Heinlein was horrified by Soviet Communism (and he’d traveled in the Soviet Union). He believed the US nuclear program (and space program) were a necessary protection against people like Stalin and Mao taking over the world.
There’s a running theme in a number of his works, of people trying to find a society and a place in it where they can live safely, where they won’t be oppressed for disagreeing with that society. It shows up in Stranger in a Strange Land, in “If This Goes On—”, in the Lazarus Long stories, etc.
I think Heinlein’s militarist liberal Americanism was contextual: he saw America as a place where a weirdo like him had a chance to live in peace, and that made it worth defending.
Heinlein was horrified by Soviet Communism (and he’d traveled in the Soviet Union). He believed the US nuclear program (and space program) were a necessary protection against people like Stalin and Mao taking over the world.
There’s a running theme in a number of his works, of people trying to find a society and a place in it where they can live safely, where they won’t be oppressed for disagreeing with that society. It shows up in Stranger in a Strange Land, in “If This Goes On—”, in the Lazarus Long stories, etc.
I think Heinlein’s militarist liberal Americanism was contextual: he saw America as a place where a weirdo like him had a chance to live in peace, and that made it worth defending.