Posted on 11/22/2016 12:13:08 PM PST by VitacoreVision
In the months leading up to his historic upset election on an anti-establishment, anti-globalism platform, more than a few leftist and establishment media organs claimed that Donald Trump was really spouting the ideas of The John Birch Society. Indeed, Trumpism is Bircherism, some commentators claimed.
The constitutionalist grassroots organization, which publishes this magazine and has chapters in all 50 states, has indeed been promoting many of the ideas and truths that Trump gave voice to during his unusual campaign. The purpose of the medias attempt to link Trump with JBS was to demonize him, not give credit where credit was due. And so many of the articles and screeds linking Trump to JBS were also laced with factual inaccuracies and smears that have been discredited even in official investigations.
Among the examples was a piece from senior editor Jeet Heer in the ultra-far-left New Republic. But with Trump triumphant, we have to see the Birch Society and its style of conspiracy-mongering in a new light, Heer wrote in Donald Trumps United States of Conspiracy, without bothering to refute any JBS or Trump claims. Far from belonging merely to the lunatic fringe, the Birchers were important precursors to what is now the governing ideology of the Republican Party: Trumpism.
Bircherism is now, with Trump, flourishing in an entirely new way, Heer continued between regurgitating easily discredited falsehoods about JBS. Far from being drummed out of conservatism, it has become the dominant strain.
Writing in the far-left establishment organ Salon, writer Daniel Denvir also claimed Trump was proof of a JBS takeover. These sorts of conspiracies are not limited to immigration: the far right that has taken over the Republican Party incorporates a whole range of extreme theories rooted in the Cold War paranoia of the John Birch Society ... and the rantings of Alex Jones and his Infowars empire, he wrote.
In the far-left establishment behemoth Huffington Post, self-styled historian Robert McElvaine also claimed Trump was proof that the JBS was winning. The Trump candidacy is the culmination of the long campaign begun by McCarthyism and the John Birch Society in the 1950s and aimed at discrediting virtually every institution in the United States, he wrote.
Of course, claims by leftists and the establishment voices that JBS was dominating the conservative movement and the Republican Party are not new. In 2011, for example, journalist Andrew Reinbach, writing in the Huffington Post, made a similar argument. Most Americans dont realize that the right wings main ideas have been pushed for 50 years by the John Birch Society (JBS), a group Barry Goldwater and William F. Buckley Jr. once thought too extreme, but which has since become the intellectual seed bank of the right, he wrote.
But are they right? Is Trump really the culmination of almost 60 years of JBS work to educate the American people? The way Trump spoke on the campaign trail did have strong echoes of JBS talking points at least on many issues.
For example, Trump proclaimed that the United Nations was not a friend to freedom and not a friend even to the United States of America. The JBS has been working to Get the U.S. Out of the UN for more than 50 years for exactly that reason. Trump also spoke regularly about a cabal seeking global government involving the Clintons, the establishment, the international banks, global special interests, and more. Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo, Trump said, sounding a lot like JBS Founder Robert Welch, while vowing to put America First.
While Trump rarely made reference to the U.S. Constitution, and did take some positions at odds with those of JBS, he also soared in popularity by taking JBS stances on a wide range of issues. From blasting the Federal Reserve and its manipulation of the economy, to calling for a strong crackdown on illegal immigration, to vowing to rip up sovereignty-destroying trade deals such as NAFTA and reconsider globalist military schemes such as NATO, to promoting a gold standard, to supporting the 10th Amendment, to calling the man-made global-warming theory a hoax, Trump might as well have been reading from the JBS playbook of the last five decades.
Obviously, Trump did not create the movement or the popular mood that propelled his campaign to victory. Instead, Trump tapped into an increasingly aware electorate that is tired of the establishment and its anti-American agenda for a totalitarian New World Order. So, while the media almost certainly brought up the JBS to attack Trump, there can be little doubt that the organization played a major role in preparing the way for a successful Trump-style candidacy. Now, the JBS must work to ensure that Trump and Congress remain loyal to those promises that conform to their oath of office.
Cease fools!
Ask 100 random people under 45 what “Bircherism” is.
99 and a half of them will say they never heard of it.
Is this “story” Fake News?
The Overton window has been dragged so far to the right that I now consider this to be a moderate site. Pretty cool.
US outta da UN, UN outta da US.
“Ah’m a faithful follower of Brother John Birch ‘n I belong to the Antioch Baptist Church, ‘n I ain’t even GOT a garage, you can call home and ask mah wife!” (Uneasy Rider)
Most leftist commie arse wipes werent even born when the man John Birch was murdered by the Maoists. Some gratitude, they know nothing of the man. Yet are expert at Mao’s agenda and pushing it.. As are far too many today.
the Donald was but a youngster that fateful day.
TOO BAD HIS CRITICS WILL NEVER GROW UP THEMSELVES, SO VILE THEY HAVE BECOME.
Trumpification?
Here is another article that is ahistoric.
You beat me to it.
Just ignore them
Little said complaining about the JBS was ever true, at least while the founder was alive.
Communists and ‘progressives’ (but I repeat myself) such as “senior editor Jeet Heer” of the New Republic are so predictably stupid.
Anything that they don’t understand or like, they will routinely affix a pejorative label to and scream it at the top of their lungs, without worrying for an instant about whether or not it is factually true (after all, to them, ‘facts’ are just a phony social construct invented by dead white males to keep women and minorities down, and ‘truth’ is an infinitely malleable concept):
‘You’re a racist!’
“You’re a fascist!”
(fill in the blank - hompohobe, transphobe, ‘Bircher’, whatever, etc. ad nauseum)
It’s no different from any other child saying, “you’re a doodyhead!” when they don’t get their way.
I remember well how my mind was completely boggled when a “well-educated” Wellesley student (from Hillary’s alma mater), a friend of my sister’s, once earnestly proclaimed to me, without a hint of irony in her voice, that Ayn Rand was “a fascist”. Of course, Ayn Rand was perhaps the leading anti-fascist voice of the twentieth century, but facts don’t actually matter to know-nothing lefties.
The same sad pathology is at work when infantile, screaming lefties try to shout down Ayaan Hirsi Ali for being an ‘Islamophobe’.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.