March 16, 2008

An Assassinated Mythology

Justin Katz

The following passage from Jonah Goldberg's Liberal Fascism struck me as relevant to the (thankfully abated) speculation of Barack Obama's assassination:

On November 22, 1963, John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas. As if on cue, Dallas was christened "the city of hate." A young TV reporter named Dan Rather heard a rumor that some Dallas schoolchildren had cheered when they heard the news of Kennedy's death. The rumor wasn't true, and the local Dallas CBS affiliate refused to run the story. Rather made an end run around the network and reported the story anyway.

Rather wasn't the only one eager to point fingers at the right. Within minutes Kennedy's aides blamed deranged and unnamed right-wingers. One headline proclaimed the assassination had taken place "deep in the hate of Texas." But when it became clear that a deranged Marxist had done the deed, Kennedy's defenders were dismayed. "He didn't even have the satisfaction of being killed for civil rights," Jackie lamented to Bobby Kennedy when he told her the news. "It's — it had to be some silly little Communist."

Or maybe not, the Kennedy mythmakers calculated. They set about creating the fable that Kennedy died battling "hate" — established code, then and now, for the political right. The story became legend because liberals were desperate to imbue Kennedy's assassination with a more exalted and politically useful meaning. Over and over again, the entire liberal establishment, led by the New York Times — and even the pope! — denounced the "hate" that claimed Kennedy's life. The Supreme Court justice Earl Warren summed up the conventional wisdom — as he could always be counted upon to do — when he theorized that the "climate of hatred" in Dallas — code for heavy right-wing and Republican activity — moved Lee Harvey Oswald to kill the president.

The fact that Oswald was a communist quickly changed from an inconvenience to proof of something even more sinister. How, liberals asked, could a card-carrying Marxist murder a liberal titan on the side of social progress? The fact that Kennedy was a raging anti-communist seemed not to register, perhaps because liberals had convinced themselves, in the wake of the McCarthy era, that the real threat to liberty must always come from the right. Oswald's Marxism sent liberals into even deeper denial, their only choice other than to abandon anti-anti-communism. And so, over the course of the 1960s, the conspiracy theories metastasized, and the Marxist gunman became a patsy. "Cui bono?" asked the Oliver Stones then and ever since. Answer: the military-industrial complex, allied with the dark forces of reaction and intolerance, of course. Never mind that Oswald had already tried to murder the former army major general and prominent right-wing spokesman Edwin Walker or that, as the Warren Commission would later report, Oswald "had an extreme dislike of the rightwing."

Amid the fog of denial, remorse, and confusion of the Kennedy assassination, an informal strategic response developed that would serve the purposes of the burgeoning New Left as well as assuage the consciences of liberals generally: transform Kennedy into an all-purpose martyr for causes he didn't take up and for a politics he didn't subscribe to.

Comments, although monitored, are not necessarily representative of the views Anchor Rising's contributors or approved by them. We reserve the right to delete or modify comments for any reason.

I recall that right after the assassination,the organization I belonged to on campus,YAF,which was a conservative student group came in for a lot of abuse-the left wing turds who belonged to the Socialist Discussion Club(later morphed into a chapter of SDS)and some of their faculty fellow travellers tried to get us banned(so much for equal application of the 1st Amendment)-I know Jerzyk,Segal,and Steve Brown would've been right at home there trying to suppress free speech that was not politburo approved.Well,it didn't work-YAF faded away on that campus because most of the men who belonged to it enlisted in the armed forces,myself included.We weren't stay at home Perle/Wolfowitz neocons.The left wing turds I referred to now run our universities and are happily suppressing free speech on a daily basis.The ironic thing is that Jerzyk,Segal,Brown,et al would be rapidly liquidated as "troublemakers"in the kind of "progressive"socialist state they seem to want.

Posted by: joe bernstein at March 16, 2008 10:50 AM

Of course, your observation about mythology also holds true regarding the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. Being that RFK was assassinated only a few months after Martin Luther King Jr., and that people generally associate RFK with the civil rights movement and the eradication of poverty, people often assume nowadays, that the reason for RFK's assassination had something to do with the poor state of race relations at the time.

Although it makes for a better narrative, especially for conspiracy theorists, it had nothing to do with black vs. white or rich vs. poor. Historically, it had almost everything to do with RFK's real or perceived support of the Israelis over the Palestinians by one certifiable nut job Sirhan Sirhan, who apparently felt betrayed by Kennedy's strong support for Israel in the June 1967 Six-Day War, which had begun exactly one year before the assassination.

PS I've never been an Oliver Stone fan, but has he ever made a movie about RFK? ... you know, in order to screw with the minds of the young and impressionable.

Posted by: Will at March 17, 2008 3:06 AM