and intrusive role toward individual sexual conduct and sexual
orientation.
Rather than a familiar brand of conservative "Father Knows Best" Republicanism,
this right-wing social movement organizes the expression of more extreme
instincts. It is built on a backlash fueled by anger- in the form of
resentment, spite, vengeance, envy, loss, and bitterness over declining
status- on the part of those who feel that they have not benefited from
the changes of the last 30 years. (Gusfield: 1963; Crawford: 1980) This
social anger is also fed by the current religious revitalization, economic
contraction and race resentment discussed above. This volatile combination
of reactionary instincts is fanned by the right and directed toward the
targets of liberals, feminists, people of color (especially through stereotyping
of welfare recipients, criminals, immigrants, and drug users), and lesbians
and gay men, all perceived to be the beneficiaries of liberal social
change.
A number of specific grievances and deprivations underlie the right's
successful organizing of a countermovement. First is anxiety on the part
of the white, suburban middle class Protestants who were dominant for
generations and in the 1980s began to see themselves as losing status
and therefore willing to join backlash movements. The assurance of a
secure and predictable place in society, while never guaranteed, was
certainly expected as part of the heritage associated with white skin,
education, and middle class family of origin. Policies designed to fortify
the liberal ideals of tolerance and pluralism and increased equality
seemed to threaten the standing of white heterosexual middle-class Protestants
and Catholics, especially males. In the heat of disillusionment and right-wing
propaganda, this sector of white voters abandoned the Democratic coalition.
(Edsall and Edsall: 1990)
But the right's resurgence is not based exclusively in the middle class.
Working class whites also suffer social stress and perceived loss of
status, and especially resent their obvious competitors- African American
men, women, gays and lesbians, and immigrants. They also resent the New
Class, the small but visible young urban professional nouveau riches
of the 1980s. These yuppies, as they are known, are stockbrokers, professional
couples with no children, single women corporate executives, MBAs who
specialize in mergers and buy-outs, and lawyers who specialize in large
real estate transactions. In short, they do not work with their hands,
they have excess income which they spend on luxury items, and they are
unattached or only loosely attached to church or family.
Across class lines there is a shared anxiety and confusion over the
speed of social and cultural change- change that is perceived as making
the society more violent, more sexually permissive, less orderly, and
less predictable. There is particular anxiety in raising children, because
it is in this sphere that so much of the perceived decline in American
society becomes concrete.
It is in the raising of children that much of the American dream is
most vividly enacted. The United States as the world's dominant economic
power, ever-growing and bringing increased prosperity to each succeeding
generation, is a revered image in our political folklore. Though the
American dream is itself a social invention, it is a particularly powerful
one. One successful strategy of the contemporary right has been to wrap
itself in the American dream, and to portray liberals as killers of that
dream. (Quigley: 1992) The right's caricature of an all-powerful liberalism
has proved elastic enough to have caused any grievance.
For middle- and working-class white Protestants anxious about their
own status and resentful of the loss of the American dream, the demonization
of liberals and progressives deflects anger away from upper-class Republicans-
the only group that has remained relatively untouched by the economic
contraction, social changes, and shift in political culture of the last
three decades. Whether or not a right-wing backlash movement prevails,
this group will remain stable. In fact, due to deregulation, and changes
in the tax code, it is expanding. While upper-class Republicans may not
be culturally comfortable with the "resentment constituency," there
is little in this movement that appears to threaten their position in
society. Thus, the takeover of the Republican Party by its right wing
is unlikely to be opposed by any upper class elites except the weakened
and faltering Republican moderates, who support a more traditional brand
of classical conservatism.
Media plays an important role in the current shift and should be mentioned
as a factor in the right's resurgence. The right has vilified the mainstream
media as liberal and biased against conservative and Christian views.
By creating new media outlets, such as Pat Robertson's Christian Broadcast
Network, and by pressuring mainstream media through boycotts of advertisers'
products and letter-writing campaigns, the right has gained remarkable
media access. As documented by the newsletter of Fairness and Accuracy
in Reporting, the opinions represented even within the television outlet
most attacked by the right, PBS, range from centrist to right wing. (Extra!: 1993)
With the exception of past sporadic appearances by the late Erwin Knoll
on the McNeil/Lehrer News Hour or an occasional independent film
with a progressive theme, there is no voice of the left on television.
Pacifica Radio is one of only a handful of left radio outlets. As the
political "center" moves to the right, public debate increasingly
takes place between the moderate right and the extreme right.
Before the electronic age- specifically satellite television transmission,
cable TV and talk-radio programming- a diversity of values existed in
greater distance from each other. Decision-making elites and opinion
makers were thought to have more information than the average person,
and for that reason were often accorded the role of representing their
constituents. Today, people feel that they have enough information to
be direct decision-makers. (Inglehart: 1990) This has encouraged a strong
streak of populism that is a crucial ingredient in the right's social
movement.
The right has promoted a belief that wisdom resides in the average (white)
person and that elites and intellectuals are no longer needed as mediators
between government and the people. Thus, an important part of the culture
shift is a demand by middle- and working-class white voters for a more
direct democracy, in order to express their discontent. This has allowed
those who understand and utilize that demand- in this case the right,
not the left- to gain political advantage by quickly providing an outlet
for it. And it has led to further disenfranchisement of the poor and
underserved, who are less well-trained and well-equipped for the challenges
of direct democracy.
Social stress and culture shift might equally cause a leftist resurgence-
an identification of the source of the problem within capitalism, its
power structure and the owning class that controls it. At times this
has been the case, but the strength of the right has succeeded in suppressing
and deflecting such political impulses, in part through the vehicle of
an effective, coordinated, and well-funded movement infrastructure.
RIGHT-WING MOVEMENT BUILDING
Social, political, and economic discontent, no matter how strongly powered
by mutually reinforcing causes, does not result in revolutionary change
unless there is a political movement to capture the anger and direct
it in a certain direction. The right's ability to capitalize on the economic
chaos, racial tensions, and social discontent of the current historical
moment can be explained, in large part, by its stronger political movement.
This movement is well-financed and well-run, combining shrewd strategic
planning for political success with a rigid set of ideological principles
backed by a certitude based in religious beliefs. The membership organizations,
networks, think tanks, media outlets, campus publications, coalitions,
interest groups, PACs, and funders that work to advance the right's political
movement make up its "movement infrastructure."
While a movement cannot succeed without substantial mass sentiment to
support it, its precise level of success is shaped by the strength and
effectiveness of its infrastructure. (Hixson, p. 273) Public education,
which is key to any change in political direction, depends on movement-oriented
think tanks, research centers, publishing houses, TV and radio outlets,
and schools and universities. Legislative initiatives to press movement
goals require legal firms. Mobilization for popular campaigns to pressure
legislators requires grassroots membership organizations. Capturing electoral
power requires political consultants, PACs, media expertise, and grassroots
training programs for political supporters.
The right's strategists, funders, organizers and activists have modeled
the creation of an effective movement infrastructure. By attending to
movement-building, they have created a juggernaut- an overwhelming force
that has swept the right to power and swept away liberal reformism in
15 short years.
In the early 1990s Beth Schulman, Associate Publisher of In These
Times magazine, circulated a memorandum that discussed the difference
in funding patterns of progressive funders and right-wing funders.
She pointed out that the right-wing funders invested in the building
blocks or skeletal structure of their movement- such as publications,
research centers, think tanks, and academic fellowships and chairs
designated for rightist scholars, campus organizations, and youth groups.
(Schulman: 1992 and Bleifuss: 1995)
Liberal and progressive foundations, on the other hand, were not underwriting
movement-building, but instead were funding good works that promised
to assure better social conditions and promote equality and tolerance.
Much of this funding could be classified as humanitarian aid, which was
needed in the face of the social service cuts of the Reagan/Bush years.
Unable to turn a deaf ear to need and suffering, liberal and progressive
funders lacked the discipline and single-mindedness of the right's funders.
The result is that the right got greater political mileage for each dollar
invested because the movement it underwrote was focused on a strategic
plan for seizing power.
Thus, in the case of a particular right-wing issue, such as the liberalism
of higher education or the increasing effectiveness of the gay rights
movement, the right had in place all the components needed to
launch a full scale campaign to press the issue. Local single-issue organizations
could tap into the resources of national right-wing legal firms, research
centers, publishing houses, funders, and membership organizations. This
allowed the fire-power of an entire movement to assist the political
work of the smallest grassroots right-wing effort.
One of the most effective roles of the right-wing movement infrastructure
has been its role in knitting together secular social and economic conservatives
and conservative religious activists. These two groups might have existed
side-by-side without a conscious effort to coordinate and integrate their
work. By combining forces through the networks and coalitions of the
right, the impact of each sector has increased dramatically. United,
the secular and religious right have seized power; separately, that would
have been unlikely.
Related to movement infrastructure is the need for strategic planning.
Without clear analysis, defined goals, and developed strategies, even
the strongest movement will spin its wheels without actually capturing
power. Two academics who write about the right's strategic planning are
sociologist Seymour Martin Lipset and his critic, Michael Rogin, political
scientist at UC/Berkeley. Lipset identified three sectors that contribute
to right-wing success: Republican politicians, their core constituency
of upper-income conservatives, and the lower-middle and working class
adherents of backlash movements. Writing in the late 1960s and early
1970s, Lipset focused much of his attention on working class rightists.
As a result, the role of Republican politicians and upper-income conservatives
in the US right was long overlooked in academic circles.
Michael Rogin has corrected this oversight by using "resource mobilization
theory." In case studies that have examined Joseph McCarthy, George
Wallace, and political behavior in Orange County, California, Rogin has
highlighted the role of political elites (Republican Party activists
and office-holders in this case) and "cause activists," right-wing
activists whose organizational base is outside the Party, but whose political
goal is control of the Party. This is a crucial aspect of the success
of the right wing of the Republican Party in taking over the Party. The "cause
activists" are not harnessed by Party unity, or even Party loyalty.
The Republican Party is simply a vehicle for the right's goals- the most
appropriate and sensible vehicle, but one that is itself in need of right-wing
reform.
In a search for new electoral cleavages to exploit within the Democratic
Party, the right's Republican partisans saw the potential of the social
issues, including racial tensions, as a source of division within Democratic
ranks. A strategy of luring socially conservative Democrats away from
the Democratic Party, which dates to the 1960s and is known as the Southern
Strategy, has accomplished several overlapping goals: the growth of the
power of the Republican Party, the diversion of resources to Republicans
through control of policy-making decisions that affect the distribution
of wealth, and the weakening of such political opponents as Democrats
and left-leaning independent voters.
These goals were achieved not simply because of a spontaneous expression
of backlash social sentiments, racial resentments, or economic anger.
They were accomplished by capturing decision-making positions (winning
political office), mobilizing resources (getting control of bureaucracies),
and swaying public opinion (activating political ideologues through a
network of organizations, publications, churches, research organizations,
grassroots groups, national coalitions, conferences, TV and radio, voter
education, and activist training). Because the right's movement is not
led by Republican office-holders, the movement is not always system-supporting.
It is often system-opposing, as New Right and Christian Right leaders
ignore or confront Republicans deemed insufficiently loyal to the movement.
(Diamond: 1995)
The role of the federal government in promoting or squelching a growing
social movement is fluid and opportunistic. The government can be either
a passive judge of competing movements and interests, or an active participant
that promotes or inhibits them. The government can channel resources,
confer legitimacy, and provide leadership for a social movement. (Lo:
1982) In the current right-wing movement, government power has been hotly
contended- an acknowledgment of the crucial role that it can play as
an asset or a roadblock for a movement.
Government also has its own independent interests, primarily those of
self-preservation and preservation of the status quo. In some
cases those needs may call for expanded rights for some groups, the promotion
of greater tolerance, or strengthening of one or another disadvantaged
group. In most cases, however, government interest lies with those holders
of power whose interests it most strongly represents. In the case of
the right, when right-wing activism is so extreme that it is directed
at the overthrow of the government or the massive disruption of the status
quo, government represses that sector.7
For the most part, the right's movement-building has been financed by
elites outside government, who have bankrolled a movement infrastructure
that is openly hostile to government power in its New Deal form. Elites
inside government have often (unsuccessfully) opposed the right's rapid
ascension.
CONCLUSION
The current electoral and cultural success of the right has not occurred
in a vacuum, but during a specific historical period in which five overlapping
and reinforcing factors have converged to create a hospitable environment.
These factors are driving the political and social direction of the country
relentlessly to the right.
This analysis can help us to understand the challenge we face in responding
to the dangerous movement known as the New Right, the Christian Right
and the new Republicans. It is discouraging that many of the factors
discussed above- especially economic contraction, social backlash, and
the strength of the right's political infrastructure- mitigate against
liberal reformist social change. That does not mean, however, that there
is no hope. What is needed is a clear appreciation of both the danger
we now face, and the potential for positive change that exists despite
that danger.
The reactionary forces of this historical moment will not be stopped
simply by progressives working harder. The engine of reaction must first
be slowed in order to create breathing room for liberalism and the left.
This requires a massive campaign of public education to expose the right's
hidden agendas and actual motivations. There must also be careful documentation
of the consequences of right-wing policies. Simultaneously, progressives
need to develop new leadership and new ideas. (Levitas, et al: 1995)
The most important quality in developing new ideas may be the ability
to listen with new ears to the concerns, fears, hopes, and aspirations
of the traditional constituencies of the left- low-income people, people
who suffer from discrimination (especially racism and sexism), and working
people on whose backs the profits of a rapacious capitalism are built.
Historically, liberals and progressives have been better at advocacy
than at listening. While the left and liberals have accomplished a great
many reforms, the right has been more successful at creating a simple
message that wins support by encapsulating frustrations and directing
them toward unpopular scapegoats.
This is a powerful marketing formula that has been used in the past
to bring ultra-right movements to power, most notably in Germany in the
1930s. It is a technique that thrives in a setting of economic hard times
for working people. It rests on a movement infrastructure that can organize
aggressively to spread the message and win recruits. And it thrives when
progressives, reformers, humanists, and liberal religious people underestimate
the threat they face or are too weak or unorganized to hold the line.
Religious liberals will have a crucial role to play in the restructuring
of the liberal/left coalition. The punitive and vengeful brand of Christian
fundamentalism that now dominates the Religious Right must be confronted
by those whose religious beliefs lead to humane, socially conscious public
policy.
Further, the strategists of liberal and progressive social change must
admit the failure of their message and their policies to hold the loyalty
of the average voter. With that admission must come a self-criticism
that is honest, thorough, and seeks input from not only those who stayed
with liberalism, but also those who have rejected it. Failed revolutionary
movements in other countries are sometimes criticized by progressives
for failing to examine adequately the reasons for their loss of popular
support. No less should be done in the face of our own failure, if the
rebuilding is to avoid the shortcomings of the past.
NOTES
1 For an excellent account of the history of the rise of the right,
see Chip Berlet, "The Right Rides High." The Progressive,
October, 1994, pp. 22-29. This article is woven into the text of Culture
War on this website.
2 There is no rigorous and universally-agreed definition of a "movement." In
the case of religious and social movements, often something as specific
as a campaign mounted by a group of like-minded citizens is labeled a
movement. In this discussion the term movement will be reserved for umbrella
movements rather than their sub-movements. Thus, the term social movement
will refer to the collectivity of active campaigns mobilized by the right
around the social issues. Economic, political, and religious movements
will refer to the collectivity of active campaigns mobilized by the right
around economic, political, and religious issues. All these movements
unite under the rubric of the contemporary US right.
3 The definitions of evangelical and fundamentalist are murky because
they describe movements rather than institutions. George Marsden (1991)
attempts a definition: Christian evangelicalism includes any Christian
who is traditional enough to affirm the basic beliefs of : 1) the final
authority of the Bible, 2) the reality of scripture, 3) redemption through
Christ, 4) the importance of missionary work, and 5) the importance of
a spiritually transformed life. A Christian fundamentalist is an evangelical
who is militant in opposition to liberal theology or to changes in cultural
values or mores. Pentecostalism, which dates to the 1920s, is associated
with faith healing and speaking in tongues, signifying dramatic intervention
of the supernatural. A slightly different and more modern form of supernatural
religious practice is practiced by "Charismatics." To be born-again
refers to a conversion experience in which one surrenders his or her
life to Jesus Christ, thus making Jesus your personal Lord and savior.
(Diamond, 1989)
4 The sectors are drawn in an over-simple fashion for the sake of the
argument. Many New Right organizations received financial support from
sources within the multinational sector, and many aspects of the political
agendas of each overlap; most notably in the cultural sphere and the
area of the "social issues."
5 The term "white" is used here to refer to Americans of European
descent who are non-Jews. Needless to say, skin color and racial identification
are far more complex than allowed by schemes of racial classification.
They are, to a large extent, social constructions.
6 The Republican Party refused to back David Duke in his 1991 campaign
for Governor of Louisiana, despite the certain victory of the Democratic
candidate, Edwin Edmunds.
7 This is the case when the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
(BATF) has attacked right-wing enclaves that have stockpiled weapons,
right-wing tax protesters who have defied the IRS, or far-right movement
activists who have engaged in illegal activity.
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