Behind the Bastards - Part One: How Orange County Incubated American Fascism
Episode Date: January 9, 2024Robert sits down with Francesca Fiorentini to talk about how Orange County, California gave birth to the modern Republican Party, thanks to some arms dealers and a howling fascist named John Schmitz.�...� (2 Part Series)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Calls, media.
That sound you just heard listeners was me opening up a can of whoopass on your sense of emotional
well-being because it's behind the bastards back for the first time in 2024, which is statistically
going to be one of the worst years of all of our lives.
So I hope everybody's excited having a good time feeling happy.
Did you rehearse that?
Did you like rehearse that in the mirror?
No, no, that all came.
I had a totally different bit to do, Sophie.
But then I realized I hadn't opened my can of aura, borah herbal sparkling water.
This is cactus rose flavor.
Mm.
Sounds like soap, but go on.
It's tasty.
That's a great way to enjoy it.
We'll believe out me sipping.
The hellacious year that will be with your cactus rose water.
Yeah.
Robert, it'll be fine.
Everything's fine.
It'll be fine.
Yeah.
It'll be content for you. It's gonna be you. You know, many bastards will be born bastards
We don't even know about who we're gonna come around this year. Yeah
Hey Robert Sophie do you want to introduce our guest? No, yes, I'm maybe perhaps
Perhaps I will introduce our guest who is Francesca Fiorantini
Perhaps I will introduce our guest, who is Francesca Fiorentini,
returning beloved guest host of the Bituation Room and partner in life of Matt Leeb.
That's right.
Everyone's partner in having the sound board.
That you just said that,
but does that hurt you at all for Jessica?
Oh no, no, no, I enjoy, look,
he's, I always live in his shadow and it's fine. I'm glad I get some time for myself. No, of course
He, first of all, he's a thirsty MFer who is needy and every time I get recognized for anything on the street
He will go to that person and go, what about me? You recognize me?
Me, you recognize me? I love them.
I know.
I'm working some good Matt Leeb dirt here.
So good, there's so much good Matt Leeb dirt.
But yes, I love my baby, Matt Leeb, Fatweeb,
and we have a baby together.
I also love her.
And it's so good to be here on the first of the year.
I mean, not the first, but one of the,
one of the first days of the year.
It's our first 24 bastard.
It's several days into the actual year, but this is the first day that we're recording
behind the bastards, which legally makes it the only day that's mattered so far this year.
Um, you know, those of you who had had important days, I don't care.
Yeah, and I really don't think this year could be that bad because you have a live show
coming up.
Is that right, Francesca?
That's such a great set. Oh, good a great set way to tell you the hell yeah.
Before we get started, everybody, if you don't know me, you know Matt Leib.
And so by association, you love me in the podcast, the BITUATION ROOM, as Robert just mentioned.
I'm going to be live in San Francisco at SF Sketchfest on Sunday, January 28th at 7pm
of the Gateway Theater.
And I'm bringing the DailyZ Guys co-host Miles Gray.
So, oh my gosh.
He's going to be there, people.
It'll be so good.
Emma Vigland of the majority report also for like political heads.
Oh, damn.
Yeah, it's going to be, it's going to be a good show.
And Robert, of course, helps sell it out last year.
Was so fun.
Sadly, Robert's not going to be there again, but dammit. I don't
know. Maybe in the future, but yeah, anyone who's in the Bay come through.
Yeah, you're very familiar with our dear friend, Miles Gray. And if you would like more info
on this, I'm linking in our episode description. Thanks so far.
Speaking of live performances, no, speaking of the worst year that any of us has ever had, maybe
Francesca, how do you feel about the Republican party?
Oh, like not really my thing, you know what I mean? Like I, like I, no, just not into it.
Like, like, limescooters, you know, like, I don't, I don't want anything to do with it.
You know, I've never really tried it, but I don't do it. Like, limescooters, you know, like, I don't want anything to do with it. You know, I've never really tried it, but I don't want to.
Yeah, yeah, I'm a pretty tolerant guy, but I've just, I've just gotten too many death threats.
From like Republican legislators to people I know, yeah, it's, it's, it's not my thing either.
But you know what is even worse than the Republican party in 2024? Orange County, California in the 1960s.
What do you know about the OC?
Oh God.
Okay.
The OC stands for Orange County.
There you go.
That's all I know.
No, I feel a lot of like, obviously there was a show.
It's pretty like rich white people drama, a
little bit of red state mega of California. Growing Asian American voter population, I know
that a lot of a lot of Asian Americans who vote damn recently, they flipped the districts
in the OC. But maybe I'm feeling like since like officers. I'm feeling some KKK vibes. I'm feeling some, it's clansy over there.
Yeah, yeah.
A little, it's, it, you know, to be fair, as you just, as you mentioned, the Orange County
has, has really turned around recently, politically and is not nearly the kind of Republican stronghold
it used to be, which is great.
It is becoming like at least demographically
more of a normal suburb than what it was
during the period of time we're about to talk about,
which is the uterus from which the Trump Republican party
just did it.
It's not a uterus.
Based.
It could be, well, it's warm. It's got palm treeserus. It's warm.
It's got palm trees.
No, it's a mold.
It's a moldy gym towel in a men's spa where there's lots of boys talk as Melania
would say.
It's like, it's like a mushroom growing on like that gym towel.
Yeah. Ronald Reagan masturbated into a gym saw and left it in a hot shower floor in a,
in a boys locker room.
Yeah.
1 million percent.
30 years or so.
Don't, the uterus is not going to do with this.
Okay.
Well, you know, people can describe it.
However, they feel in their hearts, although I am now more on board team, dirty gym.
But yeah, Orange County, whatever you want
to describe it to yourself, the Republican party
that is we're all dealing with right now.
And the Republican party that gave us Reagan
and everything terrible that came with Reagan,
the birth of the anti-abortion movement, right?
The birth of the religious right
as a powerful political entity.
And the fact that it has gotten increasingly acceptable
for Republican candidates to talk about
having their enemies perched, all of that,
the story of all of that, starts in Orange County.
And it heavily involves an Orange County local,
a guy named John Schmitz, who was the kind of the first
Trump. He was a dude who ran for president. You haven't heard of, but who was really the
guy playing around with a lot of very early Trumpist politics, kind of taking the torch
from gold water and handing it off. He didn't actually like Reagan, but a lot of the crazier
shit that came out of
Reagan was at least partially people in the GOP who liked Schmitz or who at least saw
a value in courting his electorate.
So this is a really interesting story. And in order to really properly talk about the
bastardry of John Schmitz, we have to start with the birth of Orange County, California
itself, because there's a reason why so much of the modern right
was born in Orange County.
I'm so fascinated because it is a mystery to me
that you can live in proximity to a beautiful beach
and Disneyland and still be a miserable piece of shit.
Yeah, it really has something to do with,
we'll talk about what it's got something to do with,
but you're right, it is like a lovely place
to be a piece of shit at.
Orange County includes about 40 miles of sunny beach land,
starting at Seal Beach in the north
and extending to San Clemente down south.
You might think of Orange County as like,
if you are from the DFW area like me,
it's a little bit like the Plano to Dallas, right?
And both in terms of like kind of the how long it takes to get there from the city, you know, although yeah, both those cities have
Ducks, it traffic. And in terms of how much more like conservative it is out there. And it also kind of how much less densities, you know, both places, and there's a lot of
places like this in the United States are
kind of masses of suburbs now.
There's not, I think it's a little bit better now, certainly than it was in the 60s, but
like not a lot of shared community spaces, like you have in any kind of city just by default
because that's the way like, dent cities work.
It's where people go to escape cities because they're like, there's crime.
I need to live in a man.
Yeah.
And then they don't talk to anyone for four straight months, but Rush Limbaugh and they
lose their minds.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
So I run the turn of the century.
This was all still farmland, right?
It was just owned by a few people who had huge tracts of it and it had primarily been
used for like grazing cattle before, right? They wind up finding a lot of natural gas and stuff in Orange County. So
obviously the oil industry gets the fuck in there and there's some guys who make a bunch
of money buying up land for that. And by the 1920s, kind of, it was very clear to people
who had money and knew how it worked that like, well, whatever we're going to be able to
keep getting for this place, it's like Ranch Land,
is going to be a lot less money than we'll get
if we parcel it up into little lots
and sell it off to developers to build suburbs, right?
And this is kind of ahead of the curve, right?
This isn't the first place where suburbs start developing,
but it's like one of the early places
where you start to get the developments that are going to
in kind of the post-war period,
become like the famous American
suburban culture, right? The Strip Mall. Yeah, the giant, the endless series of Strip
Months. That's beautiful, truly. Yeah, yeah. It is like a breathtaking natural beast, just like
running by us on the serringet of our souls Reminding us all what the fucking concrete looks like.
And how many, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, just how dude, earth's earth, like,
this is such a quiet thing.
Do you think like the top soil, like,
tells the other layers of earth,
how fucking ugly humans made it up there, you know what I'm saying?
Like, they're like, yo, you just see it up here.
And they got strip malls.
It is.
I was thinking of moving out.
I'm thinking of moving up.
The mantle's kind of boring.
No, man, you don't want to want to get up here right now.
There's definitely a dirty little group.
Yeah, there is.
There's a good.
Like, they're more years.
They'll get rid of all the buildings.
Yeah, they're all dial off.
We'll come in to crack that concrete. But okay, so rid of all the buildings. Yeah, they're all dial-off. We're coming through to crack that concrete.
But okay, so right, urban sprawl.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, it actually starts kind of separately from the urban sprawl, right?
Because Los Angeles isn't nearly as big in the 20s.
But yeah, you get these rich people who start with like beach homes on the coast and then
a little later, into the 30s or so.
Oh no, yeah, probably like the 50s, like the Irvine company comes in.
They see, you know, there's already, there's demand for this land.
A bunch of rich people have houses on it already.
There's a lot of space out here and it's kind of adjacent to Los Angeles.
Let's start cutting this up into tracks and selling it to people, right?
This opened up a lot of huge amount of high end homes, right? This opened up a lot of a huge amount of high end homes, right? These
are not the like super affordable, like low wage, middle wage, working class guys they're
going for here. They're going for this big population of white war veterans who were
educated and who were in industries that paid well. And largely, that's going to be the
defense industry, right?
Which is hugely, we'll talk about this a bit more later, but hugely focused in Southern
California. So most of these guys, again, World War II is just ended. A lot of these guys
were veterans and they would have been veterans who had like, in a lot of cases, maybe more technical
jobs. But Southern California has and has had military bases for a while. A lot of training gets done out near San Diego and had, I think, in this point too.
So a bunch of these dudes who had passed through, they'd come from, like,
bumfuck Iowa or something and wound up in Southern California and were like,
well, this is so much better than nine feet of snow in the winter.
This is where I want to go if I survive the Germans.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's kind of the start of it, right?
It is crazy.
I'm from Northern California, and Southern California
does have just like random warplanes overhead.
They're like, it's the Rose Bowl.
Why is there a warplane?
Like doing very suspicious, weird,
don't-eddy alien shit things overhead and so loud.
Yeah, that was weird moving out here. Yeah, right? I'm just like, what if I were in the actual war,
you know? And I'm just like, that's that's normal. That's what I grew up. Yeah. I didn't even hear
that shit growing up in Texas. Like the number of warplanes that I see I saw overhead in California
or like showing up at Seattle randomly and it's
just all sailors on the street because it turns out there's a week for that.
I didn't know these things were factors of life for other people because people don't
come to the suburbs of Dallas.
Did you kiss one?
I mean, Fleet Week.
I would have, but I never got around to it.
Didn't an opportunity to present it, so.
It was too nervous, yeah.
Well, you know, there's still time.
All those men in their terrible, terrible uniforms,
God, the Navy uniforms look like shit.
Okay, sorry.
So you get these guys, these houses start getting built
and whatnot and kind of from the start of the OCs
development into a community,
power and land there is held almost entirely
by this tiny consortium of tin landowners.
Most of whom had more than 200,000 acres each.
So right, the whole community that exists there today starts off with like tin guys who
just bought up everything back when it was really cheap.
It was like Mr. Huntington Beach.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, Johnny Huntington, Aaron Beach.
Yeah, they combined their palettes.
Santa and Anna.
Yes, Santa and Anna, right?
Yeah, their marriage was a big deal.
And of course, Johnny and Sino,
the star of the biopic and Sino, man.
Yeah, we all remember that great film.
These dudes are all businessmen.
Some of them are in oil too,
but a lot of them are in oil too, or ranchers.
That's a conservative demographic, right?
And they make the decision like, yeah,
we'll make more money off these ranches
by like kind of transferring them
into real estate empires to really take advantage
of the housing boom and this kind of explosion
in suburban living after the war.
And this boom in home buying is largely subsidized
by the department of defense, right?
There's a bet's a big part of it.
If you're a veteran and damn near everybody is at this point,
you get mortgage aid.
And yeah, I want to quote here from the book
Suburban Warriors by Lisa McGurr.
Quote, by 1962, defense had become the nation's largest business.
And from 1946 to 1965, 62% of the federal budget
went to defense.
These huge expenditures catalyzed the affluent society, and directly and indirectly affected
the lives of every American.
While defense money drove national economic growth, the regions that profited most directly
with a sunbelt, south, and west, and the biggest beneficiary was southern California.
And yeah, I don't know. Again, California has this like kind
of driven by a lot of conservative media. Reputation is being hippyland, but like, it's where we make
our killing instruments to a significant extent, right? It's where we train our soldiers.
My question is, what about black veterans, right? Was this because like, why aren't there? I mean,
there's a Latino in a black population in OC,
but this sounds like very white.
Well, that's a great question,
and there's no black veterans
because they're not allowed to buy homes there.
Oh, easy, simple.
Yeah, because they're simple.
It's simply not allowed.
There's gonna be a bunch of cases
where even like, you know, Korean American
and families of Vietnamese American families,
there's this because this region's so conservative.
After the Vietnam war ends,
a bunch of Vietnamese citizens who had been pro-US, right?
We ship a bunch of those people back over here
and give them citizenship.
It's like one of the things that kind of happens
at the end of the war.
And when that happens,
there's this big initial celebration.
And so, and then they're like,
well, we fought against the communists,
we'll move into the super anti-communist
right wing neighborhood.
And all those guys are like, oh, but we don't want you here.
No, absolutely not.
And they, you know, they still like build community
for themselves there to a significant extent.
It's just, there's a great deal of opposition.
Oh, yeah, not the nice bluffs. No, no, no, it's like a whole a there's a great deal of opposition. Yeah, not the nice bluffs. No,
no, no, it's like a whole it's a whole deal. So yeah, Southern California broadly speaking is going
to get most of like the largest single chunk of the money and defense contracts that comes during
like the entirety of the Cold War. Like that is a huge amount of what this country spins on
defense in that period.
It just all gets hoovered up by Southern California.
And most of the people working in the companies
that are doing the hoovering,
a lot of them live in Southern California.
So before the war had started,
defense basically had not been an industry in Orange County.
Whereas by 1950, there's about 31,000 workers,
like in the defense industry,
who live just in Orange County.
And this is not, like, to be fair, that's not the only place in Southern California where
there's a lot of defense money.
There's a lot of these companies have, we'll have their headquarters in Los Angeles.
LA gets like a lot of building in LA basically happens in order to us serve the defense industry
in the post war period.
And yeah, a lot of the most affluent of these guys, and it may even may work in LA because
that's where the companies are headquartered, but they live in Orange County, are these defense
industry contractors, and especially like the very well educated ones, the guys making
rockets and guidance systems and optics and stuff, The guy's making like space weapons, right?
That a lot of those dudes wind up living
in and around Orange County,
because the houses are bigger and nicer
and they can afford them.
From 1940 to 1960, the county population grew
by roughly 385%.
So that's how quickly this place explodes
just because of the end of World War II
in the birth of the Cold War.
And it's always been conservative here, as long as there has been any kind of community
or in Orange County, it's always been conservative. In the 1920s, when the second KKK kind of
starts showing up in the United States, two of the largest, yeah, oh yeah, no, you were
very, very prescient on that. The two biggest counties in California for a clan membership are Anaheim and Fullerton,
which, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't have trouble seeing that, I'm afraid.
It's also a stronghold for the temperance movement.
This is like the part of California
that wants to ban drinking the most,
which I get it.
You wouldn't, that shit don't fly in North of California.
No, it's also, you know, there's the John Wayne airport
here, Robert, which is so perfect
because we did that series on John Wayne.
And it was like, ah, I know a thing or do about that psycho
A-hole deserter.
Yeah, I do prefer his airport to LAX, but yes.
I don't know, dude.
I was there and it was a zoo.
I was like, yeah, let me go out of a, like a smaller airport.
It'll be chill or no, no, no, it was fucking crazy.
It's just less space.
But anyway, I digress.
Uh, well, it's been a while since I flown there.
See, see, I like LAX, but I'm the only one.
Yeah, you are.
Yes, indeed.
I'm like, it's just me.
Yeah.
So again, one of the things you have to remember here is that in this post-war period, Southern California is not a cool place for hippies and
like space cadets and left wing type people, right? Like that's not what it's thought of at all.
It's one of the most conservative regions in the country at the turn of the century. Huntington
Beach in the 20s was advertised as a town where, quote, there are no saloons or drinking. Um, and Lisa McGurr writes that
there were also incredibly strong social norms in the region and laws against any kind of
sexual behavior. Quote, in nearby Long Beach in the 20s, ordinances forbade caresses, hugging,
fondling, embracing, kissing or wrestling with any person or persons of the opposite sex,
inter-upon or near any public park, Avenue, Court Street, or any other public place, which
I feel like that means you could embrace or fondle someone of the same sex.
Yeah, I feel like a lot of Huntington Beach Maga Chuds really took that to heart and definitely
wrestle and fondle one another on the beach and caress each other.
But it's like, you know, no homo or whatever.
Yeah.
But yeah, that's what I know about Huntington Beach.
It was just like when Trump won,
and was like, oh, wow, again, you can live in a beautiful place,
have access to a beach, and still somehow think that
immigrants are destroying the country.
Yeah, yeah, just a bunch of angry men
with faces as red as a California sunset, awful.
But if you're heavily invested in creatine like me,
it's also like, at least you know,
you're gonna be able to retire, right?
Off of all that sweet, sweet creatine money,
those guys are putting into the economy.
So it's a part of the country with a lot of moral, busy bodies from a pretty earlier
period.
And in fact, this kind of Southern California in the area that's going to become known
as Orange County, like, I mean, it is the county, but that it's going to become known
and pop culture is Orange County.
Actually has one of the highest ratios of churches per capita of any place in the country,
like this is the most Jesus-east chunk of the country.
In that period of time, pretty much,
there's not many places that beat it.
And it's actually, I don't think a lot of people know this,
it's the literal birthplace of fundamentalist Christianity,
because modern fundamentalist Christianity
comes out of a series of essays titled
The Fundamentals, a Testimony to the Truth
that had been published from 1910 to 1915
at the behest of a California oil company founder
named Lyman Stewart, who lives in Orange County, right?
Jesus Christ.
Christ, I know I see them saying like California, yeah,
true, truly, North Cal, number one.
And secondly, it's not a blue state,
it's not like there aren't a bunch of liberals here.
We have these parts.
And I used to think it was just east of the five,
but it's west of the five, too.
Again, in these beautiful, beautiful areas,
God damn it, really, okay.
You often get this whole belief, yeah, that California has always
kind of been this progressive part of the country. And it has, it's just, there's the
most people here. So it does the most of everything. And it is also one of the most conservative
states in the country, and always has. You guys know this used to be Mexico, but that's
cool. No, no. Yeah. There's like 40 something million people. You can do two things.
It's true.
It's true.
Yeah.
So these guys, these fundamentalists, you know, who are kind of basing a lot of their,
their beliefs and kind of political organizing are the ideas in this, these series of essays
are kind of characterized with, there's this hatred of the Catholic church, which used
to be a real big thing in US politics.
There's this hatred of socialism, which is a much newer concept at the time, but they're very angry about it.
Mormonism, there are very anti-Mormon, and they also were really pissed that people were teaching Darwinism, right?
So you can see where, again, abortion's not that much of an issue for them yet, but
you can see this hatred of evolution of science, of socialism. That's all coming together
and coming out of this period in like an organized way.
Where did the hatred of Mormonism go? Like, where did that happen? I feel like everything
else got its own little war. But like, what about the white on white war? Like, you know,
like, when are we going to see that? Or Mormons are just too nice. You don't want to fight
them.
Yeah. I mean, they are generally very polite.
I think it does.
It is somewhere, what present?
If you find, when you find like really hardcore
southern Baptists and stuff, like a lot of them
have very nasty things to say about Mormons,
I think it's just less of a thing
because people who are like extreme Christians and conservative
feel more under siege today.
And they know that the Mormons are basically in agreement with them on this.
They may think those people are going to hell and in fact do, but they'll caucus with
them, you know, it's kind of like the right is always been better.
They're not under siege.
They just have a greater imagination now
because somehow demographic. They want to go.
Demographic ships. Blah blah. Yes, exactly. The woke Disney movies, which is in Orange County.
All right. So take it up with. Yeah. They're going to be. These are the descendants of these people
are going to be protesting the new, the fact that like, what is it? The song of the South ride was terminated at Disneyland.
It's been replaced by the Princess and the Frog, which stars a black princess.
Like these are the people who are going to be protesting the opening of that because
it's gone woke.
Yeah.
I just, I'm thinking of how funny it would be if like you get all the, you get these,
these protests that, that tend to be seen as more left wing where people are, are doing stuff like,
having like a fake, you know, everyone lies down and pretends to be dead, right?
To protest some horrible war crime happening in Gaza or something. I'm imagining those same tactics
being used by guys who are angry that the song of the South right is God. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You've got a bunch of dudes doing a die in in front of the King Blackface.
They're all in the Blackface.
And the Frog, right?
All of them in Blackface.
Absolutely.
No, they...
This is an honor of my favorite racist cartoon.
They've got all their little Disney mugs waiting for a refill.
They're protesting the fact that like wasn't on the jungle cruise or whatever it was,
like that ride like I guess
one of the Trader Sam or one of the like you know voodoo traders got also taken out.
They're going to be dresses them. It'll be it'll be good. It's like your grandfather fought in a
fucking war. This is this is your shit. This is what you're doing now. But yes.
I guess we'll see what they're doing in a couple of years.
But during the Great Depression World War II, OC voters, they go for FDR like everybody
else.
There is this period of time where things are really bad and a Democrat gets elected, but
they vote for a Republican again in 1940 and they keep doing so for three quarters of
a century
afterwards.
Right.
And you know, a big part of this is that after 1940, which is when the region grows
and that next 20 years, again, 385%, all of the new people coming in pretty much are wealthy,
right, or at least comparatively wealthy, right, to their predecessors moving into the
area.
There are these people who have gotten cushy jobs
in the new tech industry basically,
which is very defense focused at this point,
and they're all flooding these increasingly rapidly built homes.
We start to get some real luminaries
and the conservative movement out of Orange County
in an early era.
Part of one of your favorite guys,
you were just talking about how much you miss him as president. Your Belinda presidential future presidential candidate, Richard Nixon, who
is voted into office in 1946 into Congress by the good people of Orange County.
Is from the OC? Yeah, he's from the OC. He's from your Belinda. Yeah. Oh, God. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. That's Dick Nixon, baby. He's like a Southern California boy. He's from your Belinda. Yeah. Oh God. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's Dick Nixon. Baby. He's
like a Southern California boy. He grows up when it's much more rural. Rural. But yeah. God damn it.
It's a little bit like the way that like Stephen Miller, although Stephen Miller is from like LA,
like Stephen Miller makes you know, he's grew up like Santa Monica. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Stephen Miller
does not make sense. But, uh, but yeah, Nixon very much makes sense, also just born with
like that old Nixon face. Like he came out looking exactly like he does.
What a hero. What a fucking hero. Yeah. Yeah. So culturally, it's just also no experience
with the outside world, especially because the outside world in every direction is just
as conservative and white,
but again, beautiful,
but so it's like, it's like too nice.
You gotta have an enemy.
It is like isolated.
This is like the suburbs.
There's not nearly the same kind of connectivity
people have through technology.
And a lot of these guys are people who,
they do their term of service.
They're like, wow, the world's fucking scary.
Let me go hide in that one pretty place and make missiles
for the rest of my life. That's what's got it. That's what I'm going to do, you know, like that really is for a lot of these guys
more or less the path that they take.
So yeah, Dick Nixon comes out of Orange County. He runs for Congress as an anti-communist, right?
In 1950, Nixon, you know, pairs up with Joe McCarthy.
And, you know, it's good for him as a candidate, right? And deers him to the voters. It starts to
provide him with like a base of popularity and whatnot. You know, Nixon's gonna build his career
on attacking communists and his alignment with Joe McCarthy to a very significant
extent.
And it's too early for it to work in 1960, in part because he is Dick Nixon and he is running
against John F. Kennedy.
And that's just not going to work for him.
Even though he's a Catholic, the Catholic, even though he's a Catholic, we vote one of those
that really pisses off the Orange County people.
Right?
That we put a papis in.
This is not part of our fundamental.
Yeah.
Speaking of papists, Francesca, how do you feel about papistry?
Do you think we can trust the papists?
Do you think Catholics are an inherent third column
in our society waiting to sell us out to the Vatican?
I mean, yes.
I mean, the Biden-Craft family
is very much in bed with the inner workings of the Vatican.
I don't know.
When you say papistry though, I never say that word,
but I have gotten papistry or so.
No one tells anymore.
My mind is like the papistry is like what happens
when you get a pap smear.
Like I'm just taking in this beautiful papistry
of your, you know, cervix is how I feel.
Or like if you're a really good gynecologist,
you practice papistry.
Yeah, I'm imagining some very like confused young Nazi,
both like listening to this podcast
and reading a book about pap smears
and then carrying out an attack. Oh my god.
That makes no sense to anybody afterward.
Don't wish that.
Like, hey, listeners, are you a young confused Nazi?
Listen to behind the bastards.
Well, that's, I can't imagine a better thing to lead into ads with.
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We're back. Sophie's gonna have fun editing that last throw to ads.
I'm not doing it.
I'm leaving it as this.
I enjoyed it.
Oh, oh wow.
Okay, well.
Perfect.
No notes.
Listeners, check out my LinkedIn. Yeah, the
Twitter that it brought Francesca the look on her face. I'm not cutting that shit. Okay. So orange
counties, they vote for Nixon in 46. They like McCarthy when he's doing his thing, but they're not
really fans in Nixon by the time he runs for
president against Kennedy, right?
In part because, you know, Nixon is, he's come down as like our political bogeyman, right?
And he was a terrible, terrible monster.
But he like Nixon is the guy later in his career who will like hang out and be friends
with Mao, right?
Because he recognizes the geopolitical benefit of the US being aligned with China against the USSR, right?
That's why he does it.
I'm not saying he's doing this as a good person,
but it's like a rational political move that he makes.
Whereas these Orange County guys are saying like,
no, we need to all communists are working together
to destroy capitalism.
And we should just keep building more missiles to kill them all
rather than trying to build like economic and political agreements that include these states, right?
It just makes me think of like when Trump met with Kim Jong Un with like no pretext, no
promises, nothing, just because he's like, I'm a strong man.
Like, you know, you idiot, like anyone could have done that.
You got played.
And yet we're just not supposed to like, if it were anyone else who had done that,
the right would have freaked the fuck out.
This is what Orange County worked for.
And you throw that all the way.
It is interesting that like you're able to get away
with that if you're Trump
because they just can't like hate the guy.
And Trump's willing to do it
just because he does not come out of conservatism
as a movement, right?
Exactly, exactly.
He didn't really imbibe any of this propaganda.
He was just looking for a place where he could fit and grow like a mold.
Speaking of the gym rag or whatever it is.
Speaking of Ronald Reagan's cum sock.
Yes.
Yes.
Can we talk to the merch people about that?
I feel like that's a branded item.
No. to the merch people about that, I feel like that's a branded item.
No.
Okay, well, Sophie, I bought a 50 gallon drum of Ronald Reagan's preserved semen, but I
guess I'll have to find a different use for that.
You know what?
I think it'll be fine.
Yeah, let me know what you decide to use that for.
Yeah, I'm just going to drive through Florida.
Those little cups, you get it like a Sam's from the retire
We could retire off this sperm
Yeah, I like I like the idea that someone's doing because you know the idea of is doing that to soldiers who are killed now
The what is it? The semen, something, something, something, something.
Something awful, but that's to, oh, God.
Oh, they're gonna do that to Trump.
Oh, I'm sorry, Robert, but they're gonna do it to Trump.
They're gonna, do you know?
Yes, I do.
What if they do it to Trump?
Honestly, it would be kind of funny.
So let's, I think it's, I think it's. So I think it's fine.
I think it's fine.
They will.
Do it.
Have his babies in the future.
We'll trump it.
It's a game near the only thing he hasn't sold of his.
It's true.
It's one point to another.
Put how much is he come?
That's the future for him.
Yeah.
So these guys in Orange County, you know, Nixon, they love him for a while and then they
like feel betrayed by him
because he just kind of does things that are rational and not purely based on reactionary hatred.
And that really pisses them off. A bunch of these pissed off insane business leaders in Orange
County formed the Better American Foundation. And this had actually been formed a bit earlier,
but it kind of after, you know, the Cold War really gets started
in earnest, they turn it into this like civilian spy agency where they're building these
dossiers on every identified communist in the area. And when I say the era, I mean in Los
Angeles, like, and it's down from like Hollywood actors and stuff who actually were members
of the Communist Party or like writers to just like plumbers and shit
that somebody thinks is a communist
and since these guys are letter being like,
here's why I think this man, my neighbor's a communist.
My son wearing a red shirt one time.
So put him on your murder list.
He had a red, you know, one of the,
the comedy, who he had a sickle and a hammer.
Yeah, he's the handyman, you dumbass.le and a hammer. Yeah, he's the handyman.
You dumbass.
No, but there was a, that's the communist sign.
That is, and it is literally that dumb and like lazy, right?
It's not a good database, but it's taken seriously
by the major law enforcement agency in the area,
the LAPD partners with these guys to use their records.
And it's because one of the things these people are keeping track of legitimately is labor
organizers.
One of the reasons why, as Orange County, there are a lot of farms in the area.
Those farms are worked primarily by Mexican migrants.
And a lot of folks would periodically come in and try to organize those workers, right,
to get them into a union so that they were not exploited at the same extent.
And that would get these guys on a list and that one where the other is going to get
share of step 80 or something on your ass.
And then it's probably not going to end super well for you, right?
Like there's the police kind of partner with these folks in this mutually beneficial,
they get busts and stuff and people to go fuck with.
And you know, these business leaders in Orange County and people to go fuck with and, you know, these business
leaders in Orange County get rid of some of their problems, right?
And then they went to go pick their own grapes, obviously, just, you know, because they wanted
to be ideologically, you know, insane.
And we're going to do that.
Farming doesn't mean actually harvesting food.
It just means sitting on your porch making a lot of money.
Walking the skulls of those who try to earn a living.
Yeah.
Being incredibly angry at all times about the idea of Martin Luther King Jr.
Just pissing yourself with rage.
Now we're talking about a lot of social conservatism here so far, but obviously, you know, a huge
amount of this, especially the anti-communism, comes out of economic conservatism, which is why you get this really interesting early marriage
in Southern California in the 50s
of hard-line libertarian economic theory, right?
The stuff that's going to really get a lot more prominent
and actually get a lot of time in the sun under Reagan
and kind of ever since, one way or the other,
you have that kind of merging with social conservatism
for the first time, right?
Because while you do have a huge number of churches here,
you also have a lot of these like super tech-oriented engineers
who maybe like socially, may or may not be socially conservative,
but are extremely, they're libertarians, right?
And so they don't, you know, they'll partner
with these religious wackos that they may not like
may think are ignorant because they don't want to pay any money in taxes.
They hate the idea that somebody might use a road that their tax dollars went towards.
So that merger, which is absolutely a critical part of their Republican party today, and
ever since, that merger starts in Orange County.
And I'm going to quote from suburban warriors again by McGear.
Leonard Reed, who in 1945 would organize the foundation for economic education and institution
devoted to promulgating the message of free market, private property, and the moral principles
which underlie these concepts, converted to libertarianism during his tenure as the
manager of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce in the 1930s and 40s.
Reed had been influenced by William Seamble and Dor, who is then vice president of the Southern California
Edison Company and a board member of spiritual mobilization,
a conservative group of Los Angeles businessmen
in Claire Giamond.
And also in 1959 and 1960, was one of 25 to 30
prominent businessmen invited by Robert Welch
to organize the John Birch Society on the Pacific coast.
Great.
So that's a lot of heavy hitters like that.
This is all coming out of Southern California.
Huge amount of this of this.
Yeah.
I'm mad I even went to Disneyland.
Yeah, fuck it.
Yeah.
The next time I see a steamboat, Willie Costume,
I'm just gonna kick him right in the ass.
Absolutely.
That's what he deserves.
That's my promise.
Those churros are really good though.
Yeah, but your ass is public domain, motherfucker.
No, honestly, whatever, I don't have to go off
I'd buy Disney Land, but this is wild.
So here's the question, is it sort of a convergence
of interest?
Is it, it's like, ooh, we can use fake, you know,
religiosity and morals to cover for our blind greed and desire to not
pay anything in taxes. Like that, or is it, I'm religious, and I also am wealthy and
don't want to pay anything in taxes. Therefore, I'm going to add to my religion libertarianism
as part of my religion. Like, or is it just kind of checking out the egg conversation where they both
come together at the same time?
It's interesting.
Again, this is another thing you've kind of predicted
because it is very much a factor of let me graft
this weirdly libertarian capitalist economic theory
onto my religion because another thing that is later
going to come out of Southern California
that's a product of Orange County in a lot of ways, is prosperity gospel Christianity.
A lot of that forms.
I thought it was Florida's fault.
Come on.
Florida plays their role, but a huge amount of that shit comes out of Southern California.
That's a major center of like where kind of the prosperity gospel comes together as like
a concept is the OC.
So rich because God wanted us to be rich.
Yeah, exactly.
And you can just pray for money,
but also it helps if you send several thousand of it
right here.
Don't pay taxes, that's less money than you could send
to my scam church that buys me a plane.
Jesus actually didn't really help the poor.
His first instinct was ill, gross.
Do you even go here?
Yeah.
But then he had to,
Jesus sold the poor makeup that had a 700% markup that he bought on an
installment plan.
So, um, now again, while we're talking about all this and all this
stuff that is very common on the right right now that starts in,
in Orange County, that is not the mainstream conservative movement at this
period of time.
And the best evidence for that is that a guy who has become hated in Orange County, Richard
Nixon wins the presidency.
You know, that like that is a thing that is eventually going to happen, right?
Not that far much longer in here, right?
And like the late 60s.
And so while this stuff is starting to take off and take
hold and is eventually going to spread, Orange County very much is kind of weird, right,
on a national level. It's not the only place that's this conservative, but it's character
of conservatism is kind of unique. And that's also when it contribute to this sense of isolation
that we're talking about, right? Where this is, this is really, it's like a Petri dish
that you've added ingredients to
and you're keeping it away from the rut
and just seeing what gross there
before you dump it into the tank.
Which again, that's that's that moment
is his Ronald Reagan, right?
So yeah, one of the things that's gonna become
an early Hobgoblin of the Republican party
and the right wing movement in Orange County is the ACLU.
And this causes a problem in June 24th of 1960.
There's this Anaheim resident, John DuVormann, who is one of the rare progressives in the
area.
And he is a member of the ACLU and also an elected member of the school board.
So these guys do not like the ACLU.
They think it is a communist organization.
They think anyone in it is a communist.
Civil liberties.
Yeah.
Like, why?
So these guys love McCarthyism.
And one of the things that happens as a result
of McCarthy and the House Committee on American Activities
is, you know, Huak, is, you get a number of state committees on un-American activities.
And California has one.
It is beloved by these Orange County businessmen.
They use it a lot in order to harass, again, like union organizers and stuff that they
view as enemies.
Sure.
Devorman, as a progressive, wants to abolish it.
So he hosts a meeting at his house of the ACLU and a bunch of, you know, there's a
gathering, people give speeches about why they need to remove this thing, about how to organize
to do it. And it kind of becomes a local story that like this dude invited an ACLU meeting at his
fucking house, these communists are holding meetings and are sanctuary of Orange Gauney. And I'm
going to quote from suburban warriors here.
The response was swift and forceful.
Angry neighbors denounced warm and furbbed
importing communist ideas into their suburban enclave,
heating their neighbors' call,
citizens whose lives had previously revolved around work,
church, and family,
became involved in a contentious legal battle.
I mean, and this is all like a reaction,
as you mentioned, the MLK thing,
like this is just reactions to the civil rights movement.
This is just like,
the civil rights movement is really kicking off, yes.
Exactly, this is, let's flee people who want full,
like yes, to be treated equally, full citizenship,
to not be barred from, yeah, they're voting the ballot box.
All that shit, that's just all this is.
It's like, because you're like,
where does this communism stuff come from?
Oh, it's just your reaction.
It's just the white reaction
to the black civil rights movement.
Yeah, yeah, that's all that this is here.
And DeVormon is unfortunately,
he's the kind of dude who's like made in a lab
to piss off right wingers, right?
He was born in New York.
He went to Yale.
He was a lifelong progressive
and as a bonus was also Jewish.
So these guys, once they get a load of this guy,
they are like, oh fuck, this dude lives here,
this dude's on the school board.
Of course, it turns out he's been called up
by the California Committee on Un-American Activities
before, and he had, on principle, refused to say
if he'd ever been a communist or an aunt.
So within days, there's like newsletters going around claiming this guy is a trained communist
agent who is infiltrated Orange County.
And he's on the school board.
He's going to groom our kids, you know, like it's, it's, it's, this is not an unfamiliar
thing today.
Tale is all this fucking time.
And it's the same sort of like it was all this.
And it's the same sort of like, yeah, anti- it's the same sort of yeah, anti-Semitic
Like true anti-Semitic trope of like yeah, it's the Jews who are bringing in the migrants and giving black people rights
Same same stuff same stuff
Yeah, and the story of how people find out that this guy has held an ACLU meeting at his house is really interesting
It all comes down to this dude named James Wallace, who is very, very conservative,
and is also a production engineer at Autonetics.
You probably haven't heard of Autonetics,
but they are the people who built all of the navigation systems for our ICBMs.
Like, if you want a nuke to go kill a specific city,
you hired James Wallace to help make it happen.
Like he's one of these guys.
He's a production engineer at this company
that like that's what they do.
So, and he has, decides he's got some free time
from planning for the apocalypse.
And he blazes a trail that right wing activists
like James O'Keefe would follow for decades.
He shows up and infiltrates the ACLU meeting, right?
Like he does this, I'm just concerned,
I'm sitting in there, I'm taking notes, right?
And then he writes a letter to the local newspaper
where he talks about what he saw and describes
the ACLU rep as a traitor and writes,
I wonder what we would have done in 1942
if Mr. Devorman had a German American boond meeting
at his house. And it's like, man, I know, in 1942 if Mr. Devorman had a German American boond meeting at his house.
And it's like, man, I know in 1942, I think, I think I know where you would have been.
Yeah, honestly, but that's the other that boond meeting.
Exactly. No, I don't know. It's wild to me that these descendants of, I guess, World War two vets and heroes
are just echoing not like they're creating the basically American Nazi movement, right?
Or a version of a white nationalist movement,
which, you know,
step-alive it being anti-communist,
or saying your anti-communist.
It is extra messed up to like accuse a Jewish man
of wanting to start a German American boon meeting
in the 1940s.
I guess all the time. Yeah.
Yeah.
That is.
Ooh, that's dark.
So in short order, there's mobs showing up
at school board meetings where Devorman is going
to be present, right?
And they're just kind of shouting down
anyone trying to accomplish anything.
Like whenever they're trying to like actually do the school
board shit, they're yelling at Devorman being and being like, were you ever a member of the Communist Party?
Were you ever a member of the Communist Party?
Eventually his colleagues are like, you're not allowed to be both an ACLU member and a
school board member and he was censured and forced into a recall of Jesus.
Now the head of the recall effort is another aerospace industry employee, an engineer named
Dixon Miles.
He worked at North Onyx.
Now, I don't think you've probably even heard of North Onyx.
What else, what other horrible machine of death that they create?
I love all this.
The name has changed a little over the years.
You know them better today is Northrop Grumman.
There we go.
There we are.
Yeah, so this is like a Northrop Grumman guy, right?
He called the efforts to end a government committee
that existed primarily to destroy lives,
this un-American activities committee.
He calls the attempt to take it down a threat to our heritage,
our beautiful heritage of holding committees
to destroy people who vote differently.
And then also, that's the other thing that's so fucking,
like the dissonance is so deafening in this story and this origin story of the modern right
because of the way... I mean, I should have said this earlier, but these are supposedly
religious people who are creating weapons of death every single day. And there's no, again, there is no contradiction in their minds.
And then again, the same shit where it's like,
this guy's like, hey, we have this committee
who is kind of terrorizing our community
in different ways and interrogating us.
We should probably have some sort of sovereignty.
We shouldn't be subject to this kind of surveillance.
And they're like, no, are you?
Like, it's just the same fucking projection.
The ACLU's the one.
Yeah, they're trying to take away our freedom
to take away other people's freedom,
which is what like, it all comes down to, right?
It's all it comes down to.
And this successful effort to force Vormen off the school board
is a catalyzing moment for Orange County conservatives who had always been Dix, right?
These people had been shitty people for a spell, but they also had never felt like they
were organized together into any like cohesive political hole, right?
There's this attitude that like, well, you know, we're all pretty conservative here.
None of us like communism.
We don't accept it in our community, but now they realize how many of them there are who are that angry about the state of the world.
And again, the civil rights movement is a big part of this.
And it gives them this sense of power.
You know, again, this is not a thing that's going to be alien to anyone who's been paying
attention the last few years.
So it turns out that as we've kind of been making the case for the set of unique coincidences
that formed Orange County in its early stages was basically tailor-made to create explosion of paranoid people with no community connections
beyond those geared towards expressing fear or anger at a match in political enemies, right?
It's just a land of carons. It's a rolling hill of carons. It's mostly houses. Everything is
like very far apart from any spaces where people are going to like gather, you know, outside of households regularly.
There's basically all of the public space in the county has been shopped up in sold developers at this point, which is very clear.
There's a good passage in suburban warriors about this.
A segment of its middle class found a sense of community in the politics and social interaction preferred by local businessmen, right wing ideologues and church leaders. Thus, one woman said of conservative activism, it became a social thing. Much of the
county followed the plan sprawl model of development, the sledde chaotic spatial arrangements with
one track developed after another. Streets were bisected by new housing tracks, increasing a
perception of discontinuity and chaos. This form of growth created what one may term free
enterprise cities, with a strong emphasis
on private development and growth,
and little regard for public or community spaces.
By neglecting public space in favor of growth,
such arrangements weaken the sense of community.
In fact, even the existing central spaces
of the old downtowns were undermined
in favor of convenience, privacy, and shopping malls.
The most extreme result of this pro-growth attitude
was the eventual demolition of the old downtown city center
in Anaheim to make room for development.
So they just blast everything that isn't
a single family dwelling basically.
They think you can pay for it.
And this is, by the way, this is where kind of a trail is blazes,
like the first place where Americans are building developments
and walling them off from each other in like an organized way.
Like it happens in New York too kind of in a contemporaneous period.
You get pieces of that but like you get this, it starts in Orange County with these old
folks homes, right?
Where you basically have this is a retirement community.
They're not like old folks homes like homes for retired people.
Yeah, well, that are all part of a community that they like wall and gate off in order to like
because these people are scared of everything.
Yeah, yeah. It's like who it's definitely I've, the times I've been to the O.C. is like
who are you trying to keep out here? Because there's just other gated communities. Like are you
either, is this some kind of like, you know, warriors like fight, you know, gang,
gated community gang situation?
Because that'd be tight.
But like, I literally don't know who you're, who you're keeping out.
Anyone who, like, you can't even walk here.
Like there are no sidewalks, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which is, I mean, that, all of that is part of why it is the way it is there, right?
These are, the, the, the geography and the development makes these very isolating places.
Also, nobody comes from here.
Your whole family, like generations of it, doesn't live in Orange County, right?
You moved here from somewhere else.
And by the same note, like, so as a result of that, kind of the only public spaces are
churches. So as a result of that, the only public spaces are churches,
and the only organizations that people are likely
to be members of other than their church
is their political party.
So when you have that and you add into it,
there's suddenly this fight over perceived communism
in the neighborhood and everybody rallies together
and they're all doing a thing together in the real world.
And that's like addictive.
And you're going to get, that's the origin of a lot of what's going to wind up infecting
the rest of the Republican Party.
It starts with this, right?
It starts with this community starved group of people who find a sense of like identity
and just excitement and going to war with this dude who just wanted to host an ACLU meeting.
That's a huge moment in the history of American conservatism.
Yeah.
So the real gift that Dwarmen had gave these people
was a threat to Rally behind.
And once they had felt that high,
they didn't want to give it up.
Local business leaders who as we've stated
have always been the engine of conservative politics
in the area saw opportunity.
A group of them headed by Walter Knot, owner of Knot's
Barry Farm, organized it, which is like the first theme park in the US
I think. Yeah, so the Not's Berry Farm guy organizes a committee and sponsors what he calls the Orange County School of anti-communism. Oh
God. Oh, yeah, that just sounds like a great time over in Not's Berry Farm. You know why at least Disney doesn't have like a shady past. Yeah. You know,
or any kind of right wing overlap or any kind of Nazi, you know, none that I've heard
of, not their woke is hell. Yeah, yeah, super woke. Decent to set it himself. Okay. So
not spree. Yeah. Okay. Another theme park's been ruined. Yeah. Organized is the Orange County
School of Anti-Communism. Now, initially, this is like a series of local community college classes, right?
But they're so overattended.
Like, the community college is drowning in suburbanites who want to attend this anti-Communism
school.
So, Mr. Knot is like, all right, well, we got to do it bigger.
And a month before the Bay of Pigs invasion in the spring of 1961, more than 7,000 students and parents, many of whom had skipped work or school, gathered in
La Palma Park Stadium in Anaheim to attend a five-day Christian anti-communist school organized
by not. And I'm going to quote from the LA Times to talk about, give you a little insight into how
this thing goes. This is a speech by Herbert Philbric,
who's a former FBI agent. This is when he gives a crowd of people of like 7,000 on March 8th.
Right now, we have a 50-50 chance of defeating the Communist threat, but each day our chances
grow less. And that's like, that's the tenor of this whole thing, right? Like the Communist,
it's going to be an uphill battle. I don't know if we can beat them,
but if we, you know, we've gotta turn things around now.
Obviously, the event includes Birchers,
who one of the things that happens at this meeting
is they declare President Dwight D. Eisenhower
to have been a communist tool.
Now, it's not just not, he's not the only famous name here.
John Wayne is in attendance.
Oh, of course.
And so that's good.
Yeah, yeah, everybody's favorite fucking goblin of a man.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, it's a big deal, right?
This is a huge moment in American conservatism as well.
You know, I always, you always wonder like,
is their imagined threat still the same, right?
They call it communism, they call it socialism,
they call it woke.
They're getting closer to just saying people of color
with the word woke or anti-woke.
But you're like, at the time, was it just sort of,
I guess I'm wondering, like, when they said communism,
they knew they just meant like Jewish people,
black people, women, having any kind of like equal rights.
And it's always this threat. If they're just afraid that they would have to give up black people, women, having any kind of like equal rights.
And it's always this threat.
They're just afraid that they would have to give up their, what, beautiful, beautiful
strip mall.
Yeah.
I mean, that is, that's a huge part of it.
I will say it's not just people of color and women.
They also have a particular hatred of college students, right?
This is, this is also starting to be these early stages of protests in the early 60s against not
just in favor of civil rights, but against the Vietnam War.
Right.
It's going to stay.
And that's a huge, that's also a big bug bear for these people is college students.
Right.
So more than 16,000 Americans or Orange County in in I guess, wind up attending the event.
And Ronald Reagan is going to be the most popular speaker
there.
He's also in attendance.
You've got Reagan.
You've got John Wayne.
And you've got the Knott's Berry Farm guy.
And the event is such a hit.
And the Ronald Reagan speech is particularly
such a big deal that the Knott's Berry Farm guy
helps to organize following this a three hour Hollywood
bull event called Hollywood's answer to communism, which is described by TV critic John
Crosby as a monster three hour concentration of pure venom on television in which Patreon
it suggested again and again that the United States was largely people by traders. So that
sounds cool. Obviously, John Wayne.
People by traders. Yeah, that everyone who isn't one of these weird
right wingers is a trader to the country. High up in the list of conservatives who
hate it are the celebrities who attend this Hollywood answer to communism,
which include John Wayne, obviously, Roy Rogers, not surprising as well.
This one's going gonna hurt people though.
Jimmy Stewart's a speaker.
Oh God.
Yeah, that's a bummer.
That's a bummer.
Not shocking if you know the guy.
I can't do it, Jimmy Stewart.
Boy, I sure do hate it when people love civil rights.
I don't know, that's not a good Jimmy Stewart.
Well, now they want to be equal.
And now they're getting all nuts.
Stop, stop the blight that.
So both events are organized by a famous piece of shit and Australian
gift to conservatism, Frederick Schwartz. And he found the Christian anti-communist crusade
and he moves his headquarters to Orange County in 1960. Schwartz's claim to fame is a book
called You Can Trust the Communists to be Communists, which had a stunningly subtle
sequel. You can still trust the Communists to mean Communist Socialist and Progressives
too. So great titles like really creative, good work man. Speaking of weird fascists,
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Ah, we're back.
So both these events, you know, you've got knots kind of providing the funding, but the
guy who is organizing them is Frederick Schwartz.
He's this dude who found the Christian anti-communist crusade
which which moves to Orange County. He writes these two books with almost the same title about how
communism scary and they're communist. No, but communist probably the communism. You can't spell
communist without con. Yeah, without like most of the words in con, right? Yeah.
So his brand of propaganda, it's gonna be different
in some critical ways for mainstream far right propaganda
because he bases a lot of his pitch
on the interests of specifically people
in Southern California, right?
His first book includes a lengthy passage
where he complains that communists
are graduating more engineers than the United States, which has given them an edge in making new weapons. And there's some, there's some
wild lines in here. The question is, which system of education will win this universal war?
I was visiting an American college before I'd been there 10 minutes. The president told me with great
pride of a young man who had brought glory and honor to their school. Wherever I went on campus,
I heard his praises sung. At last I met him, and a fine young man he was. His body was live
in slender, and he stood some six feet two inches tall. He was their leading basketball player.
His skill at the game was so great that he had been chosen to go to Melbourne, Australia to
represent the United States and the Olympic Games in 1956. What an honor for the school.
Frequently I asked, who's your leading science science student He looked up at me with wonder and amazement. He could not answer the question
So he says we're teaching our kids basket ball, but not how to make missiles
It's such a funny thing to like have be your primary concern like that anyone anyone could have ever thought like the answer to the cold war
Like that we would not have enough missiles that that was ever a thing the US.
If you know anything about this country, no as soon as missiles were a thing, we were
going to have the most of them.
That was always in the cards for this country.
Like that is that is truly a trick that I don't know the, you know, military industrial
complex definitely pulled on everybody, but I guess including people and like I said,
that's the idea that you're
victors, you won.
No one even pales in comparison to the kind of military you have.
But yeah, I don't know.
I think you can play some basketball.
You know what I'm saying?
Just like, take a load off, like, chill out.
Like, you are geographically defended because of like the way North America is set up. You have so much more money and so many more guns than than anybody else on the planet.
And yet you are terrified because you saw a kid who was good at basketball, but the school
didn't have any future missile designers. Like what the fuck, man? That's a nuts.
So ridiculous. But you can see why this goes well, goes over well in Orange County,
because not only are a lot of employees of defense country, but a lot of people who are like running
these these defense companies. And like this guy saying, America's not graduating enough
missile designers. And they're like, yeah, we need more missiles. I make money off of everyone
of those we fucking sign, right? Like Northrop Grumman is paying the fucking mortgage
on a lot of these ranch-style houses, you know?
And so the people who are financially invested in this,
they like it that Shorza is saying,
there's no way to have peace.
There's no way to ever decrease our defense spending.
We only need to spend more and more and more.
This is just, it's such a nightmare of end diagram
of the, like the OC is just this like
nightmare fucking what's the longitude and latitude like nightmare coordinates of every single
like libertarianism the Christian right and the weapons industry which of course they don't
knit to it all now when they're like we need to not send any more money to Ukraine or whatnot
and they're just like no all y'all love the weapons industry you want send any more money to Ukraine or whatnot. And there's just like, no, all y'all love the weapons industry.
You want to send more money and make more weapons.
You want to send them so many more places than that.
Yes, you just don't want to do it for a good.
Yeah, exactly.
It's going to be an asshole about it.
Exactly.
No, but it is like, you know, we're talking about like the attitude towards people
who are like running these companies, but regular people don't want to feel like
they're war mongers.
And so part of what makes Schwarz interesting
is he very interestingly creates this sort of image
of like Americans want peace, right?
We actually value peace.
And when we say peace, we mean an end to violence, right?
Communists talk about peace a lot,
but communists don't view peace as the same thing.
And communism, peace doesn't mean ending violence.
Peace means ending conservatives, right?
That's basically what a ending capitalist, right?
Like that's how they say it, right?
And so like when we say we want peace,
we mean we don't want violence,
but if that means if we actually advocate for peace,
we're dooming ourselves because the only peace
that'll accept is one in which we don't exist.
Now, if you're rational at all, you can say that like, well, all you're saying is the only
real piece is one in which the communists don't exist, right? There's no difference between what
you're saying they're saying and what you are saying. Those are the same two things. But yeah,
it works, right? This is popular with these guys. But conservatism is all premised on future tripping about
a reality that has not come to bear and will not likely come to bear. They just, well,
you know, it's projection. They're going to do it to us. They're trying to eliminate conservatism,
so we need to eliminate them first. Yeah. They've said that they have to put it into capitalism,
so we have to put it into communism. A thing have to put an end, you know, to communism.
A thing we don't have, do not live under.
But that doesn't make us bloodthirsty.
We're still good Christians, right?
Sure.
Yeah, I mean, these are just, everyone finds ways of doing this.
It's not an uncom, like this is not, this was not invented by this guy, but I find the
way in which he's speaking to these Orange County voters to be kind of telling about how people in general like to look at themselves.
Yeah.
So yeah, as a side note, one of the things that's really interesting when you read a lot
of Shorz's writing is how frequently he praises the quality of Communist literature.
Like, I don't know any communists who use the word beautiful to describe like Communist
propaganda as much as this guy does, like he fucking loves it.
He writes about how a wonderful book,
like Problems of Linnanism by Joseph Stalin,
can be acquired for just a few cents
in any bookstore in America.
Like, why can't we do that with our propaganda?
There's so much better at it than us.
It's all these wood cuttings and it's great.
And they've got good must we need some good mustaches.
He writes about this Chinese Communist magazine
called Chinese pictorial.
And he's like, the color photography is beautiful.
The moral tone is excellent.
There's no violence, no crime, no nakedness, no sex, no alcohol.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's like we need to do that, but for money, you know, like for us and
our side.
Yeah, it is fun because he is saying a lot like, wow, the way these, the way that these
Maoists portray their like fantasy, future society looks great.
There's none of the things I hate, right?
It's like, okay, well then why are these people your biggest enemy?
Well, I don't know, whatever.
It is funny to me.
He writes, he clearly so enjoys, or reminds me of Jordan Peterson, right?
Keeping communist propaganda all over his walls.
He's like, that's kind of odd.
If you're not into it at all, to just surround yourself with it all the time.
That's very interesting to me.
It's got to keep the enemy close.
No, I think they would probably describe it as like,
well, I want to understand the enemy
so I can have to fight them.
Exactly.
Yeah, you know, okay.
It's there, but it is a weird obsession.
But it's also just again, I was at the California Republican party
like a convention, California Republican convention in 2015,
I guess it would be.
And the best moment of that whole convention for all these Republicans was when they could
see the protests happening outside of the building because Trump was speaking.
It's when Trump had to walk in the alley or the shoulder of a highway and whatnot because of protesters had closed the stop the entryway
and whatever.
And the faces of these Republicans were so excited.
They'd really loved watching themselves be hated
and they loved seeing what the other side was doing.
And so I do think there is sort of a weird fascination.
They see, I think there's this, a significant degree of like admiration for, well, these
guys were a tiny, unpopular chunk of the country. And using a variety of methods were
able to like build parties and organizations that allowed them to reach and radicalize
a huge number of people and take power. And that's exactly what we wanna do, but specifically so that we have to pay less taxes.
Exactly.
They have a lot of power,
but they're not the only power, right?
Because shit happens like the civil rights movement, right?
And then you get a law that they hate,
that forces changes in society that they hate.
You have, you know,
prior to that government, like, you know,
the government doing, like,
enforceably integrating school.
So they would say it is like, we're fighting like, you know, the government doing, like, enforceably integrating school. So they, they would say it is like,
we're fighting for our lives here. And what we need to do is what
those communists did, just like take total power, right? Like that's
very much why they're kind of looking to this propaganda. And
Schwartz has, again, he's very, like, positive towards communist
propaganda. And he, in this very weird passage, he compares it to
like a pedophile with a candy van, which is a really, I didn't realize that sort of like image went back
this far to like the early 60s, but evidently it does. Yeah. So anti communism is going to
remain a central interest for Orange County conservatives who all start to see the Cold War
as, you know, the acceleration of the Cold War is not simply like just for ideological reasons,
but also it's important for their bottom line, right?
This is gonna make us all rich.
The Orange County Research Institute,
which also did surveys in other parts of the US
noted in the early 60s that Orange County dwellers
were likely to either be interested in
or have bomb shelters than people anywhere else.
So I think that's funny.
Like Midwesterners aren't buying bomb shelters than people anywhere else. So I think that's funny. Like Midwesterners aren't buying bomb shelters.
Exactly.
This is like after 9-11 people, yeah.
Like in fucking, I don't know,
I think of a random ass like in,
it's like, yeah, in the OC,
being like they're coming for us.
Like no, they're not.
They're not gonna, I'm sorry.
Yourba, Linda.
Yeah, everybody had to feel, we all to feel like we're part of the news,
though, right? We all have to make it about ourselves.
Yeah, exactly. They're going to come right for us. No, they're not.
You wish they're coming. No, no one cares enough about Irvine for
our. I cannot spell your Belinda. I'm sorry. Like you're okay.
So in 1948, again, Dick Nixon's anti-communism had embodied the values of Orange County pretty well,
but over the next decade and change, like it had radicalized the point where he starts to be hated in the area, right?
And this becomes particularly the case once he becomes the president, right? In late 60s, you know early 70s when Nixon is in power,
he becomes the president, right? In late 60s, early 70s when Nixon is in power, he becomes like a huge enemy of them for the fact that he's willing to talk with Communists. He's willing
to make deals with the Chinese government, right? He's kind of the first rhino, right? That's
a term that has a lot more cash-ay now politically. They weren't using it then. But the
bircher right wing are the first people to really go after Nixon in that way.
I think he first wound up on their shit list in 62
when he had run for governor of California
and the society had attacked him.
The John Birch society had gone against Nixon in 62
by they backed the candidacy of this guy Joe Shell
who was a local assemblyman.
He was a high school football idol
turned independent oil producer.
So he's just like the perfect man
for them to all rally behind.
And mad lives of right-wing identities.
Yeah, yeah.
Football oil.
And there's this great quote.
Farmer.
Is this really good quote?
Yeah, he's a football oil farmer.
The LA Times gives a really good quote
of the tenor of the election he has,
like his competition
with the end its impact on Nixon.
Piloting his own beach craft bananza from one campaign stopped to the next.
Shell aimed his pitch squarely at fellow conservatives.
I've gotten sick and tired of calling people liberals when they're basically socialists,
he said.
First elected to the assembly in 1953, Shell was the minority leader when he decided to run
for governor.
One hallmark of his campaign, he repeatedly accused former vice president Nixon of trying
to use the California governorship as a stepping stone to the presidency.
Although Nixon won the primary handle, Shell captured 35% of the vote.
Nixon had been substantially weakened because the ultra conservative Shell's challenge
caused a split in the party, former defense secretary, Casper Weinberger said in his 2001 memoir.
So again, it's it's Orange County and particularly the John Birch society there that really stops Nixon from winning the
Goffinership because they they kind of hobble his campaign. They create all this animosity, you know, because they back this fucking
football football oil man Joe Shell.
back this fucking football football oil man Joe Schell. Yeah, God, that's funny. So Nixon irritates the John Burch Society again in 1964 when Barry Goldwater, who was then kind of
in the early 60s, he's the craziest fascist in America. He's going to white end his life
in like the 90s as like pro marijuana and pro gay marriage, but he is like,
he is the scariest fascist in public life
in the 60s.
It's a weird, yeah, he winds up, I guess, being okay
at the end of his life.
I don't know what was going on with him.
He just dies a limb, like, yeah, he kind of dies a limb,
right?
Weeds cool, love his love.
Yeah, yeah, it's interesting.
He's kind of fascinating arc. But he's the dude, his
big famous quote is he just he declares that the Republican convention that year extremism
in defensive liberty is no vice. And yeah, so that's, you know, that's the guy who's
kind of like the fucking big Republican in 64 or the big far right Republican in 64. Obviously
Nixon's going to wind up being the guy who actually gets to become president in 68, right?
Like eventually it's not gold water but Nixon. And that's another thing that pisses off
these people, right? That Nixon becomes the standard bear of the party. Barry Goldwater, the
guy they fucking love does not.
And that has all set the stage more or less for the man who's going to make the first
big crack in the dam between Orange County Conservatism and the broader national Republican
party, the guy who's going to shatter that wall and lead, let all of that filth really
spill into the rest of the country in a big way is a dude named
John Schmitz. And we're going to talk about Jay Schmitz in part two. Yeah. So Francesca,
that's the end of the episode. Do you have anything to plug before we roll out?
Uh, you know, the BITUATION RUM Podcast. We're going to be live in San Francisco on January 28,
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Miles Grave, the Daily Zeke, guys will be there.
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Cue it up, baby.
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