Reason: The center’s paranoia is the most threatening
posted at 5:07 pm on September 15, 2009 by Ed Morrissey
These days, commentators focus on “right-wing extremism” as the most dire threat to the nation. Politicians talk about the rise of racism in a country that just elected its first President with African heritage. Neither offer compelling definitions of the danger, and Jesse Walker of Reason explains that they have no compelling definition — only paranoia. The paranoia of the center, Walker argues, is much more dangerous, because it has the power to infringe on rights that the extreme right and left never have:
We’ve heard ample warnings about extremist paranoia in the months since Barack Obama became president, and we’re sure to hear many more throughout his term. But we’ve heard almost nothing about the paranoia of the political center. When mainstream commentators treat a small group of unconnected crimes as a grand, malevolent movement, they unwittingly echo the very conspiracy theories they denounce. Both brands of connect-the-dots fantasy reflect the tellers’ anxieties much more than any order actually emerging in the world.
When such a story is directed at those who oppose the politicians in power, it has an additional effect. The list of dangerous forces that need to be marginalized inevitably expands to include peaceful, legitimate critics. …
It’s comforting to imagine that violence and paranoia belong only to the far left and right, and that we can protect ourselves from their effects by quarantining the extremists and vigilantly expelling anyone who seems to be bringing their ideas into the mainstream. But the center has its own varieties of violence and paranoia. And it’s far more dangerous than anyone on the fringe, even the armed fringe, will ever be.
Walker takes us on a journey of centrist paranoia, but he mainly focuses on the distortions of the Right, whether deliberate or merely hysterical. That paranoia served a purpose; it was inevitably used to demonize and minimize legitimate policy differences. Walker also revisits the DHS report on “right-wing extremism,” noting that the document served that impulse, whether deliberate or not, and at the very least encouraged a waste of resources:
Earlier this year, the Department of Homeland Security issued a report on the threat of “rightwing extremism.” Depending on whose interpretation you prefer, the paper either defined extremism far too broadly or failed to define it at all. “Rightwing extremism in the United States,” the department said, “can be broadly divided into those groups, movements, and adherents that are primarily hate-oriented (based on hatred of particular religious, racial or ethnic groups), and those that are mainly antigovernment, rejecting federal authority in favor of state or local authority, or rejecting government authority entirely. It may include groups and individuals that are dedicated to a single issue, such as opposition to abortion or immigration.”
The charitable reading of this passage is that it’s a sloppily phrased attempt to list the ideas that drive different right-wing extremists, not a declaration that anyone opposed to abortion or prone to “rejecting federal authority” is a threat. But even under that interpretation, the report is inexcusably vague. It focuses on extremism itself, not on violence, and there’s no reason to believe its definition of extremist is limited to people with violent inclinations. (The department’s report on left-wing extremism cites such nonviolent groups as Crimethinc and the Ruckus Society.) As Michael German, a policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union, wrote after the document surfaced, the bulletin focuses “on ideas rather than crime.” One practical effect, German noted, is that the paper “cites an increase in ‘rhetoric’ yet doesn’t even mention reports that there was a dirty bomb found in an alleged white supremacist’s house in Maine last December. Learning what to look for in that situation might actually be useful to a cop. Threat reports that focus on ideology instead of criminal activity are threatening to civil liberties and a wholly ineffective use of federal security resources.”
Be sure to read all of Walker’s excellent essay. Very few people in the US believe violence belongs in the political discourse of a free nation, and those who do are legitimate threats, whether right, left, or just plain nuts. However, the impulse of the so-called center to toss out accusations of extremism and racism at criticism of politicians and policy does not serve to make a more civil society but to suppress political dissent through demonization. That has a history in the US, and it’s not pretty.









Blowback
Note from Hot Air management: This section is for comments from Hot Air's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that Hot Air management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment just because we let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with our terms of use may lose their posting privilege.
Trackbacks/Pings
Trackback URL
Comments
This is very good essay. Fresh approach, some new ideas.
I don’t buy all of it; but it’s something enjoyable to read.
The tyrany of the center.
SteveMG on September 15, 2009 at 5:09 PM
Proud Rino is not going to like this
Zetterson on September 15, 2009 at 5:09 PM
Center’s paranoia…. Sounds like JazzShaw… ‘can’t we get along?’….
phreshone on September 15, 2009 at 5:11 PM
Yes, but I’m unclear as to why this is necessary.
Cui bono? For their own power? Possibly.
SteveMG on September 15, 2009 at 5:11 PM
New ACORN video: ACORN Prostitution Scandal: California Here We Come! **This is a Part I of the ACORN San Bernardino exposé. Updates to follow…
TheBigOldDog on September 15, 2009 at 5:12 PM
Ok, so you think we can fix this at the ballot box in November 2010? I guess we’ll find out, eh?
Skandia Recluse on September 15, 2009 at 5:13 PM
OT – Beck is showing part of the new ACORN video. Same prostitution, tax evasion, etc.
BUT! THE KICKER!
The female ACORN “Advisor” admits to, at one time, to running a brothel, therefore in total understanding with Hannah (“Eden’s”) plight.
POPCORN, ANYONE?
flyawaybird on September 15, 2009 at 5:16 PM
To a certain extent, political dissent will be marginalized, BUT it will also given impetus to extremism and violence. How often have we heard “I did it because no one was listening!”
GarandFan on September 15, 2009 at 5:23 PM
Hand wringing, thumb sucking bed wetters sounds better.
Fletch54 on September 15, 2009 at 5:30 PM
This is getting RIDICULOUS:
‘ree-dick-koo-lus’, as Ricky Ricardo used to say on the “I Love Lucy” show : By definition, the Center cannot have a ‘fringe’. The Center is……in between the fringes, ain’t it? It’s that Place were all the calm, docile, unknowing, unperturbed, placated folks dwell–untainted by partisan and sectarian Misguidance. Ain’t it?
I have read some Interesting Stuff on ‘the radical center’, and heard that term applied to Perot voters in the 1990s.
They were centrists who hadn’t voted or RINOs who were drawn to Perot’s crazy-cranky mix of ‘common sense’ and volatile anger.
They lunge towards a ‘protest candidate’, then dissolve when they lose an election. Right now some of these people are tea-parrying while others look to Palin.
Should get interesting……
Janos Hunyadi on September 15, 2009 at 5:36 PM
Well, I know that just in our little playground here… there are a few self proclaimed ‘centrists’ / ‘moderates’ that are pretty scary. They seem to hate and fear anyone that has any strongly held values.
LegendHasIt on September 15, 2009 at 5:44 PM
yeah, they seem to be ‘dystopians’ who think that anyone trying to improve society or government is Suspect. Those who don’t have the time or ability to gain a basic understanding of how government and public life work should STFU about it and not spew out uber-cynical drivel
Janos Hunyadi on September 15, 2009 at 5:56 PM
Ed, Charles Johnson just took a shot at you:
Tue, Sep 15, 2009 2:55:17pm – Now we have Ed Morrissey at Hot Air opining that the REAL problem is not the extremists at all — it’s the paranoid centrists.
Let me help you: Yawn.
perroviejo on September 15, 2009 at 5:59 PM
It seems everywhere I look…I see paranoid people. It’s these legions of paranoids that will destroy the world. Along with the zombies. Jussayin’
ronsfi on September 15, 2009 at 6:00 PM
His point about the exaggerated threat of the militia movement is dead-on, and his criticism of the infamous “Right-Wing extremism” report is devastating. His attempt to pin the hysteria on centrists is just bizarre. Unless the media, the Obama administration, the Clinton administration, and the handful of liberal commentators he singles out are all genuinely centrists, he’s guilty of the same paranoia as his so-called “center.”
RightOFLeft on September 15, 2009 at 6:00 PM
See I told you. Moderates are responsible for all the wars in the world.
- The Cat
P.S. Oh, and engineers too.
MirCat on September 15, 2009 at 6:03 PM
Seriously Ed, can you delink that low rent Puffington Host buffoon Charles Johnson already. Hot Air as the “right’s” flagship blog linking to that far left smear cite is an embarassment. Johnson has clearly thrown in his lot with the NY Times/Daily Kos set. It’s time to acknowledge the reality that he is no longer a friend.
Kalapana on September 15, 2009 at 6:05 PM
Congress does not have time for ACORN. They are looking for real criminals (conservatives)!!!
mobydutch on September 15, 2009 at 6:07 PM
“If an uncompromising stand is to be smeared as ‘extremism,’ then that smear is directed at any devotion to values, any loyalty to principles, any profound conviction, any consistency, any steadfastness, any passion, any dedication to an unbreached, inviolate truth — any man of integrity.” — Ayn Rand in ” ‘Extremism’ or The Art of Smearing”, Chapter 17 of Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal
Kalapana on September 15, 2009 at 6:08 PM
I’ve been thinking about getting myself banned from LGF due to Charles’ obsession with the small amount of kooks on the right. Most of his targets are people we’ve never heard of. BOOOO-ring (Channeling Homer).
Oh, I don’t use the “Old Dog” moniker over there.
perroviejo on September 15, 2009 at 6:14 PM
To Charles Johnson at LGF- Go iron your gay pirate shirt. The one with fringes down the middle.
Fletch54 on September 15, 2009 at 6:24 PM
Hi Killgore. Charles called me an idiot? Guess again.
perroviejo on September 15, 2009 at 6:28 PM
What the “center” is today is a relative term. I believe it encompasses the former “center Left”, which makes the piece all the more creepy.
davecatbone on September 15, 2009 at 6:39 PM
BTW, I agree strongly with others. Charles Johnson has gone off the deep left edge, I’d like to see his link removed. Someone, I think Hannity the other night actually listed LGF as one of the “conservative” blogs. Yechhh.
davecatbone on September 15, 2009 at 6:42 PM
For those who haven’t seen them, watch the first Lizard Lounge video, then the others. Spot on, and funny as Hell!
bikermailman on September 15, 2009 at 6:45 PM
The only frakkin’ thing good to come from CJ was Memogate, the Hezbollah stuff, and me finding my way to HA from there.
bikermailman on September 15, 2009 at 6:46 PM
It’s not anxiety, usually. It’s deliberate manipulation for a purpose, most often to acquire, keep, or encourage a hold on power.
For a genuinely good essay on “extremism” see Ayn Rand’s Extremism, the Art of Smearing. (Published in The Capitalist Manifesto.)
JDPerren on September 15, 2009 at 6:48 PM
Correction: That reference should read: Capitalism, The Unknown Ideal (by Ayn Rand).
JDPerren on September 15, 2009 at 6:49 PM
LGF gets worse by the day: People on the threads warn each other all the time and cheer when someone gets ‘flounced’.
Very creepy………..
Janos Hunyadi on September 15, 2009 at 6:53 PM
Just to be clear, I have no problem with people criticizing what I write. If Charles disagrees, no problem. If he calls me names, which it doesn’t look like he did, that reflects on him, not me. I’m not interested in blog wars.
Ed Morrissey on September 15, 2009 at 6:53 PM
And just to underscore my last point, one of my best friends on the blogs is Jazz Shaw, who routinely and publicly disagrees with me. I write to be part of a conversation, and that’s part of the game. I get annoyed when people challenge my honesty or motivations, but I’ve learned not to respond in kind. I find most blog wars to be a colossal waste of time, and it’s been years since I’ve read LGF regularly, just because it doesn’t interest me. I have no animus towards Charles, and am appreciative of his role in the Rathergate story.
Ed Morrissey on September 15, 2009 at 6:57 PM
Just my $.02, Ed. For me, disagreement is all part of the blogosphere. It’s just (again, just for me, but I’ll bet plenty will agree) that CJ has gotten so over the top in seeing racists in every corner, banning people for simple disagreement (I know, his blog, his rules, but still), and going on the attack on good people, like Robert Spencer. As I said above, he did good work on the two stories, and he did lead me here, so he’s not all bad… :p
bikermailman on September 15, 2009 at 7:03 PM
Ed,
There is a world of difference between “disagreement” and the kind of smearing of good people that goes on at LGF.
Kalapana on September 15, 2009 at 7:20 PM
Ed,
Do you have any comment on Johnson’s statement of 4/25/09:
That sounds like more than a policy disagreement. Of course, during the last few days Johnson has been smearing McCain as a racist based on some scurious drivel written by Max Blumenthal and an disgruntled ex-employee of the Washington Times.
Kalapana on September 15, 2009 at 7:27 PM
Hey Old dog I remember you from last years election campaign. So your running a covert mission now?
sonnyspats1 on September 15, 2009 at 7:30 PM
Yeah, granted, but my point was that Charles’ disagreement here doesn’t rise to that level.
Ed Morrissey on September 15, 2009 at 7:33 PM
Says it all, right there. “Right-wing violence”, along with any substantial “panic” over it is a fictional meme, like the charges of racism now, being pushed by the left to marginalize peaceful, legitimate dissent. Just another instance of left wing projection.
petefrt on September 15, 2009 at 7:42 PM
Agreed, they’re a waste of energy, often counterproductive.
petefrt on September 15, 2009 at 7:47 PM
It smells like BS to me.
Dr Evil on September 15, 2009 at 9:06 PM
Ed, I have to agree with Kalpana. Unlike Jazz Shaw, if you don’t follow the LGF line, which changes on a daily basis. You are labeled a fascist and then banned.Yeah great dialogue there. You can even be right, and it doesn’t matter to them.
Hot Air is million times better then LGF.
Lance Murdock on September 15, 2009 at 9:10 PM
It looks like the Kossacks are falling in love with Charles and his minions.
Lance Murdock on September 15, 2009 at 9:16 PM
This was a brilliant story. Thank you…..
Hening on September 15, 2009 at 10:23 PM
I agree with Dave that Jesse Walker does mean the former center left, when he says “center.” Where is the paranoia that he describes to be found? In those who see a racist in every woodpile–we know who those people are, I mean, you can hardly hear yourself think for the din of their screaming raaaaacist, raaaaaacist. I thought that was a terrific article, and it confirmed something that I have been writing to liberal friends of mine, that “racism” is the new McCarthyism. I use McCarthyism even though I know they understand it differently from the way I understand it, just because I’m trying to get them to understand how dangerous these indiscriminate charges of racism are, and I know how dangerous they thought McCarthyism was. For one thing, a person like Maureen Dowd ought not to be so confident that she won’t later have some reason to take Obama to task. What if he decides to triangulate on abortion and she writes a ferocious pro-choice column ripping him as a traitor to the cause? Two days later, here comes Bob Herbert with “Maureen Dowd–neo-racist.” Ooh, that would be your schadenfreude. And of course there’s always overreaching, which I fully expect these paranoid centrists to do any moment, if they haven’t already. I say grant Walker his premises, for example, that Obama’s wacky buddies in the media are “centrists,” and you’ll find his article very rewarding.
smellthecoffee on September 15, 2009 at 11:26 PM
There is actually a pretty good example of the early stages of this at Strat-Sphere. AJ does excellent work on global warming mythology, as well as most other subject matter. However, he does go off on an occasional rant about how the extreme right is going to ruin things in general that has led me to wonder if there could be such a thing as an “extreme moderate.”
TVHall on September 16, 2009 at 12:52 AM
So we are all paranoiac — left, center, and right. That’s good to know. Or, to put it in nicer terms, we have met the enemy — and he is us.
unclesmrgol on September 16, 2009 at 1:30 AM
Fun coincidence: Gutfeld just speculated about the idea of “radical centrists” on Red Eye. And said he just thought of the idea. (Do great minds think alike? Or do they read each other’s articles?)
RD on September 16, 2009 at 3:21 AM
OK Ed, I agree that we shouldn’t have violence. But should this unconstitutional, economic limiting, civil rights violation of a bill on health care pass the House, even without the government directly providing a portion of it for the general population or having illegals prohibited from receiving benefits which the courts have overridden before, what do we citizens do. We, the people, have yet to even resort fully to MLK’s civil right tactics, those tactics employed by the Tennessee Income Tax Revolt in 1999 or the violence of Shay’s Rebellion of 1786. On Saturday we were loud but reserved in conduct beyond that; no fights, arrests or even serious arguments that I observed roaming around the Capitol. Not even NBC or CNN could find violence among our ranks. And no litter with upwards of 2 million there per the British Daily Mail; my calculation was 1.52 million.
Anyway, how do we stop this tsunami against our culture, traditions, constitutional rights and freedom oriented form of government by our congress and this administration before too much damage is incurred. The elections are 14 months away and congress is still hell bent on passing ObamaCare, Cap and Trade and other such bills that will bankrupt our nation and further divide it as did the Hate Crimes bill. I am in favor of a repeat of the Tennessee Income Tax Revolt in 1999 at our nations Capitol.
Glenn Beck said nothing in or out of congress but he was speaking rhetorically; at the risk of being labeled an enemy of the state as Wilson’s Sedition Acts would have done, I am serious. If the House votes on a health care bill that still contains mandatory insurance for all or penalties, the IRS is to give the government my records and collect the penalties and my health records are sent as well along and with other previsions that allow government to intrude even more on my and other citizens private lives, then congress must be shut down as was the Tennessee legislature. No quorum, so no bills in or out without a reaffirmation of their constitutional oaths and removal of the leadership of the House and Senate. That can be done constitutionally and without violence unless the government is willing to go the way of the Iranian regime. Then we would know the true nature of this government.
Forget Father Niemöller’s poem about ignoring what the Nazis began doing at YOUR own peril; 50 million plus ended up dying because most ignored what was first happening in Germany when it was possible to stop them with little bloodshed; I so note that the Nazis were certainly willing to release their Brownshirts on those that disagreed with them, while we have seem little of that against TEA Partiers and no apparent government officials directly involved in inciting such efforts. Many wiser than I have said this in some form, those who forget history are doomed to repeat it. Please remember that.
amr on September 16, 2009 at 10:08 AM