‘I see this as a global fascist moment’: author
Jeff Sharlet on interviewing far-right Americans
Sharlet, who spent a dozen years talking to ordinary
people about their predilection for violence, has long sounded the alarm
Ann Neumann
@otherspoon
Thu 30 Mar 2023
07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/mar/30/jeff-sharlet-undertow-fascism-far-right-religion-trump
8Jeff
Sharlet and I meet outside the Titanic museum in sleepy Springfield,
Massachusetts. It seems an opportune place to meet Sharlet – journalist, author
and professor – halfway between his home in Vermont and mine in Brooklyn. We
are here to talk about the fragmentation of American democracy, and I knew the
Titanic museum would strike Sharlet as an apt spot: a reliquary of dissolution,
another ship lost at sea.
Sharlet’s
latest book, The Undertow: Scenes from a Slow Civil War, is the culmination of
more than a dozen years’ reporting on the US religious right and its
machinations. The core of the book is Sharlet’s reporting from the midwest and
the high plains, talking to ordinary people about their extraordinary
predilection for violence. They see a country gone wrong under decades of
“immoral decadence” and often see the expansion of rights for women, the poor and
people of color as proof of this turpitude.
Sharlet has
been sounding the alarm for a long time – but in this moment, when newscasters
and senators alike use “Christian nationalism” and “fascism” fluently, the rest
of us are finally catching on.
His
reporting has at times been mischaracterized as sensationalist or unduly
obsessed with the bleakest, darkest fringes of the US’s raiments. This
criticism – in the wake of our climate crisis, millions of Covid deaths and the
withdrawal of the Republican party from any effort at governance – simply no
longer sticks. The stories are as necessary as they are harrowing. The writing
is explicit and expansive, almost cinematic, like looking at a battlefield from
above. Altogether, it’s a rare achievement, a cultural-political book that is
literary.
Sharlet’s
work has turned out to be a warning, not of the grief to come but of the grief
that is here, in places urban and rural, large and small, at the hands of
politicians, police, the January 6 “protesters”, Proud Boys and the ongoing
plagues on national health. “I’ve got to figure out their grief,” he says.
The book
has a narrative arc that captures the fever pitch of the past decade. How did
you pull it together?
I’ve been
writing about the right for a long time; I’m always interested in the margins
of things that tell us about what’s happening at the center. An undertow is a
metaphor for that, for the force that’s been pulling us to this place for a
long time. If you’d asked me 10 years ago if I ever thought another civil war
would be possible in the United States, I would have said no. But to think so
[now] is to not understand that the right in America is as dangerous as it is.
I’ve
watched you change your stance on the question of American fascism. You once
denied that we were a fascist state.
Two years
ago, when I started traveling for The Undertow, suddenly civil war language,
which had been fringe even on the right, was now mainstream right. Today we
hear Marjorie Taylor Greene use it. Marjorie Taylor Greene doesn’t lead, she
follows. Trump doesn’t lead, he follows.
Even a
decade ago I was so cautious because if I say, “This is fascism,” I’m going to
be dismissed as hysterical. Now here we are: conservative David French, from
the National Review, is writing in the New York Times, partly because the
undertow has left him behind. It’s moving rightward, and he’s no longer the
right. The New York Times is also moving right. Julie [Sharlet’s wife, the
academic historian Julia Rabig] has colleagues, historians, who are very
cautious and very aware that history moves slowly. They are saying, “This is as
fragmented as we’ve ever been.”
You started
approaching people with signs or stickers that showed their allegiance, like
Trump flags or Blue Lives Matter flags. People who were literally flagging
their allegiance to the myth of the big lie, to Trump, to white supremacy. You
describe your interviewees as normal, otherwise compassionate people with fully
rationalized – or, at least, self-justified – violent obsessions.
Near Eau
Claire, Wisconsin, I met a nice-looking family, dad, mom, son. You would never
tag them for who they were. I see a little “Let’s go Brandon” sticker – a meme
that rose among the right which means “Fuck Joe Biden”. And I get to talking to
them. We talked for a long time. [The father said] he had a “Let’s go Brandon”
sticker because he didn’t want to swear around his son. They’re a middle-class
dad and mom. They were always gun people, but not a lot of guns. Now they’re up
to 36, now they are arming up. The father had always been anti-abortion. But
now it was like a dream had moved into his and his wife’s mind. He described,
in incredibly violent detail, the process of abortion. Then he described, in
incredibly violent detail, the punishment he thought he and others were going
to give to abortion doctors. They were ready for executions.
We are in
one of the scarier moments that we have ever confronted – all the more reason
to understand what came before and how they endured
You call
the prelude to the book Our Condition. You mean the status of our political and
social health amid various crises?
It’s time
for us to let go of the word crisis. And that’s hard. Like we go from climate
change to climate crisis, which suggests a rising arc, like now we’re going to
come to the resolution. This is our condition because there is no resolution
here. As a person with a heart condition, this is a condition I live with.
There’s loss in it, right? I learn from that.
It’s
livable, is what you’re saying. Survivable.
Might be.
It is until it isn’t.
The two
pieces that open and close the book are about music, the first about Harry
Belafonte, published by the Virginia Quarterly Review, and the last chapter,
about Lee Hays, published by the Oxford American.
I thought,
“I can’t start this book with darkness,” and I tried to pull a thread of beauty
and art through it. Lee Hays was part of a band called the Weavers, which
people don’t necessarily know any more, from the 1940s and 50s. But they do
know songs like If I Had a Hammer, or even On Top of Old Smoky. I wanted to
find a kind of hope, but I did not want to find a hope of like, “We can do it!”
Because I don’t know if we can. But I know that we can struggle. Lee Hays was
incredibly brave at a moment in his life and was broken by it, and Harry
Belafonte was brave every moment of his life. He wasn’t broken, but he didn’t
win.
If we’re
going to pay attention to the right, we need to pay attention to the deep
strata of the struggle for freedom, right? Because this fight isn’t new, it’s
old. And it’s ongoing, although it does take new shapes. We are in one of the
scarier moments that we have ever confronted – all the more reason to
understand what came before and how they endured; not how they survived,
because they didn’t win. As we confront this fascist moment – I see this as a
global fascist moment – we’re going to need some imagination. There is little
on the table right now.
man next to
american flag wearing bandanna over mouth that says ‘PB’
‘If we’re
going to pay attention to the right, we need to pay attention to the deep
strata of the struggle for freedom.’ Photograph: Seth Herald/AFP/Getty Images
You write
about how both artists coded their music with messages of resistance; they used
their music for the fight for civil rights, equality, real democracy.
Code works
for a lot of different groups, left or right. We’re in a time where the right
is reveling in code. “Let’s go Brandon.” It’s just “funny”, right? And the left
is shying away from code.
It wasn’t
always the case. Like Belafonte, Hays understood his songs as code songs, too.
He called them zipper songs. He would take a gospel song and he would zip a
freedom struggle into it. Harry Belafonte bankrolled the civil rights movement;
he is absolutely essential to the freedom struggle in American history. There’s
a story where Belafonte and Sidney Poitier almost get killed by the Klan. [They
had to get as much money as they could collect to the organizers of the Freedom
Summer in the south in 1964. When they landed, members of the Ku Klux Klan chased
them. They reached a safe house without getting caught.] They just made it
through and they dump the money that they brought for the activists on the
table. And they all start singing [Belafonte’s hit song] Day-O, but they turn
it into a freedom song: “Freedom is gonna come.”
The second
section of the book is titled Dream On. What’s the Aerosmith connection? I
mean, I know it’s on heavy rotation at Trump rallies.
“Dreaming”
is a word we use as positive, right? Well, they’re dreaming. That’s, to me, the
whole thing about Trumpism – and maybe Trump himself – but the movement goes on
without him. (He was necessary at the beginning, he was needed. Lenin was
needed at the beginning too, but the Soviet Union went on a long time without
him.)
The free
association that happens at Trump’s rallies, the ways people make connections
that make no sense – it has dream logic. One minute, a scary man is crawling
into the window to rape your wife [a common Trump story told at rallies to
reinforce the idea that the country is not safe and that guns are necessary],
and then the next minute we’re laughing at windmills, and then the next minute
we’re sad for the birds that were killed by windmills. And then, in the next
minute, we’re yelling, “Lock her up.”
This is
dream logic. And there’s vanity in it, right? “I will interpret what they’re
saying and I will bend it.” It’s the vanity of the base, the vanity of the mob,
the aggregate grotesque imagination of power. It becomes a spinning whirlpool
that pulls more and more people in. These are people for whom reality is not
enough.
You know
Susan Friend Harding’s The Book of Jerry Falwell [about the conservative
preacher and popular televangelist]? She would go to Jerry Falwell’s church and
he would tell a story, and the next week he would tell the same story, but with
different details. You would expect people to be distressed by it in real time,
right? But no! There’s enough space within it for them to interact.
This is why
the right feels they are more democratic than the left. The intellectual
rightwingers are like, “Fuck democracy, we don’t need it.” But the everyday
people, they’re like, “This is the most democratic I’ve ever felt. I am not
only receiving – I receive, I interpret and then I transmit back.”
The
Tick-Tock chapter rocked me. It’s a close account of the radicalization of a
woman you call Evelyn. I’ve heard the deranged accusations of pedophilia from
the right, even the meme that the Clintons and other Democrats eat children,
but you bring us into Evelyn’s webwork of closely held conspiracies without
losing her humanity. You take these individuals seriously, not in their wild
ideas and beliefs, but in their conviction, in their commitment and faith. They
believe they are called to save lives. This doesn’t absolve them, as you write,
but it prevents them from being dismissible, from being caricatured, from being
ignored.
Don’t you
think this is a failure of the left? Many, not all [pro-choice advocates] are
like: “They just want to control women’s bodies.” Yes, the project is misogynist
to the core. But it is not experienced as such by many on the right. Once you
make that move, that we’re talking about children [and not fetuses, who are
harmed by doctors and politicians], what kind of person are you if you don’t
want to save that child?
It’s
astonishing there hasn’t been more violence. I think we’ve had a shield from
that violence for a long time and now that shield … I sound like Jerry Falwell
saying the hand of God is being removed from America.
Adam
Fleming Petty at the Washington Post called the book a “form of travelogue”.
This is likely due in strong part to The Undertow, the long title chapter about
Ashli Babbitt, the pro-Trump veteran who died on the day of the storming of the
Capitol. How did you write this section?
Because of
my heart condition I’d been tucked in during Covid, and I live in a rural area.
I remember sitting there at my kitchen table, watching January 6 on the
computer, texting furiously. We heard about a white woman being killed. It was
very soon after that we knew the cop was Black. And I thought, holy shit, it’s
The Birth of a Nation [a 1915 movie that justifies organized white-on-Black
violence with a racist depiction of Black people, including them being sexually
predatory toward white women; such accusations were the pretext for lynchings
for decades, with echoes remaining today]. They just did a live re-enactment of
their fantasy!
They would
say Babbitt wore an American flag, but it’s not true. She wore a Trump cape,
which is the new American flag. They would say she’s unarmed, but it’s not
true. She was carrying a knife. There’s a photo of [Babbitt’s knife] on the
cover of the book. You could say, well, it’s a small knife. Really? That knife
is plenty big enough.
This is my
little piece of power: I can tell the story
You write
that, almost immediately, the right tried to diminish Babbitt’s agency, to make
her younger, smaller, quieter. It reminded me of Terri Schiavo [the 26-year-old
woman who was found unconscious in 1984 and was the subject of a family battle
for her medical decision-making, which became a national debate dominated by
the Catholic church and the religious right until her death in 2005]. We see
the efforts on the right to project a childlike acquiescence on to the adult
woman.
Yes! Ashli
Babbitt’s “martyrdom” is tied up in her remaking as an innocent. You realize
that the gun and the fetus, it’s an innocence cult. It’s not a death cult,
people misunderstand this. It’s an innocence cult, which is to say, it’s also
the erasure of history. It says, “No, no, no, there’s no original sin in
American history. We were always good.”
Babbitt was
hurting. She was in her mid-30s, after serving eight tours of duty. She was in
massive debt. And she fell in love with Trump.
Babbitt
resolved her grief by getting certainty. She could not mourn.
She just
wanted to be a person and serve her country.
So what
we’re talking about is a whole lot of unrealized pain, and about how we
metabolize pain in different ways. You write in the prelude that “loss
sometimes curdles into fury and hate or denial and delusion. Especially
delusion.”
Yes. I’ve
been thinking about how we metabolize pain, about my own ability to metabolize
pain. My new therapist is trying to figure out why I do the work I do. She
thinks it must be so bad for me. But no, it’s fucking sustained me! It gives me
agency. States everywhere, the forces of darkness, are moving against you. You
are not imagining it, they are real. And I do not have any power.
But this is
my little piece of power: I can go tell the story.
The
Undertow: Scenes from a Slow Civil War (Norton, 2023) is out now. Ann
Neumann is the author of The Good Death
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