ABSTRACT

Far-Right Fantasy is a straight-forward, jargon-free study of contemporary American right-wing extremism. Accessible to both professional and lay audiences, it allows activists to speak for themselves in their own words. It takes the self-announced religious motivations of extremists seriously, and illustrates this by citing numerous cases of radical politics. The book addresses the strengths and weaknesses of the standard psycho-social-cultural explanations of far-right activism. It shows how extremists are similar educationally and psychologically to their more conventional neighbors; that they get into the movement in the same way that others become peace activists or radical environmentalists, namely, through their ties with fellow workers and church-goers, family members, and classmates; and that their views are given a patina of certainty by being repeatedly corroborated within closed, non-contaminated communication systems. The book avoids being preachy or judgmental, but it does try to challenge readers morally by submitting far-right fantasy to a formal ideology critique. It does this by showing how the reforms it recommends – a marketplace free of regulation, draconian immigration restrictions; an end to the federal reserve bank and the income tax; a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution; anti-union "right to work" laws and a return to debt slavery; the privatization of schools, the post office, and the commons, and so on – contradict its ostensible goal, which is to protect and enhance middle class interests. Far-Right Fantasy is suitable for adoption as a supplemental text in political psychology and sociology, sociologies of religion and knowledge, collective behavior, and American political history.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part Interlude 1|12 pages

Sovereign Citizens

part Interlude 2|18 pages

The Secessionist State of Jefferson

chapter 2|16 pages

Explaining the Far-Right

part Interlude 3|12 pages

Dreams of a Right-Wing Homeland

part Interlude 4|10 pages

“Cut It or Shut It!”

part Interlude 5|20 pages

The Rhetoric of “No-Spin” News

chapter 5|18 pages

Far-Right Fantasy 1

The “Satanification” of America

part Interlude 6|24 pages

Interlude 6

chapter 6|22 pages

Far-Right Fantasy 2

The Christian Reconstruction of America

part Interlude 7|22 pages

“Justus” Served

chapter 7|20 pages

Far-Right Fantasy 3

A Critique

part Interlude 8|8 pages

Biblically Inspired Investing

chapter 8|6 pages

Far-Right Fantasy 4

False Consciousness

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue

A Latter-Day Fortress