My
post yesterday, expressing revulsion at that "Yes We Can"
video, seems to be raising some hackles. Maybe I wasn't clear. No,
I don't mean that I smell liberal fascism in "everything inspiring" or "any show of enthusiasm by fifty or more
liberals for anything or anyone whatsoever." I mean that a
bunch of people beatifying a politician by reciting, in unison, a
speech of his that climaxes with the words
We are one people, we are one nation, and together we
will begin the next great chapther in the American story with three
words that will ring from coast to coast, from sea to shining sea:
Yes we can, yes we can, yes we can, yes we can, yes we can, yes we
can, yes we can, yes we can
is a message devoid of any content beyond a call to unity of the
collective as an end unto itself, complete with a very deliberate
aesthetic embodiment of that message. If that doesn't strike you as
even a little bit fascistic, I guess I can't help you.
By the way, reading Liberal Fascism in the context of
this election season is really, really dispiriting. Jonah spends a
lot of time discussing Hillary Clinton's old-school progressivism,
and John McCain is held up as a prime example in the afterword,
"The Tempting of Conservatism." And Mitt Romney probably can't
win.
topics:
John McCain, Hillary Clinton, Fascism, Conservatism