THE EVIL PHILOSOPHY BEHIND POLITICAL CORRECTNESS
WHY LYNDON LAROUCHE IS THE ONLY ANTIDOTE
BY MICHAEL MINNICINO
|
| Printed in The American Almanac, February,
1993 The preceding article is a rough
version of the article that appeared in The
American Almanac. It is made available here
with the permission of The New Federalist
Newspaper. Any use of, or quotations from,
this article must attribute them to The New
Federalist, and The American Almanac. |
The Evil Philosophy Behind Political Correctness
Why Lyndon LaRouche Is The Only Antidote
by Michael Minnicino
University of Chicago Professor Allan Bloom
died in October 1992, at the age of 62. A
translator of Plato and Rousseau, and a long-time
college educator, Bloom became widely known
for his 1987 book, The Closing of the American
Mind.
Closing touched a nerve. At the time of its
publication, it had become clear that the
worst lunacies of the drug-rock-sex ``counterculture''
of the late 1960s had, over the subsequent
20 years, never abated on the nation's campuses;
in fact, many of the leaders of that counterculture--now
equipped with Ph. D. s--had become the dominant
minority in college faculties and administrations.
This minority was consciously training their
students to be a thought police enforcing
``political correctness,'' ready to denounce
and punish any student or instructor deemed
guilty of racism, sexism, insufficient sensitivity
to the homosexual ``lifestyle,'' or too high
an appreciation of Western Judeo-Christian
culture.
In the five years since Bloom's book, the
situation on campus has become worse. Even
as Bloom's thesis was being debated, students
at California's Stanford University, supported
in person by Jesse Jackson, were successfully
overturning the university's Western Civilization
course requirement as ``racist''; at their
demonstrations, the students chanted, ``Hey,
Hey, Ho, Ho, Western Culture's got to Go.''
Across the country, students have successfully
demanded that readings from ``DEMs'' (``Dead
European Male'' writers) be replaced by supposedly
more relevant female and Third World authors.
Most major universities now subscribe to
quotas, to ensure a politically correct mix
of whites, blacks, Hispanics, and homosexuals.
Most schools now also have speech codes,
like the model code promulgated at the University
of Wisconsin, which, for instance, permits
a black studeno call a white ``honkie,''
but would punish a white student for calling
a black ``nigger.''
This article has two purposes. First: I shall
demonstrate that all manifestations of ``political
correctness'' are generated by a single core
philosophy which is actively evil. The antics
on campus often appear humorous, and make
good news copy; but, what stands behind them,
is evil--a philosophy of evil that is responsible
for genocide and untold human misery, and
represents a danger not only to American
education, but also to the continuation of
the American form of government.
Second: The politically correct rampages
that gall so many observers will not be defeated
until the evil philosophy underlying those
atrocities is confronted with an opposing
philosophy which comprehends the actual function
of education. LaRouche is the only thinker
today who is still asking the question, ``Why
educate?'' The only effective means of combatting
political correctness is bringing the ideas
of LaRouche onto the campus.
Postmodernist Hell
Most of Professor Bloom's book is devoted
to a single thesis: American education is
ultimately based on eighteenth-century British
liberalism; however, this liberalism has
allowed itself to be subverted over the last
100 years by what Bloom called ``the German
invasion.'' Specifically, American philosophy
has become dominated by the ideas from three,
nominally German sources: the nineteenth-century
philosopher Frederich Nietzsche, his twentieth-century
follower Martin Heidegger, and the Critical
Theory of the the so-called Frankfurt School,
including Georg Lukacs, Herbert Marcuse,
Walter Benjamin, and Theodor Adorno.
Bloom is wrong in thinking that British liberalism
is the positive basis of American education.
At its best, American education was based
on the German system of classical education,
the same system subverted in Germany by Nietzsche,
Heidegger, and the Frankfurt School. Bloom's
criticism of the latter as the source of
political correctness is on the mark. However,
he is ultimately unable to effectively combat
it because he had no rigorous basis for criticizing
British liberalism.
``Political correctness'' was a phrase originally
used in Communist Party intellectual circles
in the 1930s and 1940s. It was revived by
neoconservative authors around 1990 as an
insulting characterization of a general school
of thought that might be more scientifically
called postmodernism.
All the lunacies being taught on campus are
postmodernism. The postmodernists spend much
of their time polemicizing with each other
over who, exactly, has possession of the
true grail of postmodernism; thus, there
are structuralists, poststructuralists, feminist
deconstructionists, Third World lesbian feminist
deconstructionists, and so on. However, all
postmodernishought has its proximate origins,
as Bloom implies, in the three sources of
Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the Frankfurt School.
The postmodernists will not deny this; most
celebrate it. What, then, is postmodernism?
In 1936, Nazi Culture Minister Josef Goebbels,
on orders from Adolf Hitler, formed a committee
of academics to edihe complete works of Frederich
Nietzsche. Martin Heidegger was placed on
that committee; in preparation, Heidegger
prepared a series of lectures on Nietzsche's
work. Heidegger concluded that the most important
thing that he shared with Nietzsche was the
commitment to extinguish the last traces
in Western civilization of what he called
``physical humanism.'' This commitment was
also shared by the Frankfurt School.
``physics'' is the investigation of that
which is not in the physical world, which
generates the physical world, or generates
changes in the physical world. Many readers
will say at this point: ``Something which
is not generated by the world, but which
operates in the world? That's God.''
God: a perfectly valid response. That answer
doesn't exhaust the subject of physics, and
many physicians would deny the existence
of God, but it gives us a common ground to
admit the validity of the investigation.
So what Heidegger is saying is: We have to
remove as a subject of discussion, any theory
which admits of the possibility of human
activity connected to a physical agency.
Now, go back to Nietzsche, the context for
Heidegger's analysis. Nietzsche is probably
most famous for a single sentence, written
a little over 100 years ago: ``God is dead.''
This, it should be noted, is a lot nastier
than the classic atheist argument that ``God
does not exist and here are my proofs;''
Nietzsche was saying, ``God is dead; I killed
Him; and I want you to kill Him too.'' This
statement--``God is dead''-- is the basis
of all politically correct postmodernism.
Frederich Nietzsche (1844-1900) was a professor
of classics who abandoned his academic career
in his thirties to write wildly polemical
philosophical works. In 1888, he collapsed
on the street and spent the remainder of
his life in semi-catatonia; syphylis was
the probable cause. Nietzsche wrote to prove
that the highest concepts that mankind has
developed, the idea of God, the idea of morality,
of good and evil, are foolish and false;
mankind evolved these ideas over the centuries
as a self-consolation, to escape the mental
pain of admitting that this material world,
and our very short-lived bodies are all that
we have, and all that we can expect. At the
very beginning of human civilization, says
Nietzsche, the physically stronger and smarter
minority of the population became the rulers
over the majority. Morality was developed
by these primordial rulers as a means of
social control: Good was wanted people to
do, and bad was didn't want people to do.
However, the subject peoples chaffed under
this aristocratic rule and became vengeful,
so the rulers had to invent the concept of
God to justify their orders. But, this ploy
by the master race contained the seeds of
their own destruction. They had to create
priests to administer this religion, and
these priests started to believe their own
propaganda, and began to oppose the aristocracy.
Ultimately, you have what Nietzsche calls
``the most priestly people,'' the Jews.
``All that has been done on earth against
`the noble', `the powerful,' `the masters,'
`the rulers,' fades into nothing compared
with what the Jews have done against them,''
said Nietzsche. Here, incidentally, is where
Hitler got the core of his anti-Semitism;
even in his mass murder, Hitler was pursuing
what he thought were philosophical ends.
Why were the Jews bad? Because they gave
us Jesus.
According to Nietzsche, Christianity is thus
a Jewish plot, whose conspiratorial origins
are lost in the fact that the plot has been
so successful over the last two thousand
years. And that's what Hitler said too: First
we must eliminate the Jews, then we will
deal with enervating effects of Christianity
on the Nazi master race. Therefore, Christianity
is the most false of all false myths of religion.
What we must do, says Nietzsche, is to return
in our minds to the past--before Christianity,
before Jewish monotheism, especially before
Socrates and Plato, who demonstrated that
there must be a self-subsisting Good which
is connected to the evolution, through mankind,
of the physical universe. Modern man must
``eternally return'' to a sufficiently primitive
time when man was starting to make his own
god-myths. Homer, says Nietzsche in a famous
example, was a great author not because he
wrote about the gods, but because he created
his own gods.
Nietzsche's revolutionary New Man of the
future, the Uebermensch or superman, must
strip away all the values with which he has
lived--equality, justice, humility--and see
them as illegitimate overlays on society.
We must have an Umwertung aller Werte (the
``transvaluation'' or ``revaluation of all
values''): Each man makes his own values,
makes his own concept of good and evil, based
upon his own physical and intellectual strength.
The man of the future must be a beast of
prey, an ``artist of violence'' creating
new myths, new states based upon the essence
of human nature, which Nietzsche identifies
as Wille zur Macht, the ``Will to Power.''
At the same time, the old illegitimate physical
overlays must be pitilessly destroyed, starting
with Christianity. As Nietzsche concludes:
``I am the Antichrist.''
"Being Unto Death"
Heidegger and the Frankfurt School can essentially
be characterized as commentators on Nietzsche.
(We can also include Sigmund Freud in this
category, but for reasons of space, we only
offer the suggestion.) Martin Heidegger (1889-1976)
began his first Nietzsche lecture in Nazi
Germany in 1936, by announcing that Nietzsche
was ``not merely so subversive as he himself
was wono pose.'' Nietzsche didn't go far
enough.
Nietzsche's will to power, said Heidegger,
still retains an unnecessary physical quality,
because it allows the individual ego to create
a conception of the physical universe without
sufficient reference to the actual objects
of the universe; that is, if God is truly
killed, then objects are all we have, and
therefore the sole determinant of our will
and our ideas. In this context, Heidegger
told his students that ``Christian philosophy''
is a contradiction in terms. Actual philosophy
must distinguish between Sein (``Being''
in the abstract) and Dasein (literally, ``being-there,''
the notion of being as it is lived in the
world of experiences). The mental history
of man is Dasein attempting to grasp Sein,
or what Heidegger and his followers called
the struggle to be ``authentic.'' The problem
is that phenomena--including other people,
races, social systems, as well as hard little
objects--are ``historicized.'' They are historically
specific; Plato's ideas, for instance, were
thought in the context of a specific point
in history, which is not our point in history,
but they are treated as real in our point
in history, whereas, as Heidegger says, they
aren't real.
Heidegger goes even further: Life itself
is ultimately ``inauthentic'' because we
are all mortal, and there is no immortality.
Therefore, the most authentic and human we
can be is Sein zum Tode (``being unto death''),
the recognition that Being ends in death.
(Some readers will notice at this point in
our survey, that this is the origin of postwar
existentialism, which merely took these ideas
to their logical ends, and announced that
the most authentic act, the most truthful
achat a human being could achieve was blowing
one's own brains out.) Sein zum Tode being
the case, the most a people can hope to do,
is find what Heidegger calls ``a Hero,''
who will transcend the historicity which
has been handed down to them, and will create
a new, more authentic history. For Martin
Heidegger, that Hero was Adolf Hitler; and,
it is undeniable, thahousands of young German
intellectuals followed Hitler to their deaths,
based upon Heidegger's teachings.
The Frankfurt School is largely Nietzsche
and Heidegger, plus a Communist organizing
program. The Frankfurt School was founded
by Georg Lukacs, a Hungarian aristocrat who
became a literary theorist based largely
upon the work of Nietzsche and his various
elaborators. Around the time of World War
I, Lukacs veered toward Bolshevism, and became
commissar of culture during the brief Bolshevik
seizure of power in Hungary in 1919. After
the 100-day ``Budapest Soviet'' was defeated,
Lukacs fled to Moscow and became a high official
of the Communist International, the Comintern.
There, his task was to answer the striking
question: Why did Bolshevism succeed in Russia,
but fail to take hold in the West despite
Communist insurrection across Europe? To
this end, Lukacs gathered a group of Marxist
sociologists and philosophers who set up
the Institute for Social Research (ISR) in
Frankfurt, Germany in 1922; this became popularly
known as the Frankfurt School. The ISR determined
that the key was that Russia was dominated
by a peculiar Gnostic form of Christianity
which was ultimately pessimistic. This kind
of Christianity deemphasized the role of
the individual soul as a subject acting in
the world, and replaced it with the kind
of individual who derived identity by submerging
him or herself in the ``communal soul.''
The Bolsheviks succeeded in Russia, said
the ISR, because they convinced a portion
of the population that their revolutionary
movement represented a new secular messiah;
that is, they were able to unleash, through
propaganda and terrorism, all of the popular
resentment--or Nietzschean ``vengefulness,''
if you will-- against the aristocracy and
the Orthodox Church bureaucracy, while at
the same time maintaining the ideology of
the communal soul. They were able to make
a simple shift: You derive your identity
not from the Church or Holy mother Russia,
but from the Party.
The ISR investigators asserted that the problem
was that, despite the most pessimistic efforts
of Nietzsche and his followers, the West
still was dominated by a Judeo-Christian
culture which emphasized the uniqueness and
sacredness of the individual soul. Worse
than that, from the ISR's standpoint, the
culture of the West maintained that the individual,
through the exercise of his or her reason,
could discern the Divine Will in an unmediated
relationship; that meant that the individual
could change the physical universe in the
pursuit of the Good--that mankind could have
dominion over nature as commanded by the
opening chapters of the Book of Genesis.
This meant that every individual in the West--however
deep down--was still optimistic; they still
believed that the divine spark of reason
in every man and woman can solve the problems
facing society, no matter how big those problems
are. And that meant that the West could not
have a successful Bolshevik revolution. Thus,
in 1914, Lukacs could write his great complaint,
``Who will save us from Western civilization?''
The ISR's particular contribution to the
theory and practice of postmodernist Hell
was to realize that Western culture could
be manipulated in such a way as to self-destruct.
All that is in culture had to be abolished
through an active theory of criticism, while
at the same time, new cultural forms had
to be created--forms which would not enlighten
nor uplift, but which would expose the true
degradation of life under capitalism and
the false myths of monotheism. What was needed
was what Lukacs called the ``abolition of
culture,'' a new ``culture of pessimism,''
a world in which the individual does not
believe that he or she can have a personal
destiny, but only ``a destiny of the community
in a world that has been abandoned by God.''
The political task was to fill the people
of the West with hatred, pessimism, and hopelessness--while
simultaneously making them so stupid that
they saw no other solution to their problems
than wild, uncontrollable revolt.
In the 45 years following 1922, the ISR spun
out theory after theory (collectively known
as Critical Theory), designed to forcibly
remove the joy, the divine spark of reason,
out of our appreciation of art, literature,
and music. Walter Benjamin, who is very popular
on campuses today, took on the question of
artistic creativity. Like Nietzsche and Heidegger,
Benjamin and his colleagues were determined
to locate the origins of philosophy before
Socrates and Plato. Benjamin admits that
most people think that Socrates started philosophy
with the subject of the reasonable mind hypothesizing
the nature of the physical universe, and
seeking successively higher hypotheses to
better that understanding. At the beginning
of the eighteenth century, Gottfried Wilhelm
Leibniz, basing himself on Socrates, Plato,
and Nicolaus of Cusa, had demonstrated that
this hypothesizing mind could not be material;
matter does not think. (Keep in mind that
Leibniz is not talking about thinking as
simple mental activity, as Freud does; he
defines thinking as creative activity.) The
creative mind can apprehend the truth of
the physical universe, but it is not determined
by that physical universe. The creative mind
is self-consciously reflecting on the past
understanding of the universe in the present
to effect the future understanding of the
universe, and the creative act is as immortal
as the soul which envisions it.
All this is wrong, says Benjamin. Philosophy
begins with the material object, not the
mind. Way back in the primordial past (reliance
on this hypothetical ``primordial past''
is obsessive), man was confronted with the
objects of physical reality; philosophy began
with man's naming of these objects. Since
there was no science, no technology, no physical
economy back then to get in the way, the
name of the object was the essence of the
object; to name something was to say all
there was to say about that object. But,
with the great evil of human progress, man
becomes estranged or alienated from the objects
of nature. Creativity exists in a fashion,
but it is only the attempt by man to get
back to that primordial name or essence of
the object, past the impediments of capitalist
society. But creativity cannot be immortal
or universal since it is based on the material
world; the creative act must be specifically
related to its point in history--again, the
historicity of Nietzsche and Heidegger. The
creative act of Mozart or Shakespeare cannot
be known as Mozart or Shakepseare understood
it in their point in history, but only as
we understand it in our own, ``alienated''
point in history.
Therefore, there is no universal history;
there is no universal truth; there is no
natural law. The best art in the modern period,
says Benjamin, cannot be judged by the bourgeois
concepts of good and evil. Benjamin gives
the example of the consciously evil art of
the French Symbolists and Surrealists: Their
``Satanism,'' as he calls it, cannot be judged
as bad, because it exposes the false morality
of ``capitalist art.''
Theodor Adorno, a musician himself, did the
same thing for music. Beethoven, says Adorno,
actually yearned to write atonal music and
this is supposedly shown by his chord structure;
however, Beethoven simply didn't have the
guts to break with the social structures
of his periodm, which would not have accepted
the revolutionary change to atonalism. Today's
music must be atonal because atonalism is
ugly, and only ugly music tells us the truth
about the ugliness of our own miserable existence.
The purpose of art, said Benjamin, is to
organize pessimism, and ``To organize pessimism
means nothing other than to expel the moral
metaphor from politics.''
The Frankfurt School was not satisfied with
theory; they attempted to put this nonsense
into practice. The entire institute (with
the exception of Benjamin, who died in 1941
of a self-administered drug overdose) decamped
to America as Hitler was coming to power.
Sponsored by such institutions as CBS, Columbia
University, the American Jewish Committee,
and the B'nai B'rith, it became the dominant
force in sociological and communications
theory. It developed the concept of the ``authoritarian
personality'' to get scholarly justification
for its irrationalism, defining as ``authoritarian,''
anyone who has too high a regard for family,
nation, or reason itself. The Frankfurt School's
Critical Theory is the basis for today's
``entertainment industry,'' a phrase which
the School coined; it is the theoretical
basis of all of today's television, film,
and music programming. It is the basis of
the public opinion polls that have become
the determining factor of politics in America.
Know Your Enemy
This is what is behind all the nonsense about
DEMs. ``Why are you forcing us to read Homer,
Plato, and Cervantes? These are all male
writers who share a common Western culture;
all they can write about are their own experiences
and their own values. They can't say anything
important to a woman or a black person, or
a homosexual. You have to read female authors,
and black authors and gay authors for that,
because, as we all know, mental life is delimited
by materialism--all we can say about life
is how our different instinctual and genetic
structures, as women, as men, as blacks,
as homosexuals, interrelate with our experienced
existence (``Dasein'') as men, women, blacks,
or homosexuals.''
In 1967, a Frenchman named Roland Barthes
founded the literary theory of ``poststructuralism''
with a single statement, basing himself completely
on Benjamin and in conscious emulation of
Nietzsche's famous sentence: ``The author
is dead.'' By this he meant: Let's go all
the way and admit that any important literary
figure was so completely determined by his
conscious and unconscious interaction with
his material existence that to talk about
``the author'' is obsolete, and to say that
some past author has anything to say to you
today, is hopelessly naive. Even the words
that the author used are freighted with the
meanings imposed by the ruling class of that
specific period, so the words themselves
are suspect because they subtly convey capitalist
oppression. In 1979, while accepting a prestigious
professorship in Paris, Barthes concluded:
``Language is fascism.''
Many readers have seen reports of the experimental
Rainbow Curriculum in New York: children
have to be taught tolerance for the homosexual
lifestyle, the Satanic lifestyle, and so
on. This is called ``values clarification''
in new educational texts. ``Excuse me,''
says the parent, ``Could you teach some family
values, some universal values of good and
evil?'' The school responds, in effect: ``Universal
values? Are you an authoritarian? Are you
a religious fanatic? The only universal truth
is that a syphilitic Nazi was right: We all
create our own values--Umwertung aller Werte.''
It comes as no surprise that John Dewey,
the founder of modern American educational
theory, was a public and committed follower
of Frederich Nietzsche.
Nazism-Communism
Postmodernism, in its political expression,
invariably takes the form of Nazism-Communism.
By this, I do not mean some mushy concept
like ``totalitarianism.'' I am not talking
about Nazism or Communism, but ``Nazism-Communism,''
a specific ideological type which allows
the victim to move--without serious philosophical
contradiction--back and forth between Nazi
Party and Communist Party card-carrying membership.
Martin Heidegger was, tragically, the most
influential German academic at the time of
Hitler's assumption of the Chancellorship
in January 1933; many in that nation looked
to him for guidance concerning the Nazis.
He answered them in May 1933 by joining the
Nazi Party and assuming the rectorship of
the University of Freiburg, replacing a rector
who had refused to implement anti-Semitic
regulations at the university. An enormous
amount of ink has been wasted over the last
40 years in the attempt to minimize or justify
Heidegger's Nazism as a confused interlude.
At the time, however, Heidegger left no doubt
that the ``inner truth and greatness of this
[Nazi] movement'' was exactly what he had
been talking about for the previous decade.
Heidegger even tried to recruit his cothinker
and university colleague, Karl Jaspers, to
the Party. Jaspers had no choice in the matter,
since his wife was Jewish; at one point,
however, Jaspers reports that he challenged
Heidegger on Hitler's ignorance of philosophy.
``Education is altogether unimportant,''
answered Heidegger, ``just look at his marvellous
hands.''
At the same time that Heidegger was making
these statements, his students included a
large portion of the group that would dominate
postwar academia on the Continent. Among
the Germans were Hans- Georg Gadamer, the
faculty adviser to the 1960s generation of
student radicals. French existentialist Jean-Paul
Sartre, arguably Europe's most famous Communist
of the 1950s, went to Nazi Germany for the
sole purpose of studying at Heidegger's feet;
it is not exaggeration to say that Sartre
learned his Stalinism from a Nazi.
Heidegger's other famous student, the Frankfurt
School's Herbert Marcuse, had left Germany
by the time of the Nazi regime, and was in
America, on his way to becoming the single
most important ideological guru of America's
New Left. In the 1960s, Heidegger himself
came full circle, and announced that ``the
Marxist view of history excels all others'';
by this late date, Heidegger also publicly
agreed with Marcuse that the origin of totalitarianism,
including Nazism, was really technological
progress, which destroys philosophical thinking
and increases alienation. Predictably, the
extremist ecologist Green Party of Germany
began to take up the arguments of both Heidegger
and Marcuse.
The list goes on. Paul de Man, Sterling Professor
of Humanities at Yale University until his
death in 1983, was America's leading practitioner
of ``deconstructive'' literary theory, and
an uncompromising critic of the authoritarianism
allegedly embedded in language. In 1987,
it was discovered that de Man had written
anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi articles for a
collaboratist journal in German-occupied
Belgium in 1941-1942; the Belgian Resistance
had publicly denounced him as a traitor.
The deconstructionist movement that de Man
had helped develop took these revelations
in stride: ``The author is dead,'' therefore,
the historically specific Nazi de Man is
a completely different entity than the historically
specific Yale deconstructionist.
Today, we have evidence that postmodernism
is reverting, lawfully, to its raw Nazi-Communist
form. The architects of the rape- and murder-camps
built as part of the Serbian ``ethnic cleansing''
of the former Yugoslavia have been shown
to include a group of nominally leftist psychiatrists
trained in the Nietzschean psychoanalysis
of Jacques Lacan. It must be emphasized that
these horrors in Bosnia are simply the ``culture
of barbarism'' sought by Lukacs, and the
``forced retardation'' of Adorno, and the
``primitivization'' of Nietzsche and Heidegger.
What is going on in Bosnia is a forced march
to tribalism, and postmodernists think tribal
existence is a positive good, where people
live more ``authentically,'' and the will
to power is fully liberated. This also explains
the dominance of postmodern theory over today's
``Afro-centrist'' and ``indigenous peoples''
movements.
The Author Lives!
Lyndon LaRouche is the last great practitioner
of ``physical humanism,'' in the sense that
Heidegger used the term. All the critics
of postmodernism, from Bloom on down, are
defensive: ``We respect your opinion, and
we should widen our scope to be more sensitive
to other cultures, but please don't force
us to give up our Homer.'' Lyndon LaRouche
says: No, you are completely wrong. Great
authors are not dead, and I can prove that
your own physical existence is dependent
on those authors' living ideas.
In three recent articles (see references)
LaRouche has outlined a comprehensive reform
of America's elementary and secondary education
system. These reforms and the philosophical
method that stands behind them, represent
the only effective antidote to politically
correct postmodernism. Piecemeal opposition
is absurd in the face of a coherent philosophy
of evil; only a complete philosophy which
answers the question, ``Why educate?'' can
work.
``The purpose and content of humanist education,''
says LaRouche, ``is not the accumulation
of mere information and recipes but rather
the direct fostering of the individual spark
of creative genius (imago viva Dei--the image
of the living God) in each student, by a
total emphasis upon incorporating in the
student's mind crucial moments from the acts
of crucial, valid discoveries by (implicitly)
all of the greatest known creative geniuses
of all history.'' LaRouche demands the abandonment
of all ``value-clarification'' and ``ethno-centrism''
from education. Rather, we help the studeno
reexperience--without idiotic reference to
``race, creed, color, or sexual preference''--the
creative moment of scientific discovery.
We order those experiences, firstly, on the
basis of how each of those discoveries advances
human understanding beyond the previous one;
and, secondly, how all of those advances,
taken as a whole, perfect humanity's ability
to fulfill the command of Genesis to be fruitful,
multiply, and have dominion over the earth.
That is, we help the student experience,
insofar as mankind can experience, the overall
and ongoing act by which the Creator is creating
the human race.
As LaRouche emphasizes, the purpose of elementary
and secondary education is not to teach ``science,''
but scientific method, as the only possible
preparation for further studies. LaRouche
goes so far as to offer a basis for ordering
of pashinkers upon whose successive scientific
discoveries our Judeo-Christian culture and
our literal physical existence depends; he
also notes in this contexhe most influential
representatives of the opposing, ``oligarchical''
tendency in the history of thought. It is
striking that LaRouche's list matches almost
exactly one offered by postmodernist Wilhelm
Dilthey about 75 years ago. Dilthey, a colleague
of Nietzsche, highly praised by Heidegger,
and the teacher of several Frankfurt School
personnel, divided philosophy into two schools
of thought: One was represented by Socrates,
St. Augustine, Cusanus, and Leibniz; and
the other by John Stuart Mill, Immanuel Kant,
and the mechanistic scientist Helmholz. But
for Dilthey, the ``values'' are reversed:
Socrates and his followers are not to be
studied, but their influence destroyed!
LaRouche here is trying, almost singlehandedly,
to revive the educational theory of Leibniz,
the thinker Nietzsche called the ``greatest
brake shoe on the intellectual integrity
of Europe.'' Almost 300 years ago, Leibniz
identified that there could only be two methods
of education, the ``recitatorial'' and the
``scientific'': The recitatorial ``method
is thus used for reducing things already
known into a synopsis, and it also serves
the purpose of teaching those who are looking
for a historical acquaintance with doctrines
without the reasons for them. But it does
not preserve the order in which some truths
are born of others; it is this order which
produces science.... So I consider philosophy
not as an orderly exposition of principles
with which schoolboys or businessmen who
require only rote learning can be satisfied,
but as true science not yet made public.''
Education will either teach to confirm already
known prejudices, as it does at Stanford;
or it will create minds whose thirst for
understanding is endless, which look for
that ``true science not yet public.'' We
will teach children to understand our physical
universe in the consciousness of the immortality
of great ideas of the past, and in the immortality
of their own creative acts. LaRouche expresses
this beautifully in his paper, ``On the Subject
of metaphor'': ``So ... the pupil's mind
is populated, in effect, by a growing number
of such past historical personalities of
science, to the effect that the pupil not
merely imagines these persons as if they
were merely characters in some story, but
knows each as a living, thinking person,
through replication of some creative processes
of each within the student's own mental processes.''
It must be emphasized: The alternative to
LaRouche's idea, is book-burning. The postmodernists
already have imposed a very effective censorship
on America's campuses. Of course, one could
respond by burning the postmodernists' books--but
all that would leave would be ashes. LaRouche
is offering a future in which each parent
confidently knows that the divine spark of
genius in his or her child has been kindled
at an early age. Then, we can tell the postmodernists
to publish all they want, for we are confident
that our children will ignore them.
For Reference
The articles by Lyndon LaRouche cited above
are published in Fidelio, published by the
Schiller Insitute. They are: ``On the Subject
of metaphor,'' Vol. 1, No. 3; ``Mozart's
1782-1786 Revolution in Music,'' Vol. 1,
No. 4; ``On the Subject of God,'' Vol. 2,
No. 1.
Captions
Scenes during the 1980s of the drug counterculture,
the environmentalist movement, and the gay
rights movement--all transmission belts for
the institutionalization of the ideology
of ``political correctness'' on the nation's
campuses.
``All the critics of postmodernism, from
Bloom on down, are defensive: `We respect
your opinion, and we should widen our scope
to be more sensitive to other cultures, but
please don't force us to give up our Homer.'''
``Lyndon LaRouche says: `No, you are completely
wrong. Great authors are not dead, and I
can prove that your own physical existence
is dependent on those authors' living ideas.'''
Lyndon LaRouche holding a seminar with college
students in 1973. Getting LaRouche's ideas
onto the campuses today, is the only hope
of reversing ``politically correct'' lunacy.
``The horrors in Bosnia are simply the `culture
of barbarism' sought by Lukacs, the `forced
retardation' of Adorno, and the `primitivization'
of Nietzsche and Heidegger.''
``What is going on in Bosnia is a forced
march to tribalism, and postmodernists think
tribal existence is a positive good, where
people live more `authentically,' and the
will to power is fully liberated.''
Recent news coverage of war crimes in Bosnia.
The invariable political expression of postmodernism
is ``Nazism-Communism.'' The Frankfurt School-trained
organizers of rape and genocide in Bosnia
are fulfilling Georg Lukacs's demand for
a ``new culture of barbarism.''
Appendices:
Erich Fromm
Return to Top
In 1970, forty years after he first proclaimed
the importance of Bachofen's theory of the
Great mother cult revival, the Frankfurt
School's Erich Fromm surveyed how far things
had developed. He listed seven ``social-psychological
changes'' which indicated the advance of
matriarchism over patriarchism:
``The failure of the patriarchal-authoritarian
system to fulfill its function,'' including
the prevention of pollution; ``Democratic
revolutions'' which operate on the basis
of ``manipulated consent;'' ``The women's
revolution;'' ``Children's and adolescents'
revolution,'' based on the work of Benjamin
Spock and others, allowing children new,
and more-adequate ways to express rebellion;
The rise of the radical youth movement, which
fully embraces Bachofen, in its emphasis
on group sex, loose family structure, and
unisex clothing and behaviors; The increasing
use of Bachofen by professionals to correct
Freud's overly- sexual analysis of the mother-son
relationship -- this would make Freudianism
less threatening and more palatable to the
general population; and ``The vision of the
consumer paradise.... In this vision, technique
assumes the characteristics of the Great
mother, a technical instead of a natural
one, who nurses her children and pacifies
them with a never-ceasing lullaby (in the
form of radio and television). In the process,
man becomes emotionally an infant, feeling
secure in the hope that mother's breasts
will always supply abundant milk, and that
decisions need no longer be made by the individual.''
Experiment at Ascona -- the Creation of the
"New Age" Return to Top
An overwhelming amount of the philosophy
and artifacts of the American counter-culture
of the 1960s, plus the New Age nonsense of
today, derives from a large-scale social
experiment sited in Ascona, Switzerland from
about 1910 to 1935.
Originally a resort area for members of Helena
Blavatsky's Theosophy cult, the little Swiss
village became the haven for every occult,
leftist and racialist sect of the original
New Age movement of the early 20th century.
By the end of World War I, Ascona was indistinguishable
from what Haight-Ashbury would later become,
filled with health food shops, occult book
stores hawking the I Ching, and Naturmenschen,
``Mr. Naturals'' who would walk about in
long-hair, beads, sandals, and robes in order
to ``get back to nature.''
The dominant influence in the area came from
Dr. Otto Gross, a student of Freud and friend
of Carl Jung, who had been part of Max Weber's
circle when Frankfurt School founder Lukacs
was also a member. Gross took Bachofen to
its logical extremes, and, in the words of
a biographer, ``is said to have adopted Babylon
as his civilization, in opposition to that
of Judeo-Christian Europe.... if Jezebel
had not been defeated by Elijah, world history
would have been different and better. Jezebel
was Babylon, love religion, Astarte, Ashtoreth;
by killing her, Jewish monotheistic moralism
drove pleasure from the world.''
Gross's solution was to recreate the cult
of Astarte in order to start a sexual revolution
and destroy the bourgeois, patriarchal family.
Among the members of his cult were: Frieda
and D. H. Lawrence; Franz Kafka; Franz WerBfel,
the novelist who later came to Hollywood
and wrote The Song of Bernadette; philosopher
Martin Buber; Alma Mahler, the wife of composer
Gustave Mahler, and later the liaison of
Walter Gropius, Oskar Kokoschka, and Franz
Werfel; among others. The Ordo Templis Orientalis
(OTO), the occult fraternity set up by Satanist
Aleister Crowley, had its only female lodge
at Ascona.
It is sobering to realize the number of intellectuals
now worshipped as cultural heroes who were
influenced by the New Age madness in Ascona
-- including almost all the authors who enjoyed
a major revival in America in the 1960s and
70s. The place and its philosophy figures
highly in the works of not only Lawrence,
Kafka and Werfel, but also Nobel Prizewinners
Gerhardt Hauptmann and Hermann Hesse, H.
G. Wells, Max Brod, Stefan George, and the
poets Rainer Maria Rilke and Gustav Landauer.
In
1935 Ascona became the headquarters for Carl
Jung's annual Eranos Conferences to popularize
Gnosticism.
Ascona was also the place of creation for
most of what we now call modern dance. It
was headquarters to Rudolf von Laban, inventor
of the most-popular form of dance notation,
and Mary Wigman. Isadora Duncan was a frequent
visitor. Laban and Wigman, like Duncan, sought
to replace the formal geometries of classical
ballet with recreations of cult dances which
would be capable of ritualistically dredging
up the primordial racial memories of the
audience. When the Nazis came to power, Laban
became the highest dance official in the
Reich, and he and Wigman created the ritual
dance program for the 1936 Olympic Games
in Berlin--which were filmed by Hitler's
personal director Leni Reifenstahl, a former
student of Wigman.
The peculiar occult psychoanalysis popular
in Ascona was also decisive in the development
of much of modern art. The Dada movement
originated in nearby Zurich, but all its
early figures were Asconans in mind or body,
especially Guillame Apollinaire, who was
a particular fan of Otto Gross. When ``Berlin
Dada'' announced its creation in
1920, its opening manifesto was published
in a magazine founded by Gross.
The primary document of Surrealism also came
from Ascona. Dr. Hans Prinzhorn, a Heidelberg
psychiatrist, commuted to Ascona, where he
was the lover of Mary Wigman. In 1922, he
published a book, ``The Artwork of the Mentally
Ill,'' based on paintings by his psychotic
patients, accompanied by an analysis claiming
that the creative process shown in this art
was actually more liberated than than of
the Old Masters. Prinzhorn's book was widely
read by the modern artists of the time, and
a recent historian has called it, ``the Bible
of the Surrealists.''
The Theory of the Authoritarian Personality
Return to Top
The Frankfurt School devised the ``authoritarian
personality'' profile as a weapon to be used
against its political enemies. The fraud
rests on the assumption that a person's actions
are not important; rather, the issue is the
psychological attitude of the actor--as determined
by social scientists like those of the Frankfurt
School. The concept is diametrically opposed
to the idea of natural law and to the republican
legal principles upon which the United States
was founded; it is, in fact, fascistic, and
identical to the idea of ``thought crime,''
as described by George Orwell in his 1984,
and to the theory of ``volitional crime''
developed by Nazi judge Roland Freisler in
the early 1930s.
When the Frankfurt School was in its openly
pro-Bolshevik phase, its authoritarian personality
work was designed to identify people who
were not sufficiently revolutionary, so that
these people could be ``re- educated.'' When
the Frankfurt School expanded its research
after World War II at the behest of the American
Jewish Committee and the Rockefeller Foundation,
its purpose was not to identify anti-Semitism;
that was merely a cover story. Its goal was
to measure adherence to the core beliefs
of Western Judeo-Christian civilization,
so that these beliefs could be characterized
as ``authoritarian,'' and discredited.
For the Frankfurt School conspirators, the
worst crime was the belief that each individual
was gifted with sovereign reason, which could
enable him to determine what is right and
wrong for the whole society; thus, to tell
people that you have a reasonable idea to
which they should conform, is authoritarian,
paternalistic extremism.
By these standards, the judges of Socrates
and Jesus were correct in condemning these
two individuals (as, for example, I. F. Stone
asserts in one case in his Trial of Socrates).
It is the measure of our own cultural collapse,
that this definition of authoritarianism
is acceptable to most citizens, and is freely
used by political operations like the Anti-Defamation
League and the Cult Awareness Network to
``demonize'' their political enemies.
When Lyndon LaRouche and six of his colleagues
faced trial on trumped-up charges in 1988,
LaRouche identified that the prosecution
would rely on the Frankfurt School's authoritarian
personality fraud, to claim that the defendants'
intentions were inherently criminal. During
the trial, LaRouche's defense attorney attempted
to demonstrate the Frankfurt School roots
of the prosecution's conspiracy theory, but
he was overruled by Judge Albert Bryan, Jr.,
who said, ``I'm not going back into the early
1930s in opening statements or in the testimony
of witnesses.''
The "Authoritarian Personality"
Return to Top
To be illustrated with a pix of a TV anchorman
at his desk
The most important thing to understand about
``the authoritarian personality,'' is that
it is a sociological construct: it is not
based on actions, but on predilections, on
the measurement of alleged attitudes which
are politically interpreted to mean whatever
you want. It is ``thought crime,'' in the
sense that George Orwell used that term in
his
1984.
Try the following mental experiment: There
is a crowded opening of a new exhibit at
a famous art gallery; a man walks in, and
from his overcoat, he pulls a revolver, and
fires three shots in the air. What is the
nature of this bewildering act?
If the man is Tristan Tzara, then the act
is a work of art. If the man is Spike Jones,
then the act is a joke. If the man is a Palestinian,
then the act is terrorism. If the man is
Lyndon LaRouche, then the act is political
extremism. Most people today, need go no
further than the knowledge of the name. They
are sufficiently retarded in their reasoning
by the mass media, that they have returned
to Walter Benjamin's Aristotelian Eden: the
name tells them all they need to know. We
begin to see the power of the Frankfurt School's
techniques of ``re-naming,'' and repetition.
We also begin to see why, when Lyndon LaRouche
became an unignorable political phenomenon
after the 1986 elections, there had to be
such an obsessive repetition of the phrase
``political extremist,'' in connection with
his name.
It's all marketing: You create problems like
``static cling,'' or ``ring around the collar,''
or ``political extremist Lyndon LaRouche,''
in order to justify solving those problems.
The preceding article is a rough version
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