mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-26 07:49:37 -05:00
249 lines
9.6 KiB
XML
249 lines
9.6 KiB
XML
<xml><p></p>
|
|
|
|
<p>TOTALITARIANISM </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>by Chip Berlet</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>(adapted from a forthcoming book)</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Totalitarianism is a zealous form of political
|
|
organization new to this century's mass
|
|
society. The style, strategies,
|
|
tactics, and internal organizing practices of the
|
|
totalitarian group were outlined by
|
|
historian-philosopher Hannah Arendt in her book
|
|
The Origins of Totalitarianism. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>In recent years there has been a revisionist
|
|
interpretation of Arendt's work, linking nazism
|
|
and communism as two sides of the same political
|
|
coin, or claiming that all communist or Marxist
|
|
movements are totalitarian, or that only Nazi and
|
|
communist ideologies can become totalitarian.
|
|
Arendt specifically repudiates this simplistic
|
|
interpretation of her work when she writes
|
|
"...ideologies of the nineteenth century are not
|
|
in themselves totalitarian," and that although
|
|
fascism and communism became "the decisive
|
|
ideologies of the twentieth century they were
|
|
not, in principle, any `more totalitarian' than
|
|
others." According to Arendt, the ideological
|
|
victory of fascism and communism over other
|
|
twentieth century belief structures was "decided
|
|
before the totalitarian movements took hold of
|
|
precisely these ideologies" as a vehicle for
|
|
seizing and holding state power. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Under totalitarianism there is strict control of
|
|
all aspects of the life of the individual in the
|
|
group through the use of coericive measures,
|
|
physical or emotional. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The allure of undeniably efficient and expedient
|
|
totalitarianism is what Stalin succumbed to in
|
|
his rush to create a socialist society. Not
|
|
totalitarianism as defined by cyncial
|
|
philosophical revisionists such as Jeane
|
|
Kirkpatrick and Henry Kissinger, but
|
|
totalitarianism in the original definition as an
|
|
organizational form characterised by centralized
|
|
control by an autocratic leader or hierarchy. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Totalitarian groups are characterised by
|
|
centralized control by an autocratic leader and
|
|
surrounding hierarchy. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Totalitarianism has left its mark on this
|
|
century--and the vast majority of progressives
|
|
around the world have learned an important lesson
|
|
from the disasterous consequences, and have
|
|
rejected the siren call of totalitarianism which
|
|
infected both Hitler and Stalin in their zealous
|
|
rush to power. Some elements of the NAP's
|
|
methodology and style mirror the early stages of
|
|
several European fascist movements in the 1930's. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Totalitarian movements historically have shared a
|
|
number of similarites: </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>*** A methodological link between the
|
|
psychological and the political which forms both
|
|
a theoretical world-view and a justification for
|
|
indoctrinating members in an effort to create a
|
|
new consciousness through a unique and exclusive
|
|
technique understood only by the group's leaders. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>*** Psychologically coercive techniques to
|
|
manipulate members' views and actions. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>*** Attempts to establish hegemonic relationships
|
|
with other similar political groups, and, failing
|
|
that, attempts to undermine the group and
|
|
establish parallel organizations. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>*** Virulent and unprincipled attacks on critics,
|
|
including insults, agent-baiting, threats by
|
|
attorneys and defamation lawsuits. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>*** Re-writing of the group's political and
|
|
organizational history to meet current needs. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>*** A closed and covert hierarchical internal
|
|
structure that is not necessarily congruent with
|
|
the public organizational structure. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>*** Differentiation between internal in-group and
|
|
external out-group reality, use of propoganda,
|
|
and implementation of a "secret-society" style. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>These similarities do not change the fact that
|
|
the totalitarian LaRouchite philosophy is
|
|
apparently neo-fascist while the totalitarian
|
|
Newman and Parente philosophies are apparently
|
|
left-progressive, but it does mean that
|
|
internally, all these groups have an
|
|
authoritarian hierarchy whose existence is
|
|
denied, they rely on psychologically-manipulative
|
|
practices to control core members. These
|
|
political groups match a cult paradigm and are
|
|
far from democratic, despite outward claims and
|
|
appearances. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The propaganda and organizing techniques used by
|
|
the internally-authoritarian and
|
|
psychologically-manipulative cult groups run by
|
|
Lyndon LaRouche, Fred Newman, and Geno Parente
|
|
(and others) mirror totalitarianism. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>It is crucial to note the relationship of
|
|
LaRouche, Parente, and Newman during the early
|
|
1970's in light of their subsequent activities.
|
|
All three white male political leaders viewed
|
|
Marxist revolution through an egocentric prism
|
|
which pre-supposed the centrality of one special
|
|
individual's will in shaping history. All three
|
|
used psychologically manipulative techniques to
|
|
enforce obedience in the institutions they have
|
|
built--institutions which sought political
|
|
hegemony over other groups. All three groups
|
|
share many elements of the a totalitarian
|
|
movement which is correctly defined by its style,
|
|
structure and methods not by its stated or
|
|
apparent ideology. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Arendt's theories were first published in the
|
|
1950's, long before people like LaRouche, Newman
|
|
and Parente arrived on the political scene, yet
|
|
her analysis reads as if it were a study of the
|
|
Executive Committee of the National Caucus of
|
|
Labor Committees (the secret core leadership of
|
|
the LaRouche network), the International Workers
|
|
Party (the secret core leadership of the New
|
|
Alliance Party, the Rainbow Lobby and the
|
|
Institutes for Social Therapy), and the Communist
|
|
Party (Provisional) (the secret core leadership
|
|
of the National Labor Federation and its related
|
|
fronts, the Eastern Service Workers, California
|
|
Homemakers, etc.). </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Arendt discusses how totalitarian movements are
|
|
built around a central fiction of a powerful
|
|
conspiracy, (in the case of the Nazis, a
|
|
conspiracy of Jews which dominates the world,)
|
|
that requires a secretive counter-conspiracy be
|
|
organized. Totalitarian groups organize the
|
|
counter-conspiracy in a hierarchical manner which
|
|
mimics the levels of membership and rituals of
|
|
social and religious secret societies. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>According to Arendt, most people get their first
|
|
glimpse of a totalitarian movement through its
|
|
front organizations: </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>"Sympathisers, who are to all appearances still
|
|
innocuous fellow citizens in a nontotalitarian
|
|
society, can hardly be called single-minded
|
|
fanatics; through them, the movements make their
|
|
lies more generally acceptable, can spread their
|
|
propaganda in milder, more respectable forms,
|
|
until the whole atmosphere is poisoned with
|
|
totalitarian elements which are hardly
|
|
recognizable as such but appear to be normal
|
|
political reactions or opinions." (p. 367) </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>LaRouche, Newman and Parente have spawned dozens
|
|
of front organizations, each designed around some
|
|
issue of mass appeal. For instance, LaRouche
|
|
followers used the front device of Proposition 64
|
|
in California to take a generalized fear over the
|
|
spread of AIDS and steer it towards an acceptance
|
|
of authoritarian methods such as quarantine
|
|
isolation of suspected carriers and job
|
|
discrimination. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Arendt also explains that different
|
|
constituencies react to propaganda messages from
|
|
totalitarian groups in different ways: </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>"The whole hierarchical structure of
|
|
totalitarian movements, from naive
|
|
fellow-travellers to party members, elite
|
|
formations, and the intimate circle around the
|
|
Leader, and the Leader himself, could be
|
|
described in terms of a curiously varying mixture
|
|
of gullibility and cynicism with which each
|
|
member, depending upon his rank and standing in
|
|
the movement, is expected to react to the
|
|
changing lying statements of the leaders and the
|
|
central unchanging ideological fiction of the
|
|
movement." (p. 382) </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Arendt explains that average members of
|
|
totalitarian groups need not believe all the
|
|
statements made for public consumption, but they
|
|
do believe "all the more fervently the standard
|
|
cliches of ideological explanation." (p. 384) If
|
|
a lie is detected by the mass of people or even
|
|
the average member, it is dismissed as having
|
|
been a tactical necessity which only further
|
|
proves the cunning and wisdom of the leader. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>For the elite members, even the basic ideological
|
|
explanations of the group are not necessarily
|
|
believed, but are seen as "fabricated to answer a
|
|
quest for truth" among the lower ranking
|
|
followers. For the elite, facts are immaterial.
|
|
Their loyalty is to the leader who embodies
|
|
truth, and they require neither demonstration nor
|
|
explanation of the leader's assertions: </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>"Their superiority consists in their ability to
|
|
dissolve every statement of fact into a
|
|
declaration of purpose. In distinction to the
|
|
mass membership which, for instance, needs some
|
|
demonstration of the inferiority of the Jewish
|
|
race before it can safely be asked to kill Jews,
|
|
the elite formations understand that the
|
|
statement, all Jews are inferior, means, all Jews
|
|
should be killed." (p. 385) </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>At the top is "the intimate circle around the
|
|
Leader" for whom all statements are "mere devices
|
|
to organize the masses, and they feel no
|
|
compunction about changing them according to the
|
|
needs of circumstances." (p. 385) </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The ultimate goal of a totalitarian movement, of
|
|
course, is to propel the totalitarian leader
|
|
toward total, ruthless, world domination.
|
|
Political issues and positions are transitory
|
|
tactical tools that move the organization and its
|
|
leader toward power. Historically, when power is
|
|
attained, the political allies and issues are
|
|
betrayed. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Leninist Democratic Centralism + totalitarianism = Stalinism </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Hitlerian Ultra-Racialist Fascism + totalitarianism = Nazism
|
|
|
|
</p></xml> |