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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPete Hegseth Might Be Trump's Most Dangerous Cabinet Pick (Jonathan Chait in The Atlantic)
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2024/11/pete-hegseth-books-trump/680744/-snip-
Where Hegseths thinking begins venturing into truly odd territory is his argument, developed in Battle for the American Mind, that the entire basic design of the public education system is the product of a century-long, totally successful communist plot. Hegseth is not just hyperventilating about the 1619 Project, Howard Zinn, or other left-wing fads, as conservatives often do. Instead he argues that the entire design of the U.S. education system is a Marxist scheme with roots going back to the founding of the Republic. The deist heresies of Franklin and Jefferson, he writes, laid the groundwork to implant communist thought into the school system. Then, American Progressives in the late 1800s blended the idea of Marxist government with aspects from the Social Gospel and the belief in an American national destiny in order to make Marxism more palatable to Americans.
-snip-
In The War on Warriors, Hegseth makes plain that he considers the very idea of rules of war just more woke nonsense. Modern war-fighters fight lawyers as much as we fight bad guys, he writes. Our enemies should get bullets, not attorneys. He repeatedly disparages Army lawyers (jagoffs), even claiming that their pointless rules are why America hasnt won a war since World War II. (Ideally, the Secretary of Defense would be familiar with historical episodes such as the first Gulf War).
-snip-
And The War on Warriors repeatedly urges Hegseths readers to treat the American left exactly like foreign combatants. Describing the militarys responsibility to the nation, he writes, The expectation is that we will defend it against all enemiesboth foreign and domestic. Not political opponents, but real enemies. (Yes, Marxists are our enemies.) The Marxist exception swallows the not political opponents rule, because pretty much all of his political opponents turn out to be Marxists. These include, but are not limited to, diversity advocates (They are Marxists You know what they are? Theyre traitors), newspapers (the communist Star Tribune), and, as noted, almost anybody involved in public education.
-snip-
Hegseths idea of illegitimate behavior by the domestic enemy is quite expansive. Consider this passage, recalling his time advocating for the Iraq War: While I debated these things in good faith, the Left mobilized. Electing Obama, railroading the military, pushing women in combatreadiness be damned. The left has never fought fair. The most remarkable phrase there is electing Obama. Hegseths notion of unfair tactics used by the left includes not only enacting administrative policies that he disagrees with, but the basic act of voting for Democrats. The inability or unwillingness to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate political opposition likely endeared Hegseth to Trump, who shares the trait.
-snip-
Where Hegseths thinking begins venturing into truly odd territory is his argument, developed in Battle for the American Mind, that the entire basic design of the public education system is the product of a century-long, totally successful communist plot. Hegseth is not just hyperventilating about the 1619 Project, Howard Zinn, or other left-wing fads, as conservatives often do. Instead he argues that the entire design of the U.S. education system is a Marxist scheme with roots going back to the founding of the Republic. The deist heresies of Franklin and Jefferson, he writes, laid the groundwork to implant communist thought into the school system. Then, American Progressives in the late 1800s blended the idea of Marxist government with aspects from the Social Gospel and the belief in an American national destiny in order to make Marxism more palatable to Americans.
-snip-
In The War on Warriors, Hegseth makes plain that he considers the very idea of rules of war just more woke nonsense. Modern war-fighters fight lawyers as much as we fight bad guys, he writes. Our enemies should get bullets, not attorneys. He repeatedly disparages Army lawyers (jagoffs), even claiming that their pointless rules are why America hasnt won a war since World War II. (Ideally, the Secretary of Defense would be familiar with historical episodes such as the first Gulf War).
-snip-
And The War on Warriors repeatedly urges Hegseths readers to treat the American left exactly like foreign combatants. Describing the militarys responsibility to the nation, he writes, The expectation is that we will defend it against all enemiesboth foreign and domestic. Not political opponents, but real enemies. (Yes, Marxists are our enemies.) The Marxist exception swallows the not political opponents rule, because pretty much all of his political opponents turn out to be Marxists. These include, but are not limited to, diversity advocates (They are Marxists You know what they are? Theyre traitors), newspapers (the communist Star Tribune), and, as noted, almost anybody involved in public education.
-snip-
Hegseths idea of illegitimate behavior by the domestic enemy is quite expansive. Consider this passage, recalling his time advocating for the Iraq War: While I debated these things in good faith, the Left mobilized. Electing Obama, railroading the military, pushing women in combatreadiness be damned. The left has never fought fair. The most remarkable phrase there is electing Obama. Hegseths notion of unfair tactics used by the left includes not only enacting administrative policies that he disagrees with, but the basic act of voting for Democrats. The inability or unwillingness to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate political opposition likely endeared Hegseth to Trump, who shares the trait.
-snip-
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Pete Hegseth Might Be Trump's Most Dangerous Cabinet Pick (Jonathan Chait in The Atlantic) (Original Post)
highplainsdem
Thursday
OP
MontanaMama
(24,038 posts)1. They're all dangerous imho.
Hegseth absolutely but Tulsi Gabbard is up there too.
highplainsdem
(52,440 posts)3. Agreed.
Prairie Gates
(3,122 posts)2. Certainly dangerous to women in the hotel bar