About a year ago, the Department of Homeland Security warned of increased right-wing extremism. This is notable because it appears to be true. Since then, the Tea Party Movement, a wacky rightwing movement incubated by conservative organizations, has continued to gather increasing press. More recently, a man furious with the IRS crashed his airplane into an IRS building. And democrats have already received a number of threats over healthcare legislation.
The report (the text of which is available at the Huffington Post link above) notes that these right-wing groups are likely to capitalize on the economic downturn (as has happened in the past) and the election of the first African American president.
Interestingly, it also notes that conspiracy theorists who have anticipated a cataclysmic collapse of the American financial system will be egged on by the current financial crisis; it also notes other sources of paranoia for these extremists -- such as ammunition shortages and the rise of other world economies. Of concern, there has been an increase in stockpiling of ammunition among these groups, and the report notes that they are likely to recruit disgruntled returning war veterans.
Of course, we have an historic healthcare bill coming through congress; those legislators opposing it have reacted rather aggressively. I want to argue that republicans should think carefully before spewing paranoia-inducing rhetoric about healthcare legislation. On the other hand, I feel that arguments which use national security as a supporting argument are often suspect (this cynicism is due to coming of political age in the last 10 years).
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