Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States has been hailed by leftist intellectuals and Hollywood elites as a masterpiece of American history. To others—particularly conservative Christians, classical liberals, and anti-Communist patriots—it is a dangerous revisionist work filled with distortions, ideological propaganda, and deliberate omissions.
Few books have had as profound a cultural impact on the way generations of students view America. But who was Howard Zinn, and what did he really believe? Was his work grounded in careful scholarship or revolutionary zeal? This post explores Zinn’s Communist roots, the ideological substructure of his work, and the devastating impact his book has had on the worldview of the American left.
Howard Zinn’s Background: Red Roots and Revolutionary Influences
Howard Zinn was born in 1922 to working-class Jewish immigrants in Brooklyn, New York. His parents were factory workers, and their home was characterized by financial struggle and class consciousness. Zinn’s upbringing immersed him in a laborer’s perspective on society—one that predisposed him to sympathize with Marxist class conflict narratives.
While Zinn claimed he was never formally a member of the Communist Party USA, FBI files and later revelations suggest otherwise. FBI documents show that Zinn was a member of the CPUSA during the 1940s while working as a shipyard laborer. Zinn never repudiated Marxist revolution in principle—instead, he cloaked it in humanistic language and softened rhetoric.
There’s no known evidence that his parents were party members, but they were embedded in a social and cultural world deeply sympathetic to Socialist and Communist causes, particularly in Depression-era New York. His early philosophical orientation emerged not from objective historical analysis but from revolutionary class ideology.
“A People’s History” — A Title with a Loaded Ideology
Published in 1980, A People’s History of the United States purports to tell the “true” story of America—not from the viewpoint of its Founders, presidents, or industrial leaders, but from that of “the people”: Native Americans, slaves, women, laborers, and the poor.
The very title is ideologically loaded. The word “People’s” echoes the Communist lexicon. Mao Zedong, Lenin, Stalin, Pol Pot, Castro—all claimed to lead “people’s revolutions.” Their regimes were dubbed the “People’s Republic,” the “People’s Army,” or “People’s State,” yet they were anything but democratic or representative. In practice, such regimes slaughtered millions and installed authoritarian governments that erased individual liberty in the name of collective equality.
Zinn, whether consciously or not, employed the same rhetorical strategy: the “people” are the oppressed masses, and history is a record of their struggle against capitalist oppressors. This Marxist dialectic—bourgeoisie vs. proletariat—is the underlying worldview of the book.
The Philosophy of A People’s History: Marxist Presuppositions
Zinn’s book operates on several key presuppositions that mirror the Communist worldview:
- History is a story of class oppression. Zinn frames nearly every major American event—from Columbus’ arrival to the Constitution, from the Civil War to World War II—as driven by elite manipulation, exploitation, and oppression of the powerless.
- America is systemically evil. The Constitution is not a triumph of liberty but a conspiracy to protect slaveholders and capitalists. The Founding Fathers are not flawed but honorable men; rather, they are cast as conniving hypocrites. America is portrayed as imperialist, racist, patriarchal, and irredeemable.
- Progress only comes through revolution. Incremental change, constitutional methods, or religious revival are dismissed in favor of protest, agitation, and upheaval. Zinn romanticizes violent struggle and undermines the idea of ordered liberty.
- Objective truth is a myth. In his own words, Zinn declared, “There is no such thing as a pure fact.” He advocated for history written as political activism—not dispassionate inquiry. This is a postmodern and anti-Christian view of truth.
From a Philosopher’s lens, Zinn’s work rejects classical logic, natural law, and the correspondence theory of truth. From a Christian lens, it fails to acknowledge man’s total depravity and God’s providential working in nations through both common grace and judgment. Zinn’s America has no divine calling, no moral compass, no redemption—only conflict and class warfare.
Zinn’s Celebrity Followers: Affleck, Damon, and the Hollywood Left
Zinn’s narrative captivated many in Hollywood. Actor Matt Damon, who narrated the audiobook version of A People’s History, praised the work and often recommended it in interviews. In the film Good Will Hunting (written by Damon and Ben Affleck), Damon’s character famously references the book.
Both Damon and Affleck hail from the Boston area, where Zinn taught at Boston University. Their reverence for Zinn was not just artistic but ideological. Damon, in particular, has been vocal about progressive politics, wokeness, and systemic critiques of America. Ben Affleck has similarly aligned with leftist causes, including support for Planned Parenthood, gun control, and anti-Trump activism.
Their admiration is no coincidence—Zinn’s worldview aligns with the activist spirit now embedded in the entertainment industry. His historical revisionism became the intellectual foundation for Hollywood’s embrace of identity politics, historical grievance, and social revolution.
The Long March: Zinn’s Influence on the Leftist Mind
Zinn’s book became a staple in high school and college classrooms by the 1990s. Instead of reading primary sources like The Federalist Papers or Tocqueville, students were given Zinn’s distorted polemic.
His influence among progressives cannot be overstated. Zinn shaped:
- Academia: His approach inspired generations of activist historians who prioritize ideology over truth. Critical Race Theory, intersectionality, and decolonization movements owe a debt to Zinn’s method.
- Education policy: Groups like the Zinn Education Project, supported by radical teachers’ unions, push his materials into public schools under the guise of “equity” and “social justice.”
- Neo-Marxist identity politics: Zinn’s model of perpetual victimhood—Native Americans, African Americans, women, the poor—created the conceptual groundwork for today’s intersectional matrix.
His Marxist revisionism replaced the idea of American exceptionalism with a myth of American villainy. Where once students read about liberty, innovation, and providence, they now read about genocide, slavery, and economic exploitation. One can argue that Zinn helped plant the ideological seeds that blossomed into the 1619 Project.
Mary Grabar’s Counterpunch: Debunking Howard Zinn
In 2019, author and historian Mary Grabar published Debunking Howard Zinn: Exposing the Fake History That Turned a Generation against America. Her book dismantles Zinn’s work in painstaking detail.
Grabar’s core claims include:
- Academic malpractice: Zinn’s book is riddled with poor sourcing, selective quotation, and paraphrases taken wildly out of context. He routinely cites secondary sources that are themselves flawed or biased.
- Factual inaccuracies: Zinn misrepresents the Founders, slanders Christopher Columbus, distorts motives behind American wars, and leaves out essential facts that disprove his narratives.
- Intellectual dishonesty: Grabar shows that Zinn deliberately omitted context and facts that would complicate or contradict his Marxist framing. For example, he ignores Native American atrocities while highlighting those of settlers. He falsely attributes motivations to historical figures without supporting documentation.
- Propaganda, not scholarship: According to Grabar, Zinn’s book should be categorized under political literature, not history. It lacks balance, nuance, and methodological integrity.
Grabar herself is a Ph.D. in English and a fellow at the Alexander Hamilton Institute for the Study of Western Civilization. She approached Zinn’s work as a scholar, not an ideologue, and exposed its fatal flaws.
Zinn’s Character and Death
Howard Zinn died in 2010 at the age of 87 of a heart attack while swimming in Santa Monica, California. His public image was that of a humble professor-activist, beloved by his students and the left. However, private disclosures complicate this picture.
In 2010, declassified FBI files revealed his Communist Party membership and radical affiliations. Zinn had long denied party membership, which calls his honesty into question. He was a vocal supporter of radical causes, including the Vietnam antiwar movement and Cuban socialism under Castro.
Though not convicted of criminal behavior, Zinn’s integrity as a historian is tarnished by his open contempt for objectivity, his distortion of facts, and his lifelong embrace of revolution over reason. He may not have been malicious in the ordinary sense, but his commitment to ideology over truth reveals a form of intellectual deceit.
Zinn and the Neo-Marxist Stream: From Class to Identity
Zinn’s work serves as a key tributary to the river of modern Neo-Marxism. Traditional Marxism focused on class struggle. Neo-Marxism expanded that into cultural domains—race, gender, sexuality, and more.
Zinn’s A People’s History embodies this shift:
- Recasting history as oppression: Every event in American history becomes a narrative of victimization. There are no heroes—only oppressors and victims.
- Eroding shared history: By denying the value of the Founding, the Constitution, or national heroes, Zinn undermines the unifying elements of American identity.
- Moral relativism: Without objective truth, Zinn replaces Christian morality with social agitation. In his world, rebellion is always righteous, and the only sin is inequality.
- Religious subversion: Zinn frequently criticizes Christianity while praising liberation theology and radical pacifism. He distorts the historic Christian influence on America’s founding and instead aligns Christianity with colonialism and patriarchy.
Zinn’s legacy lives on in CRT classrooms, university protests, and the ideological zeal of the modern woke movement. His spirit animates the idea that America is irredeemable and must be dismantled to be rebuilt—a classic Marxist tenet clothed in 21st-century language.
Conclusion: The Gospel Versus the Gospel According to Zinn
Howard Zinn offered a counterfeit gospel. His narrative says: You are oppressed. Salvation comes through revolution. The system is evil. The people must rise up and destroy it.
The Christian gospel says: You are a sinner. Salvation comes through Christ. The heart is evil. You must be born again to truly be free.
Zinn’s work created generations of cynics, agitators, and disillusioned citizens. But truth sets people free—not propaganda. Christians and patriots must reject Zinn’s fake history and stand firmly on the foundation of truth, liberty, and redemption in Christ.
Robert Sparkman
rob@christiannewsjunkie.com
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