The Jazz Band
Dave Martin c1996
An excerpt....
A broad spectrum of single issue religious and political groups are attempting to destroy our constitutional rights and our way of life. Why are they doing this? What is it all about? Who is really in charge? Is there a hidden agenda? Some people, surprised by the proliferation of right-wing groups, have referred to them as spreading like bacteria. With an analogous eye, we can view them as bacteria in a pond. Pond bacteria can be put to work in wondrous ways. With clever coaching from microbiologists, bacteria already processing compounds in a natural setting can be genetically engineered to flourish while accomplishing other tasks. Like the microbiologist, cultural opportunists can manipulate and husband diverse political and religious groups to work in concert toward a hidden agenda.
A more accurate analogy might be to describe radical right groups in musical terms. The repressive and undemocratic themes we hear from these groups are likened to a musical score, written not for a symphony orchestra but for a jazz band. Let's view right- wing religious and political groups as single instruments in a band. Playing each instrument’s part individually, the original score might not be recognizable, but when jazz instruments play together, we recognize When The Saints Go Marching In. When radical right-wing themes are played together, images are evoked of repressive totalitarian regimes of recent history.
The "New Right" movement was kicked off in the early 1970s by a group of conservative activists which included Paul Weyrich, Joseph Coors and Richard Viguerie. It was Weyrich, founder of the Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress, and Richard Viguerie, direct-mail/fund-raising maven, who first saw the potential of politically organizing church members from a variety of denominations around the abortion issue. It was Weyrich who brought Jerry Falwell into the fold with the formation of the Moral Majority and convinced Pat Robertson to run for president in 1988. Weyrich and Viguerie believed that social conservatives could be organized into a group that would form a constituency larger than the politically active in either the Democratic or Republican parties. Viguerie has been quoted as saying, "I organize discontent."
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