Current:Home > ContactBook excerpt: "Prequel" by Rachel Maddow -TradeWise
Book excerpt: "Prequel" by Rachel Maddow
View
Date:2025-04-12 23:18:30
We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.
MSNBC host Rachel Maddow, whose previous books include "Bag Man" (about disgraced Vice President Spiro Agnew), "Blowout" (about corruption in the oil and gas industry), and "Drift" (about America's war-making apparatus), returns with an examination of the rise of fascist sympathizers in the U.S. prior to World War II, and its particular relevance today.
In "Prequel: An American Fight Against Fascism" (published by Crown October 17), Maddow explores the not-so-idle planning of America's authoritarian movement in the 1930s and '40s, made up of Hitler fans, white nationalists and antisemites who aimed to mimic a fascist government in the U.S. And they had help in surprising places.
Read an excerpt below, and don't miss Rita Braver's interview with Rachel Maddow on "CBS News Sunday Morning" October 8!
"Prequel" by Rachel Maddow
$22 at AmazonPrefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.
Try Audible for freeIn the years leading up to the U.S. entry into World War II, the American government, American institutions, American democracy itself, was under attack from enemies without and within. The great American fight against fascism that we have inherited as a cornerstone in our country's moral foundation is a fight that didn't happen only overseas in the 1940s. Americans fought on both sides of that divide here at home, too, and their stories will curl your hair. They may also bolster your confidence in our ability to win our modern iterations of those same recurring fights, not to mention the future rounds, too, when this inevitably comes up again on civilization's big democracy chore wheel.
The fight here at home in the 1930s and 1940s is a story of American politics at the edge: a violent, ultra-right authoritarian movement, weirdly infatuated with foreign dictatorships, with detailed plans to overthrow the U.S. government, and even with former American military officers who stood ready to lead. Their most audacious plan called for mounting hundreds of simultaneous armed attacks on U.S. government targets in the immediate aftermath of FDR's likely reelection in 1940. Their attacks would spark chaos and panic, they hoped, and galvanize and radicalize anti-Roosevelt Americans, culminating in an armed takeover of the U.S. government and the installation of something much more like a fascist dictatorship. And as far-fetched as that sounds, these belligerents were doing a lot more than flapping their lips. They had started stealing from federal armories, and had made their plans to raid them, with confederates on the inside ready to help. They had bought weapons by the hundreds and thousands and started building and stockpiling bombs.
The even more incendiary fact was that these would-be insurrectionists enjoyed an astonishing amount of support from federal elected officials who proved willing and able to use their share of American political power to defend the extremists, to derail the Justice Department's efforts to thwart or punish them, and to shield themselves from potential criminal liability when they were found out. In the lead-up to World War II, the U.S. Congress was rife with treachery, deceit, and almost unfathomable actions on the part of people who had sworn to defend the Constitution but who instead got themselves implicated in a plot to end it.
We can look back now, at a distance of more than eighty years, and see that all those American fascists (along with their lies and disinformation, their Hitler love, their white supremacist antisemitic derangement) ended up splintered on a rocky embankment. But in the moment, the lead-up to World War II in America was a much more close-run affair than we want to remember. It was a fast ride through churning and dangerous political rapids, and it wasn't clear at the time exactly who and what were going to survive the journey. A lot of powerful figures in Congress, in the media, in law enforcement, in religious leadership, were bailing hard to keep the fascist boat afloat.
* * *
Calculated efforts to undermine democracy, to foment a coup, to spread disinformation across the country, to overturn elections by force of arms with members of Congress helping and running interference—all these things add up to a terrible episode for a country like ours to live through, but they are not unprecedented. Our current American struggle along these lines, it turns out, has a prequel.
And it turns out that the most interesting part of that story is about the Americans—mostly forgotten today—who picked up the slack in this fight against our domestic authoritarians and fascists and heavily armed right-wing militias. People like federal prosecutors William Power Maloney and O. John Rogge; federal lawmen such as Leon G. Turrou and Peter Wacks; Leon Lewis, a Jewish veteran of World War I who ran a dangerous undercover spy operation inside the dens of American Nazis; brave informants like Charles Slocombe, John C. Metcalfe, and Denis Healy, who all took real physical risks; journalists like Dillard Stokes, Arthur Derounian, and the cub reporter Arnold Sevareid; a direct mail advertising consultant turned daring citizen investigator, Henry Hoke. These mostly unremembered Americans stood up and challenged both the fascists and the political figures who were running a protection racket for them. They were not necessarily the people you might expect to be on the front lines, but there they were, standing fast. They won. And they left stories to tell—incredible stories—about how they did it.
Excerpted from "Prequel" by Rachel Maddow. Copyright © 2023 by Rachel Maddow. Excerpted by permission of Crown. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Get the book here:
"Prequel" by Rachel Maddow
$22 at Amazon $29 at Barnes & NobleBuy locally from Bookshop.org
For more info:
- "Prequel: An American Fight Against Fascism" by Rachel Maddow (Crown), in Hardcover, Large Print, eBook and Audio formats, available October 17
- "The Rachel Maddow Show" on MSNBC
veryGood! (4862)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- How ageism against Biden and Trump puts older folks at risk
- Women are breaking Brazil's 'bate bola' carnival mold
- Baltimore County police officer indicted on excessive force and other charges
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Tech companies sign accord to combat AI-generated election trickery
- 2024 NBA All-Star Game is here. So why does the league keep ignoring Pacers' ABA history?
- Pennsylvania high court takes up challenge to the state’s life-without-parole sentences
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Americans divided on TikTok ban even as Biden campaign joins the app, AP-NORC poll shows
Ranking
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Maine gunman says reservists were worried he was going to do something because ‘I am capable’
- Women are breaking Brazil's 'bate bola' carnival mold
- Super Bowl LVIII was most-watched program in television history, CBS Sports says
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Polar bears stuck on land longer as ice melts, face greater risk of starvation, researchers say
- Proposed questions on sexual orientation and gender identity for the Census Bureau’s biggest survey
- Alexei Navalny, jailed opposition leader and Putin’s fiercest foe, has died, Russian officials say
Recommendation
Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
3.8 magnitude earthquake hits Ontario, California; also felt in Los Angeles
From Cobain's top 50 to an ecosystem-changing gift, fall in love with these podcasts
Amy Schumer calls out trolls, says she 'owes no explanation' for her 'puffier' face
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
Watch Caitlin Clark’s historic 3-point logo shot that broke the women's NCAA scoring record
Man who told estranged wife ‘If I can’t have them neither can you’ gets life for killing their kids
Prosecutors drop domestic violence charge against Boston Bruins’ Milan Lucic