How the American Right Became Radicalized

Published: Sept. 27, 2023, 7 a.m.

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At the height of the John Birch Society\\u2019s activity in the 1960s, critics dismissed its members as a paranoid fringe. After all, \\u201cBirchers\\u201d believed that a vast communist conspiracy existed in America and posed an existential threat to Christianity, capitalism, and freedom. But as historian Matthew Dallek reveals, the Birch Society\\u2019s extremism remade American conservatism. Most Birchers were white professionals who were radicalized as growing calls for racial and gender equality appeared to upend American life. Conservative leaders recognized that these affluent voters were needed to win elections, and for decades the GOP courted Birchers and their extremist successors.

Shermer and Dallek discuss: the origin of the John Birch Society \\u2022 the \\u201cright,\\u201d \\u201cconservatism,\\u201d \\u201cliberalism\\u201d \\u2022 \\u201cmainstream\\u201d vs. \\u201cfringe\\u201d \\u2022 Cold War context for the rise of the radical right \\u2022 the link between the John Birch Society and figures like Michele Bachmann, Sarah Palin, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Glenn Beck, Alex Jones, Ron Paul, Rand Paul, and Donald Trump \\u2022 America First nationalism, school board wars, QAnon plots, allegations of electoral cheating \\u2022 and the future of the Republic (if we can keep it).

Matthew Dallek\\xa0is a political historian whose intellectual interests include the intersection of social crises and political transformation, the evolution of the modern conservative movement, and liberalism and its critics. Dallek has authored four books which appeared on the Washington Post and the Chicago Tribune\\u2019s annual best-of lists. His latest is Birchers: How the John Birch Society Radicalized the American Right.

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