kunstler | The Birchers retailed all kinds of ideological nonsense that made
them the butt of ridicule during the Camelot days of John F. Kennedy and
the heady Civil Rights years of his successor Lyndon B. Johnson. (Bob
Dylan wrote a song about them in 1962: "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid
Blues.") Everything perceived to be a threat in a changing society was
sold by the Birchers as a communist plot - water fluoridation,
de-segregation, even, by a kind of tortured logic, the US strategy in
the Vietnam War. Since a Democratic president and congress passed the
civil rights legislation of 1964-5, the traditionally Democratic "solid
South" revolted almost overnight and eventually turned solidly
Republican. (It was also good for business.)
Something
else was going on in Dixieland from the late 1950s on. The region boomed
economically, partly from luring northern industry down with cheap
labor, and partly because so many large military bases were located
there - hence the hyperbolic, militant patriotism of a region that had
lately staged a violent insurrection against the national government.
The region also went through an explosion of air-conditioned suburban
sprawl because the southern states were geographically huge and the
climate was unbearable half the year. The sprawl industry itself
generated vast fortunes and widespread prosperity in a part of the
country that had been a depressed agricultural backwater since the Civil
War.
Consequently, a population of poor, ignorant
crackers crawled out of the mud and dust to find themselves wealthy car
dealers and strip-mall magnates in barely one turn of a generation. The
transition being so abrupt, their cracker culture of xenophobia,
"primitive" religion, and romance with violence came through intact.
They were the perfect client group for a political party that styled
itself "conservative," as in maintaining the old timey ways. Toward the
end of the 20th century, as the old northern states' economies withered,
and Yankee culture lost both footing and meaning, and poor white folks
all over America looked with envy on the glitz of country music and
Nascar, and gravitated toward the Dixieland culture of belligerent,
aggressive suburbanization, religiosity, and militarism. This cartoon of
the old timey ways swept the "flyover" precincts of the nation. Along
in the baggage compartment was all the old John Birch Society cargo of
quasi-supernatural ideology that appealed so deeply to people perplexed
by the mystifying operations of reality. That perplexity was supposedly
resolved in a Bush II White House aide famously stating, "We make our
own reality." The results of the 2012 election now conclusively
demonstrate the shortcomings of that world-view.
And so
the news last week was that a different version of America outvoted the
John Birch Dixiecrat coalition by roughly two million ballots. Meaning,
of course, that there are still a lot of dangerous morons out there, but
also that the times they are yet a'changin' again. Fist tap Dale.
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