NYPD’s Mini Rebellion And The True Face Of American Fascism

Oh, yeah — Happy New Year, every­body! Now let’s get back to fas­cism. When the “Corpo” régime installed by tyran­ni­cal President Buzz Windrip in “It Can’t Happen Here” strips Congress of its pow­ers, tries dis­si­dents in secret mil­i­tary courts and arms a repres­sive para­mil­i­tary force called the Minute Men, most cit­i­zens go along with it. (Yeah, some of that sounds famil­iar — we’ll get to that.) These dra­con­ian mea­sures are under­stood as nec­es­sary to Windrip’s plat­form of restor­ing American great­ness and pros­per­i­ty, and even those who feel uncom­fort­able with Corpo poli­cies reas­sure them­selves that America is a spe­cial place with a spe­cial des­tiny, and that the ter­ri­ble things that have hap­pened in Germany and Italy and Spain are not pos­si­ble here. No doubt the irony of Lewis’ title seems embar­rass­ing­ly obvi­ous now, but it was not meant to be sub­tle in 1935 either. His point stands: We still com­fort our­selves with mys­ti­cal nos­trums about American spe­cial­ness, even in an age when the secret pow­ers of the United States gov­ern­ment, and its insu­la­tion from demo­c­ra­t­ic over­sight, go far beyond any­thing Lewis ever imagined.

I’m not the first per­son to observe that the New York police unions’ cur­rent mini-rebel­lion against Mayor Bill de Blasio car­ries anti-demo­c­ra­t­ic under­tones, and even a faint odor of right-wing coup. Indeed, it feels like an ear­ly chap­ter in a con­tem­po­rary rewrite of “It Can’t Happen Here”: Police in the nation’s largest city open­ly dis­re­spect and defy an elect­ed reformist may­or, inspir­ing a nation­wide wave of sup­port from “true patri­ots” eager to take their coun­try back from the dubi­ous alien forces who have degrad­ed and des­e­crat­ed it. However you read the prox­i­mate issues between the cops and de Blasio (some of which are New York-spe­cif­ic), the police protest rests on the same philo­soph­i­cal foun­da­tion as the fas­cist move­ment in Lewis’ nov­el. Indeed, it’s a con­stant under­cur­rent in American polit­i­cal life, one that sur­faced most recent­ly in the Tea Party rebel­lion of 2010, and is close­ly relat­ed to the dis­or­der famous­ly anat­o­mized by Richard Hofstadter in his 1964 essay “The Paranoid Style in American Politics.”

There’s no doubt that the NYPD cri­sis has dis­turb­ing impli­ca­tions on var­i­ous lev­els. Amid a nation­al dis­cus­sion about police tac­tics and strat­e­gy, and the under­stand­able grief fol­low­ing the mur­ders of two NYPD offi­cers, it amounts to a vig­or­ous ide­o­log­i­cal coun­ter­at­tack. In effect, many cops (or at least their more intran­si­gent lead­ers) want to assert that law enforce­ment is a qua­si-sacred social insti­tu­tion, one that stands out­side the law and is inde­pen­dent of demo­c­ra­t­ic over­sight. Sometimes this is tak­en to ludi­crous and lit­er­al-mind­ed extremes, as in a recent col­umn by Michael Goodwin of the New York Post cel­e­brat­ing the NYPD and the United States mil­i­tary as “Our angels in a time of dan­ger and cyn­i­cism.” (Without real­iz­ing it, Goodwin was but­tress­ing the con­clu­sions of James Fallows’ must-read Atlantic arti­cle about the way American soci­ety has become dis­con­nect­ed from the mil­i­tary and sanc­ti­fied it at the same time.) As Salon colum­nist and vet­er­an New York reporter Jim Sleeper has not­ed, this ten­den­cy also makes clear how lit­tle the trib­al, insu­lar cul­ture of big-city polic­ing has changed, even in an era of far greater diversity.

We still don’t know where this con­fronta­tion between de Blasio and his cops will lead, or how it will be resolved. (So far, the city has been peace­ful – and nobody on my block got a park­ing tick­et all week! So it’s win-win.) But I’d like to strike a coun­ter­in­tu­itive posi­tion and insist that it’s impor­tant not to over­state the threat, or to give an arro­gant blowhard like Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association head Patrick Lynch more impor­tance than he mer­its. My fel­low Irish-Americans will rec­og­nize Lynch as a lat­ter-day exam­ple of the small-mind­ed big­ots and “begrudgers” too com­mon in the tribe. But set him against Joe McCarthy and Father Coughlin, and he bare­ly reg­is­ters on the his­tor­i­cal scales of infamy.

In the final analy­sis I don’t find Lynch and his min­ions espe­cial­ly ter­ri­fy­ing, for exact­ly the same rea­sons I don’t find Sen. Ted Cruz espe­cial­ly ter­ri­fy­ing. Both may dream of a Corpo America, in which dis­sent is crushed with an iron fist and our glo­ri­ous nation­al des­tiny is reclaimed from the appeasers and mul­ti­cul­tur­al­ists and panty­waists. But they lack the polit­i­cal finesse or rhetor­i­cal sub­tle­ty to make it hap­pen. Ultimately, the real dan­gers may be clos­er at hand, and more dif­fi­cult to see.

With both the dis­grun­tled NYPD lead­er­ship and the so-called intel­lec­tu­al leader of the Tea Party, the appeal to fas­cism – no, excuse me, to “patri­o­tism” and “true Americanism” – is just too bla­tant, and their rejec­tion of democ­ra­cy too obvi­ous. Many peo­ple inclined to feel sym­pa­thy for the police, and skit­tish about the street protests of recent weeks, were dis­mayed to see cops turn the funer­al of a mur­dered offi­cer into a pet­ty polit­i­cal con­fronta­tion, against the wish­es of the dead man’s fam­i­ly. It was, or should have been, a moment of mourn­ing and con­tem­pla­tion, when the city and the nation were poised to reflect on the unique­ly dif­fi­cult lives of police offi­cers, who so often bear the brunt of poli­cies they did not cre­ate and atti­tudes they can­not real­is­ti­cal­ly be expect­ed to escape.

Instead, Lynch and his fol­low­ers got buf­faloed into a polit­i­cal protest that may have served the ends of right-wing strate­gists, and gal­va­nized the Fox News audi­ence, but is exceed­ing­ly unlike­ly to improve the lives of NYPD offi­cers and their fam­i­lies. Ted Cruz is a crafti­er char­ac­ter than Lynch, no doubt, but his entire career has been self-serv­ing polit­i­cal the­ater meant to enhance his star sta­tus and thrill his zeal­ous core of fol­low­ers. He is wide­ly dis­liked with­in his own par­ty for his pat­tern of ide­o­log­i­cal over­reach and polit­i­cal blun­ders, and many con­ser­v­a­tives will nev­er vote for him. He’s not remote­ly qual­i­fied for the role of Buzz Windrip or Huey Long, who had enor­mous pop­u­lar appeal and cam­paigned on a plat­form of Mussolini-like pub­lic hand­outs. Republican appa­ratchiks will do every­thing pos­si­ble to stop Cruz from becom­ing the party’s 2016 pres­i­den­tial nom­i­nee; if he wins the nom­i­na­tion any­way, he might well lose 40 states in the gen­er­al election.

As I said ear­li­er, despite their dif­fer­ent con­texts, the NYPD’s cold war with de Blasio, the Tea Party move­ment and the not-entire­ly-fic­tion­al American fas­cism of “It Can’t Happen Here” all have the same philo­soph­i­cal roots. It’s not just about race, although America’s racial divi­sions play an inescapable and cen­tral role. (In Lewis’ nov­el, Windrip’s move­ment seeks to sup­press blacks and Jews, and revoke female suf­frage.) At root it’s also not about police-state poli­cies and tac­tics, even if those might seem to be the desired out­come. (Tea Partyers claim to oppose those things, with vary­ing degrees of sin­cer­i­ty — except when Muslims or oth­er vari­eties of dark-skinned immi­grants are involved.) Rather, these world­views rest on the idea that America is not defined by its demo­c­ra­t­ic insti­tu­tions, but by a mys­ti­cal or spir­i­tu­al essence that can­not be pre­cise­ly described — but is under­stood far bet­ter by some of its cit­i­zens than by oth­ers. If those attuned to this patri­ot­ic fre­quen­cy over­whelm­ing­ly tend to be white males, that is not evi­dence of racism (they might say) but of the clar­i­ty and self­less­ness of their polit­i­cal vision.

In this view, Lincoln’s “gov­ern­ment of the peo­ple, by the peo­ple for the peo­ple” takes a dis­tant sec­ond place to John Winthrop’s vision of America as a tran­scen­dent “city upon a hill.” This vision does not have to be specif­i­cal­ly reli­gious or Christian (though it some­times is) to be infused with a puri­tan­i­cal sense of man­i­fest des­tiny, and of the unbridge­able gulf between the elect, who per­ceive the true nature of America, and the damned, who do not. (I would argue that this kind of American excep­tion­al­ism is an inher­ent­ly reli­gious idea — but that’s a top­ic for anoth­er time.) Democracy is only val­ued inso­far as it pro­duces the “cor­rect” results, and comes to be seen as debased and per­vert­ed when it does not. So for the com­mit­ted patri­ot of the Pat Lynch/​Buzz Windrip/​Ted Cruz per­sua­sion, only some demo­c­ra­t­ic out­comes are legit­i­mate expres­sions of “America” (see Bush v. Gore, 2000), only some elect­ed lead­ers are wor­thy of respect, and only some exer­cis­es of author­i­ty require deference.

I’m no defend­er of the Democratic Party in gen­er­al or of Bill Clinton or Barack Obama in par­tic­u­lar, a pair of Wall Street flunkies and nation­al-secu­ri­ty ride­a­longs who are both to the right of Richard Nixon on most mean­ing­ful issues. But the con­cert­ed and unceas­ing cam­paign to depict both men as crim­i­nals and usurpers, whose spu­ri­ous claims to the White House could mag­i­cal­ly be undone with a stained cock­tail dress or a Kenyan birth cer­tifi­cate, pro­vides one of the clear­est man­i­fes­ta­tions of America’s pro­to-fas­cist dis­or­der. The cen­tral issue was nev­er whether Clinton should be impeached for lying about a sleazy affair, or whether Obama qual­i­fied as a “nat­ur­al-born cit­i­zen.” (Which he prob­a­bly would have, even had he been born over­seas.) Those things were head­line-grab­bing expe­di­ents, sym­bol­ic fic­tions from the Leo Strauss play­book (Benghazi!), meant to stand in for an eso­teric truth the benight­ed pub­lic was inca­pable of grasp­ing: Those guys were not real Americans. The Force was not with them; they had no right to the throne; any method used to defeat them was justified.

These have been upset­ting and dra­mat­ic weeks in New York and across the nation, and 2014 is like­ly to be remem­bered as a piv­otal year in our society’s rela­tion­ship with the police pro­fes­sion. But I sus­pect the spec­ta­cle of those cops turn­ing their backs on Bill de Blasio is best under­stood as a rear­guard action, a pathet­ic echo of the cam­paigns of vil­i­fi­ca­tion and de-Americanization con­duct­ed against Clinton and Obama. It’s fas­cist wish­ful think­ing, a nos­tal­gic appeal to a white work­ing-class, “Reagan Democrat” demo­graph­ic that is fad­ing away. It might yield some short-term polit­i­cal ben­e­fits for the Republican oper­a­tives who appar­ent­ly orches­trat­ed it, but it is not the first stage of a putsch.

If there’s an urgent les­son to be drawn from Lewis’ 1930s alle­go­ry, it might come from turn­ing its premise upside down. We don’t need an unc­tu­ous hyp­ocrite like Buzz Windrip, or a buf­foon­ish black­shirt like Pat Lynch, to end up with some­thing close to fas­cism. (Lewis was arguably not fair to the real-life Huey Long, who was an excep­tion­al­ly com­pli­cat­ed fig­ure – part Napoleon, part Occupy Wall Street. He would be viewed as a dan­ger­ous rad­i­cal today, not accept­able in either polit­i­cal par­ty.) Congress has already ren­dered itself irrel­e­vant; any pres­i­dent who stripped it of its pow­ers would be applaud­ed. We already have the secret courts and the secret police, in the form of agen­cies we do not have the right to know about. Our pres­i­dent is charm­ing and urbane, and despised by the old-school, would-be fas­cists with the Dad pants and the bad hair­cuts. So the fact that he has amassed unprece­dent­ed exec­u­tive pow­er he will hand on to his suc­ces­sor, and stands astride a vast sub­ter­ranean “deep state” no one can see or con­trol, is not some­thing to wor­ry about. This is America, and America is a spe­cial place. It can’t hap­pen here.