The Ultimate Reaping of What One Sows: Right-Wing Edition
by Glenn Greenwald
by
Glenn Greenwald
Right-wing
polemicists today are shrieking in self-pitying protest over a new
report from the Department of Homeland Security sent to
local police forces which warns of growing "right-wing extremist
activity." The report
(.pdf) identifies attributes of these right-wing extremists, warning
that a growing domestic threat of violence and terrorism "may include
groups and individuals that are dedicated to a single-issue, such
as opposition to abortion or immigration" and "groups that reject
federal authority in favor of state or local authority."
Conservatives
have responded to this disclosure as though they're on the train
to FEMA camps. The Right's leading political philosopher
and intellectual historian, Jonah Goldberg, invokes
fellow right-wing giant Ronald Reagan and says: "Here
we go Again," protesting that "this seems so nakedly ideological." Michelle
Malkin, who spent the last eight years cheering on every domestic
surveillance and police state program she could find, announces
that it's "Confirmed: The Obama DHS hit job on conservatives
is real!" Lead-War-on-Terror-cheerleader Glenn
Reynolds warns that DHS as a result of this report
(but not, apparently, anything that happened over the last eight
years) now considers the Constitution to be a
"subversive manifesto." Super Tough Guy Civilization-Warrior
Mark Steyn has already concocted
an elaborate, detailed martyr fantasy in which his house is
surrounded by Obama-dispatched, bomb-wielding federal agents. Malkin's
Hot Air stomps
its feet about all "the smears listed in the new DHS warning
about 'right-wing extremism.'"
It's certainly
true that federal police efforts directed at domestic political
movements even ones with a history of inspiring violence
in both the distant
and
recent
past
require real vigilance and oversight, and it's also true
that the DHS description of these groups seems excessively
broad with the potential for mischief. But the political faction
screeching about the dangers of the DHS is the same one that
spent the last eight years vastly expanding the domestic Surveillance
State and federal police powers in every area. DHS
and the still-creepy phrase "homeland security" became George Bush's
calling card. The Republicans won the 2002 election by demonizing
those who opposed its creation. All of the enabling legislation
underlying this Surveillance State from the Patriot
Act to the Military Commissions Act, from the various FISA "reforms"
to massive increases in domestic "counter-Terrorism" programs
are the spawns of the very right-wing movement that today is petrified
that this is all being directed at them.
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