This fourth part has almost nothing to do with him, which makes evident how so many words were spun out of this man’s life he is an uninteresting mediocrity, but a fascinating symptom of the strifeful turbulence we now live in. There is not much to say about Andrew Breitbart’s life, yet this is now the fourth part of what was originally intended as a simple analysis of his memoir, Righteous Indignation. On December 1st, 2013, they were replaced with sections taken from the actual digital print edition.) Originally, excerpts from Breitbart’s Righteous Indignation were transcripts from his audio book. This began as a short entry, it is now the length of a too long short novel. Bluntly speaking, this means the word moralfag is used a few times, so tender readers might consider this fair warning of what’s below. As a result of the focus drifting onto the latter, some use is made of their glossary. Part four gives space to the environment in which his work briefly thrived, and what might be called the pre-revolutionary state in which we now live.Īs said, though these posts were originally intended to focus entirely on Andrew Breitbart, they ended up bleeding into various other subjects, including Anonymous. Part three gave focus to his various followers in the aftermath of his death. Part two dealt with Breitbart’s attitude towards Hollywood and the Anthony Weiner scandal. Part one dealt with Breitbart’s education and the possibility that he may have plagiarized part of his memoir’s section on the Frankfurt school from an essay in an old journal published by the notorious Lyndon LaRouche. The fascinating Chet Uber of the last makes a small cameo here. Byways into my research on Andrew Breitbart resulted in a section on one of Breitbart’s devotees, “BuzzFeed’s Benny Johnson: Gorgeous Animus”, while “The Invisible World: Bradley Manning, Adrian Lamo, Chet Uber, Timothy Douglas Webster” was the result of Breitbart’s overlap with Anonymous. This is part one, part two, and part three. It was originally a simple addendum to the third part, but because of that post’s great length, and this section’s own tumescence, it has received its own place. (This is the fourth, and final part, of what was originally intended to be a single post on Andrew Breitbart’s memoir, Righteous Indignation.