Showing posts with label Heritage Foundation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heritage Foundation. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Sandwichman — Deep Structures of the Cultural Marxism Myth

Jeet Heer has posted a timely and excellent essay at New Republic titled "Trump's Racism and the Cultural Marxism Myth." In his essay, Heer recounts much of the background to the Higgins memo that I have documented here, here and here. Heer credits William S. Lind as the major popularizer of the myth, as have I in my blog posts. What I'm posting here extends the analysis and reveals significant background about personnel and timelines to the story....
There is a subtext to this that one needs to know and many American that were born later than 1980 and most non-Americans probably don't know much about it. A key element of the history is the influence of Herbert Marcuse on the countercultural revolution of the Sixties and Seventies that carried dynamcially by the antiwar movement against the Vietnam War. The participants in this were characterized by the opposition as "dirty fucking hippies" (acronym DFHs).

I am only too well aware this since I was one of the DFHs. After I left active duty in the US Naval Reserve as an officer serving in the Western Pacific (yes, I am therefore a Vietnam vet) I joined the antiwar movement based on what I had learned from my experience, as did John Kerry and other Vietnam vets. We were the butt of a great deal of vituperation from people that did not serve and sought deferments to keep from serving.

The DFHs became the enemy along with totalitarian communism. The right characterized the DFHs as at least pink if not red, indicating an overlap between antiwar Americans and the commies. Jane Fonda was the poster child. We adopted the term "DFH" proudly for ourselves to counter the insult, but actually called ourselves "freaks" since our task as countercultural revolutionaries was to freak out the squares. We dressed and acted accordingly, as in "sex, drugs and rock and roll." Good times.

When the US lost the Vietnam War by withdrawing rather ignomineously, the narrative on the right was that the antiwar left had "stabbed America in the back." This was reminiscent of Hitler and the Nazis scapegoating "the Jews" for stabbing Germany in the back, purported resulting Germany's loss in WWI. I don't want to overemphasize this parallel, but it is there, and it should not be ignored, especially in light of present politics.

Since that time, US politics has been characterized by the attempt of the more extreme right to characterize the left as a whole in this light in its narrative. This is the origin of the term "cultural Marxism."
At last we have a doctrine, a vanguard organization, and a timeline. But most importantly, courtesy of the Larouche cult, we now have a suitably unitary devil-function. The "basic Nazi trick," as Kenneth Burke labeled "the 'curative' unification by a fictitious devil-function, gradually made convincing by the sloganizing repetitiousness of standard advertising technique." Helpfully, in a 1988 address to the Heritage Foundation,William F. Campbell explained why conservatives need such a devil-function: 
But as first and second generation conservatives have always known, and had to live with as an unpleasant skeleton in the family closet, there is sharp tension, if not contradiction, between the traditionalist and the libertarian wings of the conservative movement. They have been held together primarily because of their common enemies, modern egalitarianism and totalitarian collectivism, which they both abhor.
In 1988, when Campbell made those remarks, the Soviet Union still existed and could serve the primary role of common enemy, symbolizing the alien totalitarian destiny of domestic egalitarianism. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, a new enemy had to be conjured. The Higgins memo is testament to the contortions that must be endured to conjure that devil.
BTW, I was sitting that the center of the left at the time as a grad student in philosophy. I can say from experience that Herbert Marcuse's influence on the antiwar movement and DFHs was marginal. So most of the cultural Marxism myth based on his supposed influence is simply nonsense. This may have been true, to some degree at least, in the youth movements in France and Germany at the time. But Americans are not much interested in philosophy and tend to be action-oriented. They don't need elaborate justifications for action.

EconoSpeak
Deep Structures of the Cultural Marxism Myth
Sandwichman

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Zaid Jilani — Trump the Outsider Outsources His Budget to Insider Think Tank

President Trump’s budget proposal, released on Thursday, echoes none of the populist, anti-establishment themes of candidate Trump’s campaign for higher office. Instead, it calls for a large increase in defense spending while reducing spending for a variety of popular domestic programs.
That’s not surprising considering where those ideas came from. Rather than bringing in new ideas from outside of the Beltway, many of its proposals are lifted straight from the recommendations of an elite ultra-conservative D.C. think tank: the Heritage Foundation.
Founded in 1973, Heritage has served as a sort of a watering hole for the Republican establishment, providing policy papers and staffers for GOP members of Congress and presidential administrations. Its 2015 annual report listed almost $100 million in revenues — drawn from conservative mega-donors and corporations — which it uses to facilitate the spread of its ideas across Washington, D.C.
And those ideas have found a home in the Trump administration, which leaned heavily on Heritage advice during the transition period. Many of the White House proposal’s ideas are identical to a budget blueprint Heritage drew up last year.
Here are just a few examples….
Jim DeMint is smiling.

The Intercept
Trump the Outsider Outsources His Budget to Insider Think Tank
Zaid Jilani

See also

New York Magazine
Remember Jim DeMint? His Fingerprints Are All Over the Trump Transition
Ed Kilgore

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Jonathan Swan — Bannon set up Trump-Gabbard meeting

Donald Trump’s chief strategist Steve Bannon contacted Tulsi Gabbard to arrange Monday’s meeting with the president-elect, according to a source close to Bannon.
“He reached out to her, not vice versa,” the source told The Hill on Monday.Many in the media raised their eyebrows when the news broke that Trump was meeting at Trump Tower Monday morning with Hawaii’s Democratic congresswoman.
But for those who know Bannon best, there was no surprise at all.
Bannon, who hates the entrenched two-party system, has long admired Gabbard. She’s an Iraq War veteran with an independent streak. Bannon, a navy veteran, was drawn to her when she began publicly excoriating the Obama administration over its plan to defeat ISIS.
“He loves Tulsi Gabbard. Loves her,” a second source familiar with Bannon’s thinking told The Hill. “Wants to work with her on everything.”...
The Hill
Bannon set up Trump-Gabbard meeting
Jonathan Swan

Before anyone gets all excited about "bipartisanship"….
As we go into the long Thanksgiving weekend, shell-shocked by events surrounding the presidential transition getting more surreal by the day, it’s almost comforting to read a piece of news that sounds even slightly like familiar political activity. It’s the kind of thing that would have made for screaming headlines and much gnashing of teeth on the left just a few months ago, but now seems almost quaintly normal. I’m speaking of the news that Donald Trump’s transition team has outsourced much of the lower level government staffing to the ultra-conservative Heritage Foundation, which is in the hands of right wing extremist Jim DeMint. According to Politico:
Heritage is “absolutely the fulcrum, and essential to staffing the administration with people who reflect Trump’s commitments across the board,” said Marjorie Dannenfelser, head of Susan B. Anthony List, a prominent group that opposes abortion rights. “I can say it’s been a source of great confidence during the election to know that principled people were planning for a Trump administration.”
Salon
Is Donald Trump’s transition being outsourced to the Heritage Foundation? That’s not good news
Heather Digby Parton

Friday, April 29, 2016

Another warped, Goldman fuck

All you have to do is listen to the comments coming out of the mouths of Goldman Sachs’ executives to understand in an instant that this company is nothing more than a racket run by highly educated and privileged morons. Some of them even depraved.

In a recent speech given by a former Goldman Sachs’ president, some guy named John Thornton, he says that he is very concerned about “our economic future” and predicts that it will “end in tears.” 

Did Thornton have any particularly insightful reason why he would say that, like, who knows, maybe because the insane neocons in Washington (whom I am sure he supports) might decide to start World War 3 with Russia?

No.

Instead Thornton says that the United States and other countries will see their economic situations end in tears because those benevolent central banks, you know...the ones who have collectively worked so hard to “buy time” for governments to “get their houses in order,” will realize that all their efforts have been in vain.

“After the events of 2008, really since then, the central banks either collectively or individually have tried to implement policies which would, in effect, buy time for individual governments to take the actions they should take to put their houses in order,” Thornton says.


What this imbecile is referring to is what he sees as some timebomb of massive government debt, obviously. What else would he be talking about?


The dead giveaway is the fact that this guy is now the chairman of the super right wing neoliberal think tank, the Brookings Institution. And Brookings is the gold standard of organizations that peddle the insidious and destructive doctrine of neoliberalism, i.e. privatization, austerity, debt reduction, “free trade,” regime change, war, etc.


Funny I should mention gold standard because this guy is also on the board of Barrick Gold, it appears. (Probably pushing for a Balanced Budget amendment and a return to the gold standard, of course.)
The prescriptions of these psychopaths have brought nothing but massive economic dislocation, poverty, inequality, never-ending regime change and war yet here they are still giving speeches.


What’s so amazing about the whole thing is how shamelessly brazen guys like Thornton are. They spend their careers making fortunes at institutions that openly admit to operating criminal rackets, then casually pay fines while criticizing the very governments that allow them to operate with impunity in this fashion.


These guys know nothing and subscribe only to their own, warped ideology and criminality. Yet they parade around all over selling their poisonous snake oil, all the while buying the politicians that will make sure their thievery gets officially sanctioned by the force of law.

It literally makes me want to puke.

Friday, July 17, 2015

ProGrowthLiberal — Heritage Economist on Greece and the US


The Heritage foundation doesn't employ economists. It employs propagandists with an agenda — replacing what's left the welfare state with a market state under the control of an oligarchy. 

That's the heritage that these people want to reestablish is American heritage founded on a plantation economy.

That's the heritage of American capitalism.

Econospeak
Heritage Economist on Greece and the US
ProGrowthLiberal

Friday, June 6, 2014

Ed Paisley — Heritage Weighs into the Inequality Discussion with Some Problematic Data Analysis

This piece and its underlying data analysis have three fundamental flaws:
  • The Gini coefficient they are referencing is of income and does not factor in the effect of taxes or transfers. Thus, the measure they are using explicitly misses the impact of the policies that they claim are ineffective.
  • They are suffering from one of the cardinal sins of data analysis: omitted variable bias. More populous areas also tend to have higher inequality, at least in part because higher density allows for higher incomes. Furthermore, cities and urban areas also tend to elect more progressive leaders for a variety of reasons. Thus population density is the omitted variable. They fundamentally misunderstand (or at the very least ignore) the relationship between inequality and population density.
  • Finally, they are factually incorrect to say the 1980s and 1990s are emblematic of the very laudable notion that “a rising tide lifts all boats.” As can be seen in the figure below, median hourly compensation has been essentially flat since 1970 despite the fact that per capita economic growth more than doubled over the same period.
 Freshman mistake or lying with statistics?

WCEG
Heritage Weighs into the Inequality Discussion with Some Problematic Data Analysis
Ed Paisley

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Elias Isquith — GOP’s true leader is Jim DeMint

The former senator isn't just the head of the right's premier think tank -- he's now running the Republican Party
...what’s most striking about DeMint is his boundless optimism. He’s not only utterly convinced that there’s a silent majority of conservatives dotting the American landscape, but he also believes that Republicans’ failures in 2008 and 2012 were the product of the party not being conservative enough....
 ... a lot about the way Jim DeMint sees the world that would strike many as odd. He’s not so sure gay people or sexually active unmarried women should be allowed to teach. He’s convinced that the Republican Party can win on cutting social insurance programs like Medicare and Social Security. He thinks Obama is turning the U.S. into a country of “national socialism.” His chosen method of political persuasion is to inflict “pain.”
For most folks outside of the GOP base, this is a bizarre and unfortunate combination of right-wing libertarianism and an authoritarian spirit....
Some would say that being a libertarian and being an authoritarian are incompatible and that a libertarian authoritarian is an oxymoron. However, that depends. Classical liberalism had a conservative side holding that while all are created naturally equal, only some deserve to be free through their meritorious action evidence in worldly power and success. Social liberalism was only added decades later.

Social liberalism was never adopted by many classical liberals. Nor was it by neoclassical liberals, who see liberalism in terms of free markets and utility maximization. Free markets means no government "intrusion" since exchange is "natural," and "utility" maximization signifies acquisition of power and property as being "rational." The best from of government is "meritocracy" as shown by acquisition of power and wealth. The privilege of political power (authoritarianism) and economic freedom (libertarianism) is hard won and deserved and therefore should be inheritable.



Wednesday, August 21, 2013

SWAMPED By Images Of Ridiculous LACK of Public Investment

Commentary by Roger Erickson

Heritage Foundation's 15 Pictures of Ridiculous Government Spending Guaranteed to Make You Madly Distracted, Divided and Conquered

Why, just for little old us, HF graciously croons: "We’ve compiled just 15 examples of the ridiculous government spending that is driving America toward a $17 trillion [private sector liquidity pool]."

What's wrong with this picture? Is that YOUR culture and heritage foundation protesting too much? Or just ignoring statistics, context and paradigm ... all simultaneously? Why are they dissing orient? They epitomize the confluence of those two concepts!

Sadly, HF's picture of reality is SWAMPED by images of ridiculous LACK of public investment in ourselves. It's the ratio, dudes, not either one.

Yet here they are, trying to impress us with the calamity of the stunning, scary, stop-you-in-your-tracks numeral FIFTEEN!!! Why, it virtually screams off the page! And threatens us with imagery to boot. Hah! Good thing PT Barnum's America is not easily swayed! :)

These HF idiots can't see the fiat for the Forex? Good thing they're not into trading too. They'd drain the Middle Class dry in one generation.

Chock this up to yet another thing that, if the NeoCons can't see, they're hiding from themselves?

It's amazing what a little semantic translation will do to a sophist argument.

I fully expect the Heritage Foundation to respond with a claim that we're running out of soph, and may not be able to scrub the nation clean of logical hearsay. Either their foundation is running, or that's drool on their chin, or both. Regardless, it's a ridiculously sad image, for everyone forced to look. The herits are showing their age, and little more. Time to save us all further embarrassment and shame, by investing in a comfy rocking chair for them, in a house of mirror, where they can't hide from themselves - or anyone else.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Bill Black — The Heritage Foundation: Where 7.8% Growth is “Moderate” and 4.4% is “Spectacular” [Where? Ecuador]

Heritage Foundation is run by Jim DeMint, the former Tea Party legislator. Heritage promptly demonstrated the impact of its new leadership with its purported study of the benefits and costs of immigration that ignored the benefits and inflated the costs. Even other conservative groups were appalled – and that was before one of the co-authors of its studies’ past writings on the inferiority of certain minorities that purportedly made assimilation fail became public. Heritage is one of many anti-think tanks where anyone with a progressive thought is shown the door.
I wondered how the new Heritage was handling Ecuador. Ecuador is a particular problem for entities like Heritage. Heritage has an “economic freedom index.” “Freedom” has a specialized meaning to Heritage – financial regulation and regulation to protect workers’ health and safety tends to be treated as a decline in freedom. Simply having the government spend money – even if the spending dramatically increases health, safety, and education – can be treated by the index as making a nation less “free.” Like the competitiveness indices created by the World Economic Forum, the Heritage indices represent faux empiricism in the service of ideological dogmas.
New Economic Perspectives
The Heritage Foundation: Where 7.8% Growth is “Moderate” and 4.4% is “Spectacular”
William K. Black, Associate Professor of Economics, UMKC