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The Powell Memo and the Teaching Machines of Right-Wing Extremists

by: Henry A. Giroux, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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(Photo Illustration: Ionia K. / Truthout)

    Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, echoing the feelings of many progressives, recently wrote in The New York Times about how dismayed he was over the success right-wing ideologues have had not only in undercutting Obama's health care bill, but also in mobilizing enormous public support against almost any reform aimed at rolling back the economic, political, and social conditions that have created the economic recession and the legacy of enormous suffering and hardship for millions of Americans over the last 30 years.[1] Krugman is somewhat astonished that after almost three decades the political scene is still under the sway of what he calls the "zombie doctrine of Reaganism," - the notion that any action by government is bad, except when it benefits corporations and the rich. Clearly, for Krugman, zombie Reaganism appears once again to be shaping policies under the Obama regime. And yet, not only did Reaganism with its hatred of the social state, celebration of unbridled self-interest, its endless quest to privatize everything, and support for deregulation of the economic system eventually bring the country to near economic collapse, it also produced enormous suffering for those who never benefited from the excesses of the second Gilded Age, especially workers, the poor, disadvantaged minorities and eventually large segments of the middle class. And yet, zombie market politics is back rejecting the public option in Obama's health plan, fighting efforts to strengthen bank regulations, resisting caps on CEO bonuses, preventing climate-control legislation, and refusing to limit military spending. Unlike other pundits, Krugman does not merely puzzle over how zombie politics can keep turning up on the political scene - a return not unlike the endless corpses who keep coming back to life in George Romero's 1968 classic film, "Night of the Living Dead" (think of Bill Kristol who seems to be wrong about everything but just keeps coming back). For Krugman, a wacky and discredited right-wing politics is far from dead and, in fact, one of the great challenges of the current moment is to try to understand the conditions that allow it to once again shape American politics and culture, given the enormous problems it has produced at all levels of American society, including the current recession.

    Part of the answer to the enduring quality of such a destructive politics can be found in the lethal combination of money, power and education that the right wing has had a stranglehold on since the early 1970's and how it has used its influence to develop an institutional infrastructure and ideological apparatus to produce its own intellectuals, disseminate ideas, and eventually control most of the commanding heights and institutions in which knowledge is produced, circulated and legitimated. This is not simply a story about the rise of mean-spirited buffoons such as Glenn Beck, Bill O'Reilly and Michael Savage. Nor is it simply a story about the loss of language, a growing anti-intellectualism in the larger culture, or the spread of what some have called a new illiteracy endlessly being produced in popular culture. As important as these tendencies are, there is something more at stake here which points to a combination of power, money and education in the service of creating an almost lethal restriction of what can be heard, said, learned and debated in the public sphere. And one starting point for understanding this problem is what has been called the Powell Memo, released on August 23, 1971, and written by Lewis F. Powell, who would later be appointed as a member of the Supreme Court of the United States. Powell sent the memo to the US Chamber of Commerce with the title "Attack on the American Free Enterprise System."

    The memo is important because it reveals the power that conservatives attributed to the political nature of education and the significance this view had in shaping the long-term strategy they put into place in the 1960's and 1970's to win an ideological war against liberal intellectuals, who argued for holding government and corporate power accountable as a precondition for extending and expanding the promise of an inclusive democracy. The current concerted assault on government and any other institutions not dominated by free-market principles represents the high point of a fifty-year strategy that was first put into place by conservative ideologues such as Frank Chodorov, founder of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute; publisher and author William F. Buckley; former Nixon Treasury Secretary William Simon, and Michael Joyce, the former head of both the Olin Foundation and the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. The Powell Memo is important because it is the most succinct statement, if not the founding document, for establishing a theoretical framework and political blueprint for the current assault on any vestige of democratic public life that does not subordinate itself to the logic of the alleged free market.

    Initially, Powell identified the American college campus "as the single most dynamic source" for producing and housing intellectuals "who are unsympathetic to the [free] enterprise system."[2] He was particularly concerned about the lack of conservatives on social sciences faculties and urged his supporters to use an appeal to academic freedom as an opportunity to argue for "political balance" on university campuses. Powell recognized that one crucial strategy in changing the political composition of higher education was to convince university administrators and boards of trustees that the most fundamental problem facing universities was "the imbalance of many faculties."[3] Powell insisted that "the basic concepts of balance, fairness and truth are difficult to resist, if properly presented to boards of trustees, by writing and speaking, and by appeals to alumni associations and groups."[4] But Powell was not merely concerned about what he perceived as the need to enlist higher education as a bastion of conservative, free market ideology. The Powell Memo was designed to develop a broad-based strategy not only to counter dissent, but also to develop a material and ideological infrastructure with the capability to transform the American public consciousness through a conservative pedagogical commitment to reproduce the knowledge, values, ideology and social relations of the corporate state. For Powell, the war against liberalism and a substantive democracy was primarily a pedagogical and political struggle designed both to win the hearts and minds of the general public and to build a power base capable of eliminating those public spaces, spheres and institutions that nourish and sustain what Samuel Huntington would later call (in a 1975 study on the "governability of democracies" by the Trilateral Commission) an "excess of democracy."[5] Central to such efforts was Powell's insistence that conservatives nourish a new generation of scholars who would inhabit the university and function as public intellectuals actively shaping the direction of policy issues. He also advocated the creation of a conservative speakers bureau, staffed by scholars capable of evaluating "textbooks, especially in economics, political science and sociology."[6] In addition, he advocated organizing a corps of conservative public intellectuals who would monitor the dominant media, publish their own scholarly journals, books and pamphlets, and invest in advertising campaigns to enlighten the American people on conservative issues and policies. The Powell Memo, while not the only influence, played an important role in convincing a "cadre of ultraconservative and self-mythologizing millionaires bent on rescuing the country from the hideous grasp of Satanic liberalism"[7] to match their ideological fervor with their pocketbooks by "disbursing the collective sum of roughly $3 billion over a period of thirty years in order to build a network of public intellectuals, think tanks, advocacy groups, foundations, media outlets, and powerful lobbying interests."[8] As Dave Johnson points out, the initial effort was slow but effective:

In 1973, in response to the Powell Memo, Joseph Coors and Christian-right leader Paul Weyrich founded the Heritage Foundation. Coors told Lee Edwards, historian of the Heritage Foundation, that the Powell Memo persuaded him that American business was "ignoring a crisis." In response, Coors decided to help provide the seed funding for the creation of what was to become the Heritage Foundation, giving $250,000. Subsequently, the Olin Foundation, under the direction of its president, former Treasury Secretary William Simon (author of the influential 1979 book "A Time for Truth"), began funding similar organizations in concert with "the Four Sisters" - Richard Mellon Scaife's various foundations, the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, the Olin Foundation and the Smith Richardson Foundation - along with Coors's foundations, foundations associated with the Koch oil family, and a group of large corporations[9].

    The most powerful members of this group were Joseph Coors in Denver, Richard Mellon Scaife in Pittsburgh, John Olin in New York City, David and Charles Koch in Wichita, the Smith Richardson family in North Carolina, and Harry Bradley in Milwaukee - all of whom agreed to finance a number of right-wing think tanks, which over the past thirty years have come to include the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, the Koch Foundation, the Castle Rock Foundation and the Sarah Scaife Foundation. This formidable alliance of far-right-wing foundations deployed their resources in building and strategically linking "an impressive array of almost 500 think tanks, centers, institutes and concerned citizens groups both within and outside of the academy.... A small sampling of these entities includes the Cato Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute, the Manhattan Institute, the Hoover Institution, the Claremont Institute, the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, [the] Middle East Forum, Accuracy in Media, and the National Association of Scholars, as well as [David] Horowitz's Center for the Study of Popular Culture."[10]

    For several decades, right-wing extremists have labored to put into place an ultra-conservative re-education machine - an apparatus for producing and disseminating a public pedagogy in which everything tainted with the stamp of liberal origin and the word "public" would be contested and destroyed. Commenting on the rise of this vast right-wing propaganda machine organized to promote the ideal that democracy needs less critical thought and more citizens whose only role is to consume, well-known author Lewis Lapham writes:

The quickening construction of Santa's workshops outside the walls of government and the academy resulted in the increased production of pamphlets, histories, monographs and background briefings intended to bring about the ruin of the liberal idea in all its institutionalized forms - the demonization of the liberal press, the disparagement of liberal sentiment, the destruction of liberal education - and by the time Ronald Reagan arrived in triumph at the White House in 1980 the assembly lines were operating at full capacity.[11]

    Any attempt to understand and engage the current right-wing assault on all vestiges of the social contract, the social state and democracy itself will have to begin with challenging this massive infrastructure, which functions as one of the most powerful teaching machines we have seen in the United States, a teaching machine that produces a culture that is increasingly poisonous and detrimental not just to liberalism, but to the formative culture that makes an aspiring democracy possible. This presence of this ideological infrastructure extending from the media to other sites of popular education suggests the need for a new kind of debate, one that is not limited to isolated issues such as health care, but is more broad-based and fundamental, a debate about how power, inequality and money constrict the educational, economic and political conditions that make democracy possible. The screaming harpies and mindless public relations "intellectuals" that dominate the media today are not the problem; it is the conditions that give rise to the institutions that put them in place, finance them and drown out other voices. What must be clear is that this threat to creating a critically informed citizenry is not merely a crisis of communication and language, but about the ways in which money and power create the educational conditions that make a mockery out of debate while hijacking any vestige of democracy.

    Notes:

    [1] Paul Krugman, "All the President's Zombies," The New York Times (August 24, 2009), p. A17.

    [2] Lewis F. Powell Jr., "The Powell Memo," ReclaimDemocracy.org (August 23, 1971), available online at http://reclaimdemocracy.org/corporate_accountability/powell_memo_lewis.html.

    [3] Ibid.

    [4] Ibid.

    [5] See Michael P. Crozier, Samuel. J. Huntington and J. Watanuki, "The Crisis of Democracy: Report on the Governability of Democracies to the Trilateral Commission" (New York: New York University Press, 1975).

    [6] Powell, "The Powell Memo."

    [7] Lewis H. Lapham, "Tentacles of Rage - The Republican Propaganda Mill, a Brief History," Harper's Magazine (September 2004), p. 32.

    [8] Dave Johnson, "Who's Behind the Attack on Liberal Professors?" History News Network, (February 10, 2005), available online at http://hnn.us/articles/printfriendly/1244.html.

    [9] Ibid.

    [10] Alan Jones, "Connecting the Dots," Inside Higher Ed (June 16, 2006), available online at http://insidehighered.com/views/2006/06/16/jones.

    [11] Lapham, "Tentacles of Rage," p. 38.

  

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Henry A. Giroux holds the Global TV Network chair in the Department of English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University in Canada. Some of the ideas in this article draw from "Youth in a Suspect Society: Democracy or Disposability" (Palgrave/McMillan 2009). Henry A. Giroux's forthcoming books, "Hearts of Darkness: Torturing Children in the War on Terror" and "Politics After Hope: Barack Obama and the Crisis of Youth, Race, and Democracy," (Paradigm Publishers) will be released in January 2010. His homepage is www.henryagiroux.com.

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By funneling ever larger

By funneling ever larger groups of people into technical and business programs which provide no cultural or philosophical perspective on social and economic conduct, conservatives have largely gutted any understanding of human life outside of getting and spending. Many college graduates know little about Government, history, social ethics, logic or literature. They know how to pay someone to write a business plan, calculate a PE ratio and count their pennies. This ignorance guts the capacity for civic and political life to operate and impoverishes our families and communities. They don't know the difference between love and sex either. I'm a divorce lawyer and I know that for sure. Most have no clue what they should actually do with their children, besides manage them to become replicants of themselves. They don't even know why they do that.

Great article and exactly

Great article and exactly correct, we must do something to educate people as to the dangers of zombie capitalism.

and why we are in so much

and why we are in so much trouble. however, i believe the antecedents got back to the 30's (at least) when conservatives resisted and lost the battle to end the gilded age and have a more egalitarian society under FDR's New Deal. arguably too, though i don't know enough of the history, it may well lead back to the monarchists of the revolutionary era, who lost that battle. perhaps, there was always enough power in this country which only wanted an aristocracy of the few, to control the many as serfs, slaves and robots to fund their usurious lifestyle. Certainly, nothing reagan ever did contradicts that......

What funds the so called

What funds the so called "liberal" media? Certainly not big business, or the alleged free hand of the open market. Who are the corporate sponsors for left wing, or even moderately liberal news casters or talk radio hosts / hostesses? The little man / woman, and they are without the deep pockets of the "corporate citizen". The day of democracy in America is over. We live in a corporatocracy. Can we rebuild the democratic ideals here in our nation? The ideals we are attempting to foist onto other nations, in a pitiful attempt to hide the corporate hand hidden in the glove of democracy? Obama came in with great ideas, riding in on the first valid election in three electoral cycles of presidency - and he hasn't found a way to open the door in the halls of power the way the little man /woman opened the doors of power to him through a fairly decided election. Will the conservatives who stole the two elections putting GW into the White House allow that to happen again? Does Obama have the chutzpah to lead us back to the democratic ideals that brought him into office?

Clearly the right has

Clearly the right has organized a massive and concerted campaign to influence fundamental public philosophies and perceptions while liberals squabble among themselves. Labor unions for example, have failed to reach out to non-members to forge alliances involving issues that affecting workers as a whole. Consequently a majority of Americans see unions as irrelevant or evil. The ongoing and ever-increasing concentration of economic power places the vast majority of citizens in an increasing position of dependence on those who control the flow of money. Witness how we responded AIG vs. GM or how schools and parks and other public functions increasingly must look for donations and corporate partnerships in order to operate. Dependence transforms us into β€œyes men” and β€œyes women”, afraid to even consider positions to which those with real power would object.

Is there any hint of karmic

Is there any hint of karmic irony in the fact that progressives lamented Powell's departure from the Supreme Court? Or do ALL ideologues fail by the very nature of their construct?

Yes frightening, but this is

Yes frightening, but this is not new. The question is how to combat the march towards fascism. One of the problems is that we progressives are very thoughtful, we believe that accurate, rational, and well presented reasoning can save the day. The right plays on emotions on the bitterness that's out there. The heritage foundation just provides intellectual fluff -- to help the politicians take cover. The real stuff is the divide and conquer game -- its the Blacks, the NY liberals, its the politicians in Washington, who taking it away from you. They take the bitterness and turn it toward the anyone and everyone but the real culprits -- those who are amassing wealth while the majority withers economically. The line is, "things are bad, but don't let them take what little you have away." I think we need to redirect the focus where it belongs; the era of too-big-to-fail is the time to do it.

William Hamilton raises a

William Hamilton raises a very important issue. Liberal arts college programs were very popular in the 1960’s but have dramatically fallen out of favor. The Bush administration’s education department specifically disparaged such programs, but the aim of liberal arts is to provide sufficient context and foundation for increased clarity in any circumstances, including within one’s own specialty. When the British were cracking the Nazi codes, they housed multiple teams of workers in a separate building so that that they possessed only fragments and would comprehend as little about what they were doing as possible. Why? Because loose lips sink ships. While a reasonable approach to very special circumstances, such segregation is pernicious when trying to comprehend the problems of a society. Liberal arts helps illuminate the forest as well as the trees.

If we want to regain OUR

If we want to regain OUR democracy, we must be ready for the long-haul and not be discouraged by temporary set-backs. Conservatives worry that Obama is brainwashing American children because they have been so successful brainwashing the American people to vote against their own interests and for the interests of the ruling elites and corporations. We are but disposable pawns in their grand chess game.

Great article. For an

Great article. For an excellent and more extended treatment of the role of conservative businessmen in shaping public policy -- going as far back as the New Deal -- I highly recommend Kim Phillips-Fein's new book titled "Invisible Hands: The Making of the Conservative Movement from the New Deal to Reagan." It's quite revealing and meticulously documented.

We have books, essays, etc.

We have books, essays, etc. and one radio network on the liberal side, but what good is it doing when it seems to get so little notice? As an example, a book by James K. Galbraith called "The Predator State". The subtitle is, "How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why Liberals Should Too". The thesis is that conservatives continue to use the concept to steal and consolidate the corpratocracy but they know the "free market" is a myth. It is a devastating critique; why do I never see references to this book? Liberals need to take lessons from some of the things Giroux has pointed out here, and begin to restore the Enlightenment philosophies that founded America. Do you know that the American History curriculum in public schools now begins in the post-Civil War era? Students are not even exposed to the events and principles on which we were founded. The strategies from this memo have been so frighteningly successful . . .

And here I thought that I

And here I thought that I was really all by myself out here for the last 25 years! It started with textbook content with me. I was comparing the really old ones with the new ones in history and got concerned. But I fear that is now too late to change the direction of this country that loves "Kate and Jon Plus Eight" and all its trash and disregard for children. We treasure nothing of moral worth and follow blindly the pied piper of good times. Glad I have no grandchildren.

POWER, CONTROL. Is it about

POWER, CONTROL. Is it about anything else? As far as I've been able to ascertain, Conservatism, Liberalism, Communism, Fascism, "Religionism," jingoistic Patriotism, Consumerism, etc. are ALL used to brainwash and CONTROL, just as in Nazi Germany and Commie Russia. Once you are brainwashed and under control; what does the content or ideology matter?

Where is it in the US

Where is it in the US Constitution that as a citizen, I have a responsibility to share my hard earned income with everyone who does not work or does not work as hard as I do? Liberalism and socialism lead to mediocrity at its best!

Burrowed-in beneficiaries at

Burrowed-in beneficiaries at the EPA and in city-contractor ranks use tax money to privatize water by making debt service a growing portion of water bills. At this level of detail, diverse groups can come together. Focus on urgent local issues could ally social liberals and even illiberals to lessen influence of burrowed-in consolidators whose work causes poverty in both groups. Agreement across labels could be had for specific issues. Careful testing of water close to use could be monitored by high-school and college science departments to make sure water quality is equal in neighborhoods. Data could be gathered by city workers and analyzed in many diverse places. Trees and rodents can make cracks that might affect water. A gravity-fed system is efficient. Instead, many places are being pressured for inefficient centrally pumped systems. The science is against consolidators, some of whom were burrowed in before Clinton. Finding common cause is an urgent need. Complex labeling is interesting, but it may divide people where there might be lessening of tensions by finding urgent grass-root issues where public media are afraid to shine light.

People are abandoning

People are abandoning traditional media outlets in droves. Don't want to drink from poisoned wells. That's encouraging.

Obama's no liberal. See

Obama's no liberal. See www.blackagendareport.com for many pertinent critical essays (from the Left), of Obama's policies. His "flip flop" on being for singlepayer in 2004 or so to "if we were starting from scratch..." and "off the table" is one of his switches that I attribute more to the being in with the Establishment than bowing to the Rwing. We'll see.

Come to the Mid West where

Come to the Mid West where Progressives can be fired for responding to insults by Conservative co-workers. This is reality: I and several other Progressives were told that our responses were deemed discourteous and inappropriate. We were told that we would be fired if there were any further complaints. Meanwhile, no actions were taken against Conservatives even though their remarks continued to be demeaning and sometimes racist. Progressives were told that they should take care of the issue: sure, take care of it and get fired for "bad mouthing" Conservatives.

It seems obvious that there

It seems obvious that there is a single controlling voice in the conservative world. On any given issue the multitude of ideas and opinions that arises from the liberal thinkers and commentators are almost as contentious as the response from the conservative side. The conservative agenda, by contrast, has a one-sided "bullet point" opinion that is put forward by the cable shows, the conservative newspapers, the conservative pundits and the conservative politicians. It is like they are reading from the same script. If this assertion seems overly broad, consider the multitude of "next day retractions" following any deviation from the line by conservative politicians or pundits. This is a very effective method of directing opinion, because a lie told frequently will tend to be believed. And unlike the "peer reviewed" opinions of the liberal left, there is no lie from its members that is challenged by the conservative right. Lies are simply the means to an end, and in the conservative opinion the ends justify the means...any means. The underlying premise is blatantly anti-democratic, reflecting an autocratic, paternalistic approach. A benign paternalistic attitude, although demeaning, may in some instances be an effective means of management/governance. But the agenda being foisted on us by the conservative right is far from benign. It is ruthlessly predatory and would quickly subvert the constitution and the democratic process to install its own manipulable figure, be he/she called monarch, dictator, leader or president. Ironically if one considers the actions of the right as carefully as their words it is obvious that the ideal form of government to their minds is one of an elite oligarchy with a strong central authority to control the population at large. One might recall that this model has been tried before, and quite recently.

I think the roots of

I think the roots of American conservatism go back further than Giroux says. Conservatives generally owned the newspapers from the midnineteenth century on and later the radio and television stations. Religion was always enlisted on the side of factory owners, the wealthy being assured that their success had everything to do with their own greatness and nothing to do with their backgrounds, inheritances, or sheer good luck. The rise and fall of Soviet Russia pointed to the rightness of the capitalistic system for many decades beginning in 1920. "Free Enterprise" was the system that defeated totalitarian Russia. That defeat had nothing to do with the contradictions within the Russian economic system but was due to the rightness of our practice. The strategy of the right never changes: Establish a boogey man (anarchists, socialists, immigrants), work up the population by means of the media (thoroughly controlled by the right), wrap up in the flag and hold up a cross, and buy off politicians whenever possible. It's worked for the past two hundred years and it works now.

What allows it to happen is

What allows it to happen is the numbness of Americans to any understanding of social change. it's almost too late. The current generation is completely wired into this mindless mentality brought forth by the puppeteers who control the media, the arts, everything we read or view, or look at. We, the boomers, allowed this to happen, allowing Bill Clinton and his ilk to further in the steps of Ronald Reagan, who's name used to be a joke but is now like a mantra to the Pharaohs who have led us into the desert to milk their camels. Even the sports broadcasters are mimicking one another, being told what catch phrases to use, etc. Yeah, its over, unless Obama can wake up and smell the coffee.

We need to support and

We need to support and encourage citizen groups like the League of Women Voters to press for education and involvement in government. Schools must teach teens the skills of critical thinking necessary for effective citizenship. How many high schools actually study the Constitution? How many instruct students on the system of law and justice in America? We can do better and we must do better.

Hey, right wing activist,

Hey, right wing activist, it's called the Common Good, when everyone works together according to their ability to make the country a great place to live. If you don't want your tax dollars spent on anything that doesn't benefit you directly, then be ideologically consistent and stop using public roads, schools, libraries, water, trash pickup, recycling, and the like. But no, you have the typical dogmatic mentality of "I've got mine, the hell with you." Yes, sir, the USA is number one at denying health care, slaughtering people, and wasteful consumption. Nothing to be proud of.

A number of factors can be

A number of factors can be sited: vast funding of conservative think tanks compared to meager for liberal/progressive (about $200M to $50M), media consolidation, abandoning the fairness doctrine. Let's not forget that the U.S. Congress has essentially legalized the bribing of itself with campaign contributions, and corporate interests do the bribing. For all that Clinton and Obama got elected, Congress reformed in '06. It's not a truly progressive movement, but that trend has kept the Supreme Court from going completely conservative (or radical right.) Therefore, the American people are pretty good. They do wake up after and take action. It just takes them awhile. Other trends for democracy are the internet. It's perhaps not sufficiently appreciated what the 'open source' software movement has meant. Google grew out of it using free Linux software for their servers, and is now poised to render the collapse of Microsoft--for good or ill, who knows, but it happens. Social networking and blogging are important. The current ongoing Iranian resistance is enabled by Twitter. And, of course, the liberal trend among college professors is important. On the whole, the corrupting influence of big money corporatism and its increasing gains of political power has no doubt steadily increased with some setbacks since Reagan. The greatest countermanding force to this is something unalterable by any corporate initiative. That is the wonderful phenomenon of humanity itself and its ever renewing youthfulness. In this country and around the world it's always a bright factor. The complete subversion of youth is very rare I would say in history and only exists with the utter lack of any enlightenment. For this to occur today, would require the complete descent of Western Civilization into another dark age. Absent that, the spirit of youth will prevail, I dare say. Even in the darkest places, some light will penetrate.

Attention "Right Wing

Attention "Right Wing Activist": Your parody of a noise-machine astroturfer, posting a response which is irrelevant to the essay and has no connection to reality in any event, is spot-on. Unless it's not a parody, in which case I weep for my species and my only hope is that we wipe ourselves out; perhaps next time, our niche will be filled by an intelligent life-form.

A recapitulation of facts

A recapitulation of facts evident in the credits of most PBS "public affairs" programming since the 60s. (The foundations named above invariably show up in the credits of PBS programming).

Inalienable rights will not

Inalienable rights will not be controlled, least of all by thefts like Enron, Iraq, Fox News or the Pentagon. The sheer cost of control and the threat of exposure inevitably drive the thieves into a fearful, ignorant corner, where they may be eradicated by a woman who refuses to sit in the back of the bus. The failure to specify the culprits in Dallas, at the WTC, the "bailouts", the long series of suspicious suicides and small plane crashes, is the most important misdirection facing those who would regain the common good. Sooner or later everyone will know every concealed secret and the "man behind the curtain" must be exposed for the petty thief and mass murderer who is so anxious to hide. Destruction is the only alternative to common good and destruction has been employed by these thieves along with theft and dispossession, to profit from death , conflict, crisis and catastrophe. But a dysfunctional system kills the golden goose. We, the People, create wealth by our labor. Thieves do not, cannot, create anything but misery. The President's efforts at bipartisanship have exposed the right-wing contribution to society-- theft, servitude, misdirection, and, like their plan for healthcare reform, death.

Right Wing Activist: Oh,

Right Wing Activist: Oh, read a book, will you? So, you want to return to before Chief Justice Marshall? Before Lincoln? Even before Andrew Jackson? Where exactly do you know when this country was as selfish and self-centered as you seem to believe it was somehow set up to be? Go live in Korea or Miranmar, places with your philosophy in toto.

NOW I KNOW WHY I'M SO

NOW I KNOW WHY I'M SO CONCERNED......... "Right Wing Activist" - "Where is it in the US Constitution that as a citizen, I have a responsibility to share my hard earned income with everyone who does not work or does not work as hard as I do?" IT DOESN'T NEED TO BE IN THE CONSTITUTION ABOUT SHARING... IT SHOULD BE IN YOUR HEART. WHEN WE HAVE UNCARING GREEDY PEOPLE LIKE THE ABOVE, ONES THAT WISH TO COVET SO MUCH THAT CAUSE THOUSANDS TO DIE EVERY DAY OF STARVATION, SOME SORT OF HUMAN MORAL CONSCIENCE MUST HAVE DIED WITH THIS TYPE OF PERSON... MAYBE WE NEED A BETTER TYPE OF EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM FOR THE BETTERMENT OF OUR SOCIETY.

Success? Enabled by the

Success? Enabled by the press. Enabled by the Insurance Companies themselves, acknowledged by Mr Krugman! Bought and paid for! I thought we were watching a made for TV movie this summer entitled "Town Hall". Indeed, let's focus on their "success" and use that as an excuse to increase the wealth of the few Paul. Go 'Murica!

There is a fundamental

There is a fundamental dishonesty in all these organizations: They start their analyses with the answer they seek, and work literally backwards to invent justifications for their preconceived ideas. Unfortunately, no system, in any disciplinary area, works that way, including business, economics, and finance. In systems analysis, an area of applied mathematics and engineering, one learns about feedback, in which a change goes around a loop to affect the beginning. If the change works contrary to the system, a condition known mathematically as "negative feedback," the system is stabilized, and thereby controllable. If the change reinforces the system, i.e. pushes it further in the original direction, the condition mathematically is "positive feedback" and leads to an instability known as "runaway." There are no ifs, ands, buts, or other arguments with nature. Unfortunately, this is how the "free" market works. It ran away in the early thirties, but because the business wonks won't learn anything they don't believe ab initio, we have another runaway as of a year or so ago. Unfortunately, they still get their bonuses and the general population pays a terrible price.

Hillary Clinton was

Hillary Clinton was right!!!!! It is indeed vast.

Maybe we need liberal

Maybe we need liberal millionaires to buy 100,000 copies of the latest liberal book so it will go to the top of bestseller lists and be publicized and more widely read. Works for the filth that Coulter, et al put out.

The most pointed fallacy is

The most pointed fallacy is that Powell's concern over "anti free-market" sentiment has given rise to a corporate culture in which lobbyists successfully strip away the last vestiges of a competitive free market, leaving the corrupt monopolies that are breaking our backs. There is some powerful insight here, but it is buried within language that the average American sadly cannot penetrate.

Attacks on leftist and

Attacks on leftist and pro-capitalist propaganda go way back. It is true that the rich were very upset by the anti-establishment attitudes of the 1960s and the willingness of so many to reject the bread, circuses and lies and even to take to the streets in protest. However, don't forget the McCarthy era preceded the 1960s. And, while it may be possible to think of McCarthyism as simply a political attack on a few, the era as whole was a large-scale, multi-dimensional attack on the majority, focusing largely on anti-labor measures from Taft-Hartley to religious anti-labor bigotry, including the destruction of the "labor press" and the promoting of "the free market." Read "Selling Free Enterprise" by Fones-Wolf. And, of course, World War I and the 1920s was another, earlier era of full frontal attack on leftists--i.e., the majority of us who must work to obtain a half-decent living.

A so accurate article. It

A so accurate article. It describes what today is happening in Canada, the USA and most countries of the world. There are exceptions Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Venezuela, Cuba just to name a few. For the CONSERVATIVE ELITE to spend $30 BILLION of their own hard earned --"STOLEN"-- dollars over the years to beat the citizenry down is a sure sign they are --- RUNNING SCARED. As Martin Luther King said "WE SHALL OVERCOME"!

to 17:55 β€” Right Wing

to 17:55 β€” Right Wing Activist You are sharing, not with the poor but with the rent collecting upper class who have bamboozled us all with their brilliant propaganda over the last several decades. I am just rereading Orwell's 1984 - clearly the play book of our dear "benefactors" such as the Olin, Coors and Mellon families.

As an undergraduate student

As an undergraduate student at the University of California I dared to speak out against the slanderous 'Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week' that David Horowitz threw onto over 100 campuses nation-wide and through a series of back-and-forth articles in my newspaper at the Univ. Horowitz claimed that my mere critique of his rather outrageous right-wing propaganda was akin to 'fascism.' Talk about psychological projection! I had the last word, but it is a chilling experience to realize that these right-wing extremists are serious about transmuting the university from dissent and critical pedagogy to corporatism and a facile, docile student body. Horowitz's horrible book about the '101 most dangerous professors' is basically a black-list and he uses it to crush progressive ideas via the introduction into state legislatures of 'the academic bill of rights' which is a smoke-screen for introducing corporate proto-fascist state ideology into the classroom under the doctrine of 'fairness.' After having personal experience with the Horowitzs' of the right, we on the left must wake up and organize because these people are serious and ruthless. http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/irvinequality/

Look at the NY Times Sunday

Look at the NY Times Sunday magazine for 9/27. The lead article shows that public school teachers are afraid to take a stand on serious moral issues because they will be accused of doing something "political." The attempt to turn teachers into moral eunuchs is not confined to the colleges.

Here's the truly interesting

Here's the truly interesting thing about the plutocracy of corporations and the doctrine of selfishness: their context is so limited in time and scope that they cannot see how they engineer their own destruction. I refer not to a social destruction but to the actual physical destruction of life through industrial pollution, wholesale destruction of ecosystems, and global warming. Our feet are set upon a path from which the planet may not be able to recover. The corporations are engaged in a battle only to protect their own profits by doing more of the same planetary exploitation that has already set in motion massive species extinction. We are a species subject to extinction. Our limitations of wisdom, but not of cleverness, seem to make it impossible for us to control our own appetites and act for the survival of the whole organism -- planet Earth -- without which we perish. Such talk is liberal, of course, which recognizes the supremacy of the good of the whole over the (perceived) good of the individual. It is the oldest debate in philosophy.

Jade Queen, if I understand

Jade Queen, if I understand you, I am interested in your idea that focusing on issues that effect the health and well-being of the community can bring people of diverse backgrounds and political affiliations together with a common cause. Involving schools in community concerns is a great idea for many reasons. I'd love to see this happen. There is a school-based program called Globe that collects data regarding weather and water conditions around the world. Perhaps one could branch out from existing programs like that to start. School-based urban garden projects are another example that have the potential to involve everyone.

Thorsten Veblen warned us at

Thorsten Veblen warned us at he beginning of the 20th century in his Higher Learning in America . Kenneth Rexroth's 1950's poem Empire iterated, "In ten years/ The art of communication/ Will be more limited./The wheel, the lever, the incline,/ May survive, and perhaps,/ The alphabet." During ronnie regan's tenure social security prepared a pamphlet for seniors who threatened to commit suicide with their benefits taken away. That we should take this very seriously is illustrated by the success of past efforts. Plato's Crito set out a plan to destroy any female voice; cristianity tabooed nonchristian holy words, e.g. cunt- Cunti, the mother of the white race, becoming the river Kennet in England flowing from the pagan made hill Silbury. And today, how many know of the Disney Chair of history at Cambridge? A hostile take-over of information dissemination. Renfrew's a nutter but hey, the Aryan Model peaked in academia in the 1920's, found popular expression in the Holocaust, was succeeded by The Extreme Aryan Model, and now we're so far past Hitler's crazy version of history that we are inculcated with "ultra-Europeanism". (The only popular media mention I've heard of this violent delusion was in a TV cartoon show: maniacal child and cynical [these folks could intend the pun] dog). The Dark Ages are staring back at us, replete with Inquisition, crusades, forbidding even the parish priest to read the bible. To arms! We must not abdicate like European intellectuals before the last war. As the Chinese saying goes, If we do not change the direction we are going, we are likely to wind up where we are headed. Ouch.

An excellent article and I

An excellent article and I appreciate the thoughts above. It's good to have this exchange, but what do we do? Wringing our hands or resummarizing the article hardly addresses the problem. What is the problem? This piece points to a sublety I had not grasped before. On the other end of education, the public end (now charterized) is the high stakes testing that pumps universities with the afore mentioned zombies. Where do we start? The conservatives are in charge. It doesn't matter how they got there. How do we define the problem? Then how do we design a grass roots movement to meet it?

Enlightening article, to

Enlightening article, to simplify when any group, collective or organization kill the "organs of democracy". The end of that democracy is not far behind. This scenario has play it self out before the world over; thru history. Americas greatest enemy is/are Americans.

Absolutely chilling. To

Absolutely chilling. To think Chief Justice William Rehnquist -- a conservative movement ally of Powell-- delivered the White House and the country to the privateer war-mongers Bush and Cheney in one of the worst decisions ever handed down by the Supreme Court, that subsequently lead to among other things : privateer Chief Justice Roberts, privateer Associate Justice Samuel Alito, privateer corruption extremist Paul Bremer as Proconsel of Iraq, privatized military/oil service contractor Dick Cheney Duck Hunting with privateer Associate Justice Antony Scallia, Christmas parties at Donald Rumsfeld's plantation( an acolyte of the Godfather of privateers Milton Friedman) with guests Tim Russert (NBC/GE -which manufactures nuclear weapons), Andrea Mitchell (NBC/GE - which manufactures nuclear weapons), Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan( who is a disciple of Ayan Rand, who is considered a privateer literary midget.)... and the Supreme Court will soon decide if corporations can censor free-speech by privatizing it.

emerald green sea

emerald green sea frightening isn't it? not to mention the univ. of chicago one of the fusion centers and in this since the 40s 50s and spawning some of these nuts. to right wing person socialism does what? if your heroes are the ceo's who steal everything thats not nailed down and have a hammer for which is who take all but add nothing to our society whats your point. i used to work for one of the worlds largest corps. and while they paid their workers tuition reimbursement ethics courses were not covered. neither were any courses that might make these folks think about anything but profits and stealing from the employees. this is the net result. and at the end of the day some of these people got hip but were stuck in the box that was designed for them. they were paid far more then they could earn in the rest of the sector and their skill sets didn't line up for other sectors either. this is another result of the domination discussed in paul's article. karma visits us all in some way shape or form.

I can't wait until I get out

I can't wait until I get out of college. I am going to start a news orginization where all I do is rant, spew sensational bullcrap and pick my fights with the weakest debaters. The news orginization will be more sensational than fox news or this site. Everyone will view it so that they can have their daily helping of misinformation spoon-fed to them and I will become a billionaire. I'll hire people that are a hundred times more radical than Glenn Beck or Kieth Olberman, it will be great... Does anyone actually remember when News orginizations actually reported the news?

"Americans don't have

"Americans don't have thoughts, they have emotional reactions...which advertisers have learned to exploit. -- Gore Vidal, recent interview And not just advertisers.

Actually, those 'numb' wired

Actually, those 'numb' wired youngsters are collapsing the right wing machine as we speak. All you have to do is look.

"Conservative" or

"Conservative" or "right-wing activist" or whatever you want to call it. The cabal is composed of people whose motto is "I've got mine. I want to keep it all, and to hell with everyone else." Ayn Rand and the greed-is-good crowd are clever at dressing up in respectable garb and mouthing pious, patriotism while they systematically go about lying and stealing and vandalizing all that was once best in America. Go to your Crystal Cathedrals! Preach that riches are God's rewards to the righteous! Carry on about respecting life while you starve, imprison and mistreat the LIFE of people you consider beneath you!

In the Age of American

In the Age of American Unreason, Susan Jacoby gives an excellent historical and regional background of American thought, education, and anti-intellectual attitudes, as well as present forces opposing thoughtful discourse and reason. I was terribly impressed because it helped me place myself in in terms of regional, religious, educational, and familial background. Unfortunately, I was left with enormous envy towards those with families who encouraged reading, thinking, schools which supported intellectual growth, and historical antecedants which blazed a path towards reason. Neverbefore was I so awarfe of what I had missed.

Krugman mistakenly looks for

Krugman mistakenly looks for logic when the right has used well proven methods to shape public opinion. Advertising in the 1920's doubled the number of people smoking cigarettes and even today we have teenagers starting to smoke despite knowing the health hazards. We are a nation of true believers and racial and religious bigots and were this not the case the Fox News commentators and Rush Limbaugh and John McCain and Ms. Palin would not be successfully exerting influence over the masses. Lenin and Hitler both use antisemitism successfully in their day and it is no different with the Republican Party and the neo-cons or neo-Nazi of our day. Wolves cannot thrive without sheep.

here's what the democrats

here's what the democrats need: A WORD One word. Whenever the Republican'ts launch a tirade that blocks political movement due to strictly idological reflexive action, the democrats and the public need JUST ONE WORD to label it and dismiss it. JUST ONE. Democrats need to decide on this word and begin applying it, (ahem), liberally.

Africa is to America, what

Africa is to America, what all of America is to Wall Street & Capitol Hill. Banking & Political Sector along with the US Dollar have been weaponized, making them a military target and have ceased to be civilian entities any longer. I foresee civil disobedience along with the strife for imperial dominance. I correctly predicted the greatest depression back in 1999, which was postponed by fraudulent electronic-wealth until 2007 and am sure of this new predicament in waiting. Ayn Rand is obsolete, this is about weaponization of the dollar and western currencies maintaining economic colonialism and apartheid infrastructure. The potential difference is so wide and high that we'll witness some serious arcing. These are the seeds of war, foretold for germination.