It Can’t Happen Here

It Can’t Happen Here

by Sinclair Lewis

Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip Character Analysis

Buzz Windrip is the populist senator who wins the 1936 presidential election and sets up a fascist dictatorship in It Can’t Happen Here. At the beginning of the novel, Windrip builds mass support by promising iron-fisted rule and riches for all. In reality, however, Windrip is a “Professional Common Man” with no principles at all: he convincingly tells everyone what they want to hear, even though he doesn’t intend to keep any of his promises. His public personality is largely an invention, and behind the scenes, his ruthless secretary Lee Sarason is really running the campaign. What Sarason and Windrip truly want is power—and when they get it, they immediately turn against anyone who threatens to take it away. Windrip all but shuts down Congress and the Supreme Court, empowers his personal militia (the Minute Men), and hands control over the whole U.S. economy to a handful of well-connected businessmen. He replaces the states with provinces and appoints loyal followers to run them. Then, he starts censoring, imprisoning, and executing everyone who opposes him. Even though he crashes the national economy and faces countless rebellions, Windrip manages to stay in power through corruption, propaganda, and widespread repression—until Lee Sarason overthrows him. Windrip’s rise to power, which Sinclair Lewis based on a combination of Adolf Hitler and the populist Louisiana governor Huey Long, is a cautionary tale about the dangers of authoritarianism and the importance of defending democracy. Lewis uses Windrip’s populist platform and relatable, folksy style to emphasize that fascism is always grounded in unique national traits and demonstrate what an American version of it would look like. While a Windrip-like tyrant never took power in the 1930s, Lewis warns his readers against ever complacently believing that fascism can’t take root in the United States.

Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip Quotes in It Can’t Happen Here

The It Can’t Happen Here quotes below are all either spoken by Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip or refer to Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
American Fascism Theme Icon
).

Chapter 1 Quotes

“For the first time in all history, a great nation must go on arming itself more and more, not for conquest—not for jealousy—not for war—but for peace! Pray God it may never be necessary, but if foreign nations don’t sharply heed our warning, there will, as when the proverbial dragon’s teeth were sowed, spring up an armed and fearless warrior upon every square foot of these United States, so arduously cultivated and defended by our pioneer fathers, whose sword-girded images we must be … or we shall perish!”

Related Characters: Herbert Y. Edgeways (speaker), Adelaide Tarr Gimmitch , Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 2-3
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 2 Quotes

“People will think they’re electing [Windrip] to create more economic security. Then watch the Terror! God knows there’s been enough indication that we can have tyranny in America—the fix of the Southern share-croppers, the working conditions of the miners and garment-makers, and our keeping Mooney in prison so many years. But wait till Windrip shows us how to say it with machine guns! […] On the whole, with scandalous exceptions, Democracy’s given the ordinary worker more dignity than he ever had. That may be menaced now by Windrip—all the Windrips. All right! Maybe we’ll have to fight paternal dictatorship with a little sound patricide—fight machine guns with machine guns. Wait till Buzz takes charge of us. A real Fascist dictatorship!”

“Nonsense! Nonsense!” snorted Tasbrough. “That couldn’t happen here in America, not possibly! We’re a country of freemen.”

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs (speaker), Francis Tasbrough (speaker), Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 16-17
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 4 Quotes

Senator Windrip’s father was a small-town Western druggist, equally ambitious and unsuccessful, and had named him Berzelius after the Swedish chemist. Usually he was known as “Buzz.” He had worked his way through a Southern Baptist college, of approximately the same academic standing as a Jersey City business college, and through a Chicago law school, and settled down to practice in his native state and to enliven local politics. He was a tireless traveler, a boisterous and humorous speaker, an inspired guesser at what political doctrines the people would like, a warm handshaker, and willing to lend money. He drank Coca-Cola with the Methodists, beer with the Lutherans, California white wine with the Jewish village merchants—and, when they were safe from observation, white-mule corn whisky with all of them.

Within twenty years he was as absolute a ruler of his state as ever a sultan was of Turkey.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 26-27
Explanation and Analysis:

No one, even among the Washington correspondents, seemed to know precisely how much of a part in Senator Windrip’s career was taken by his secretary, Lee Sarason. When Windrip had first seized power in his state, Sarason had been managing editor of the most widely circulated paper in all that part of the country. Sarason’s genesis was and remained a mystery.

[…]

He had been variously a Socialist and an anarchist. Even in 1936 there were rich people who asserted that Sarason was “too radical,” but actually he had lost his trust (if any) in the masses during the hoggish nationalism after the war; and he believed now only in resolute control by a small oligarchy. In this he was a Hitler, a Mussolini.

Related Characters: Lee Sarason, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs
Page Number and Citation: 28-29
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

When Doremus, back in the 1920’s, had advocated the recognition of Russia, Fort Beulah had fretted that he was turning out-and-out Communist.
He, who understood himself abnormally well, knew that far from being a left-wing radical, he was at most a mild, rather indolent and somewhat sentimental Liberal, who disliked pomposity, the heavy humor of public men, and the itch for notoriety which made popular preachers and eloquent educators and amateur play-producers and rich lady reformers and rich lady sportswomen and almost every brand of rich lady come preeningly in to see newspaper editors, with photographs under their arms, and on their faces the simper of fake humility. But for all cruelty and intolerance, and for the contempt of the fortunate for the unfortunate, he had not mere dislike but testy hatred.

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 46
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 7 Quotes

Buzz and buzz and keep it up,
Our cares and needs he’s toting,
You are a most ungrateful pup,
Unless for Buzz you’re voting!

[…]

See, youth with desire hot glowing,
See, maiden, with fearless eye,
Leading our ranks
Thunder the tanks,
Aeroplanes cloud the sky.

Bring out the old-time musket,
Rouse up the old-time fire!
See, all the world is crumbling,
Dreadful and dark and dire.
America! Rise and conquer
The world to our heart’s desire!

Related Characters: Adelaide Tarr Gimmitch (speaker), Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR)
Page Number and Citation: 53-54
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 8 Quotes

(15) Congress shall, immediately upon our inauguration, initiate amendments to the Constitution providing (a), that the President shall have the authority to institute and execute all necessary measures for the conduct of the government during this critical epoch; (b), that Congress shall serve only in an advisory capacity, calling to the attention of the President and his aides and Cabinet any needed legislation, but not acting upon same until authorized by the President so to act; and (c), that the Supreme Court shall immediately have removed from its jurisdiction the power to negate, by ruling them to be unconstitutional or by any other judicial action, any or all acts of the President, his duly appointed aides, or Congress.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs
Page Number and Citation: 64
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 9 Quotes

Doremus had never heard Windrip during one of his orgasms of oratory, but he had been told by political reporters that under the spell you thought Windrip was Plato, but that on the way home you could not remember anything he had said.

There were two things, they told Doremus, that distinguished this prairie Demosthenes. He was an actor of genius. There was no more overwhelming actor on the stage, in the motion pictures, nor even in the pulpit.

[…]

But below this surface stagecraft was his uncommon natural ability to be authentically excited by and with his audience, and they by and with him. He could […] make you see him veritably defending the Capitol against barbarian hordes, the while he innocently presented as his own warm-hearted Democratic inventions, every anti-libertarian, anti-Semitic madness of Europe.

Aside from his dramatic glory, Buzz Windrip was a Professional Common Man.

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 71-72
Explanation and Analysis:

There came to him stockbrokers, labor leaders, distillers, anti-vivisectionists, vegetarians, disbarred shyster lawyers, missionaries to China, lobbyists for oil and electricity, advocates of war and of war against war. […] He promised to further their causes. […] He promised fellow politicians to support their bills if they would support his. He gave interviews upon subsistence farming, backless bathing suits, and the secret strategy of the Ethiopian army. He grinned and knee-patted and back-slapped; and few of his visitors, once they had talked with him, failed […] to support him forever… The few who did fail, most of them newspapermen, disliked the smell of him more than before they had met him […] By the time he had been a Senator for one year, his machine was as complete and smooth-running—and as hidden away from ordinary passengers—as the engines of a liner.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 74
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 11 Quotes

The conspicuous fault of the Jeffersonian Party, like the personal fault of Senator Trowbridge, was that it represented integrity and reason, in a year when the electorate hungered for frisky emotions, for the peppery sensations associated, usually, not with monetary systems and taxation rates but with baptism by immersion in the creek, young love under the elms, straight whisky, angelic orchestras heard soaring down from the full moon, fear of death when an automobile teeters above a canyon, thirst in a desert and quenching it with spring water—all the primitive sensations which they thought they found in the screaming of Buzz Windrip.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Walt Trowbridge, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR)
Page Number and Citation: 85-86
Explanation and Analysis:

[Doremus Jessup] had expected that traditionally Republican Vermont would give him too drearily easy a task in preaching Trowbridge. What he found was a dismaying preference for the theoretically Democratic Buzz Windrip. And that preference, Doremus perceived, wasn’t even a pathetic trust in Windrip’s promises of Utopian bliss for everyone in general. It was a trust in increased cash for the voter himself, and for his family, very much in particular.

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Walt Trowbridge
Page Number and Citation: 86-87
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 12 Quotes

Manhattan peasants. Kind people, industrious people, generous to their aged, eager to find any desperate cure for the sickness of worry over losing the job.
Most facile material for any rabble-rouser.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs
Page Number and Citation: 97
Explanation and Analysis:

He slid into a rhapsody of general ideas—a mishmash of polite regards to Justice, Freedom, Equality, Order, Prosperity, Patriotism, and any number of other noble but slippery abstractions.

Doremus thought he was being bored, until he discovered that, at some moment which he had not noticed, he had become absorbed and excited.
Something in the intensity with which Windrip looked at his audience, looked at all of them, his glance slowly taking them in from the highest-perched seat to the nearest, convinced them that he was talking to each individual, directly and solely; that he wanted to take each of them into his heart; that he was telling them the truths, the imperious and dangerous facts, that had been hidden from them.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs
Page Number and Citation: 99
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 13 Quotes

All through the “Depression,” ever since 1929, Doremus had felt the insecurity, the confusion, the sense of futility in trying to do anything more permanent than shaving or eating breakfast, that was general to the country. He could no longer plan, for himself or for his dependants, as the citizens of this once unsettled country had planned since 1620.

Why, their whole lives had been predicated on the privilege of planning. Depressions had been only cyclic storms, certain to end in sunshine; Capitalism and parliamentary government were eternal, and eternally being improved by the honest votes of Good Citizens.

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 104-105
Explanation and Analysis:

“Is it just possible,” he sighed, “that the most vigorous and boldest idealists have been the worst enemies of human progress instead of its greatest creators? Possible that plain men with the humble trait of minding their own business will rank higher in the heavenly hierarchy than all the plumed souls who have shoved their way in among the masses and insisted on saving them?”

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs (speaker), Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 117
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 15 Quotes

Before six, the President had proclaimed that a state of martial law existed during the “present crisis,” and more than a hundred Congressmen had been arrested by Minute Men, on direct orders from the President. The Congressmen who were hotheaded enough to resist were cynically charged with “inciting to riot”; they who went quietly were not charged at all. It was blandly explained to the agitated press by Lee Sarason that these latter quiet lads had been so threatened by “irresponsible and seditious elements” that they were merely being safeguarded. Sarason did not use the phrase “protective arrest,” which might have suggested things.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Lee Sarason, Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs
Page Number and Citation: 135-136
Explanation and Analysis:

“I am addressing my own boys, the Minute Men, everywhere in America! To you and you only I look for help to make America a proud, rich land again. You have been scorned. They thought you were the ‘lower classes.’ They wouldn’t give you jobs. They told you to sneak off like bums and get relief. They ordered you into lousy C.C.C. camps. They said you were no good, because you were poor. I tell you that you are, ever since yesterday noon, the highest lords of the land—the aristocracy—the makers of the new America of freedom and justice. Boys! I need you! Help me—help me to help you! Stand fast! Anybody tries to block you—give the swine the point of your bayonet!”

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 136-137
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 16 Quotes

The hysteria can’t last; be patient, and wait and see, he counseled his readers.
It was not that he was afraid of the authorities. He simply did not believe that this comic tyranny could endure. It can’t happen here, said even Doremus—even now.

The one thing that most perplexed him was that there could be a dictator seemingly so different from the fervent Hitlers and gesticulating Fascists and the Cæsars with laurels round bald domes; a dictator with something of the earthy American sense of humor of a Mark Twain, a George Ade, a Will Rogers, an Artemus Ward. Windrip could be ever so funny about solemn jaw-drooping opponents, and about the best method of training what he called “a Siamese flea hound.” Did that, puzzled Doremus, make him less or more dangerous?

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 143
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 18 Quotes

“All this trouble and the Corpos—They’re going to do something to you and me. We’ll become so roused up that—either we’ll be desperate and really cling to each other and everybody else in the world can go to the devil or, what I’m afraid is more likely, we’ll get so deep into rebellion against Windrip, we’ll feel so terribly that we’re standing for something, that we’ll want to give up everything else for it, even give up you and me. So that no one can ever find out and criticize. We’ll have to be beyond criticism.”

“No! I won’t listen. We will fight, but how can we ever get so involved—detached people like us—”

“You are going to publish that editorial tomorrow?”

“Yes.”

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs (speaker), Lorinda Pike (speaker), Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Dr. Hector Macgoblin, Willy Schmidt, Rabbi Vincent de Verez
Related Symbols: The Fort Beulah Daily Informer
Page Number and Citation: 179-180
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 19 Quotes

“The tyranny of this dictatorship isn’t primarily the fault of Big Business, nor of the demagogues who do their dirty work. It’s the fault of Doremus Jessup! Of all the conscientious, respectable, lazy-minded Doremus Jessups who have let the demagogues wriggle in, without fierce enough protest.

[…]

“It’s my sort, the Responsible Citizens who’ve felt ourselves superior because we’ve been well-to-do and what we thought was ‘educated,’ who brought on the Civil War, the French Revolution, and now the Fascist Dictatorship. It’s I who murdered Rabbi de Verez. It’s I who persecuted the Jews and the Negroes. I can blame no Aras Dilley, no Shad Ledue, no Buzz Windrip, but only my own timid soul and drowsy mind. Forgive, O Lord!

“Is it too late?”

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs (speaker), Rabbi Vincent de Verez, Aras Dilley, Oscar “Shad” Ledue, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 186
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 26 Quotes

Doremus discovered that neither he nor any other small citizen had been hearing one hundredth of what was going on in America. Windrip & Co. had, like Hitler and Mussolini, discovered that a modern state can, by the triple process of controlling every item in the press, breaking up at the start any association which might become dangerous, and keeping all the machine guns, artillery, armored automobiles, and aeroplanes in the hands of the government, dominate the complex contemporary population better than had ever been done in medieval days, when rebellious peasantry were armed only with pitchforks and good-will, but the State was not armed much better.
Dreadful, incredible information came in to Doremus, until he saw that his own life, and Sissy’s and Lorinda’s and Buck’s, were unimportant accidents.

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Cecilia “Sissy” Jessup, Lorinda Pike, Buck Titus
Page Number and Citation: 260
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 29 Quotes

The universal apprehension, the timorous denials of faith, the same methods of arrest—sudden pounding on the door late at night, the squad of police pushing in, the blows, the search, the obscene oaths at the frightened women, the third degree by young snipe of officials, the accompanying blows and then the formal beatings, […] the waiting in solitude to know what will happen, till men go mad and hang themselves—

Thus had things gone in Germany, exactly thus in Soviet Russia, in Italy and Hungary and Poland, Spain and Cuba and Japan and China. Not very different had it been under the blessings of liberty and fraternity in the French Revolution. All dictators followed the same routine of torture, as if they had all read the same manual of sadistic etiquette.

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Dr. Hector Macgoblin
Related Symbols: The Fort Beulah Daily Informer
Page Number and Citation: 284-285
Explanation and Analysis:

Their feeble pamphlets, their smearily printed newspaper, seemed futile against the enormous blare of Corpo propaganda. It seemed worse than futile, it seemed insane, to risk martyrdom in a world where Fascists persecuted Communists, Communists persecuted Social-Democrats, Social-Democrats persecuted everybody who would stand for it; where “Aryans” who looked like Jews persecuted Jews who looked like Aryans and Jews persecuted their debtors; where every statesman and clergyman praised Peace and brightly asserted that the only way to get Peace was to get ready for War.

What conceivable reason could one have for seeking after righteousness in a world which so hated righteousness? Why do anything except eat and read and make love and provide for sleep that should be secure against disturbance by armed policemen?

He never did find any particularly good reason. He simply went on.

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 288
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 35 Quotes

In his two years of dictatorship, Berzelius Windrip daily became more a miser of power. He continued to tell himself that his main ambition was to make all citizens healthy, in purse and mind, and that if he was brutal it was only toward fools and reactionaries who wanted the old clumsy systems. But after eighteen months of Presidency he was angry that Mexico and Canada and South America (obviously his own property, by manifest destiny) should curtly answer his curt diplomatic notes and show no helpfulness about becoming part of his inevitable empire.

And daily he wanted louder, more convincing Yeses from everybody about him. How could he carry on his heartbreaking labor if nobody ever encouraged him? he demanded.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Lee Sarason, Oscar “Shad” Ledue, Effingham Swan
Page Number and Citation: 340
Explanation and Analysis:

Secretary of the Treasury Skittle and Attorney General Porkwood shook their heads, but Secretary of War Haik and Secretary of Education Macgoblin agreed with Sarason high-mindedly. Once, pointed out the learned Macgoblin, governments had merely let themselves slide into a war, thanking Providence for having provided a conflict as a febrifuge against internal discontent, but of course, in this age of deliberate, planned propaganda, a really modern government like theirs must figure out what brand of war they had to sell and plan the selling-campaign consciously. Now, as for him, he would be willing to leave the whole set-up to the advertising genius of Brother Sarason.

“No, no, no!” cried Windrip. “We’re not ready for a war! Of course, we’ll take Mexico some day. It’s our destiny to control it and Christianize it. But I’m scared that your darn scheme might work just opposite to what you say.”

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip (speaker), Lee Sarason, Webster R. Skittle, Senator Porkwood, Dewey Haik, Dr. Hector Macgoblin
Page Number and Citation: 347
Explanation and Analysis:

They planned, these idealists, to correct, as quickly as might be, the errors of brutality and crookedness among officials. They saw arising a Corpo art, a Corpo learning, profound and real, divested of the traditional snobbishness of the old-time universities, valiant with youth, and only the more beautiful in that it was “useful.” They were convinced that Corpoism was Communism cleansed of foreign domination and the violence and indignity of mob dictatorship; Monarchism with the chosen hero of the people for monarch; Fascism without grasping and selfish leaders; freedom with order and discipline; Traditional America without its waste and provincial cockiness.

Related Characters: Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, Lee Sarason, Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs
Page Number and Citation: 351
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 36 Quotes

[Doremus Jessup] saw now that he must remain alone, a “Liberal,” scorned by all the noisier prophets for refusing to be a willing cat for the busy monkeys of either side. But at worst, the Liberals, the Tolerant, might in the long run preserve some of the arts of civilization, no matter which brand of tyranny should finally dominate the world.

“More and more, as I think about history,” he pondered, “I am convinced that everything that is worth while in the world has been accomplished by the free, inquiring, critical spirit, and that the preservation of this spirit is more important than any social system whatsoever. But the men of ritual and the men of barbarism are capable of shutting up the men of science and of silencing them forever.”

Related Characters: Doremus Jessup/William Barton Dobbs (speaker), Karl Pascal, Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip
Page Number and Citation: 359
Explanation and Analysis:
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Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip Character Timeline in It Can’t Happen Here

The timeline below shows where the character Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip appears in It Can’t Happen Here. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 2
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...Karl Pascal.” Jessup agrees with Tasbrough that the country’s political situation is serious: Senator Buzz Windrip might win the presidency next year, especially if the popular radio personality Bishop Prang endorses... (full context)
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...nationalism during the Great War, and lynching and the KKK. But R.C. Crowley declares that Windrip would give bankers like him the power they deserve, while punishing “lazy bums” who live... (full context)
Chapter 4
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...Republican candidate will probably be the unassuming senator Walt Trowbridge, and the firebrand Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip is sure to win the Democratic nomination. The crafty, sociable Windrip grew up in a... (full context)
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After six years in the Senate, Windrip decided to run for president. He is promising a guaranteed income to every American, and... (full context)
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Windrip has already published a popular book, Zero Hour—Over the Top, which Sarason actually wrote. It... (full context)
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...which is why Doremus Jessup considers him “a real Fascist menace.” Compared to Prang and Windrip, the likely Republican candidate and honest political realist Walt Trowbridge looks boring and uninspiring. (full context)
Chapter 5
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In a brief quote from Buzz Windrip’s Zero Hour, Windrip describes newspapermen as greedy, godless swindlers who secretly plot to manipulate politicians... (full context)
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...but he also finds him curious. For instance, Doremus adds, Ledue is now backing Buzz Windrip in the election. Philip replies that even though Windrip sounds like a demagogue, he’s really... (full context)
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...as well be the 1800s again, except when Buck Titus mentions all the “Messiahs,” like Windrip and Prang, who are trying to save the country from itself. Julian Falck, the Reverend’s... (full context)
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Prang officially endorses Buzz Windrip and declares that the League will propel him to the presidency. Emma Jessup comments that... (full context)
Chapter 6
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In the chapter’s epigraph from Zero Hour, Buzz Windrip says he’d choose “a wild-eyed anarchist” over an elite politician, any day, because he wants... (full context)
Chapter 7
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In this chapter’s epigraph from Zero Hour, Berzelius Windrip compares himself to Jesus and claims to hate attending public meetings. Then, the chapter begins... (full context)
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When Colonel Dewey Haik formally nominates Windrip, he asks everyone to refrain from chanting the senator’s name. A procession of Civil War... (full context)
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The audience cheers Windrip for four hours. But first, Mrs. Adelaide Tarr Gimmitch sings a patriotic version of “Yankee... (full context)
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By evening, the balloting is deadlocked between Windrip and President Roosevelt. Doremus Jessup brings Foolish the dog to Father Perefixe’s home, where the... (full context)
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In the early morning, the convention officially nominates Berzelius Windrip for president. Doremus Jessup, Buck Titus, Father Perefixe, the Rev. Mr. Falck, and Foolish the... (full context)
Chapter 8
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In a quote from Zero Hour, Windrip claims he’s not particularly educated—except about the Bible, the law, and writers like the fascist... (full context)
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Fifth, Windrip’s government will place a cap on personal income ($500,000), wealth ($3 million), and inheritance ($2... (full context)
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...will condemn anti-Jewish discrimination and tolerate Jewish people who assimilate to American culture and support Windrip. Tenth, Black Americans will be banned from voting, public office, law, medicine, and education. Each... (full context)
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...the Constitution to give the president absolute power over the government. Finally, an addendum to Windrip’s platform explains that all of his proposals, except the fifteenth, will only be enacted if... (full context)
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Emma Jessup finds Windrip’s platform confusing and contradictory, but Doremus thinks it’s clear. Windrip will bring big business to... (full context)
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Doremus Jessup declares that he has to do what he can to stop Windrip—but that he and his family might be shot for it. Emma asks him to be... (full context)
Chapter 9
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In an epigraph from Zero Hour, Buzz Windrip writes that patriotism, not intelligence, makes the best politicians—and he believes that white Americans are... (full context)
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Doremus Jessup simply doesn’t understand how Windrip can charm so many people with his endless, vulgar lies and empty promises. Reportedly, Windrip... (full context)
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Wherever Windrip goes, he turns hotel rooms into chaotic campaign offices. He spends all day talking on... (full context)
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Sophisticated Lee Sarason takes care of building relationships with foreign diplomats, and he masterminds Windrip’s strategy. For instance, he wrote Zero Hour and won popular support by strategically spurning an... (full context)
Chapter 10
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In an epigraph from Zero Hour, Buzz Windrip writes that inflation is a myth because the U.S. has so many natural resources. The... (full context)
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Buzz Windrip and his team—Bishop Prang, Senator Porkwood, and Colonel Osceola Luthorne—give constant radio addresses and take... (full context)
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...white people, a mob of Black veterans runs him out of town. Doremus Jessup sees Windrip’s campaign as “Revolution in terms of Rotary.” (full context)
Chapter 11
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In this chapter’s epigraph from Zero Hour, Windrip writes that, just like he became popular in school when his teacher singled him out... (full context)
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...he still respects Trowbridge (and knows that he has better chances of winning). He attacks Windrip in his Informer columns, and he spends his days interviewing voters around town. He’s dismayed... (full context)
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...Lorinda Pike’s business partner Mr. Nipper, and Emil Staubmeyer all giddily tell Doremus Jessup that Windrip will make them rich. Louis Rotenstern, Frank Tasbrough, Medary Cole, and R.C. Crowley also support... (full context)
Chapter 12
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In this chapter’s epigraph from Zero Hour, Buzz Windrip declares that the U.S. should fund the universal $5,000 wage by producing all of its... (full context)
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...arrogantly swaggering down the street, dressed in blue mock army uniforms. He realizes that they’re Windrip’s militia, the Minute Men, who are led by Colonel Haik. They wear five-pointed stars (because... (full context)
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...Square Garden. On his way, he passes through enthusiastic crowds, who shove policemen and sing Windrip songs. He sees group of nine Minute Men attack an elderly FDR supporter and then... (full context)
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...a story about a wise carrier pigeon in the Great War, and then introduces Buzz Windrip. The crowd goes wild as a group of Minute Men leads Windrip into the auditorium. (full context)
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Windrip’s speech begins with an awkward story about visiting New York when nobody knew his name.... (full context)
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...a parade march past his house, singing Mrs. Adelaide Tarr Gimmitch’s new song about Buzz Windrip’s victory. The song says that any “Antibuzz” who voted against Windrip is a traitor and... (full context)
Chapter 13
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In Zero Hour, Windrip writes that when he retires, he wants to move to a place like Florida or... (full context)
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...they meet Karl Pascal, the communist mechanic. Pascal tells Jessup that he’s actually excited for Windrip to take office, since there’s nothing like a “pro-plutocrat, itching militarist dictator” to start the... (full context)
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...He makes fun of Karl Pascal and says that the socialists would have defeated “Buzzard Windrip” if they had the communists’ support. Pascal jokes that Pollikop has never really read Marx... (full context)
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...townspeople can’t bother him. Now, he spends his evenings there, meditating, editing articles, and avoiding Windrip’s supporters. After returning home from Pollikop’s garage, he finishes an editorial about the threat to... (full context)
Chapter 14
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In Zero Hour, Windrip writes that he wishes that all the Christian churches could unite together. Like Jessup’s pastor... (full context)
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...her boarding house, the Beulah Valley Tavern. Doremus Jessup visits her there. They agree that Windrip will set back women’s rights, and Jessup says he wants to move to Canada, but... (full context)
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...learned about it, but that sex would probably help Doremus focus his energy on fighting Windrip. She admits that she’s still a virgin, but probably not for long, given how her... (full context)
Chapter 15
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In an epigraph from Zero Hour, Windrip writes that he’s just a normal, humble man who prefers to avoid conflict—except when he... (full context)
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Windrip appoints his “embarrassing friends and enemies” to faraway ambassadorships: he sends the writer Upton Sinclair... (full context)
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After taking the oath of office, Windrip promises to give the people “the real New Deal” and “a whale of a good... (full context)
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...Minute Men outside the D.C. jail—two shots ring out and hit the Minute Men. Then, Windrip gives an impassioned speech ordering Minute Men across the country to kill anyone who gets... (full context)
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When Bishop Prang starts questioning Windrip’s coup, his broadcast rights get cancelled, so he visits D.C. to talk with Windrip. Within... (full context)
Chapter 16
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In Zero Hour, Buzz Windrip writes that he doesn’t really want to be the president—just to serve the people. The... (full context)
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By the end of February, Windrip is still in power. The Minute Men have violently repressed strikes and protests all around... (full context)
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...about how dreadful Haik and Reek are. On his drive over, Jessup sees hundreds of Windrip propaganda billboards, all sponsored by major corporations. When he arrives, several old men tell him... (full context)
Chapter 17
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In Zero Hour, Windrip quotes a passage from II Kings in the Hebrew Bible, in which a messenger from... (full context)
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...most new recruits are down-and-out farmers, factory workers, and criminals. The Minute Men start calling Windrip “the Chief” and assembling to sing their poorly written new anthem, “Buzz and Buzz.” (full context)
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Windrip declares that the League of Forgotten Men is no longer needed, since it is already... (full context)
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Windrip’s Corporatist supporters call themselves “Corpos,” but their enemies call them “Corpses.” They promise that as... (full context)
Chapter 18
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In Zero Hour, Windrip writes that he loves the peace and quiet of small-town America. The chapter begins with... (full context)
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...universities. One night, after spending the day at Columbia University, firing professors who voted against Windrip, Macgoblin calls up his old professor, the biologist Willy Schmidt, who now lives in New... (full context)
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...paranoid and isolated, or they will dedicate their whole lives to joining the resistance against Windrip. She asks if Jessup is still planning to publish the editorial, and he says yes.... (full context)
Chapter 19
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In Zero Hour, Windrip writes that politicians shouldn’t confuse ordinary people with the facts, and that it’s easier to... (full context)
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...and fails to get used to his uncomfortable stool and bed. He blames himself for Windrip’s dictatorship—he thinks that he should have resisted it earlier and more forcefully. But now, it... (full context)
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...lawyer, Mungo Kitterick, but Swan informs him that he no longer has any rights, because Windrip has declared martial law. Jessup points out that many of Swan’s catchphrases are from popular... (full context)
Chapter 20
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In the novel’s final epigraph from Zero Hour, Windrip writes that Jewish people are inherently cruel, while “Nordic” people are inherently kind. The chapter... (full context)
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Meanwhile, Father Perefixe decides to return home to Canada, and the formerly pro-Windrip miller Medary Cole gets fed up with the Minute Men. One day in October, the... (full context)
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...government overhauls the education system, closing independent universities and forming new Corpo ones, starting with Windrip University in New York and Macgoblin University in Chicago. These new universities teach an “entirely... (full context)
Chapter 22
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Berzelius Windrip celebrates his birthday, December 10, by outlawing all opposition to the government. The punishment will... (full context)
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...right. Americans everywhere are watching what they say and even start using code names for Windrip and Sarason. There is a “nameless and omnipresent” sense of fear. More and more well-known... (full context)
Chapter 24
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...if Doremus is really against the Corpos—yes, he is. Even though he didn’t vote for Windrip, Philip now loves and respects the administration. Doremus points out that the same administration murdered... (full context)
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Philip also celebrates Windrip for ending unemployment and stopping crime, and especially for spiritually “revitaliz[ing] the whole country” through... (full context)
Chapter 26
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...papers. Jessup quickly learns about the government’s unspeakable atrocities all over the country. For instance, Windrip shot two of his personal bodyguards, the entire congregation of a synagogue was murdered with... (full context)
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Jessup struggles to translate the German news into English—it’s very pro-Windrip, and the language is extremely difficult. He also publishes some articles about labor issues from... (full context)
Chapter 29
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...more and more comic strips, alarmist headlines, and polemic articles about the Corpos’ economic success. Windrip and his inner circle tout their new programs on daily radio addresses, and new government-subsidized... (full context)
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Windrip’s economic policies also follow the same pattern as other dictatorships: besides a few bankers, businessmen,... (full context)
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In June, Francis Tasbrough calls up Doremus Jessup and passes on some confidential information: Windrip is replacing Secretary of War Osceola Luthorne with Provincial Commissioner Dewey Haik, who will be... (full context)
Chapter 33
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...Swan happens to be boarding his official plane to fly down to Washington and meet Windrip. Over the radio, Mary jokes with the ground crew about someone blowing up Swan and... (full context)
Chapter 34
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...Lorinda and Sissy receive shocking news from the New Underground: Lee Sarason has overthrown Buzz Windrip. (full context)
Chapter 35
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During his two years as president, Buzz Windrip grows bitter, lonely, and frustrated. He hates that Canada, Mexico, and South America refuse to... (full context)
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But Windrip cares as much about Sarason’s opinion of him as the country’s. When he notices their... (full context)
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Windrip is so frightened of getting assassinated in the White House that he lives in a... (full context)
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Windrip tells Sarason about his plans for a great empire and suggests that he might make... (full context)
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...Rebellions are also sprouting up in the Midwest—Minnesota and the Dakotas are even considering secession. Windrip angrily yells at his advisors, particularly Sarason, and insists that the Midwest loves him. Sarason... (full context)
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That night, Lee Sarason, Dewey Haik, and Hector Macgoblin visit President Windrip in his hotel room. Sarason holds a dagger, and Windrip calls out to him. Windrip... (full context)
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...to support President Lee Sarason, who announces to the country that the cabinet has ousted Windrip for embezzling money and making treasonous anti-war agreements with Mexico. Sarason starts appointing his favorite... (full context)
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...immediately oppose the new Sarason regime. These people, like General Emmanuel Coon, deeply believe in Windrip’s message. They think that despite all the bloodshed, the Corpos are really trying to build... (full context)
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Dewey Haik is far more extreme than Windrip or Sarason. He prioritizes efficiency over all else, so he officially abandons Windrip’s $5,000-a-year promise,... (full context)
Chapter 37
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...virtually all the territory north and west of Cincinnati. Most of the rebels originally supported Windrip but soon realized that he was handing power and wealth not to the people, but... (full context)