Five Minutes With: Thomas Frank
/ Thomas Frank is the author of the book What’s the
Matter With Kansas which explains how the
wealthy in America conduct class warfare on the sly by
hoodwinking /bamboozling the religious working class
. Franks shares how the abandonment of the working class to
support corporate interest by primarily DLC Democratics
created a void which encourages the religious working class
to vote against their own and the nations well being. What’s the
Matter With Kansas is now on its way to becoming a feature film,
due out in 2006.
CP: Could you give us a hint of one of the strategies that you’re going to focus on?
TF: It’s not written yet! I will say that I do focus on creating a
liberal economic message because that is something that pop
conservatives have trouble talking about. Even thinking about. The more
experience I have with these guys, the more I am convinced of this.
They love to talk about culture war. Culture war is very exciting, it
mobilizes millions of people. But when you start talking about things
like social security privatization it immediately shuts them down
because it doesn’t fit their populist versus elitist narrative. It’s
just the opposite. It totally turns the tables on them. So you drive
this home as much as you can. I’m trying to find ways to do that. This
is something that totally problematizes their world.
CP: One thing you wrote about frequently is the way in which the
conservative cultural agenda has largely gone unfulfilled while the
conservative economic agenda has made great progress. With so many
judicial appointments on the horizon in the next few years, do you
still feel that way?
TF: Since 1968, when pop conservatism really started its path to power
things have changed dramatically in the economic sphere. But
culturally, they’re always on the defensive and their promise is we
won’t let it go as far as the other team would. Their overall record on
cultural issues is one of total failure. And the right deliberately
chooses issues that get you very angry and present them in a blunt and
unnuanced way. They do win some things here and there but their
victories are very limited. Even with abortion, they’ve only been able
to chip away around the edges. Pro-choice is still the dominant
position in this country. If they were ever to win, they would
themselves facing a massive backlash. The pro-choice people aren’t
really mobilized anymore, they’re not motivated, they’re not in the
streets. And conservatives want it that way. They want to keep it that
way. That’s important. They have to walk a very fine line between
victory and failure. Failure here is important for conservatives.
There’s something very attractive about fighting the good impossible
fight. [more]