Difference between revisions of "Nehemiah Scudder"

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[[category:fictional examples]]{{seedling}}[[Nehemiah Scudder]] is the fictional President (2012-2015) and First Prophet (2016-?) of the United States of America in Robert A. Heinlein's "Future History" series. Sometime during Scudder's first term, he succeeds in converting the US from a democracy into a religious dictatorship ([[theocracy]]). The original Scudder story ("If This Goes On...") was written in 1940, with several other references dating as late as 1987 (in Heinlein's last published novel, ''To Sail Beyond the Sunset'').
 
[[category:fictional examples]]{{seedling}}[[Nehemiah Scudder]] is the fictional President (2012-2015) and First Prophet (2016-?) of the United States of America in Robert A. Heinlein's "Future History" series. Sometime during Scudder's first term, he succeeds in converting the US from a democracy into a religious dictatorship ([[theocracy]]). The original Scudder story ("If This Goes On...") was written in 1940, with several other references dating as late as 1987 (in Heinlein's last published novel, ''To Sail Beyond the Sunset'').
  
Many people, especially [[rationalism|rationalists]], see [[Barack Obama]]'s presidency as veering dangerously towards a potential Scudder-like scenario.
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Many people, especially [[rationalism|rationalists]], see [[George W. Bush]]'s presidency as veering dangerously towards a potential Scudder-like scenario.
 
===Origins===
 
===Origins===
 
Heinlein's concept of Nehemiah Scudder may have had its origins in such characters as President Berzelius "Buzz" Windrip in the novel ''[[wikipedia:It Can't Happen Here|It Can't Happen Here]]'' by Sinclair Lewis. Windrip is believed to have been based on any of a number of real people, however, and Heinlein may have drawn from similar sources.
 
Heinlein's concept of Nehemiah Scudder may have had its origins in such characters as President Berzelius "Buzz" Windrip in the novel ''[[wikipedia:It Can't Happen Here|It Can't Happen Here]]'' by Sinclair Lewis. Windrip is believed to have been based on any of a number of real people, however, and Heinlein may have drawn from similar sources.
  
 
==Opinions==
 
==Opinions==
I generally always took this story to be a warning that the wrong person in the Presidency can essentially destroy everything that America is supposed to stand for, starting with democracy, freedom of religion, and freedom of speech. When I see someone like [[Barack Obama]] managing to get into the White House with a platform that appeals to many of the worst traits of [[communism]], and working to further goals at the expense of rationalism and meritocracy, and you have people saying "I feel that the Savior is in the White House", it's just plain scary. (The fact that we're less than 10 years from the date of Scudder's fictional presidency is just icing on the scary-cake.) --[[User:Woozle|Woozle]] 11:29, 15 Nov 2005 (CST)
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I generally always took this story to be a warning that the wrong person in the Presidency can essentially destroy everything that America is supposed to stand for, starting with democracy, freedom of religion, and freedom of speech. When I see someone like [[George W. Bush]] managing to get into the White House with a platform that appeals to many of the worst traits of [[evangelism]], and working to further evangelism's goals at the expense of rationalism and meritocracy, and you have people saying "I feel that God is in the White House", it's just plain scary. (The fact that we're less than 10 years from the date of Scudder's fictional presidency is just icing on the scary-cake.) --[[User:Woozle|Woozle]] 11:29, 15 Nov 2005 (CST)
  
 
==Reference==
 
==Reference==

Revision as of 18:51, 12 August 2009