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The rise of radical Islam with its medieval manias about Jewish conspiracies and Crusader intrigues and the wild fears the disasters of the Bush administration provoked are driving out unwarranted superciliousness, and not before time.

The Times columnist David Aaronovitch has just published Voodoo Histories (Jonathan Cape), an examination of paranoid politics from the Protocols of the Elders of Zion to the myths surrounding the suicide of the British government WMD expert David Kelly. Although Aaronovitch deploys a dark wit and extraordinary patience as he lays bare the psychology of conspiracism, he is no doubt that the "idea of conspiracies" has more power to cause harm than actual conspiracies. In September, Francis Wheen will release Strange Days Indeed: The Golden Age of Paranoia (Fourth Estate), which holds up the crisis of the 1970s as a mirror for our frightened times. Early next year sees Anthony Julius's study of British anti-Semitism, a work of impressive scholarship, which ends with an account of how the traditional conspiracy theory of the far-Right crashed through the central-reservation barrier to deform the thinking of the Left.

I use the terms "Right" and "Left" out of habit, but I cannot pretend that they help. In 1963, at the high point of post-war liberalism, Richard Hofstadter delivered his celebrated lecture "The Paranoid Style in American Politics" and thought that he was describing a conservative pathology. Hofstadter was a good historian and accepted that his definition of paranoid included the populist theory from the late 19th century that an international conspiracy of bankers was impoverishing the common man and the pacifist fantasy that arms manufacturers had tricked America into entering the First World War. But Joseph McCarthy's hunts for communists in the 1950s were at front of his mind and he directed most of his fire against conservative nativist movements, which had raged throughout American history against Catholic and Jewish immigration and Masonic, Jesuit and communist conspiracies. "A distinguished historian has said that one of the most valuable things about history is that it teaches us how things do not happen," Hofstadter concluded after surveying the sorry field. "It is precisely this kind of awareness that the paranoid fails to develop. He has a special resistance of his own, of course, to developing such awareness, but circumstances often deprive him of exposure to events that might enlighten him — and in any case, he resists enlightenment. We are all sufferers from history, but the paranoid is a double sufferer, since he is afflicted not only by the real world, with the rest of us, but by his fantasies as well."

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Steve
May 29th, 2009
2:05 PM
Anonymous, you should learn to read. The point was not that it was paranoid to doubt the existence of WMD, it was that it IS paranoid to believe that the government KNEW that there was NO WMD and LIED about them DELIBERATELY in order to justify war. Do you get it now? Thought not.

Matty
May 29th, 2009
2:05 PM
Crawling out of the woodwork here. Some people don't seem to have read/understood Cohen's argument in places. Anonymous the point about David Kelly is that people believe he was murdered as part of a cover up. Melvyn you are looking for order in chaos. The world is composed only of ordinary, fallible humans. Not all powerful monsters coordinating vast conspiracies.

Bill Corr
May 29th, 2009
12:05 PM
Whay does the Harold Wilson quote about the fat spider and the blind man remind one of William Burroughs' demented ravings in 'The Naked Lunch' and various other works? Was Roly-Poly Harold smoking something other than tobacco in that eternally-smouldering pipe of his?

Melvyn
May 29th, 2009
10:05 AM
Cohen uses the arguments of David Aaronovitch? Who defends the nazis and does not accept the evidence of the Reicshtag Fire? Aaronovitch failed German history at Oxford and was expelled for his low grades. Cohen does not mention once the evidence about 9/11 - such as William Rodriguez's testimony. And what about the anthrax attacks - which the 'paranoid conspiracy theorists' said was a US job? The FBI has confirmed as much. We were correct. Cohen and Aaronovitch ignore many other facts as well, such as the fall of WTC 7, which the BBC reported as having fallen at 5pm EST - 20 minutes BEFORE it fell...explain that one Cohen. Or why all 3 buildings fell in less than 10 seconds in what experienced firefighters called a "controlled demolition". Or why there were people loading up the gold, who had inside knowledge and were ready with trucks to load the gold up from the vaults in the WTC. Or why the insurance investigator, Kevin Ryan, noted that the buildings could not have fallen as stated due to the impact of planes. Or why bush claimed he saw the first attack televised when it never was. Or why the FBI refused to listen to Alan and Cindy Thompson when they ran into bin Laden in 1998. Or why the hole in the Pentagon was only 18" across. Or why the anthrax attacks were not properly investigated. Hundreds more questions, and one just might add to them: Whey are idiots like Cohen and Aaronovitch trying to sell the official story? It may not be that they are agents; stupidity and arrogance could well be their excuse, making them useful idiots.

Anonymous
May 29th, 2009
10:05 AM
A friend of mine who served in the Gulf War with US Forces told me: "We believed in the WMD, you guys (British Servicemen) didn't". David Kelly thought that there was 30 per cent chance that Iraq had a WMD programme. Scott Ritter thought there was no chance at all. To have been sceptical about Iraqi WMD in 2003 is hardly the same as beeing convinced that the Duke of Edinburgh murdered the Princess of Wales. And those of us who were sceptical turned out to be correct. (VW: horrific nearly - a comment in itself)

Bill Corr
May 29th, 2009
9:05 AM
Nick Cohen refers to the southern Balkans. Some truths are stranger than fiction. The U.S.A. has an immense military bases in Kosovo {Serbian nomenclature] or Kosova [Albanian nomenclature] but almost nobody, even well-informed people, even know it exists. Camp Bondsteel is the name of this immense base. Check it out on the Internet. For reasons which only a few score Americans know, there was none-too-covert U.S. assistance to the armed Albanians of western Macedonia during a brisk, but vicious Albanian versus Slav civil war in that impoverished land. The U.S. now has airbase favilities in Bulgaria. Can anyone explain any of this? On a lighter note, there's the nonsense about featherbrained-but-scheming Diana's death. Was she really going to marry a Muslim, as some claim? If so, which one? The playboy who perished at her side or the Pakistani surgeon?

Matthew
May 29th, 2009
7:05 AM
Actually, apologies, Nick was criticising the war for oil in that piece I quote from. He did argue that Britain was willing to fight the war because it owed the US £243m from World War II debts.

Matt
May 29th, 2009
7:05 AM
I remember a certain journalist used to believe a lot of these conspiracy theories. "America sustains fundamentalist monarchs because it wants their oil. ...Support for Israel, which has no oil and is the enemy of oil producing Arabs, confuses this simple reasoning. But it can be explained away as an aberration created by the enormous influence of the Jewish lobby in Washington." N.Cohen, April 7th 2002

Anonymous
May 28th, 2009
11:05 PM
"That the Jews, once again, formed a "lobby" in the US that pushed America into a needless war against Saddam Hussein;" Are you serious? Jews made up more than 50% of the neocons calling for war while being 2 of the US population! And what of the conspiracy of the Jewish far right "Eurabia" that Muslims control Europe

Eben Marks
May 28th, 2009
11:05 PM
Most of this I can get behind, but at what point did Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia (helpful use of their own mythologising name there) start blowing people to pieces? I seem to remember it was after the invasion. If you had referred to all of Saddam's victims then the point might have stood. I think you may be seeing some of your own fat spiders.

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