10.16.2010

Millions

Photographer: Alfred T. Palmer [1941 or '42]
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

Caption: "The four freedoms. The people gather on a million street corners to discuss a million problems. Only in a democracy are they free to discuss the affairs of their nation and the affairs of the world. Only in a democracy would we find this free mingling of a dozen different races. The scene is Columbus Circle, New York."

Romantically overblown—and less than convincing about acceptance of "different races." The concept of "race" had even more weight then, with the caption writer detecting "a dozen" in this scene. That idea of "race" being determined by religion and country of ancestry isn't so common now, with skin color being the main preoccupation. Here, the camera here has caught a single, visibly uncomfortable, black person.

Hyperbole aside, it does seem that—way back then—our citizenry had some real eagerness to "discuss the affairs of their nation."

Today: millions of Americans are watching millions of TVs tuned to Fox, where Glenn Beck does the thinking for them.

This week, millions of workers took to the streets of Paris and other French cities, to protest Sarkozy's plan for raising the retirement age. Which is intended to subsidize the wealthy by imposing austerity on the masses.

Workers were soon joined by students—who understand that keeping older people in the workplace squeezes out younger workers.

From the Irish Times article in that link, above—

Sign:
GRANDPA, GRANDMA
AT WORK
YOUTH
UNEMPLOYED
NO THANKS

Photo: Reuters

While here, billionaires propagandize our youth, to turn them against Social Security and pit them against retirees.

A safety net for all being something the owners will never allow.

And after 30 years of capital flight and killing off of worker rights—our labor force closes ranks... behind the bosses.

This was a particularly bad week at the office, with my already unreasonable workload being made very much worse. The result of the latest power grab by someone my boss allows to call these shots.

It makes me livid. Especially when I don't have the freedom of speech to say a thing. There's just the single remaining right of America's peon class: the freedom to try finding another job.

It all brings up a lot of anger I can barely articulate. As the mindless demands increase, any pretense of civil society is dropped. Divide and conquer has always worked in this country, and the tougher the times, the more it's true.

I'm lucky to have a cubicle to myself; there's only the occasional unpleasantness of having to make trips to the area where my "co-workers" and the managers are. Where most of my encounters have a bullying undertone.

One person in the bunch is OK, another is semi-OK. From the majority I would expect to hear, "The guy didn't pay the $75, so he deserved to lose his house."

10.10.2010

October Read: "Invisible" In Plain View

WPA/Federal Art Project
Collection:  Art Institute of Chicago
Image: Posters for the People
Invisible Hands: the Making of the Conservative Movement from the New Deal to Reagan
Kim Phillips-Fein, 2009
In just over 250 pages, Phillips-Fein covers a story of nearly fifty years: the business underwriting of multifarious institutions for manipulating public opinion. The book opens with the DuPont family's 1934 creation of the Liberty League, and moves through decades of building the machinery that would bring about Reagan's election.

The author does not examine the parallel political chicanery—and outright subversion—that these interests also underwrote. To look at that during the book's period, we would begin with the Liberty League's effort to overthrow FDR and end with the October Surprise of 1980, engineered by the Reagan campaign.

Nevertheless, Phillips-Fein presents a very readable overview of key players behind many tentacles of right-wing propaganda operations that began with the New Deal and have continued growing ever since. Although the author might not describe this as a propaganda operation; expanded from a dissertation, her writing is in a more measured, objective tone than I can summon.

The motive behind it all comes from a simple thought, quoted on page 6:
As one foreign visitor to the United States remarked in 1928, "America is an employer's paradise."
By the time of the New Deal, the public image of big business had dropped to a low point, and union victories were making inroads into that paradise. The story then became one of how "malefactors of great wealth" worked to regain their paradise lost.

Creation of think tanks and academic institutions began after the war. Feeling that business had failed at "telling its own story," market ideology activists devised new projects. With business held in such low public esteem, better for it to fund such programs behind the scenes, leaving public communication to specialists.

Phillips-Fein quotes material from the first "free market" think tank, the Foundation for Economic Education, created to "uphold... voluntary society, private property, limited government concept," and serve as "an intellectual lighthouse that persons may be attracted from the sea of socialistic error."

To counter the contemporary triumph of Keynesian economics, dissident economists Freidrich von Hayek and Ludwig von Mises were brought to the U.S. Phillips-Fein notes—
...the commonplace faiths of social Darwinism and... neoclassical economics alike were shattered by the economic disaster of the Great Depression. The language of economic competition and the moral superiority of the rich suddenly sounded hollow and false. The notion that the market was fair or just seemed nearly masochistic... It was associated with power and privilege, the trappings of social hierarchy. Their great innovation was to create a defense of the free market using the language of freedom and revolutionary change. The free market, not the political realm, enabled human beings to realize their liberty. It could transcend social class; it would liberate everyone.
The work Hayek and Mises were subsidized to write became the economics bible for succeeding generations of the right.

Institutions and public relations projects expanded over the decades. By 1950 a congressional investigation revealed the major corporations backing the American Enterprise Association, which provided congressman with reports "free of a left-wing bias." The AEA's guise of being an academic institution, and its "self-serving façade of objectivity" were criticized, but its tax-exempt status was left alone. Only the name changed, a dozen years later; the think tank would become increasingly influential as the American Enterprise Institute.

The right's first national political campaign came with the 1968 Goldwater presidential bid.

Behind the scenes, invisible hands built lasting networks. By the Seventies the right was apoplectic about social ferment, especially anti-war protest and the new level of consumer activism inspired by Ralph Nader's work. Citation of 1973 data from Oklahoma Christian University is startling today—
... undergraduates gave business the lowest rankings for ethical standards (Ralph Nader was at the top); half of all seniors identified themselves as leftists, compared to one third of all freshmen.
In 1971 corporate attorney Lewis Powell wrote a memorandum for the Chamber of Commerce, suggesting how it should organize business to beat back "The Attack on the Free Enterprise System," by building right-wing institutions to counter liberal academia and media. And advising business to emulate the civil rights movement, Powell wrote, "The judiciary may be the most powerful instrument for social, economic and political change."

Two months later, Nixon nominated Powell to the Supreme Court. The memo had not yet come to public attention, and Powell was confirmed easily.

At the end of the Seventies the movement's reach would expand tremendously, as the Christian right began throwing its untaxed wealth and media resources into political activism.

Much of the book is a rogue's gallery of players, with history of each one's particular piece of the action. A number of their names were new to me, but the ideology is quite familiar.

That includes the kind of Birchite frothing once considered beyond the pale; today, pushed into the mainstream. Robert Welch, founder of the Birch Society in 1958, happens to have been a "theorist of salesmanship" who applied his theories to selling conservatism. Phillips-Fein quotes his exhortation to "Join your local PTA at the beginning of the school year, and go to work and take it over!"—a tactic fundamentalists have long since made familiar.

I found Phillips-Fein's chapter on General Electric the most informative. In the late Forties the company pioneered both anti-union tactics and methods of employee control that later would be emulated widely.

GE's head of labor relations, Lemuel Boulware, promoted employee "education" through political indoctrination. After the war, supervisors who had worked their way up from the shop floor were often skeptical of management intentions; soon they would be replaced by men just out of college and easily molded.

Phillips-Fein:
... Boulwarism represented a new way of thinking about workers, as a kind of captive political audience... who could be organized to oppose the New Deal and liberalism through lectures, reading groups, and political messages. Boulware never believed that the working class was inherently liberal or Democratic. The union organized workers in one way; his program sought to organize them in another. Instead of being radicalized on the job, they could be instructed in the ways of the marketplace.
And GE hired an employee whose public career otherwise would have been over. Reagan's transition from B actor to politician may not have been a sure thing, but it also was no accident.

In addition to his TV hosting duties, he was sent around the country to give company spirit pep talks to employee groups. Afraid of flying, Reagan took trains with company executives. Still nominally a Democrat, Reagan talked politics and economics with these peers. Phillips-Fein suggests he was probably exposed to readings the company promoted, including right-wing books, National Review, and "the company's own ceaseless barrage of publications." Reagan would later call his time at GE "a postgraduate course in political science," and an "apprenticeship" for public life.

A school "so obsessed with conservatism that it was not unlike the John Birch Society," as publicist Edward Langley described the company.

As Reagan's "education" proceeded and
... his speeches grew more deeply political, Reagan's appeal as a speaker increased as well. Soon he was talking not only to workers at the plants but to audiences of local businessmen at the Rotary Club and Chamber of Commerce, at gatherings of the Elks Club, and meetings of [trade] groups... Soviet communism, he told them, was not the only threat... social legislation—the Veterans Administration, Social Security, federal education spending, farm subsidies were examples he liked to mention—would bring totalitarianism before anyone even noticed...
In what would become the pattern for his later career, Reagan apparently combined ideology he was reading with "facts" he dreamed up; the result was his speaking on such topics as Karl Marx having invented the progressive income tax.

"Reagan," writes Phillips-Fein, "like Boulware, was able to turn the idea of government as the servant and spokesman of the worker on its head, creating a universe in which the corporation was the liberator and the state the real oppressor of the working class."

Ultimately, Reagan's election would bring his backers the rollback of the New Deal they had so longed for. Ever since 1980 we know how much worse everything has become, economically and socially. And how the organizations and PR assaults keep growing—rich people being able to pay for whatever they want.

The same old tactics remain with us. Just as the DuPont brothers' Liberty Lobby pretended to be a mass movement of ordinary people, so are the Koch brothers main funders of the "tea party."

There are good reasons for grassroots anger, but it's for the benefit of billionaires that this "party" manipulates the incoherent, largely racist, rage of "Medicare-motor-scooter conservatives."

For decades right-wing think tanks and corporate front groups have supplied the media with its "experts." As the right only becomes more blatant in its rewrites of history, its message is being amplified, with no serious mass audience news media to counter it. Birch Society material and the Mises/Hayek critique of Nazis—solely as "socialists"—are the origins of Jonah Goldberg's, "liberals are fascists" screed, as Chip Berlet makes clear.

Goldberg's ugly sausage of a book is an obvious attempt at popularizing Hayek. The latter may have had the backing of some rich guys, but he never had access to 24/7 propaganda broadcast outlets. Goldberg's meme has had the potential to reach a vast, gullible audience never imagined by Hayek.

It's three-quarters of a century since the Great Depression; before long, no living person will remember it first-hand. Professor Glen Beck is on hand to educate millions, and the Supreme Court's corporate shills have done what they were sent there to do: made it a breeze for the Chamber of Commerce to buy elections.

Phillips-Fein quotes a Chamber president in 1943: "Only the willfully blind can fail to see that the old-style capitalism of a primitive, free-shooting period is gone forever." After thirty years of gains—and with elections finally available for direct sale—the Chamber has advanced from that quaint moderation to such heady stuff as running international pay-for-play shakedowns.

Uindentifiable interests can even test market purchasing a congressional seat by throwing big bucks into a mostly rural district with a small population. Here, the unknown funder is out to bring down a progressive Dem, to install a loon of epic "abolish public schools (including colleges)/nuclear waste is good for you" proportions.

Owning lawmakers who will see that things are taken care of—deregulate and privatize everything, dump nuclear waste anywhere, deny climate change—increases the profit opportunities for whatever becomes the billionaires' agenda du jour.

The motives have been the same since 1934. With the upper 1-2% owning more than ever before—and inequality growing daily—the right's money has been very well invested.

10.01.2010

9.27.2010

"I like talking about people who don’t have any power..."

... Stephen Colbert, breaking character.










Migrant workers' truck, 1940
Photographer: Jack Delano
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive

Full Colbert quote:
I like talking about people who don't have any power, and it seems like one of the least powerful people in the United States are migrant workers who come in and do our work, but don’t have any rights as a result. And yet, we still ask them to come here, and at the same time, ask them to leave. And that's an an interesting contradiction to me, and um... You know, "whatsoever you did for the least of my brothers," and these seemed like the least of my brothers, right now. A lot of people are "least brothers" right now, with the economy so hard, and I don't want to take anyone's hardship away from them or diminish it or anything like that. But migrant workers suffer, and have no rights.
Part of the Q & A following Colbert's testimony before Congress; taken from here.

The testimony itself had some digressions into Colbertian schtick. But his remarks on the actual issue were a well-deserved poke at Congress.

A performance panned by a media appalled at talk of those without power. And most of all, appalled by Colbert's speaking to Congress in that tone.

Just as they've been appalled in the past, when Colbert spoke truth to the even more powerful...

9.19.2010

Freak Show

Rutland Fair, Vermont. 1941
Photographer: Jack Delano
Library of Congress, FSA/OWI Archive
He tried before, and it worked: national attention!

Earlier, the would-be cult leader was thrown out of Germany.

Until then, he found quite a few followers in Cologne: 800 to 1000 joined his church. Der Spiegel quotes a Protestant official who worked on the case:
Former church members are still undergoing therapy as a result of "spiritual abuse," Schäfer said. According to Schäfer, Jones urged church members to beat their children with a rod and also taught "a distinctive demonology" and conducted brainwashing.

"Terry Jones appears to have a delusional personality..."
He's down to about 50 followers, yet commands weeks of world attention.

Everybody is talking about him.

Including some very important people.

Very important people also give his phone a jingle.

More of his past comes to light: high school classmates!

Now he is just as famous as his old classmate! And, even after he's canceled his media event, Muslims continue to be more provoked by him than by anything the fat drug addict has said.

Success, at last!

... Oops!

Thank you, 24-hour news-cycle pursuit of "controversy," for giving him credibility as a "religious leader" in the first place!

Though he finally drew enough attention to himself to anger even Republicans; maybe there's some hope this scam will catch up with him...

9.11.2010

September Read: Consuming Security

Chicago : Illinois WPA Art Project
Artist: V. Donaghue
Library of Congress
Neither Dead nor Red: Civil Defense and American Political Development During the Early Cold War
Andrew D. Grossman, 2001

For nine very long years—ever since Bush hit his Trifecta on September 11, 2001—an annoying little detail has lurked behind our Homelandification process.

The "duck and cover" civil defense campaigns of the Cold War appear so laughable now—yet how hard was it to get so much of the public to fall for an indeterminate War on Terra?

Yes, there was scoffing at color codes and the idea of biological weapon-proofing the house with duct tape. But year after year, there's that hunk of the population still willing to say, "I don't mind taking off my shoes/having my phone conversations listened to/my computer monitored/my [fill in the blank] – as long as it keeps me safe..."

Given the sudden post-2001 state of indeterminate "war," there is much that is familiar in Andrew Grossman's study of how the early Cold War national security state and its civil defense structure evolved.

Grossman points to the the effects on executive power and jurisprudence, which would change private life:
• An indeterminate war led to increased presidential power, and laws made in an emergency planning atmosphere centralized power in the executive branch.

• Laws on "national security" conflated internal and external policy, and viewed the threat as coming not only from the Soviet Union but also from ideas. A goal of idea "containment" led the government to disregard differences between external and domestic security policy in handling perceived internal threats. Legislation was created around discretionary powers that aided growth of a national security bureaucracy.
Post-war Truman administration policy was to contain the Soviet Union through nuclear deterrence and defense alliances in Europe, strategies that had to be sold through "domestic education"—which would then pave the way for social control.

Creating public acceptance of a prospective war fought with atomic weapons was part of this effort, and it would have to counteract the public's reasonable fear of the bomb. After the bombings in Japan and US tests in the South Pacific later in the 1940s, the public had been exposed to realistic reporting about the effects of radiation on the human body. Important scientists had also engaged in public activism against further development and future use of nuclear weapons.

After some earlier bureaucratic incarnations, the Federal Civil Defense Administration (FCDA) created in 1950 became the agency responsible for disaster planning and for promoting those plans to the public—
The FCDA predicated its national policy planning on a general theory of emotion management or "crisis mastery." ... the American public had to be prepared to fight and win a war... As sociologist Guy Oakes notes: "If the attempt to preserve peace by threatening nuclear war produced the very consequences it was intended to divert, the American people would be required to pay the price ultimately exacted by the strategy. If the price of freedom proved to be nuclear war, would Americans be willing to pay?" It was the FCDA's mission under Truman to make sure the answer to this question was yes.
The agency functioned as a mediating institution, writes Grossman. It linked the government with major universities plus new think tanks and foundations. It also connected the Executive branch with the major media of print, broadcast, and film outlets, serving in this way as an extension of the wartime management of information. Under the pretense of independence from the government, material would be produced by the Ad Council, Hollywood, and broadcast outlets.
In sum,
The FCDA was part of a new postwar institutional and administrative architecture for long-term Cold War mobilization that was based on a public policy of national civic education regarding all facets of the Cold War... the Truman administration's policy of Cold War national security civic education is an example of how a liberal democratic state can expand its power into all spheres of both public and private life and use that power to garner the necessary domestic support for its larger grand strategy.
Through the FCDA "the state literally entered the home with its preparedness programs." While maintaining centralized control, the FCDA used local agents to present programs in primary and secondary schools; through business connections it established workplace education; it recruited citizens for local warden programs.

With passage of the National Security Act of 1947, institutions were created for continuous civilian, economic, and military mobilization. The public was to be mobilized through state institutions "applying a sophisticated version of 'communication science' developed during World War II..."

The public became "the consumer of the home front mobilization process." Not coincidentally, the target was the growing middle-class that was relocating to suburbs. These were the consumers who were driving the post-war economy, and they were the focus of magazines and broadcast media during the Fifties and early Sixties (as Thomas Hine writes about so well in Populuxe).

In one bit of marketing to these consumers—
The FCDA's Alert America campaign in 1952 was an important first step in selling an illusion of protection for the suburban middle classes. Alert America caravans announced their arrival in various towns across the country as the "show that could save your life." The surrealistic "doomsday carnival" assuaged the nuclear fear of visitors by promising to teach everyone "how Civil Defense protects you and your family from modern terror weapons." Visitors to the exhibition were shown FCDA-produced and Ad Council-packaged movies, three-dimensional exhibits, and dioramas of the American family surviving and winning World War III. The gist of the message to the attending public was the importance of individualism, patriotism, voluntarism, and the "happy life" in the bomb shelter where families played popular board games and rehearsed FCDA "Home Protection Exercises" while urban America was reduced to radiating ruins. Most important to FCDA training, Alert America promoted the concept of the "responsible Cold War citizen": Each individual shoulders collective responsibility for civil defense and does so as a nuclear-age citizen-soldier. The public's internalization of this message was fundamental in the garrisoning process and in shaping ... politically correct behavior in a democratic state that was engaged in continuous levels of mobilization for the possibility of war.
If "preparedness" meant building and stocking individual family bomb shelters, then families living in suburbs had the required space; policy makers essentially wrote off large cities and their residents. And when Florida politician Milliard Caldwell was named the first head of the FCDA, his "states' rights" stance allowed communities in Jim Crow states to manage their own local shelter planning, without central oversight. NAACP-organized protest against Caldwell's appointment was unsuccessful.

At this point in 2010, as the right-wing rachets up the hate with its "Ground Zero Triumphalist Terror Training Mosque" shriek-out, Grossman's citations from a 1950 Gallup Poll resonate:

What do you think should be done about members of the Communist party in the United States in the event we get into a war with Russia?

Action/Percentage in support of action

Put them in internment camps/22
Imprison them/18
Send them out of the United States, exile them/15
Send them to Russia/13
Shoot them, hang them/13
Watch them, make them register/4
Nothing, everyone is entitled to freedom of thought/1
Miscellaneous/9
No opinion/10

Gore Vidal in Screening History (1992), on two wartime periods and their aftermaths—
In 1917 Wilson had predicted that those oligarchs of capital whom he had tried to name in his first administration would now, under the excuse of wartime emergency, re-establish a more perfect boardroom state, which they did, and it lasted until the Depression.

After 1941 the same thing happened again. The famous dollar-a-year businessmen came to town to put the war on a businesss-like footing. Dr. New Deal, as FDR airily explained, had given way to Dr. Win-the-War. So we won the war and lost the deal. The businessmen found that they had so enjoyed running the United States that they set up that National Security State in which we still live...
Grossman treats the intentions of Cold War planning seriously—the planners were faced with the prospect of a World War III fought with nuclear weapons—and he rejects the "Atomic Café" approach of poking fun at the period's civil defense campaigns. Yet Grossman acknowledges that planners at the highest levels
... distrusted the very social order they were defending... These "wise men" of American foreign policy believed that postwar consumerism, combined with the kind of democracy that was practiced in the United States, would not generate the kind of citizen necessary to combat what was known as "Red Fascism."
Grossman ends by looking at the "superterrorism" scenarios under discussion in government quarters from the 1990s. Just as in the early Cold War period
... current antiterrorist lawmaking, civil defense preparedness, and disaster planning have two ominous interrelated features that bode ill for the protection of individual civil liberties and pave the way for a regarrisoning of civil society: enormous discretionary power and cumbersome judicial overlap among agencies... [the policy history shows that] crisis lawmaking ... will result in highly discretionary and ambiguously written legislation.
Grossman reproduces this chart, presumably from the late 1990s—

Grossman notes the threats to civil liberties inherent in this "hydra-headed bureaucratic planning structure." The chart's many tentacles do not, of course, include the "Homeland Security" tentacles added since late 2001.

The bureaucratic machinery begun post-WWII still expands endlessly. And in a sense, it is a joke played endlessly on the American public.

Grossman's book was published in July 2001. His closing thought could serve as an unforeseen punch line to the joke: that we should heed the lessons of Cold War mobilization, "for the stakes are always high in a liberal democracy that cherishes individual civil liberties."

"L-word democracy*"...?
* efforts to make this one a dirty word—"We have a Republic [add "an" after the "c"], not a democracy [= democRat party] haven't completely gotten through yet...
And there's that punch line: "civil"-what? Among just two recent stories:

For travelers who decline having their naked body images displayed by airport scanners profiting Michael Chertoff, TSA will conduct "searches" by retaliatory groping.

And this, in the ever-growing category of, "Fourth Amendment? We don't need no steenking Fourth Amendment."

Again, in Vidal's words (Screening History): our "military-industrial-political combine that has locked us all up inside a National Security State and thrown away the key."


Penna Art WPA, [between 1941 and 1943]
Artist: Charlotte Angus
Library of Congress

Propaganda Remix Project