Naomi Wolf Provides Context for Some Familiar Events
May 6, 2008 on 2:17 am | In Uncategorized, Academic Freedom, ContextAfter a sampling of 2006 news headlines about war, torture, and the repression of political dissent, Naomi Wolf reflects:
“I began to think of these examples as ‘historical echoes’ – not proof that someone influential in the administration had studied the details of mid-twentieth-century fascism and totalitarianism, but certainly suggestive.
What was it about the image of a mob of young men dressed in identical shirts, shouting at poll workers outside of a voting center in Florida during the 2000 recount, that looked familiar? What resonated about the reports that Bush supporters in the South were holding organized public events to burn CDs by the Dixie Chicks? (CDs are actually quite hard to burn and produce toxic fumes.) What seemed so familiar about an organized ideological group shaming an academic for saying something unpopular—and then pressuring the state government to get the university president to fire that professor? . . .
These events may seem to have historical echoes because they actually are mirrored in history.
No one can deny the skill of fascists at forming public opinion.”
Naomi Wolf, The End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot (2007).