Arthur Schlesinger Jr’s, A Thousand Days, - A Comment
In Arthur Schlesinger’s memoir of his years as an advisor to President John F. Kennedy, A Thousand Days, he wrote about the right wing as he saw them in 1965, the year of publication. You might get a sense of Déjà vu.
From page 750:
“The burst of right-wing activity in the early sixties was a predictable historical phenomenon. In conservative periods, like the fifties, the radical right was characteristically disorganized and dormant. Its members were soothed by the eternal hope that a conservative administration might do something they would like.” . . .
“But the election of a progressive administration generally has a galvanizing effect on the radical right. It grows desperate, convinced that the nation is in mortal danger, that it is five minutes before midnight, that it must rally and resist before it is too late.” . . .
He went on with “I first heard of the John Birch Society in an early warning letter of December 1960 from that fine old progressive Republican Alfred M. Landon. One heard a great deal more of it in the months following. The radical right appealed equally to the incoherent resentment of the frightened rich and the anxious middle class. It flourished particularly in states like California and Texas, overflowing over raw new money; in states like Arizona and Florida, where older people had retired on their pensions; in small towns in the mountain states, where shop keepers felt harassed by big business, big labor, and big government. The mood is one of longing for a dreamworld of no communism, no overseas entanglements, no United Nations, no federal government, no labor unions, no Negroes or foreigners – a world in which Chief Justice Earl Warren would be impeached, Cuba invaded, the graduated income tax repealed, the fluoridation of water stopped and the import of Polish hams forbidden.”
Remember this was written in 1965
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