Reflections on Entryism

I wasn't exaggerating. On the one hand, it took the Masons a long bitter fight in the 1920s and 1930s to identify and throw out Klansmen who had joined Masonry with the goal of turning the Craft (that's what Masons call Masonry) into a wholly owned subsidiary of the Klan. On the other, quite a few other lodge organizations had to engage in similar struggles to keep socialists from taking them over -- that's when a lot of lodges started making the Pledge of Allegiance part of the opening ritual; socialists hated that and usually wouldn't say it, which made it easy for them to be identified and rendered harmless in various polite but effective ways.
The irony? There are two groups of people who quite frequently pop up on my blog, either trying to post links to articles on their websites unrelated to the topic of the weekly essay, or trying to give my feet a tongue bath because they think they can then talk me into agreeing with their positions. You guessed it: it's either socialists on the one hand, or people from the racist right on the other.
It's interesting that this should still be the case a century after the examples I'd studied. Now of course socialism and racial politics both have ghastly track records -- between them, they're responsible for most of the major genocides of the last century and a half -- and that's got to be a problem for recruitment. Still, given the abysmal historical ignorance of most Americans, it shouldn't be that insuperable. Some sort of subcultural heredity? Or some other factor?
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A group I used to run ended up being infiltrated by a couple of hard line socialists, their plan was essentially to complain about every issue rather than provide any solutions. There was this one time during the committee elections one of them was going on a notable rant about 'not enough being done in regards to X,Y and Z' - the previous president simply snapped at him and said "If you don't like it, why not run for committee and fix it!". They threw up their hands and were never seen again. Rather than avoid them, we leaned into them.
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That said, throw in a dash of ADHD and I can be a right mess someday at least in terms of thought patterns. Probably why some of my responses here can be a little erratic.