Thursday, August 17, 2017

The "Tom Watson Slide": Today's anti-fascist is tomorrow's fascist



Millions have already seen the short documentary embedded above. I am ashamed to admit that I had not viewed it until yesterday. If you've not seen it yet, you must.

Pay close attention to Matthew Heimbach, who shows up not long past the ten minute mark. You may be surprised by his anti-corporatist, anti-capitalist message. For a moment, he sounds like someone who has been reading Chomsky. Of course, Heimbach believes that anti-capitalism and anti-Semitism go hand in hand; so did many 19th century Marxists.

An argument of that sort may seduce radical leftists into joining the far right. In fact, I've seen that very scenario play out many times.

In 1970, anti-war protestors gathered to hear Jane Fonda say "Don't trust the government" -- and ten years later, the same people voted for Ronald Reagan, who also said "Don't trust the government." I knew a famous leader of the SDS -- someone who testified at the Chicago 8 trial -- who, by the 1990s, had become a quasi-sympathizer of the JBS. I used to know one of the founders of the East Village Other (a great hippie journal of the 1960s); by the 1990s, the same guy was a right-wing kook who wanted to get rid of Social Security. In the late 1980s, I knew people radicalized by Chomsky and Cockburn and Pacifica radio; by 1994, the same people were joining militias and trading conspiracy theories about Bill Clinton and the Rothschilds and the Knights Templar and God-knows-what-else.

The beat goes on: The SPLC tells us that White Nationalist Jason Kessler got his start with the Occupy movement.

We need a name for this phenomenon. I suggest calling it the "Tom Watson Slide," after the populist rabble-rouser Tom Watson, who began as a radical ultra-progressive but eventually morphed into a radical racist. Watson played the Édouard Drumont role in the Leo Frank affair -- and modern Nazis are still defending his scurrilous behavior.

Some readers wonder why I've come to hate the BernieBros. Some wonder why I never had any use for those on the left who despise mainstream liberalism and the Democratic party.

Why do I distrust such people? The Tom Watson Slide. That's why. I've seen it happen far too often.

In the 1930s, the left was split between those who loved FDR and those who called FDR a capitalist sell-out. The latter category included a few notables (such as Whittaker Chambers and, arguably, Irving Kristol) who eventually showed us their versions of the Tom Watson Slide. Meanwhile, those in the former category -- the FDR-lovers -- tended to stay put. If they did slide, they didn't slide very far.

For similar reasons, I oppose anarchism -- all forms of anarchism, including that really cool one that you are now tempted to prattle on about because you seem to believe that I've never heard that kind of prattle before. Why do I stand against the anarchist? Because anarchism, in all its flavors, is a common "gateway drug" leading to Libertarianism, and Libertarianism usually morphs into the latest iterations of the Tea Party or the John Birch Society.

I have read that members of Antifa behaved with true heroism in Charlottesville. They deserve our gratitude and our applause for that.

However, the more I learn about Antifa, the greater my fear that this movement attracts the kind of radicals likeliest to make what I call the Tom Watson Slide. Most members of Antifa are anarchists who oppose conventional Democratic politicians. How can I do anything but oppose their opposition? In response to a previous post, one of my readers insisted on drawing a sharp distinction between Antifa and the violence-prone Black Bloc. But that distinction is far from clear: See here and here and here.

History strongly suggests that today's anti-fascist street-brawler is tomorrow's pro-fascist street-brawler. Those who bravely stood against the Nazis in Charlottesville may find it hard to believe that such a transmogrification is possible. But the Slide has happened before -- many, many times. It will happen again.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

I mostly agree with you! But this isn't the time to be directing fire at the left and the perniciousness of anarchists isn't the takeaway. The president said there were many "fine people" in the "quiet" Nazi torch parade. Our country has its Hitler, and he has three and a half years left, minimum. Keep your eye on the ball.

JSL said...

President Trump needs to be impeached and sooner rather than later.

Racism is unacceptable. Trump's narcissism and egoism are a clear and present danger.

I'm not saying anything everyone doesn't already know. So how in the fuck is this idiot not impeached? How are there not impeachment proceedings in the Congress already? How far is the GOP (or Republicans or whatever shit name they want to self-identify with) going to let Trump shit all over the nation and bounce around like a fucking buffoon? Impeach the son of bitch, put Pence in office for the next ~3 years. Then let that evil son of a bitch lose to the Democratic nominee. Which would happen because Michael Pence on his own wouldn't even reach the ~1% level in the primaries that Lindsey Graham had. The Democrats could throw up anyone (except Hillary Clinton) and easily skate to victory in 2020 against Pence and his fellow goombas.

Impeach Trump. Let's get it done, America. No more playing footsies with neo-Nazis, the Alt. Right, the Far Right, the neo-fascists, the ultranationalists, etc. It's time to put an end to these dangerous flirtations before someone gets bedded.

RIP Heather Heyer. May your death lead to America's salvation in getting rid of that imbecile President 45.

Jay

b said...

What's happening with Steve Bannon?

Whatever it is, it's not essentially about white supremacism. Bannon is not a white supremacist. That term is bandied about so much. Bannon may be willing to use the crackers, just as Trump wouldn't have won the election without geeing up the beer-bellied, uneducated, white gun-toting males who think they're Macho Incarnate but who in the event of a second US civil war might find it hard to pull themselves away from the wrestling on the telly. Any serious military force would be very choosy about who among that rabble of lardarses (probably in many cases addicted to opiates) they wanted to recruit. Even the German SA had standards.

Bannon said last year that the US and China would fight a war within 5-10 years. The background of guys like Bannon and Michael Ledeen is fascism. Not Nazism. Italian fascism. Militarism and war were far more intrinsic to that brand than they were to German national socialism. War is central to Bannon's outlook. Major war between, on one side, the US and at least some of its NATO allies, and on the other, China, Russia, or both. World war three. Nuclear war. Not a bunch of hooded crackers in the US South. It was obvious that Trumpism would cause blood to start flowing in the US. But the crackers are just tools.

Here's a quote from Bannon when he went to a conference in the Vatican in 2014:

"Just to put it in perspective, with the assassination that took place 100 years ago tomorrow in Sarajevo, the world was at total peace. There was trade, there was globalization, there was technological transfer, the High Church of England and the Catholic Church and the Christian faith was predominant throughout Europe of practicing Christians. Seven weeks later, I think there were 5 million men in uniform and within 30 days there were over a million casualties." (emphasis added)

That sounds far more like it.

More recently he came from a different angle:

There’s no military solution (to North Korea’s nuclear threats). Forget it. Until somebody solves the part of the equation that shows me that 10 million people in Seoul don’t die in the first 30 minutes from conventional weapons, I don’t know what you’re talking about. There’s no military solution here. They got us.

He is correct in his analysis of the balance of forces in Korea. North Korea could indeed destroy Seoul with conventional weapons within a very short period of time. It would be absolutely impossible for the US to destroy their artillery before they did it. The South Korean elite must be shitting themselves at the thought that their assets will be sacrificed at the altar of the Trump-Kim monster. But they're small fry.

The term "economic war with China" has been deliberately chosen for use by Bannon because of the resonance that is pumped up by its final three words: war with China. His statements about both WW1 and Seoul, even if the latter was couched in forked-tongue negative terms, show he is very well aware of how quickly things can change, how quickly the plan is for them to change. It's at this point in the analysis that comparisons with Nazism are apt.

joseph said...

Eric Hoffer, "The True Believer"

Anonymous said...

I keep remembering Toni Morrison's description of one of those: he didn't kill because of the organization demanded it, he joined the organization because he wanted to kill, or something to that effect.

William said...

The political spectrum is not a straight line but a circle. Liberals on left, conservatives on the right, and libertarians on the bottom. The further left or right that you go you eventuality meet each other at the bottom.

Gus said...

Word in the conspiracy world is that Kessler might be some kind of intelligence agent working for "them". No idea if there is any truth to that but I found it an interesting suggestion. No doubt there are intelligence agents infiltrating these groups on a regular basis.

b said...

@William - Sure, that's often true as a first-order observation, but you haven't defined "left" and "right"; nor, for that matter, the horrible term "liberal". Is Trump a "conservative"?

The straight line ("spectrum"), the horseshoe, the circle, the two-dimensional plane (left-right on one axis, despotism-liberalism on the other): they are all confused. We live in dark, dark times, in which to achieve an appreciable amount of critical clarity is a lifelong and ongoing battle. Many of the decent people who reject the right wing, the free market, and the red fascism of Lenin and Stalin, but who are anything but nutcases who are always calling for what few social forces are actually materially positing, have a hard time defining what they are for.

Where would you place Anton Pannekoek, usually considered to be the left of Leninism, on your circle? Nowhere near Ayn Rand, I hope :)

Amelie D'bunquerre said...

I remember like it was only yesterday how the mainstream media, or corporate media, or the Octopus had condemned blogs and bloggers, who were encroaching on their elite privilege of ownership of information. Underneath any of their sometimes sensible arguments was the self-evident fact: the Internet is anarchy and liberty made actual, no need for steenking badges, n'est-ce pas?

It would be useful to have a national debate about repealing the 22nd amendment which limits the terms of the president. More important, though, the Constitution should be amended to require all candidates for president, vice-president, and Congress to wear paper sacs over their heads to insure that non-photogenic persons (and men who suffer flopsweat) get a fair shake.

b said...

The Barcelona attack happened outside this Chabad-certified restaurant.

joseph said...

Other than an obsession with Chabad, I fail to see b's point.

Anonymous said...

Everyone you mentioned were conspiracists first and foremost. That's the common denominator. When the next cool bit of forbidden knowledge comes along they can't help themselves but to get swept up in it. And no individual is either totally left or totally right on the political spectrum, any more than they're totally good or totally bad.

Joseph Cannon said...

Anon: So you figured out who was who, even though I dropped no names? Guess I wasn't as oblique as I thought. I could tell some stories -- especially about the East Village Other guy.

Look, you're right about no-one being totally left or right; human behavior is not so schematic. But I've seen the transition too often: A nice liberal guy becomes curious about who was shooting from the grassy knoll, and three years later, the same guy is telling me to read "The Committee of 300" or some similar classic.

b said...

The Chabad links to properties close to the sites of terror attacks are way too many to be coincidence, and as with the 7/7 bombings in London there will be Zionist "security" all over the area. No doubt you will say I am a genocidalist Hitler-lover to make that point, small-j joseph, so don't expect a reply.