NP Rank:
ADL, Glenn Beck, and pulling the plug
LA Times asks, "Who's Watching Glenn Beck?"
Last week, a columnist for the LA Times wrote a piece on Glenn Beck, comparing the Fox News pundit to FDR Depression era radio pundit, Father Charles Coughlin.
The columnist, Tim Rutten, actually wondered aloud if : a. Fox Network should pull the plug on Beck and b. Cable News should pull the plug on Fox.
Speaking seemingly on behalf of the Jewish Anti- Defamation League (ADL) , Rutten pointed out the way in which Father Coughlin, once he became a detractor of FDR and the whole New Deal, had over 40 million listeners, and only ceased being a danger when he was silenced.
Much like the Depression-era demagogue Father Charles Coughlin, the Fox News personality is promoting a mass movement. Should his bosses be pulling the plug? ~ Tim Rutten, LA Times, Nov. 25, 2009
(As an aside, I like this Colbert video footage of the comedian taking on Beck, calling him on some things. ) For the opposing view, see this piece.
For nearly a century, the Anti-Defamation League has stared unflinchingly into the dark corners of America's social psyche -- the places where combustible tendencies such as hatred and paranoia pool and, sometimes, burst into flame.
As a Jewish organization, the ADL's first preoccupation naturally is anti-Semitism, but in the last few decades it has extended its scrutiny to the whole range of bigoted malevolence -- white supremacy, the militia movement, neo-nativism and conspiratorial fantasies in all of their improbable permutations. These days, the organization's research is characterized by the sense of proportion and sobriety that long experience brings.
That makes its recent report on the extremist groups and propagandists that have emerged since President Obama's election -- "Rage Grows In America: Anti-Government Conspiracies" -- particularly notable. For the first time in living memory, the ADL is sounding the alarm about a mainstream media personality: Fox News' Glenn Beck, who also hosts a popular radio show.
The report notes that while "other conservative media hosts, such as Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity, routinely attack Obama and his administration, typically on partisan grounds, they have usually dismissed or refused to give a platform to the conspiracy theorists and anti-government extremists." By contrast, "Beck and his guests have made a habit of demonizing President Obama and promoting conspiracy theories about his administration. ... Beck has even gone so far as to make comparisons between Hitler and Obama."
What gives all of this nonsense an ominous twist is Beck's announcement that he intends to use his TV and radio shows to promote a mass movement that will involve voter registration drives, training in community organizing and a series of regional conventions that will produce a "100-year plan" for America to be read from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to a mass rally Aug. 28.
As Beck wrote on his website, "I know that the bipartisan corruption in Washington that has brought us to this brink and it will not be defeated easily. It will require unconventional thinking and a radical plan to restore our nation to the maximum freedoms we were supposed to have been protecting. ... All of the above will culminate in The Plan, a book that will provide specific policies, principles and, most importantly, action steps that each of us can take to play a role in this Refounding."
Hard times predictably throw up their demagogues. Still, even allowing for the frenetic pace of our wired world's 24-hour news cycle, it's remarkable how quickly the arc of Beck's career has come to resemble that of the Great Depression's uber-demagogue, Father Charles Coughlin. In the months after the crash of '29, Coughlin turned what had been a conventionally religious weekly radio broadcast into a platform for championing the downtrodden working man. He was an early supporter of the New Deal, coining the slogan "Roosevelt or Ruin," but quickly turned on the president for a variety of complex ideological and personal reasons. Coughlin flirted with Huey Long, launched an unsuccessful political party, published a popular newspaper, Social Justice, and even inspired and supported a kind of militia, the Christian Front, some of whose members were arrested by the FBI and charged with plotting a fascist coup.
NowPublic on Facebook
Recommendations (16)
-
Spydermonkey
huntsville, Alabama, United States -
Karl Gotthardt - albertacowpoke
Redwater, Alberta, Canada -
marianmo
Mission, Canada


Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (6)
at 09:51 on November 30th, 2009
interesting
at 10:50 on November 30th, 2009
Ha, Roy, I knew this would rile you. I never watch Beck, but he is nice-looking, and that, as Nietzsche says, speaks well of him. But I am tired of the American divide, I am beginning to hate both sides. :( think I will move to Afghanistan.....
at 11:06 on November 30th, 2009
Roy, I like Colbert on Beck: http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/200910090006
at 11:26 on November 30th, 2009
and see this, Roy: http://brianroberts.me/prison-planet/adl-criticized-for-attack-on-%E2%80%98paranoid%E2%80%99-right.html
at 13:14 on November 30th, 2009
Glenn Beck is no more a populist than Father Coughlin was. I am emphatically opposed to censoring him or any of the other pseudo-populist hacks out there. I was curious to find out who "censored" Father Coughlin and I think you may be surprised by the answer:
Time Magazine Oct. 1937 :Last week Most Rev. Edward Mooney, new Archbishop of Detroit, cracked down on his most famed priest, Rev. Charles Edward Coughlin, as had been predicted he might (TIME. June 14). To reporters Father Coughlin had said that Justice Black's appointment was a monument to President Roosevelt's "personal stupidity." had further opined that Catholicism and the C.I.O. are incompatible. Last week in his official Michigan Catholic, Archbishop Mooney expressed his regret for Father Coughlin's language, took issue with him on his reasoning. Two days later Father Coughlin announced that he was canceling his contract for 26 radio broadcasts which were to have begun October 31. Archbishop Mooney, he declared, had declined to permit the radio priest to publish a rebuttal to the Michigan Catholic statement. Said a spokesman for Father Coughlin: "It was quite apparent that Father Coughlin would be permitted only to talk platitudes that mean nothing; that he could not say what he thinks, but only what the Archbishop thinks."
Year ago Father Coughlin promised to stop broadcasting if Franklin Roosevelt were reelected, but the New Deal's landslide did not stop him. Last week it appeared that if the President could not padlock Father Coughlin's tongue a Catholic prelate could.
at 13:17 on November 30th, 2009
aH HA!! Thanks for that additional info, nanute, most interesting!