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<xml><p>Date: Sun, 8 Jan 1995 08:21:07 -0500
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From: James Daugherty <special>jhdaugh@a-albionic.com</special>
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Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
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Subject: Carroll Quigley Examined; Multicultural Strategy of Ruling Class?</p>
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<p>A-albionic Research Weekly Up-date of January 8, 1995
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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***************Contents**********************</p>
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<p>1. Clinton, Quigley, and Conspiracy: What's going on here? by Daniel Brandt
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^</p>
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<p>2. Multiculturalism and the Ruling Elite by Daniel Brandt
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ </p>
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<div> *********************************************</div>
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<p>This article is from NameBase NewsLine, which is distributed to users of
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NameBase, a microcomputer database with 170000 citations and 78000 names
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of ruling class/conspiracy personnel.. This 3-megabyte database is
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available on floppy disks and is used by over 700 journalists and
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researchers around the world. For a brochure write to: </p>
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<p> info@a-albionic.com
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A-albionic Research, PO Box 20273, Ferndale, MI 48220-0273</p>
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<p> A-albionic Research is an authorized distributor of NameBase
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$79.00 Postpaid</p>
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<p>From NameBase NewsLine, No. 1, April-June 1993:</p>
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<p> Clinton, Quigley, and Conspiracy: What's going on here?</p>
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<p> by Daniel Brandt</p>
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<p> When Bill Clinton delivered his acceptance speech at the Democratic
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convention on July 16, 1992, it didn't contain any surprises, nor were any
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expected. There were the usual feel-good platitudes: he wanted to talk
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with us "about my hope for the future, my faith in the American people,
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and my vision of the kind of country we can build.... This election is
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about putting power back in your hands and putting the government back on
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your side.... It is time to heal America." Any speech writer could have
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pulled boiler-plate from the files and pasted together something similar.
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Speeches for occasions like this one aren't meant to be long on specifics.</p>
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<p> Toward the end of the speech Clinton mentioned that "as a teenager
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I heard John Kennedy's summons to citizenship. And then, as a student at
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Georgetown, I heard that call clarified by a professor named Carroll
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Quigley, who said to us that America was the greatest country in the
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history of the world because our people have always believed in two
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things: that tomorrow can be better than today and that every one of us
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has a personal, moral responsibility to make it so."</p>
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<p> This was not the first time that Clinton had paid tribute to the
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memory of his Georgetown professor. A few days earlier, a story on
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Clinton's background mentioned that he had never forgotten Quigley's last
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lecture. "Throughout his career he has evoked [this lecture] in speeches
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as the rhetorical foundation for his political philosophy," according to
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the Washington Post, which offered another Clinton quotation praising
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Quigley's perspective and influence.[1] A kindly old professor appreciated
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as a mentor by an impressionable, idealistic student? This is how it was
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interpreted by almost everyone who heard it, particularly since Quigley's
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name was not exactly a household word.</p>
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<p> But in certain rarified circles among conspiracy theorists, Clinton's
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reference to Quigley was surprising. Now that Clinton had one foot in the
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White House, the conservative Washington Times soon ran an item that tried
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to clear matters up. Professor Quigley, according to the Times,
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specialized in the history of a secret group of elite Anglo-Americans who
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had a decisive influence on world affairs during the first half of this
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century. Quigley, in other words, was a conspiracy theorist -- but one who
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had an impeccable pedigree as "one of the few insiders who came out and
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exposed the Eastern establishment plan for world government." These words
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belong to Tom Eddlam, research director for the John Birch Society. As
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someone who had sold two of Quigley's books, Eddlam knew plenty about
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Quigley. But we can't have a Democratic draft-dodging liberal candidate
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who admires a Birch Society conspiracy hero, so the Times quickly resolved
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the issue by noting that Quigley wanted the conspiracy to succeed, whereas
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the Birchers wanted it to fail.[2] Thus the Times summed matters up, in
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six column inches.</p>
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<p> Clinton's supporters depict him as an intellectual, someone whose
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heroes traffic in solemn ideals. If so, Clinton presumably read Tragedy
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and Hope, Quigley's best-known book, which appeared while Clinton was at
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Georgetown. At any rate, Quigley's work is well worth looking at, along
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with Clinton's early career, for its possible clues to Clinton's thought.</p>
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<p> Reading Quigley may turn you into a student of high-level conspiracy,
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which is exactly what many influential people around Clinton and elsewhere
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say you shouldn't be. Almost all of the 3000 members of the Council on
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Foreign Relations (CFR) will go on record ridiculing any of the conspiracy
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theories that, according to all polls, are taken seriously by large
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majorities of average people. CFR member Daniel Schorr will tell you again
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and again that Oswald was a lone nut, and CFR member Steven Emerson will
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write article after article debunking Pan Am 103 and October Surprise
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theories. It's not that people in high places know better, it's simply
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that they have more to protect and cannot afford to be candid.</p>
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<p> As new research is published about the JFK assassination, for
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example, it becomes clear that virtually all the high-level players, from
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LBJ on down, assumed it was a conspiracy from the moment the shots were
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fired. It took until recently for dedicated researchers to dig this fact
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out.[3] But thirty years later many journalists still find it useful to
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defend the Warren Commission or belittle its critics.</p>
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<p> Carroll Quigley was a conspiracy historian, but he was unusual in
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that he avoided criticism. Most of his conspiracy research concerned the
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role of the Rhodes-Milner Round Table Groups in Britain from 1891 through
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World War II. His major work, Tragedy and Hope (1966), contains scattered
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references to his twenty years of research in this area, but his detailed
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history of the Round Table was written in 1949. The major reason he
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avoided criticism is because his work wasn't threatening to people in high
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places. Quigley's research was too obscure, and too much had happened in
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the world since the events he described. Quigley was also an insider, so
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his criticisms of the groups he studied are subdued. He did his
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undergraduate and graduate work at Harvard, where he received a doctorate
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in 1938. He later taught at Princeton and Harvard before settling in at
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Georgetown's conservative School of Foreign Service in 1941, where he
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remained for the rest of his career. He was a consultant for the Brookings
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Institution, the Defense Department, the State Department, and the
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Navy,[4] and taught western civilization and history. In 1962 the Center
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for Strategic and International Studies was established on the Georgetown
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campus, where it maintained close ties with the School of Foreign Service.
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CSIS included a number of people on its staff who had high-level CIA
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connections. Quigley moved in these circles until his death in 1977:</p>
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<p> I know of the operations of this network [the Round Table Groups]
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because I have studied it for twenty years and was permitted for two
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years, in the early 1960s, to examine its papers and secret records.
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I have no aversion to it or to most of its aims and have, for much of
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my life, been close to it and to many of its instruments. I have
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objected, both in the past and recently, to a few of its policies,
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but in general my chief difference of opinion is that it wishes to
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remain unknown, and I believe its role in history is significant
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enough to be known.[5]</p>
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<p> In his 1949 detailed look at the Cecil Rhodes - Oxford - Alfred
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(Lord) Milner - Round Table nexus, published posthumously in 1981 as
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The Anglo-American Establishment, Quigley was more forceful with his
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criticism. While endorsing this elite's high-minded internationalist
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goals, Quigley wrote that "I cannot agree with them on methods," and added
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that he found the antidemocratic implications of their inherited wealth
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and power "terrifying." This is as tough as he got with his comments:</p>
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<p> No country that values its safety should allow what the Milner Group
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accomplished in Britain -- that is, that a small number of men should
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be able to wield such power in administration and politics, should be
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given almost complete control over the publication of the documents
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relating to their actions, should be able to exercise such influence
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over the avenues of information that create public opinion, and
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should be able to monopolize so completely the writing and the
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teaching of the history of their own period.[6]</p>
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<p> Quigley also avoided criticism because his books are the product of
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years of painstaking research into primary diplomatic sources. To qualify
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as a critic of his analysis, someone would have to duplicate that research
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-- and so far no one has. It also helped that Quigley was doing most of
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his work at a time when conspiracy theories were considered curious and
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quaint, but not threatening. Clinton, at any rate, had no reason to feel
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uneasy about citing the virtually unknown Quigley in his convention
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acceptance speech.</p>
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<p> But serious researchers can hardly afford to pass over Quigley's
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potential significance so lightly. The Washington Times, to begin with, is
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clearly mistaken to brush Quigley off as simply one more liberal elitist
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one-worlder. Certainly he is no streetcorner agitator, whether of the
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right or left. But his understated critique of his elite colleagues is
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nevertheless a searching one.</p>
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<p> In the years following the publication of Tragedy and Hope in 1966,
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writers on both the right and left began to recognize this. For example,
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New Left writer and activist Carl Oglesby came to realize that some of his
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ideas about elite power in the U.S. had been anticipated by Quigley.[7]
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On the far right, meanwhile, Quigley found a convert in W. Cleon Skousen,
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a former FBI agent who later became a star of the John Birch Society's
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lecture circuit. In 1970, Skousen published a book-length review of
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Quigley's Tragedy and Hope that was titled The Naked Capitalist. It
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quoted so heavily from Quigley's work that Quigley threatened to sue for
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copyright infringement.</p>
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<p> Skousen chose to emphasize Quigley's mention of subterranean
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financial arrangements between certain Wall Street interests and certain
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groups on the U.S. left, in particular the Communist Party.[8] Oglesby,
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meanwhile, shared Quigley's interest in the challenge posed to Wall
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Street's Eastern elite by newer oil and defense-aerospace money
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concentrated in the Southwest.[9] But as Oglesby recognized, Quigley's
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meticulous research into elite power shaded insensibly over into the study
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of "conspiracy":</p>
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<p> Am I borrowing on Quigley then to say with the far right that this
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one conspiracy rules the world? The arguments for a conspiracy theory
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are indeed often dismissed on the grounds that no one conspiracy
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could possibly control everything. But that is not what this theory
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sets out to show. Quigley is not saying that modern history is the
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invention of an esoteric cabal designing events omnipotently to suit
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its ends. The implicit claim, on the contrary, is that a multitude of
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conspiracies contend in the night. Clandestinism is not the usage of
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a handful of rogues, it is a formalized practice of an entire class
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in which a thousand hands spontaneously join. Conspiracy is the
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normal continuation of normal politics by normal means.[10]</p>
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<p> But it's a bad word for polite editors, so the issues surrounding the
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"C" word are almost never discussed in print. One needs to tease out
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Oglesby's observation that there is a qualitative difference between the
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way that the left and right in the U.S. have addressed this issue. Both
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tendencies can at least get together on which groups deserve attention:
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the Council on Foreign Relations, which became the American branch of the
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Round Table in 1919; Bilderberg, which has held secret meetings in Europe
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for select participants since 1954; and the Trilateral Commission, a group
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that began in 1973 and now has 325 members from Japan, Europe, and America.
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CFR consists of Americans only, whereas Bilderberg adds the Europeans and
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TC also adds the Japanese. The Americans in Bilderberg and TC are almost
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always members of CFR also.</p>
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<p> But some leftists and left-liberal sociologists prefer to take the
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curse off their interest in such groups by calling their investigations
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"power-structure research." The implication seems to be that tracing
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interlocking directorates, let's say, belongs to science in a way that
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tracing Lee Harvey Oswald's intelligence connections never could. Still,
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G. William Domhoff, the most prominent of the "power structure"
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researchers, admits that attempting to maintain this quarantine can itself
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become unscientific:</p>
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<p> Critics of a power elite theory often call it 'conspiratorial,' which
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is the academic equivalent of ending a discussion by yelling
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Communist. It is difficult to lay this charge to rest once and for
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all because these critics really mean something much broader than the
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dictionary definition of conspiracy. All right, then, if 'conspiracy'
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means that these men are aware of their interests, know each other
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personally, meet together privately and off the record, and try to
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hammer out a consensus on how to anticipate or react to events and
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issues, then there is some conspiring that goes on in CFR, not to
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mention in the Committee for Economic Development, the Business
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Council, the National Security Council, and the Central Intelligence
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Agency.[11]</p>
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<p> And what makes Domhoff's middle ground on the problem of conspiracy
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so difficult to maintain is precisely the existence of inconveniently
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concrete cases like Oswald's. If there was a conspiracy and cover-up, then
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it was carried out by interested individuals rather than by blind social
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forces. The best that Domhoff can do with the JFK assassination is to
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ignore it, which he does.</p>
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<p> But this won't do for Michael Albert, editor of the leftist Z
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Magazine and a Domhoffian "structuralist," who has attempted to finesse
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this problem. His argument on the JFK assassination, as best I can
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understand it, goes something like this: JFK was a predictable product of
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established institutions; these institutions wanted a war in Vietnam; it's
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inconceivable that JFK would have disagreed with this because his behavior
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was determined (that is, he could not have changed his mind), and
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therefore, the assassination of JFK, conspiracy or not, made no difference
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to our history and is unimportant. The problem with Albert's approach is
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that he's fairly close to vulgar Marxism, which by now has been thoroughly
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discredited.</p>
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<p> To my thinking, the reason why the JFK assassination is so important
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is this: It's one thing to believe that there are rich people who become
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richer because their environment tells them to behave that way, and quite
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another to believe that there is a powerful, secret government that
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doesn't have to play by the rules. If you can prove that the assassination
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was a conspiracy, then the first notion becomes silly and insignificant.
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Essentially, conspiracy theories restore notions of freedom and
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responsibility that have been stripped from from the "value free" social
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science establishment. Quigley is between Domhoff and Oglesby on our
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spectrum, which is not a left-right spectrum but rather a conspiracy
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spectrum. Oglesby deals seriously with the JFK assassination while Quigley
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does not. But Quigley at least follows the money trail and believes that
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human agency and individual actors are important forces in history.
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Domhoff, on the other hand, is more interested in class distinctions and
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general behavior.</p>
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<p> Skousen is much more conspiratorial than Oglesby. He applies
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conspiracy thinking to complex issues where a middle ground would be
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productive (such as CFR, Bilderberg, and Trilateralism), and treats them
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in an either/or fashion as if they were similar to the JFK assassination.
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It doesn't work very well. The New World Order may be a bad idea, but to
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assume as a starting point that it's a Communist plot doesn't help us
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understand the who or why behind it.</p>
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<p> Before returning to Clinton, it will help to fill out our spectrum a
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bit. So far we have Domhoff, Quigley, and Oglesby in a line, and Skousen
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off further on the pro-conspiracy end. On the anti-conspiracy end we
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should add Erwin Knoll, longtime editor of The Progressive. According to
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Knoll, "none of the conspiracy theories we have scrutinized meets the test
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of accuracy -- or even plausibility -- we normally apply to material
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published in The Progressive, so none has appeared in the pages of this
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magazine.[12] Knoll's advisory board includes three members of the Council
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on Foreign Relations, so this fits okay. There's also Chip Berlet, who
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berates unwitting leftists for falling prey to conspiracy theories that
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the devious right has conspired to foist on them. He isn't critical of
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conspiracy thinking on the basis of the evidence, but waits until the
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theorist can be shown to have incorrect political associations.[13] Berlet
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doesn't fit anywhere on our spectrum; he's running his own show.</p>
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<p> A conspiracy bookseller named Lloyd Miller[14] is farther out than
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Skousen. Miller is aware of Quigley and sells his books. While Oglesby is
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toying with an American ruling-class Yankee-Cowboy split that goes back a
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generation or so, Miller dwells on a split between the Knights of Malta
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and the Knights Templar going back to the year 1307. The modern derivative
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of this struggle provides his hypothesis that "the overt and covert organs
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of the Vatican and British Empire are locked in mortal combat for control
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of the world." In Miller's theory, Jesuit-controlled Georgetown is the
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Vatican headquarters on the American front, and Quigley is a Vatican agent
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exposing the Anglo-American connection. Miller is more sophisticated than
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this description allows, but I have difficulties with him. On a case by
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case basis, the theory produces as many questions as answers. More
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importantly, perhaps, my historical interests and imagination don't extend
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much beyond the last 100 years.</p>
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<p> Miller is mentioned because there are similarities between his
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analysis and the theories of Lyndon LaRouche. For anyone who wants to
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figure out what LaRouche is talking about, it is necessary to be
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conversant with esoterica concerning Freemasonry, the Knights of Malta,
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and British imperialism. The alternative is to see all of the above as
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code words for Jews, and LaRouche's enemies -- namely Chip Berlet, Dennis
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King, and the Anti-Defamation League -- tend to take this easy way out. I
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don't believe that right-wing globalist conspiracy theories in general, or
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LaRouche's theories in particular, can be dismissed by claiming that they
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are disguised anti-Semitism -- that is to say, code-word versions of the
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old international Jewish banking conspiracies. While there is some
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anti-Semitism on the right, it is no longer the driving force it might
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have once been. Most right-wing theories are more sophisticated than
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Berlet, King, or the ADL are ready to believe.</p>
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<p> I don't consider any of the people I've mentioned as crackpots,
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because I'm convinced that there are vital issues at stake. All of them
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are doing their best with checkered evidence, and for the most part I
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share their instincts if not always their conclusions. Regardless of where
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we decide to place Bill Clinton on the spectrum, which will be discussed
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after a review of his career, at least two other former (and future?)
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presidential candidates have staked out positions. Ross Perot believes
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that there is massive corruption and occasional conspiracies in high
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places; he belongs somewhere close to Quigley. Pat Robertson is a less
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hysterical version of Skousen, modified for post anti-Communism, and
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should also be taken seriously. Along with Ross Perot's movement, some see
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Robertson's Christian Coalition as a populist challenge to our one-party
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Republocrat system.</p>
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<p> Most of Pat Robertson's latest book, The New World Order (1991), is
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a popularized yet articulate presentation of recent American history as
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controlled by the Council on Foreign Relations, the Trilateral Commission,
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Bilderberg, the Federal Reserve System, and Wall Street. Several pages
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are spent on Quigley's theories, which provide the background for an
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understanding of the Rhodes Trust, CFR, and the foundations with their
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"One World agenda." Unfortunately, the only mention of this book in the
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left press ignores the analytical material that Robertson draws on, and
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dismisses "its more bizarre conspiracy theories such as those targeting
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mainstream figures as dupes of the Devil."[15]</p>
|
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<p> Yes, Robertson finally couches his theories in a Biblical context
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(after keeping the Bible out of it for the first two-thirds of the book),
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and most of us don't find the Bible necessary or compelling. But when
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leftists skip to the end in order to belittle his critique, at a time
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when they have lost the capacity to provide an alternative critique, this
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is self-defeating. My main objection to Robertson is that he doesn't
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deserve to have a monopoly on these important issues; his vision is too
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apocalyptic and too narrow. Unlike the politically-correct "progressive"
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press, however, I consider him potentially closer to populism than to
|
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fascism.</p>
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<p> Robertson spends several pages recounting the 1976 campaign of Jimmy
|
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Carter, and describes how he concluded that Carter's strings were being
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pulled by the same Trilateralists who created him. A similar analysis --
|
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much more detailed and convincing -- can also be found from a leftist
|
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perspective.[16] It wasn't too many years ago, before politically-correct
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thinking carried the day, that the left took Trilateralism seriously.
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Since 1980, the only left perspective on Trilateralism has been written by
|
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a Canadian professor.[17] His Gramscian categories tend to be academically
|
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overbearing, but he took the trouble to interview 100 Trilateral
|
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Commission members.</p>
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<p> The Jimmy Carter story is depressing. Hamilton Jordan reportedly
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said, "If, after the inauguration you find Cy Vance as secretary of state
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|
and Zbigniew Brzezinski as head of national security, then I would say
|
|
that we failed." That's exactly what happened, and seventeen other key
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|
members of the administration were also Trilateralists. For his entire
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administration, every move on foreign policy was cleared with the
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hard-liner Brzezinski.</p>
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<p> Robertson's book was written just one year before Clinton's name
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|
became a household word. One wonders how Robertson reacted to Clinton's
|
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reference to Quigley in his acceptance speech. And then what Robertson
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|
thought when he learned that Clinton checked off on almost every group
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you care to name: he is a Rhodes Scholar, a CFR member, a Trilateral
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Commission member, a Bilderberg participant, and most of his appointees
|
|
are at least one of the above. If Clinton's mention of Quigley in July
|
|
1992 had been an isolated case, then one might interpret this as simply a
|
|
ploy to disguise his elitist loyalties. But Clinton has mentioned Quigley
|
|
many times over the years, and I suspect that on this he is sincere. Then
|
|
again, it's hard to believe that Clinton is unaware of Quigley's
|
|
anti-elitist tendencies. What's going on here?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> After shaking John Kennedy's hand, they say that William Jefferson
|
|
Clinton never doubted that he was headed for the White House. A band major
|
|
in high school, he was favored by his school principal, who encouraged him
|
|
to run for class offices and to participate in a leadership program that
|
|
sponsored his trip to Washington. He attended Georgetown from 1964-1968,
|
|
majoring in international affairs and immediately running for student
|
|
office ("Hello, I'm Bill Clinton. Will you help me run for president of
|
|
the freshman class?"). When he wasn't listening to Quigley or networking
|
|
and glad-handing his way through a student council election, he was
|
|
working in the Senate Foreign Relations Office of Senator J. William
|
|
Fulbright, an Arkansas Democrat and former Rhodes Scholar who started
|
|
criticizing the CIA and Vietnam policy in 1966. During his first two
|
|
years, Clinton was a trainee in Georgetown's ROTC unit, and could be seen
|
|
around campus in Army fatigues.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Between Quigley and his Georgetown connections, Fulbright and his
|
|
Rhodes Trust connections, and Clinton's keen interest in his own political
|
|
power, it's not surprising that the big, bearded, amiable Clinton became a
|
|
Rhodes Scholar in 1968 and went off to spend two years at Oxford. Another
|
|
power behind Clinton was Winthrop Rockefeller (1912-1973), two-time
|
|
Republican governor of Arkansas, who reportedly functioned as a father
|
|
figure. At Oxford, Clinton participated in one or more demonstrations
|
|
against U.S. policy in Vietnam in front of the American embassy, and used
|
|
his connections to stay out of the draft. After Oxford he went to Yale Law
|
|
School. In the fall of 1972 he directed McGovern's campaign in Texas. He
|
|
ran for Congress in Arkansas in 1974 after finishing Yale, but barely
|
|
lost. Then he taught law in Arkansas until 1976, when he was elected state
|
|
attorney general after running unopposed. That year he also headed up the
|
|
state campaign for Jimmy Carter. Two years later he won the race for
|
|
governor.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The anti-war sentiments among Clinton's Oxford colleagues did not
|
|
produce an antipathy toward the CIA. Robert Earl, later an assistant to
|
|
Oliver North at the National Security Council, was one of these
|
|
colleagues. And while governor, Clinton was aware that an airfield in
|
|
Mena, Arkansas played a major role in secret contra logistics involving
|
|
gun and drug running. Clinton's security chief is being sued for an
|
|
alleged Mena-related frame-up, and many believe that there were cover-ups
|
|
by both state and federal agencies.[18]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bill Clinton is promoted as the first baby boomer and anti-war
|
|
activist in the White House. Yet I was also these things, and I cannot
|
|
identify with Clinton at all. In order for this piece to make any sense,
|
|
it's important that I show how two different anti-war protesters might
|
|
have stood together in a demonstration for different reasons, after
|
|
arriving from different directions.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> To begin with, one has to divide the student movement into two
|
|
periods, before and after 1968. This year was pivotal: the McCarthy
|
|
campaign, the RFK and MLK assassinations, the police riot in Chicago.
|
|
Anti-war protesters on conservative campuses such as my University of
|
|
Southern California and Clinton's Georgetown, were almost always bona fide
|
|
prior to 1968. There was no percentage in it otherwise, as the polls were
|
|
overwhelmingly in favor of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. At USC I organized
|
|
a peaceful draft card turn-in ceremony in 1968. We were physically ejected
|
|
from the campus by fraternity boys, and had to continue in a church across
|
|
the street, where the frat rats feared to tread. A poll by our student
|
|
newspaper showed that most students agreed with the fraternity. At USC,
|
|
and the same was probably true of Georgetown, a student politician
|
|
couldn't get more than a handful of votes by taking an anti-war position.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In 1969 everything suddenly changed. Major anti-war organizing
|
|
efforts appeared on campus, coordinated through national networks. I
|
|
guessed that these new activists, who seemed to come out of nowhere to
|
|
organize the Vietnam Moratorium, were former McCarthy-Kennedy campaign
|
|
workers. Although I had been co-chairman of our SDS chapter the previous
|
|
year, these were all new faces to me. I was astounded and a little
|
|
suspicious. Everything had turned around completely: now no student
|
|
politician could hope to win without the long hair, the beads and sandals,
|
|
and speaking at freshmen orientation by abandoning the lectern and sitting
|
|
on the edge of the stage, "rapping" to them movement-style.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> When it came time to confront the draft, these same student
|
|
politicians used their mysterious connections to get out the easy way.
|
|
Sometimes they pulled strings to secure a place in the overbooked National
|
|
Guard, but most got out clean. Almost half of all undergraduate men were
|
|
released when the first lottery was held at the end of the year, which
|
|
of course brought our anti-draft movement to a halt. I now refer to my
|
|
1969 experience as the "Sam Hurst syndrome," after the articulate and
|
|
good-looking student body president who sat on the edge of the stage and
|
|
rode into power on the post-1968 wave. It's my euphemism for slick,
|
|
well-disguised self-interest and a great head of hair.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I noticed that new students could not tell the difference between Sam
|
|
Hurst's activism and mine. Students with safe lottery numbers sadistically
|
|
inquired about my number -- they would find it amusing if my number was
|
|
also safe, now that I had been convicted for refusing induction. It was
|
|
every man for himself. Then it got worse. By September 1970 the big
|
|
movement on campus centered on Timothy Leary's old colleague Richard
|
|
Alpert, who now called himself Baba Ram Dass and told overflow crowds that
|
|
the best way to do revolution was to sit in the lotus position and do
|
|
nothing. Soon Rennie Davis of Chicago Eight fame was spending his time
|
|
puppy-dogging a teenaged guru from India. Within another year there was no
|
|
discernible movement at all, just embarrassing burnouts like the Weather
|
|
Underground and eventually the Symbionese Liberation Army, which kidnapped
|
|
and brainwashed Patty Hearst.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bill Clinton is even slicker than Sam Hurst. His anti-war activism,
|
|
as well as everything else he did, developed from a focused interest in
|
|
his own future. After 1968 it would have been unthinkable for Clinton to
|
|
ignore the anti-war movement and face political obsolescence -- not
|
|
because of his revulsion over carpet bombing, but because it was time to
|
|
hedge his bets. Clinton is not an intellectual, he's merely very clever.
|
|
A clever person can manipulate his environment, while an intellectual can
|
|
project beyond it and, for example, identify with the suffering of the
|
|
Vietnamese people. But this involves some risk, whereas power politics is
|
|
the art of pursuing the possible and minimizing this risk. Almost
|
|
everything that happened to the student movement is best explained without
|
|
conspiracy theories. There are, however, some bits of curious evidence
|
|
that should be briefly mentioned. Each of these alone doesn't amount to
|
|
much, but taken together they suggest that something more was happening --
|
|
the possibility that by 1969 a significant sector of the ruling class had
|
|
decided to buy into the counterculture for purposes of manipulation and
|
|
control:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>* Student leaders James Kunen[19] and Carl Oglesby[20] both report that
|
|
in the summer of 1968, the organization Business International, which
|
|
had links to the CIA, sent high-level representatives to meet with
|
|
SDS. These people wanted to help organize demonstrations for the
|
|
upcoming conventions in Chicago and Miami. SDS refused the offer, but
|
|
the experience convinced Oglesby that the ruling class was at war
|
|
with itself, and he began developing his Yankee-Cowboy theory.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>* Tom Hayden, who by 1986 was defending his state assembly seat against
|
|
those trying to oust him because of his anti-war record, was quoted
|
|
as saying that while he was protesting against the Vietnam War, he
|
|
was also cooperating with U.S. intelligence agents.[21]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>* The CIA was of course involved with LSD testing, but there is also
|
|
evidence that it was later involved in the distribution of LSD within
|
|
the counterculture.[22]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>* Feminist leader Gloria Steinem[23] and congressman Allard Lowenstein
|
|
both had major CIA connections. Lowenstein was president of the
|
|
National Student Association, which was funded by the CIA until
|
|
exposed by Ramparts magazine in 1967. He and another NSA officer, Sam
|
|
Brown, were key organizers behind the 1969 Vietnam Moratorium.[24]
|
|
(In 1977 Brown became the director of ACTION under Jimmy Carter; his
|
|
activism, which was more intense and more sincere than Clinton's,
|
|
didn't hurt his career either.)</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>* Symbionese Liberation Army leader Donald DeFreeze appears to have
|
|
been conditioned in a behavior modification program sponsored by
|
|
elements of U.S. intelligence.[25]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>* The CIA has a long history of infiltrating international
|
|
organizations, from labor to students to religion. I submit that
|
|
if an anti-war activist was involved in this type of international
|
|
jet-setting, the burden is on them to show that they were not
|
|
compromised. Clinton comes close to assuming this burden.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The major point here is that by 1969, protest was not necessarily
|
|
anti-Establishment. When thousands of students are in the streets every
|
|
day, and the troops you sent to Vietnam are deserting, sooner or later
|
|
it's going to cut into your profits. If you can't beat them, then you have
|
|
to co-opt them. Clinton's mentors and sponsors realized this, Clinton
|
|
himself sensed the shift, and until more evidence is available it's fair
|
|
to assume that his anti-war activity was at a minimum self-serving, and
|
|
perhaps even duplicitous.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> How else can we explain why he has recently embraced the very
|
|
organizations who got us into Vietnam in the first place? He joined the
|
|
Council on Foreign Relations in 1989, attended a Bilderberg meeting in
|
|
1991, is currently a member of the Trilateral Commission, and has
|
|
appointed numerous Rhodes Scholars, CFR members, and Trilateralists to key
|
|
positions. These are the very groups whose historical roots, according to
|
|
Quigley, are essentially conspiratorial and antidemocratic. A cynic would
|
|
say that Clinton appropriated from Quigley what he needed -- which was a
|
|
precise description of where the power is -- and ignored those aspects of
|
|
Quigley that did not fit his agenda. He may have read a book or two by
|
|
Quigley, but he didn't inhale them.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> On February 2, when Clinton's nominee for CIA director was asked some
|
|
polite questions, Senator John Chafee (R-RI) joked about what he called
|
|
"a Mafia that's taking over the administration."[26] Be sure to smile when
|
|
you say that, Senator. The new director, R. James Woolsey, was an early
|
|
supporter of the contras and served as defense attorney for Michael Ledeen
|
|
and Charles E. Allen, he has Georgetown-CSIS connections, and he's a
|
|
Rhodes Scholar, CFR member, and Yale Law School graduate, several years
|
|
ahead of Clinton. Yale, of course, is thick with CIA connections.[27] The
|
|
new CIA director was close to Brent Scowcroft at the Bush White House, and
|
|
is a director of Martin Marietta, the eighth-largest defense corporation,
|
|
whose contracts include the MX missle and Star Wars weapons.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It's becoming clear that on inauguration day we merely had a changing
|
|
of the guard. But it's still the same old team at headquarters, wherever
|
|
that is, and you won't find any television cameras there. Ultimately,
|
|
then, Clinton's references to Quigley are worth as much as his anti-war
|
|
record. And both are worth nothing at all.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 1. David Maraniss, "Bill Clinton: Born to Run...and Run...and Run.
|
|
Washington Post, July 13, 1992, p. A1.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 2. "Clinton a Bircher?", Washington Times, July 22, 1992, p. A6. For a
|
|
more useful discussion of the right and Quigley, see Frank P. Mintz,
|
|
The Liberty Lobby and the American Right: Race, Conspiracy and
|
|
Culture (Westport CT: Greenwood Press, 1985), pp. 145-51.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 3. This conclusion in inescapable after reading Dick Russell, The Man
|
|
Who Knew Too Much (New York: Carroll & Graf, 1992).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 4. Who's Who in America, 1976-1977 (Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1976).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 5. Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our Time
|
|
(New York: Macmillan Company, 1966), p. 950.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 6. Carroll Quigley, The Anglo-American Establishment (New York: Books in
|
|
Focus, 1981), pp. xi, 197.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 7. Carl Oglesby, The Yankee and Cowboy War (New York: Berkley Publishing,
|
|
1977), pp.6-7.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 8. Quigley, Tragedy and Hope, pp. 945-9.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 9. Ibid., pp. 1245-6.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>10. Oglesby, p. 25.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>11. G. William Domhoff, "Who Made American Foreign Policy, 1945-1963?" In
|
|
David Horowitz, ed., Corporations and the Cold War (New York: Monthly
|
|
Review, 1969), p.34.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>12. Erwin Knoll, "Memo from the Editor," The Progressive, March 1992,
|
|
p. 4.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>13. Chip Berlet, Right Woos Left (Political Research Associates, 678
|
|
Massachusetts Avenue, Suite 205, Cambridge MA 02139), July 28, 1992,
|
|
$6.50.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>14. A-albionic Research, P.O. Box 20273, Ferndale MI 48220.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>15. Kate Cornell, "The Covert Tactics and Overt Agenda of the New
|
|
Christian Right," Covert Action Quarterly, No. 43, Winter 1992-93,
|
|
p. 51.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>16. Laurence H. Shoup, "Jimmy Carter and the Trilateralists: Presidential
|
|
Roots"; Laurence H. Shoup and William Minter, "Shaping a New World
|
|
Order: The Council on Foreign Relations' Blueprint for World
|
|
Hegemony, 1939-1945"; and several other relevant articles. In Holly
|
|
Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and Elite
|
|
Planning for World Management (Boston: South End Press, 1980).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>17. Stephen Gill, American Hegemony and the Trilateral Commission (New
|
|
York: Cambridge University Press, 1991).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>18. Association of National Security Alumni, Unclassified, February-March
|
|
1992, pp. 6-9.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>19. James Simon Kunen, The Strawberry Statement: Notes of a College
|
|
Revolutionary (New York: Avon Books, 1970), pp. 130-1.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>20. Steve Weissman, Big Brother and the Holding Company (Palo Alto CA:
|
|
Ramparts Press, 1974), pp. 298-9.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>21. AP in San Francisco Examiner, June 21, 1986.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>22. Martin A. Lee and Bruce Shlain, Acid Dreams: The CIA, LSD, and the
|
|
Sixties Rebellion (New York: Grove Press, 1985).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>23. Kai Bird, The Chairman: John J. McCloy, The Making of the American
|
|
Establishment (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992), pp. 483-4, 727.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>24. Richard Cummings, The Pied Piper: Allard K. Lowenstein and the
|
|
Liberal Dream (New York: Grove Press, 1985).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>25. Douglas Valentine, The Phoenix Program (New York: William Morrow,
|
|
1990), p. 337.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>26. Douglas Jehl, "CIA Nominee Wary of Budget Cuts," New York Times,
|
|
February 3, 1993, p. A18.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>27. Robin W. Winks, Cloak and Gown: Scholars in the Secret War, 1939-1961
|
|
(New York: William Morrow, 1987).
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>This article is from NameBase NewsLine, which is distributed to users of
|
|
NameBase, a microcomputer database with 170000 citations and 78000 names
|
|
of ruling class/conspiracy personnel. This 3-megabyte database is
|
|
available on floppy disks and is used by over 700 journalists and
|
|
researchers around the world. For a brochure write to: </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> info@a-albionic.com
|
|
A-albionic Research, PO Box 20273, Ferndale, MI 48220-0273</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> A-albionic Research is an authorized distributor of NameBase
|
|
$79.00 Postpaid</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>From NameBase NewsLine, No. 3, October-December 1993:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Multiculturalism and the Ruling Elite</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> by Daniel Brandt
|
|
_____</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Opportunity is rapidly vanishing, poorly masked by an institutionalized
|
|
preference for diversity. Leftist academics in ivory towers are hooked on
|
|
designer victimology but fail to notice the real victims -- the entire
|
|
next generation. Meanwhile the rich get richer. Have a nice New World
|
|
Order.
|
|
_____</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Anyone who follows today's academic debates on multiculturalism, and
|
|
by happenstance is also familiar with the power-structure research that
|
|
engaged students in the sixties and early seventies, is struck by that old
|
|
truism: the only thing history teaches us is that no one learns from
|
|
history. By now it's even embarrassing, perhaps because of our soundbite
|
|
culture. Not only must each generation painstakingly relearn, by trial and
|
|
error, everything learned by the previous generation, but it's beginning
|
|
to appear that we have to relearn ourselves that which we knew a scant
|
|
twenty years earlier. The debate over diversity is one example of this.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Researchers in the sixties discovered that the ruling elites of the
|
|
West mastered the techniques of multiculturalism at the onset of the Cold
|
|
War, and employed them time and again to counter the perceived threat from
|
|
communism. The Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF) was funded first by the
|
|
CIA and then, after this was exposed in 1967, by the Ford Foundation. CCF
|
|
created magazines, published books, and conducted conferences throughout
|
|
the world, in an effort to wean intellectuals to democratic liberalism.[1]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The CIA was also busy in Africa. In an article titled "The CIA as an
|
|
Equal Opportunity Employer" that first appeared in 1969 in Ramparts and
|
|
was reprinted in the Black Panther newspaper and elsewhere, members from
|
|
the Africa Research Group presented convincing evidence that "the CIA has
|
|
promoted black cultural nationalism to reinforce neo-colonialism in
|
|
Africa." In their introduction they added that "activists in the black
|
|
colony within the United States can easily see the relevance to their own
|
|
situation; in many cases the same techniques and occasionally the same
|
|
individuals are used to control the political implications of
|
|
Afro-American culture."[2]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> But this is lost history, found today only on dusty library shelves
|
|
or buried in obscure databases. None of it is mentioned in the current
|
|
debate over diversity, not even in one of the most lucid essays, an
|
|
opinion piece by David Rieff that appeared in a recent Harper's.[3] Rieff
|
|
paints a picture of multiculturalism and shows, in broad strokes, how
|
|
multiculturalism serves capitalism. To appreciate the significance of
|
|
multiculturalism we must, as Rieff does, look at the academic arguments
|
|
from someplace in the real world, or at least from off campus. But we must
|
|
also be aware of our own historical legacy: psychological warfare and the
|
|
secret state, the mass media and the culture of spectacle, the role of
|
|
foundations, and above all, the interests and techniques of the elite
|
|
globalists who won the Cold War.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> From the time that this war began in 1947, the Carnegie, Ford, and
|
|
Rockefeller Foundations, in cooperation with the CIA, began funding
|
|
programs at major U.S. universities such as Harvard, MIT, and Columbia.
|
|
They began with an emphasis on Russian studies, but by the mid-1960s these
|
|
three foundations and the CIA had a near-monopoly on all international
|
|
studies in the U.S.[4] This phenomenon, a big-money, top-down affair born
|
|
out of strategic considerations, is the precursor of today's academic
|
|
multiculturalism.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Some defenders of academic diversity pretend that the elitist shoe
|
|
is on the other foot, and note that their critics are funded by certain
|
|
conservative foundations. Sara Diamond tracks the Olin Foundation and
|
|
Smith-Richardson money behind Dinesh D'Souza and the National Association
|
|
of Scholars (NAS), two of the more vocal critics of multiculturalism.[5]
|
|
Diamond points out that the Smith-Richardson Foundation has its own CIA
|
|
connections, even though they pale in significance alongside the Carnegie
|
|
- Ford - Rockefeller nexus. But Diamond's major error is in framing her
|
|
arguments in terms of right and left. This allows the real dynamics to
|
|
escape her field of vision.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The ruling elite that finds diversity useful is an elite operating
|
|
at a level which transcends right and left. While there is an ideological
|
|
right that is battling the left, and while they do enjoy funding from
|
|
other conservatives, these folks are not the problem because they do not
|
|
have substantial power. Nothing shows this better than the fact that this
|
|
ideological right has always been as concerned as the left over the real
|
|
source of power, the elite globalists. This began with the Reece Committee
|
|
on the role of foundations in 1954, continued through the 1960s with the
|
|
John Birch Society's attacks on the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR),
|
|
and later on the Trilateral Commission, and continues today with Pat
|
|
Robertson,[6] Pat Buchanan, Ross Perot, Spotlight, and others. It's not
|
|
a right-left problem, but rather a top-bottom problem.[7]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Secondly, whatever the funding enjoyed by D'Souza and NAS, one
|
|
must recognize that the ideological right has long been motivated by
|
|
a Constitutionally-based, protectionist patriotism that hates big
|
|
government. Too often the patriotic component has devolved into what can
|
|
only be described as racism and imperialism. But in 1993 they are once
|
|
again isolationist, at a time when louder mainstream voices want to assume
|
|
the role of the world's policeman. And today the populist, ideological
|
|
right (as opposed to the corporate, Republican, elitist right found on the
|
|
CFR roster) is also opposed to NAFTA, every bit as firmly as the
|
|
trade-union Democrats. The ideological right, in other words, takes ideas
|
|
seriously -- a characteristic of those who lack power. It's just possible
|
|
that diversity for its own sake deserves to be criticized because it
|
|
replaces the search for truth with a situationist relativism based on
|
|
personal experience. This too is a consideration that defies simplistic
|
|
left-right categories.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> For those who feel that the forces behind the debate are instructive,
|
|
it's worthwhile noting that the Ford Foundation began supporting feminist
|
|
groups and women's studies programs in the early 1970s. Just ten years
|
|
earlier they were busy training Indonesian elites (using Berkeley
|
|
professors as instructors) to take over from Sukarno,[8] which occurred
|
|
soon after a CIA-sponsored coup in 1965 that led to the slaughter of
|
|
hundreds of thousands. Did the folks at Ford Foundation have a bleeding
|
|
change of heart, or are they continuing the same battle on another front?
|
|
It would appear to be the latter. David R. Hunter, considered the
|
|
"godfather of progressive philanthropy" by hip heirs such as George
|
|
Pillsbury,[9] began his new career co-opting the next generation after
|
|
spending four years at the Ford Foundation.[10] The ruling elite knows
|
|
exactly what it's doing, and they are remarkably consistent.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> When Ramparts blew the whistle on the CIA's domestic cultural
|
|
activities in 1967, President Johnson appointed a committee consisting of
|
|
elitists Nicholas Katzenbach (Rhodes scholar and former Ford Foundation
|
|
fellow), OSS old-boy John Gardner (Carnegie Corporation president,
|
|
1955-1965), and CIA director Richard Helms to study the problem. The
|
|
Katzenbach Committee reported that they expected private foundations,
|
|
which had grown from 2200 in 1955 to 18000 in 1967, to take over
|
|
the CIA's funding of international organizations, and recommended a
|
|
"public-private mechanism" to give grants openly. Sixteen years later
|
|
a Democratic Congress adopted this recommendation by establishing the
|
|
National Endowment for Democracy (NED). By now it requires a leap of good
|
|
faith to draw distinctions among complicated overlapping networks of CIA
|
|
funding, NED funding, and funding by foundations such as Carnegie, Ford,
|
|
and Rockefeller. The same people are behind all three, and they seem to
|
|
be getting richer every day. They promote the two-party system because
|
|
it keeps the rest of us off track.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Consider the issue of women in the workplace. Everyone agrees that
|
|
increased opportunities for women are wonderful, but what effect has this
|
|
had on family income? Here's the sobering answer, from Daniel Patrick
|
|
Moynihan, no less:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The average weekly take home pay of a worker who entered the
|
|
workforce in 1989 is $5.68 less today than thirty years ago. This is
|
|
also reflected in hourly wages. Compared to 1959, there has been a
|
|
slight increase, 60 cents an hour. But hourly wages are down from
|
|
their peak in 1973. The 1950s were our boom time. In that one decade
|
|
hourly wages grew by 83 cents. It took the following three decades
|
|
to add a mere 60 cents. Families made do by doubling up in the
|
|
workforce. Between 1955 and 1989 female participation in the work
|
|
force rose from 35.7 percent to 57.4 percent. Even so, family income
|
|
stayed flat. Median family income in 1973 was $32109. Half a
|
|
generation later in 1988 it was, in constant 1988 dollars, $32191, a
|
|
gain of $82. We also started the 1980s as the largest creditor nation
|
|
in history. We are now the largest debtor.... As a debtor nation, we
|
|
must expect that the people we owe money to will be better off than
|
|
we are.[11]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> More American women are working just to keep the family going, while
|
|
more Japanese women can afford to stay home and are choosing to do so. The
|
|
flip side of increased opportunities for American women is that they can
|
|
no longer choose to stay out of the labor force. As David Rieff asks, "If
|
|
multiculturalism is what its proponents claim it is, why has its moment
|
|
seen the richest one percent of Americans grow richer and the
|
|
deunionization of the American workplace? There is something wrong
|
|
with this picture."[12]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Consider, too, the situation of African-Americans. As soon as the
|
|
ghettos erupted in the mid-1960s, Johnson's war on poverty began pouring
|
|
funds on the flames. This was followed with Nixon's "black capitalism,"
|
|
and by the early 1970s affirmative action was institutionalized by edict
|
|
from above in both the public sector and in major private corporations
|
|
that held government contracts. But twenty years later only the
|
|
politicians, pundits, and movie stars pretend that any of this is
|
|
significant; it's the Jesse Jacksons and black personalities on television
|
|
who justify what they've got by emphasizing how far we've come thanks to
|
|
the civil rights struggle. Meanwhile the young in the ghettos, and
|
|
increasingly even on campuses, know that these front-office PR slots were
|
|
filled long ago. It's not a problem of inequality; for the next generation
|
|
there's already a rough equality in anticipated misery. The big problem
|
|
is that opportunities are vanishing altogether, without regard to race,
|
|
gender, or sexual orientation.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> What's left of the left has yet to even acknowledge this, which makes
|
|
the proponents of diversity seem irrelevant and even a bit suspicious.
|
|
It's as if the multiculturalists are protesting too much. Trapped by the
|
|
cognitive dissonance engendered by hard evidence and common sense, their
|
|
words lash out reactively in an effort to justify themselves. What else
|
|
can they do? As David Rieff notes, their relationship to the real world
|
|
is peripheral:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> For all their writings on power, hegemony, and oppression, the campus
|
|
multiculturalists seem indifferent to the question of where they fit
|
|
into the material scheme of things. Perhaps it's tenure, with its way
|
|
of shielding the senior staff from the rigors of someone else's
|
|
bottom-line thinking. Working for an institution in which neither pay
|
|
nor promotion is connected to performance, job security is guaranteed
|
|
(after tenure is attained), and pension arrangements are probably the
|
|
finest in any industry in the country -- no wonder a poststructuralist
|
|
can easily believe that words are deeds. She or he can afford to.[13]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> While self-justification may motivate tenured multiculturalists, the
|
|
same politics also work well for those who are trying to get there. As any
|
|
humanities grad student soon discovers, academia is about specialization,
|
|
not about teaching. You need a gimmick. The choreography of the canon
|
|
limits the varieties of mental gymnastics during any given academic period
|
|
(about ten years), and anyone out of sync is destined for unemployment. By
|
|
insisting on diversity as a challenge to the canon, new slots are forced
|
|
open for tenure-track spin doctors. Pressure from the administration for
|
|
departmental affirmative action dovetails nicely with the fact that only
|
|
victims can preach this new canon; presto, tenure at last! Elizabeth
|
|
Fox-Genovese, who resigned as chair of Emory's women's studies program
|
|
because of complaints she wasn't sufficiently radical, admits as much:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In real terms, however, the battle over multiculturalism is a battle
|
|
over scarce resources and shrinking opportunities. To recognize this
|
|
much does not deny the related battle over national identity, but
|
|
does caution us to take the more extreme pronouncements pro and con
|
|
with a grain of salt.[14]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Multiculturalism can be an ideology that is used to bludgeon one's
|
|
way into tenure, because affirmative action alone is insufficient. The
|
|
essence of affirmative action becomes clear after leaving grad school and
|
|
spending fifteen years working for small companies as well as several
|
|
large corporations. Affirmative action (the PR phrase is "equal
|
|
opportunity" and the accurate phrase is "preferential treatment") is a
|
|
facade, affecting only the low-level and public-interface positions in
|
|
large corporations. After instructing their human resource departments
|
|
along federal guidelines, upper management stays the same, secure in the
|
|
knowledge that the low-level hires will statistically offset the white
|
|
males behind their closed office doors. Feminists call this the "glass
|
|
ceiling."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> For young white males without exceptional advantages, it's closer to
|
|
a glass floor. Math doesn't play language games: if you quota something in
|
|
you also quota something out. Someone must pay for the sins of the elite.
|
|
When the diversity-mongers target white males, at best they are almost
|
|
half correct -- many (not all) older white males have enjoyed advantages.
|
|
But then when they make someone pay, they are all wrong: it's always the
|
|
young and innocent who bear the brunt of their policies. It would make as
|
|
much sense for U.S. institutions to impose sanctions on young women today,
|
|
simply because historically they have enjoyed exemption from the military
|
|
draft.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The fact that affirmative action appeared so rapidly over twenty
|
|
years ago, without opposition from entrenched interests, should have
|
|
provided a clue. It may have been designed to defuse civil unrest, but
|
|
this remedy was forced from above, not from below. In a poll commissioned
|
|
by Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition, which plans to organize minorities
|
|
in support of traditional family values, only 36.6 percent of Hispanics,
|
|
37.6 percent of blacks, and 10 percent of whites agreed with the statement
|
|
that "African-Americans, Hispanics and other minorities should received
|
|
special preference in hiring to make up for past inequalities."[15] The
|
|
agenda of victimology, defined by George Will as "the proliferation of
|
|
groups nursing grievances and demanding entitlements,"[16] is not an
|
|
agenda shared widely off campus.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It appears that those who are most vocal in support of affirmative
|
|
action are those, reasonably enough, who are most dependent on it to
|
|
maintain their advantage. The ruling elite are experts at manipulating
|
|
their own interests; they know how to divide and conquer, which is why
|
|
they continue to rule. As inequality becomes increasingly obvious, those
|
|
who are less equal begin to see society in terms of "us" and "them." The
|
|
dominant culture shades this definition by using the mass media to
|
|
emphasize our differences at every opportunity. Conventional wisdom
|
|
becomes articulated within narrow parameters, which is another way of
|
|
saying that the questions offered for public debate are rigged.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The objective is to define "us" and "them" in ways that do not
|
|
threaten the established order. Today everyone can see that there is more
|
|
Balkanization on campus, and more racism in society, than there was when
|
|
affirmative action began over twenty years ago. And for twenty years now
|
|
one can hardly get through the day without being reminded that race is
|
|
something that matters, from TV sitcoms all the way down to common
|
|
application forms (it would have been unthinkable to ask about one's race
|
|
on an application form in the 1960s). We are not fighting the system
|
|
anymore, we're fighting each other.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Multiculturalism fails to challenge the underlying assumption of all
|
|
affirmative action rationales, namely that opportunities are scarce and
|
|
there's not enough for everyone. There is much evidence to substantiate
|
|
this, particularly as the U.S. tries to remain competitive in a new global
|
|
economy. Perhaps we should take the global perspective seriously and
|
|
hunker down for hard times. It's just poor business sense to build a
|
|
factory in the U.S. if you can build it in Mexico (2000 have moved
|
|
already). In 1983 the cost of an hour's labor time here was $12.26. The
|
|
hourly savings for using foreign labor that year amounted to $10.81 in
|
|
Mexico, $10.09 in Singapore, $6.06 in Japan, and $10.97 in Korea.[17]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Perhaps America's only potential advantage is the technical lead we
|
|
enjoy in certain areas. If we can play this card well, it might partially
|
|
compensate for a declining industrial base. Here, too, affirmative action
|
|
has it all backwards. A huge pool of talent -- the ones, incidentally,
|
|
who have most of the skills needed in a society that wants to emphasize
|
|
technical innovation, merit, and quality -- are underemployed and
|
|
demoralized by affirmative action policies.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Recent literacy tests by the Education Department, the most
|
|
comprehensive in two decades, show that American adults aged 21 to 25
|
|
scored significantly lower than eight years ago, and that about 40 million
|
|
American adults of all ages have difficulty reading a simple sentence. Men
|
|
outscored women in document and quantitative literacy, and white adults
|
|
scored significantly higher than any of the other nine racial and ethnic
|
|
groups surveyed.[18] Over half of all minorities admitted to college under
|
|
affirmative action programs drop out before graduating; 30 percent before
|
|
the end of their freshman year.[19] America does not have the time or
|
|
resources to bring everyone up to the same level, so instead it appears to
|
|
be "dumbing down" our culture by denying opportunities and challenges to
|
|
our most capable young people. This attempt at social leveling is a poor
|
|
second choice.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> None of these dire trends are of any concern to the ruling elites who
|
|
have the power to address them. They are citizens of the world, and no one
|
|
-- now not even the Soviet bloc -- stands in their way. They have no need
|
|
for borders; free trade is what they want and what they will eventually
|
|
get. Many on Wall Street prefer unrestricted immigration, which would
|
|
drive down wages and fold up our few remaining unions. For ruling elites,
|
|
private security provides insulation and "social decay" is just an
|
|
irrelevant phrase. A massive amount of money, some $1 trillion, is traded
|
|
every day on currency exchanges around the world. On those rare occasions
|
|
when money laundering is discovered, the tax man gets too greedy, or
|
|
regulators become pesky, one nation can be played off against another. And
|
|
there is disturbing evidence that even the CIA operates at the level of
|
|
offshore banking and drug-running, presumably after they determine that
|
|
their already-bloated budgets, picked from our pockets, simply don't meet
|
|
their needs.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The owners of corporate America have the resources to move offshore
|
|
or south of the border, while the rest of us are here for the duration. If
|
|
we were all tightening our belts together, there might be some basis for
|
|
programs designed to redistribute opportunities. But the rich are getting
|
|
richer at the same time that they institute policies such as affirmative
|
|
action and NAFTA. It doesn't pass the smell test. The campus left speaks
|
|
of equality, and then forgets about justice by ignoring economic and class
|
|
distinctions. This failure is so fundamental that multiculturalists
|
|
should no longer be considered "leftists." As long as they claim this
|
|
description, some of us -- those who still feel that elites ought to be
|
|
accountable -- are beginning to feel more comfortable as "populists."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Back on campus, the debate rages over the quality of
|
|
politically-correct (PC) courses and the propriety of speech codes
|
|
designed to penalize so-called "hate" speech. Multiculturalism is
|
|
pervasive throughout the humanities, but English and art classes seem
|
|
to attract most of the PC professors. At the University of Maryland,
|
|
Josephine Withers taught "Contemporary Issues in Feminist Art" in 1993.
|
|
Nine of her students, in an effort to propagate the awareness of rape as
|
|
a feminist issue, tacked up hundreds of fliers bearing the heading
|
|
"Notice: These Men Are Potential Rapists." The names underneath were
|
|
chosen arbitrarily from the student directory. Some of those named were
|
|
not amused. This is not "hate speech," because in this case the
|
|
perpetrators -- the nine women -- are victims of a "male-identified"
|
|
culture, and are simply expressing sensitivity to their own
|
|
oppression.[20]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> For an example of actionable hate speech, we go to the University of
|
|
Pennsylvania. The theft of 14000 copies of the student newspaper by black
|
|
students unhappy with a white columnist went unpunished at Penn. But a
|
|
white male freshman was hauled before the school's judicial board after
|
|
yelling "water buffalo" at a group of black sorority sisters creating a
|
|
disturbance under his dormitory window.[21]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Some of the steam has gone out of campus speech codes because of
|
|
recent court decisions that have declared them unconstitutional. But
|
|
political correctness and multiculturalism is still rampant inside some
|
|
classrooms. Scholars from NAS have expressed concern over standards of
|
|
scholarship and rising campus tensions.[22] Thoughtful progressives like
|
|
Barbara Epstein worry that "a politics that is organized around defending
|
|
identities ... forces people's experience into categories that are too
|
|
narrow."[23] Todd Gitlin, a former 1960s student leader who now teaches
|
|
at Berkeley, echoes similar sentiments:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The academic left has degenerated into a loose aggregation of margins
|
|
-- often cannibalistic, romancing the varieties of otherness,
|
|
speaking in tongues. In this new interest-group pluralism, the
|
|
shopping center of identity politics makes a fetish of the virtues
|
|
of the minority, which, in the end, is not only intellectually
|
|
stultifying but also politically suicidal.... Authentic liberals have
|
|
good reason to worry that the elevation of 'difference' to a first
|
|
principle is undermining everyone's capacity to see, or change, the
|
|
world as a whole.[24]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Even Mother Jones magazine is having second thoughts. Karen Lehrman,
|
|
a thirtyish conservative who visited 20 women's studies classes at
|
|
Berkeley, Iowa, Smith, and Dartmouth, delivered a withering critique of
|
|
course content in a recent issue.[25] The same Mother Jones issue also
|
|
tantalizes with a teaser for future articles: "Is Hillary our friend?"
|
|
and "Did someone get to Bill?" At this rate the magazine may eventually
|
|
(sometime after the next election, naturally) figure out who the Clintons
|
|
really represent. Or at least discover that Donna Shalala, FOH (friend of
|
|
Hillary) and chancellor of the University of Wisconsin (before Hillary
|
|
appointed her HHS secretary), is a member of both the Council on Foreign
|
|
Relations and the super-elitist Trilateral Commission (as is Hillary's
|
|
husband). Shalala has called for "a basic transformation of American
|
|
higher education in the name of multiculturalism and diversity."[26]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The critics of course content object to some of the sensitivity
|
|
training programs and techniques that are in vogue on the multicultural
|
|
campus. Many universities now require PC sensitivity exposure of some sort
|
|
for incoming freshmen. The NAS worries that such programs are making the
|
|
situation on campus worse, not better:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 'Sensitivity training' programs designed to cultivate 'correct
|
|
thought' about complicated normative, social, and political issues do
|
|
not teach tolerance but impose orthodoxy. And when these programs
|
|
favor manipulative psychological techniques over honest discussion,
|
|
they also undermine the intellectual purposes of higher education and
|
|
anger those subjected to them. If entire programs of study or
|
|
required courses relentlessly pursue issues of 'race, gender, and
|
|
class' in preference to all other approaches to assessing the human
|
|
condition, one can expect the increasing division of the campus along
|
|
similar lines.[27]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Sensitivity training has its roots in the late 1960s, when it became
|
|
a business management fad much the way that "total quality" has been the
|
|
fad over the past few years. An undergraduate at the time, at least in
|
|
California, could usually find a sensitivity course in the business
|
|
school. These revolved around personal rather than political sensitivity.
|
|
A similar experience might be found in the psychology department, where
|
|
one "humanist" might have held out against the behaviorists. In sociology,
|
|
a race relations class might sponsor trips to the ghetto, where poverty
|
|
program militants would harangue and titillate white sorority sisters by
|
|
using foul language.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Ethical questions should be raised when such techniques are applied
|
|
with a political agenda. In the late 1960s in California, a group with
|
|
liberal Protestant connections calling itself the "Urban Plunge" organized
|
|
sensitivity immersions for white liberals from the suburbs. After several
|
|
days or more of intensive ghetto exposure organized by charismatic Plunge
|
|
staffers, interspersed with group "attack therapy" sessions, many
|
|
participants were duly impressed. I attended two or three "Plunges" in
|
|
1967-1968 in Los Angeles and San Francisco. In early 1970, when I believed
|
|
in pacifism and was appealing a conviction for draft resistance, the Los
|
|
Angeles "Plunge" invited me to speak to the weekend participants. I
|
|
arrived at the scheduled time and discovered that new techniques were
|
|
being used: everyone had been deprived of sleep and food for two days
|
|
in an effort to sensitize them to the Third World. Tempers were
|
|
understandably short. As I walked in, fists were flying between a staffer
|
|
and participant. Disgusted with the whole scene, I immediately walked
|
|
back out.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In 1968, despite all the mistakes and stupidity of that era,
|
|
victimology as self-justification was not yet in vogue. Poverty program
|
|
militants acted more like kings on their own turf than like victims; they
|
|
even seemed to enjoy themselves. Women didn't start complaining until a
|
|
year or two later. Hispanics were only recently recognized on a par with
|
|
blacks, even in the huge barrios of Los Angeles. Draft resisters risked
|
|
prison in an effort to stop the machine, and many who served in Vietnam
|
|
felt an obligation to society and risked everything. In this social stew
|
|
there were many demands for justice but few self-serving claims to
|
|
entitlements. Today, however, Lehrman discovers that victimology is all
|
|
the rage:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Terms like sexism, racism, and homophobia have bloated beyond all
|
|
recognition, and the more politicized the campus, the more frequently
|
|
they're thrown around.... [T]hose with the most oppressed identities
|
|
are the most respected.... The irony is not only that these students
|
|
(who, at the schools I visited at least, were overwhelmingly white
|
|
and upper-middle class) probably have not come into contact with much
|
|
oppression, but that they are the first generation of women who have
|
|
grown up with so many options open to them.[28]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Another sore point for the critics is the moral relativism of today's
|
|
multiculturalists, particularly in the humanities. Lehrman complains that
|
|
their "post-structuralism" implies that "all texts are arbitrary, all
|
|
knowledge is biased, all standards are illegitimate, all morality is
|
|
subjective." When it comes to their own Western-culture feminism, however,
|
|
the relativism is conveniently forgotten.[29] Mortimer J. Adler feels that
|
|
those who assert subjectivism have dug themselves into a philosophical
|
|
hole:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> For such multiculturalists ... what is or is not desirable is,
|
|
therefore, entirely a matter of taste (about which there should be
|
|
no disputing), not a matter of truth that can be disputed in terms of
|
|
empirical evidence and reasons. We are left with a question that
|
|
should be embarrassing to the multiculturalists, though they are not
|
|
likely to feel its pinch. When they proclaim the desirability of the
|
|
multicultural, they dispute about matters that should not be disputed.
|
|
What, then, can possibly be their grounds of preference? Since in
|
|
their terms it cannot appeal to any relevant body of truth, what they
|
|
demand in the name of multiculturalism must arise from a wish for
|
|
power or self-esteem.[30]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Classes on campus that are considered PC tend to be easy credits,
|
|
where students grade each other and spend much of their time discussing
|
|
personal experiences and writing journals. Indeed, once relativism is
|
|
embraced, there's not much to learn that doesn't come from within, so what
|
|
else can be done? But then add social pressure to the classroom, so that
|
|
certain patterns of experience are validated by one's peers while others
|
|
are not. If one's classmates represented a cross-section of society the
|
|
effect might even out, but in this rigged environment they all end up
|
|
saying the same thing. Thus college becomes a narrowing experience rather
|
|
than a broadening experience. Normally this isn't supposed to happen
|
|
until grad school.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> But perhaps learning has always occurred more frequently outside of
|
|
the classroom. In 1968 I noticed from a puff piece in our campus yearbook
|
|
that a university trustee, John McCone, was a former CIA director. In the
|
|
library there was exactly one book to be found that was critical of the
|
|
CIA (The Invisible Government by David Wise and Thomas B. Ross, published
|
|
in 1964) and it included some material on McCone. Then I began looking at
|
|
the other University of Southern California trustees, and discovered some
|
|
of the people behind Governor Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> No one ever assigned me readings on power-structure research; the
|
|
established order never encourages anyone to research or expose its inner
|
|
workings. I became interested on my own, with help from soon-defunct
|
|
magazines like Ramparts. (Years later a former postal worker told me that
|
|
at his post office, the feds collected lists of Ramparts subscribers.)
|
|
When it comes to naming and describing the ruling elite, the facts are
|
|
inconvenient for those who are nursing careers. Students at Columbia
|
|
published impressive research on the trustees at their university in 1968,
|
|
but not a hint of this made it into the major media. It was reported as
|
|
long-haired, pot-smoking draft dodgers who spontaneously decided to take
|
|
over the campus for no reason at all. Film at eleven.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Professors know little about ruling elites because they do know
|
|
how to recognize a career-stopper when they see one. The fact that
|
|
administrators are actively promoting multiculturalism should have set
|
|
off alarm bells for class-conscious leftists who haven't yet deluded
|
|
themselves about the role of the university. This support by the
|
|
administration ought to clearly suggest that multiculturalism is endorsed
|
|
by the ruling elite because they find it useful.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Donna Shalala, now secretary of Health and Human Services, once
|
|
remarked:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The university is institutionally racist. American society is racist
|
|
and sexist. Covert racism is just as bad today as overt racism was
|
|
thirty years ago. In the 1960s we were frustrated about all this. But
|
|
now, we are in a position to do something about it.[31]</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> She and her CFR and Trilateralist friends must laugh about this in
|
|
private, knowing that their policies function like self-fulfilling
|
|
prophecies. They also know that any focus on racism and sexism to the
|
|
exclusion of class analysis amounts to a cover-up of their own agenda. The
|
|
1980s speak for themselves. Ultimately the ruling elites intend nothing
|
|
less than the Balkanization of the American middle class. Comparatively
|
|
speaking, this class is one of world's few remaining reservoirs of
|
|
unprotected, unexploited wealth.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 1. Peter Coleman, The Liberal Conspiracy: The Congress for Cultural
|
|
Freedom and the Struggle for the Mind of Postwar Europe (New York:
|
|
Free Press, 1989), 333 pages.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 2. Dan Schechter, Michael Ansara, and David Kolodney, "The CIA as an
|
|
Equal Opportunity Employer," Ramparts, June 1969, pp. 25-33.
|
|
Reprinted with an introduction in Ellen Ray, William Schaap, Karl
|
|
van Meter, and Louis Wolf, eds., Dirty Work 2: The CIA in Africa
|
|
(Secaucus NJ: Lyle Stuart, 1979), pp. 50-69.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 3. David Rieff, "Multiculturalism's Silent Partner: It's the newly
|
|
globalized consumer economy, stupid." Harper's, August 1993,
|
|
pp. 62-72.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 4. Sigmund Diamond, Compromised Campus: The Collaboration of
|
|
Universities with the Intelligence Community, 1945-1955 (New York:
|
|
Oxford University Press, 1992), 371 pages; David Horowitz, "Sinews of
|
|
Empire," Ramparts, October 1969, pp. 32-42.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 5. Sara Diamond, "The Funding of the NAS." In Patricia Aufderheide, ed.,
|
|
Beyond PC: Toward a Politics of Understanding (Saint Paul MN:
|
|
Graywolf Press, 1992), pp. 89-96. This essay first appeared in
|
|
Z Magazine, February 1991.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 6. Compare Sigmund Diamond's discussion of the Reece Committee in
|
|
Compromised Campus and Pat Robertson's discussion of same in The New
|
|
World Order (Dallas: Word Publishing, 1991).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 7. I'm indebted to Ace Hayes for this sentence.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 8. David Ransom, "Ford Country: Building an Elite for Indonesia." In
|
|
Steve Weissman, ed., The Trojan Horse: A Radical Look at Foreign Aid
|
|
(Palo Alto CA: Ramparts Press, 1975), pp. 93-116.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 9. Kathleen Teltsch, "Adviser Helping the Rich Discover Worthy Causes,"
|
|
New York Times, 14 October 1984, p. 50.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>10. Who's Who in America, 1984-1985 (Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1984).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>11. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, "Deficit by Default" (14th edition of an
|
|
annual series beginning with Fiscal Year 1976), July 31, 1990,
|
|
pp. xiv - xvii.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>12. Rieff, p. 63.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>13. Ibid., p. 66.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>14. Pat Aufderheide, ed., Beyond PC: Toward a Politics of Understanding
|
|
(Saint Paul MN: Graywolf Press, 1992), p. 232.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>15. Ralph Z. Hallow, "Christian Coalition to Court Minorities: Blacks,
|
|
Hispanics Back Key Stands," Washington Times, 10 September 1993,
|
|
p. A5.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>16. George F. Will, "Literary Politics." In Aufderheide, ed., p. 24.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>17. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Handbook of Labor Statistics (Washington:
|
|
1985), p. 435, Table 132.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>18. Carol Innerst, "America's Illiterates Increasing: Survey Disputes
|
|
U.S. Self-Image," Washington Times, 9 September 1993, p. A1, A10.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>19. C. Vann Woodward, "Freedom and the Universities." In Aufderheide,
|
|
ed., p. 32.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>20. Janet Naylor, "'Potential Rapists' Flier Stirs UMd. Flap," Washington
|
|
Times, 7 May 1993, p. A1, A7.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>21. Carol Innerst, "The Hackney Hubbub: PC Debate at Penn Trails
|
|
Clinton's Pick for NEH," Washington Times, 14 June 1993, p. D1, D2.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>22. National Association of Scholars, "The Wrong Way to Reduce Campus
|
|
Tensions." In Aufderheide, ed., pp. 7-10.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>23. Barbara Epstein, "Political Correctness and Identity Politics." In
|
|
Aufderheide, ed., pp. 148-54.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>24. Todd Gitlin, "On the Virtues of a Loose Canon." In Aufderheide, ed.,
|
|
pp. 185-90.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>25. Karen Lehrman, "Off Course," Mother Jones, September-October 1993,
|
|
pp. 45-51, 64, 66, 68.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>26. Shalala is quoted in Dinesh D'Souza, Illiberal Education: The
|
|
Politics of Race and Sex on Campus (New York: Vintage Books, 1992),
|
|
p. 13.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>27. National Association of Scholars, p. 9.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>28. Lehrman, pp. 64, 66, 68.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>29. Ibid., p. 66.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>30. Mortimer J. Adler, "Multiculturalism, Transculturalism, and the Great
|
|
Books." In Aufderheide, ed., pp. 59-64.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>31. Shalala is quoted in D'Souza, p. 16.</p>
|
|
|
|
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