What you are seeing is a mailer sent out by a Young Republican in Maury County. If you think "Young Republican" means naive young people and want to excuse this, don't be deceived. One is a Young Republican up until age 40.
I know some of my liberal friends will believe this; they always thought the Republican Party was fascist and weird, but I know this is not normal. This is not what Republicans have always been like; this is what the Republican Party has become since Donald Trump was elected.
Of course, there have always been nut-jobs and conspiracy theorists in the Republican Party. When you have a two-party system like ours, the nutjobs make up part of each coalition.
Not all the crazies are Republicans, of course. There have always been some Democrats who believed some crazy stuff and advocated nutty things like unilateral disarmament, defund the police, borders are racist, trans women are women, and many seem ignorant of economics. So, I am not saying it is only Republicans who are crazy, but crazy Republicans are now mainstream Republicans. What would have once been rejected and denounced and marginalized is now mainstream.
I am old, but not old enough to remember when it happened, but in the late fifties and early sixties, many chapters of the Republican Party had been taken over by the John Birch Society. If you only had a surface knowledge of the JBS, they seemed like normal but very conservative people. If you scratched the surface, you discovered they were really weird. They believed in a grand conspiracy. Not only was the government controlled by Communists, but Communism was just part of a bigger conspiracy that had been pulling the strings of world events since the Enlightenment. The world was controlled by a cabal of people called "the insiders." The insiders were also the Illuminati or something like that, and the insiders included the Rothschilds, the Council of Foreign Relations, the United Nations, and many others. Around 1962, led by National Review founder William F. Buckley, Jr., the JBS was marginalized and denounced, and the organization's power waned, almost disappearing.
Getting rid of the JBS, of course, did not mean the end of nuttiness in the Republican Party. There were always a few right-wing militia types and fringe groups that attached themselves to the Republican Party, but they were routinely denounced and marginalized.
I think following the terrorist attack of September 11, 2001, the Party became more comfortable with the crazies in their ranks. It became acceptable to be bigoted toward all Muslims and take a stand that freedom of religion did not apply to Muslim. Of course, President George W. Bush and other leaders and respected conservative journalists consistently advocated for our Constitutional liberties, but there was a Republican insurgency that welcomed the enemies of Constitutional liberties, and many were ready to receive a message that 9-11 was somehow an inside job.
Due, I think, to the rise of talk radio and then the modern internet and social media, there was a democratization of opinion. Whereas in the past one's reach with a bombastic tone or crazy theories was limited, in the new media environment, everyone had a megaphone, and there were plenty of people ready to listen and believe the loudest, most shrill voice and the one who could offer the simplest explanations to complex problems.
The rise of the TEA party movement further provided fertile ground for the growth of crazy ideas and dangerous ideologies. I was very much part of the TEA party movement. I attended the rallies. I favor lower taxes and a less intrusive government. However, as the movement grew, it attracted more and more fringe types, and they were tolerated. Being radical became the norm. The nerdy scholarly Republican and the Country Club Chamber of Commerce Republican were being replaced by the rabble rouser.
I was very involved in Republican Party politics around 2012, when a new hysteria swept through the Republican Party. It has pretty much disappeared now, but starting about 2012, concern over something called "Agenda 21" swept through Republican and conservative circles. Agenda 21 was a United Nations study that essentially warned of the threat of global warming and laid out what should be done about it. Agenda 21 amounted to nothing. It was just the opinion of the authors of the study. It was not a treaty nor even a resolution of the United Nations. Many Republicans, including people I knew and had worked with on campaigns, thought this was a serious plan to kill 98% of the world's population, and it involved killing us all with aspartame and fluoride. People really believed this crap. Everything from programs to have shady sidewalks, to reintroducing wolves into the wild, was denounced as part of the Agenda 21 agenda. If you think I am making this stuff up, follow this link. I covered this nonsense at the time.
And then came Donald Trump and the doors were swung wide open to the rabble rouser and the nutjob. I attended CPAC in 2015 and Donald Trump was not even invited to speak. CPAC, was for serious conservatives. What was once a gatekeeper to what was acceptable conservatism is now simply a part of the Trump machine. My, how things have changed.
Look at the list of points of the Austin mailer: The Great Replacement theory is a debunked white nationalist, far-right conspiracy theory that white people are deliberately being replaced by non-white peoples through mass migration, demographic growth and a drop in the birth rate of white people. Immigrants who come here as refugees fleeing oppression or simply for a better way of life are called invaders. Religious liberty is rejected and Austin Lee would ban two of the world's major religions. Antisemitism is expressed, and men should be in charge. This is nuts. This is fascist. This is authoritarianism. This is un-American. Unfortunately, people who advocate these positions feel at home in the Republican Party.
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