Fear and Loathing: The Rise of the Christian Right

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Book Review
THE POLITICS OF HEAVEN: AMERICA IN FEARFUL TIMES
By Earl Shorris
W.W. Norton, 371 pages, $25.95
Some of the meanest people in the world are nice.
That’s the conservative evangelical paradox: the smiling churchgoer who will kindly volunteer his last crust of bread with one hand while voting to gut what remains of welfare with the other. The impersonal is the political, and the rest is Christian charity. This attitude bedevils liberal observers of American political culture. How can such inconsistency not corrupt the logic of Christian values? And how can these same people sabotage their own economic interest by supporting tax-slashing politicians?
The past decade has seen a succession of books that offer answers to these questions, including such notable titles as Drew Westen’s The Political Brain, Thomas Frank’s What’s the Matter with Kansas? and George Lakoff’s Moral Politics. The most recent addition to the field is Earl Shorris’ sprawling, erudite The Politics of Heaven: America in Fearful Times, and though sympathetic to his fellow liberals, Mr. Shorris feels that they often furnish solutions without fully appreciating the magnitude of the problem.
According to Mr. Shorris, the “absurdity” of most discussions about conservative political allegiances “is that the journalist or scholar [claims to know] the interests of the voters better than the voters themselves.” Middle Americans, he argues, may be voting against their economic interests, but they’re not voting against their best interests, at least as far as they’re concerned. Until liberal analysts stop viewing conservatives as confused, irrational yokels, the unifying power of conservatism will remain mysterious.
So far, so what, you might ask: Several writers have reached similar conclusions. But Mr. Shorris goes beyond polemics that look at history at the level of election cycles. “As much as any other single attribute,” he writes, “the possibility of mass destruction describes contemporary life.” Since the bombing of Hiroshima, he argues, America has been in thrall to a radical fear that has forged a conservative national political movement “even more potent and more encompassing than the New Deal.” The conservative movement has been the guiding force in American life for over half a century and it has proven corrosive to our democracy.
Mr. Shorris believes that the rise of the conservative movement is the result of “confluence” shifting the mood of nation. “Confluence,” in his theory of history, is “Junction, union, flow, assemblage; rivers or people or currents coming together.” That’s as close as he gets to defining the term, though he speaks directly about what history-as-confluence isn’t. It’s not, as some people claim, “one damned thing after another.” Nor does confluence function like Marx’s thesis-antithesis-synthesis progression. Mr. Shorris’ idea is more rhetorical than analytical—he likens it to pulling apart the threads of a densely woven fabric—and it allows him to include Aristotle and Martin Luther alongside Lincoln and F.D.R. as major contributors to American history. This strategy is perfectly acceptable when the idea is to stimulate curiosity about the connection between the Katrina disaster and Goldwater conservatism, or whatever, but when the book uses “confluence” to support direct cause and effect, as it occasionally yet reluctantly does, the concept veers dangerously close to deus ex machina.
Putting these concerns aside and taking Mr. Shorris on his own terms, the 62 years since the Enola Gay’s infamous flight have seen such disparate events as the Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam, the ascendancy of the economic shock doctrine, the rise of both the Christian Coalition and neoconservative thought, 9/11 and a multitude of other events and ideas, all of which have contributed to the confluence and our current political movement.
The end result of this history, argues Mr. Shorris, has been the replacement of American optimism with various forms of pessimism, most importantly theological and political pessimism. People began to anticipate catastrophe. “And if enough people expect a catastrophe,” he writes, “no real catastrophe need occur; the expectation is a catastrophe.”
This is bad news because safety—financial, social and theological—then becomes the paramount societal concern, weakening citizens’ commitment to civil liberties, civic dialogue and the state itself. The most “salient” representative of this political movement, argues Mr. Shorris, is the conservative Christian evangelical, a kind of anti-mascot that unites political cynicism with Christian eschatology.
The Politics of Heaven is a frustrating book. At times it’s oblique, vague and circular. But it’s also learned, thoughtful and humane. Mr. Shorris pulps a lot of history to make his argument. Depending on your personal politics, you might call it dynamic synthesis—or interpretive extravagance. But this is how history is written: drawing narrative connections through the innumerable entanglements and complications that time has presented. Mr. Shorris is right more than he’s wrong when he discusses how conservative intellectual developments have informed each other, but his book fails to prove that fear ushered in a national political movement. If anything, fear shaped our entire national culture, and if that’s what Mr. Shorris meant, I wish he’d said so.
But the value of The Politics of Heaven lies outside any specific argument. Earl Shorris understands that each political moment is the result of tremendous philosophical, theological and moral complexity, a fact that most books about current affairs blithely disregard.
Michael Washburn is the assistant director of the Center for the Humanities at the Graduate Center, CUNY.



















Yours is the simplistic, arrogant view, from the towers of New York, that make conservatives scream in rage.
"The conservative movement has been the guiding force in American life for over half a century and it has proven corrosive to our democracy."
I submit to you that "liberalism," the PC term for Socialism, is in fact the corrosive element.
Taking government to heights of power and intrusion, never envisioned by our founding fathers, is the danger to our liberties.
To quote a worthy American..."We have nothing to fear except fear its self..."
America and American's have too long been ruled by the spirit of fear....
Jim
Conroe, Texas
To quote a worthy American..."We have nothing to fear except fear its self..."
America and American's have too long been ruled by the spirit of fear....
Jim
Conroe, Texas
To quote a worthy American..."We have nothing to fear except fear its self..."
America and American's have too long been ruled by the spirit of fear....
Jim
Conroe, Texas
Frederick, you are 100% right. And I say this as a New Yorker. Here, in a nutshell, is why liberals will never be able to solve the "problem" of conservative ascendancy in this country:
"Some of the meanest people in the world are nice. That’s the conservative evangelical paradox: the smiling churchgoer who will kindly volunteer his last crust of bread with one hand while voting to gut what remains of welfare with the other."
A decade after welfare reform (enacted under a Democrat adminstration, no less) and notwithstanding all documented success of that reform, liberals still think those who don't support Great Society-style welfare are "mean." Old fashioned wlfare did nothing to improve conditions for generations who became dependent on handouts. Yet liberals still insist that it is "nice" to support that state of affairs and "mean" to recognize the failure and seek to fix it. With those blinders on, the left will never be able to recognize, let alone solve, any real problem.
Living ina dreamland will not make it a reality. The christian conservative has based his theory on hatred misdirection and lies. One made argue all one wants but the New Powers to be recognized and rising are what the white man fears most.
The American Black and the Hispanic are on the rise and in direct conflict with the Party and Religion of hate and Intolerance.
The new powers coming into being will no longer accept this talking down to and do as your told atttitude of the Hateful right.
A religion that supports help if your deemed the right person by color religion and idealogies. No I say the conservative movement is in the final throes of lets make noise Hate and fear and with that they will crawl away and disappear for ever I hope.
One must remember to embrace the conservative movement one must HATE,Lie,Cheat,Steal,Manipullate and destroy. They must be willing to give up ALL free thought and CRITICAL THINKING and except the leaderships and the congregations rule and guide failure to do so is ostrification from the group.
CHristian and republicans are EVIL and only know one thing HATRED HATRED and MORE HATRED.
disgusted is correct. The modern church would be destroyed by Jesus Christ because it's leaders are mentally imbalanced kooks like Hitler's Nazis.
Have you ever met a pro-lifer who WASN'T anti-labor? Do you think repealing Roe vs. Wade makes you 'pro-life'? Do you think a constitutional ban on gay marriage is the 'golden calf'...this is a doll and THIS is idolatry?! These are all attcks on the sovereignty of labor here adn abroad. Lets try talking about the economic impact of the C.R. Can't, well that's the problem? For example if you are able to generate an aggregate of citizens, out of thin air, who you've deemed unworthy of signing/maintaining contracts you will ultimately weaken wages accross the board, this is the 'golden calf'. LOL, arming ourselves w/out ever mentioning the accronym, NAFTA, is actually criminal. That's like walking into a room, throwing a book on the table, slapping that mexican then criminalizing him for having been slapped, THEN searching that book for justification. And GOD knows there's no justification, that's why HE is criminal. If you really want to see the answer to our problem simply apply the golder rule.
I entirely agree that the Christian Right "has been the guiding force in American life for over half a century and has proven corrosive to our democracy."
Another example of this phenomenon is the outrageous involvement of individuals affiliated with several Christian fundamentalist "educational institutions" in setting the agenda of a Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit taking place at the San Diego Natural History Museum.
In essence, as a series of articles by Charles Gadda on the NowPublic site have revealed, the museum agreed to enter a quid pro quo agreement, whereby an evangelical Christian connected with the "University of the Holy Land" would arrange for the scrolls to come to San Diego under the condition that the discoveries and research conclusions of a series of Jewish and Israeli archaeologists and historians who have rejected the old theory of Dead Sea Scroll origins would be excluded from the exhibit.
Apparently, $100,000 from Steven Spielberg's Holocaust fund was donated to the museum and passed on to the graduate student of another fundamentalist Christian "bible scholar" seeking to have the evidence presented in a misleading manner. Spielberg, it would appear, was unaware of the fundamentalist connection and of the terms of the agreement into which the museum entered.
This agreement, of course, violates the American Association of Museum's "ethical transparency" standard, and perfectly illustrates the dangers posed to a liberal society when religiously motivated organizations are allowed to exercise an inappropriate degree of influence over scientific and educational events. The individuals who came up with the San Diego scheme should be held accountable, either by the Board of Directors of the museum or in the court of public opinion. The museum's declared scientific mission is to "educate the public," not collaborate with a clique of fundamentalists for financial profit.
For more information on this scandal, see Charles Gadda's articles at http://www.nowpublic.com/node/582470
and
http://www.nowpublic.com/node/525806