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Calming the New Radicalism – The Dispatch

Americans of all stripes are growing more radical. A universal cynicism about the status quo has led those on the right to flirt with nativist nationalism; on the left there is a growing attraction to more radical forms of socialism. In America, political violence is on the rise, and the right and left increasingly see themselves as bitter enemies in an existential conflict. Internationally, the liberal world order seems to be cracking. Everything feels anxious and uncertain. I am, of course, talking about the 1930s. 

The 1930s (indeed, up until our entry into the Second World War) were an era in which Americans on all sides were questioning long-held assumptions about our system of government. The original America Firsters thought we had been far too open with immigration and that our military involvement in World War II was a waste of resources that should be used to serve Americans. They sympathized with European fascist critiques of the liberal west. On the left, there was a growing attraction to communism. William Z. Foster published Toward Soviet America, making the case for a communist revolution here. The free market, the new socialists thought, was a failed experiment. It was also an era in which all sides, increasingly, seemed to blame the Jews for whatever was going wrong. 

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