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{{LaRouche}} | |||
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] (1922–2019) and the ] have expressed controversial views on a wide variety of topics. The LaRouche movement is made up of activists who follow LaRouche's views.<ref>{{cite news|work=The Evening Independent|author=Donald Kaul|title=LaRouche might awaken Democratic party|page=12A|quote=... 'by 'he' I mean all LaRouche followers; internal dissent is not a big number with them' ... .|date=April 10, 1986}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Mystery of dead Briton and the right-wing cult|first=Jerome|last=Taylor|work=The Independent|location=London (UK)|date=February 27, 2010|page=12|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/mystery-of-dead-briton-and-the-rightwing-cult-1912336.html|access-date=September 17, 2017|archive-date=April 17, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140417042646/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/mystery-of-dead-briton-and-the-rightwing-cult-1912336.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
==Economics and politics== | |||
{{about|the political views of Lyndon LaRouche|an overview of his organization|LaRouche Movement}} | |||
According to Matko Meštrović, emeritus senior research fellow at the Institute of Economics of ], Croatia,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.eizg.hr/default.aspx?aspxerrorpath=/emeriti-en-US/105.aspx|title=Naslovna|website=Ekonomski institut, Zagreb|access-date=May 28, 2022|archive-date=May 28, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220528155642/https://www.eizg.hr/default.aspx?aspxerrorpath=%2Femeriti-en-US%2F105.aspx|url-status=live}}</ref> LaRouche's economic policies call for a program modeled on the economic-recovery program of the ] administration, including ], ], ], ], and ] price and trade agreements among partner-nations, although Roosevelt generally pursued trade liberalization.<ref name="TW"/><ref name="Meštrović">{{cite book|editor1-first=Davorka|editor1-last=Vidovic|editor2-first=Davor|editor2-last=Paukovic|first=Matko|last=Meštrović|chapter=What is Global Change?|title=Globalization and Neo-liberalism (Reflections on Croatian Society)|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FfiV0UvHDF4C&pg=PA26|access-date=July 10, 2011|publisher=CPI/PSRC|location=Zagreb, Croatia|isbn=978-953-7022-16-7|year=2007|pages=25–26|archive-date=July 6, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140706195657/http://books.google.com/books?id=FfiV0UvHDF4C&pg=PA26|url-status=live}}</ref> LaRouche also called for a reorganization of debt world-wide, and a global plan for large-scale, continental infrastructure projects.<ref name="Meštrović" /><ref name=Beltran /><ref name=Carter>{{cite news |title=Democrats fear LaRouche takeover; Followers of fringe candidate seek seats on Alameda County Democratic Central Committee |first=Matt |last=Carter |work=Oakland Tribune |location=Oakland, Calif |date=February 23, 2004 |page=1 }}</ref> He rejects ], ], and ].<ref name="Meštrović"/><ref name=Smith>{{Cite book|title=Against the machines: minor parties and independents in New South Wales, 1910–2006|series=NSW Sesquicentenary of Responsible Government Series|first=Rodney|last=Smith |publisher=Federation Press|year=2006|isbn= 978-1862876231 |page=97}}</ref> | |||
===Marxist roots=== | |||
The '''political views of ]''' are the source of much controversy. LaRouche's critics and supporters often have difficulty interpreting or agreeing on the meaning of statements he has made, and must analyse the implications of those statements. This is complicated by the fact that LaRouche's views have changed considerably over time, particularly during the ] when he abandoned much of his ] philosophy. In addition, two of LaRouche's most outspoken critics claim to have discovered coded messages in his writings. <small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerlet-1|3}}{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small> | |||
Lyndon LaRouche began his political career as a ]<ref name="TourishWohlforth2000">{{cite book|last1=Tourish|first1=Dennis|last2=Wohlforth|first2=Tim|title=On the edge: political cults right and left|year=2000|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|isbn=978-0-7656-0639-6|page=69}}</ref> and praised ], but he and the ] abandoned this ideology in the late 1970s. From then on, LaRouche no longer opposed private ownership of the means of production, and his analysis of political events is no longer phrased in terms of class.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.xinhuanet.com/fortune/2010-03/31/c_1210286.htm |title=The Current World Financial System is Unsalvageable (现行的世界金融体系已经无可救药) |first=Ju |last=Hui (鞠辉) |newspaper=] |date=July 24, 2009 |access-date=December 11, 2010 |archive-date=November 7, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107212200/http://news.xinhuanet.com/fortune/2010-03/31/c_1210286.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
According to ], during and after his break with Trotskyism, LaRouche's theory was influenced by what he called his "Theory of Hegemony" derived from ]'s view of the role of intellectuals in being a ] helping workers develop their consciousness and realize their leading role in society. He was influenced by ]'s concept of ] as an intellectual and cultural elite which directs social thought. LaRouche's theory saw himself and his followers as becoming such a hegemonic force. He rejected Gramsci's notion of "organic intellectuals" being developed by the working class itself. Rather, the working class would be led by elite intellectuals such as himself.<ref name="TW">{{cite news | first=Tim | last=Wohlforth | url=http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/Wohlforth.html | title=A '60's Socialist Takes a Hard Right | work=Political Research Associates | date=n.d. | access-date=August 27, 2009 | archive-date=January 25, 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210125020518/http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/Wohlforth.html | url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
==Overview== | |||
These are views that the LaRouche network presents as the most essential features of LaRouche's political and philosophical outlook. | |||
LaRouche was influenced by his readings of ]'s '']'' and ]'s '']'' developing his own "theory of reindustrialization", saying that the West would attempt to industrialize the ], particularly India, and attempt to solve the economic crisis both by developing new markets in the Third World and using its cheap and surplus labor to increase profits and minimize costs (see ].) To oppose this, LaRouche argued for a "reindustrialization" of the United States with himself at the vanguard of the effort allowing him to personally resolve the ]. Though his arguments had since been stripped of their quasi-Marxist language and citations, his core theories had remained essentially the same since the late 1960s.<ref name="TW"/> | |||
LaRouche regards government as an expression of the highest aspirations of the citizenry. He believes that the material and cultural progress of humanity is the proper concern of government, and that the state does not serve a merely negative function, e.g., to ward off hostile foreign powers or restrain criminals. LaRouche regards "freedom" as the right to participate in what he sees as the progress of humanity, which requires certain minimum standards of material well-being and universal public education to equip the citizen to play that role. In LaRouche's view, the political system which enables this to occur is the ]. | |||
==== ''Dialectical Economics'' ==== | |||
The LaRouche network has taken a stand on a number of controversial issues: | |||
In the book ''Dialectical Economics: An Introduction to Marxist Political Economy'', which was published in 1975 by ] under the pen name Lyn Marcus, LaRouche tried to show that numerous Marxists—ranging from the '']'' group to ], Vladimir Lenin, ], ], ], ] and the "Soviet economists"—had failed to understand and to interpret correctly Marx's writing. Marxists he admired—apart from Marx himself—were ] and ]. | |||
*They have called for a ] on ] ]. | |||
*They have opposed the so-called ], and the legalization of ], arguing that these create a "]" culture of self-centered ], and a highly manipulable population. LaRouche calls for a revival of ] culture, particularly in the domain of ]. | |||
*They have supported ] and other complex technologies often opposed by the ] movement, arguing that human survival depends on a progression of technologies (see ].) | |||
*They defended President ] during his impeachment scandal, claiming that those who called for Clinton's resignation or impeachment following the ] scandal were hiding their true motives. | |||
*They opposed the 1991 ] and the ]. | |||
*They opposed, from ] onwards, the ] of trucking, airlines, telecommunications, public utilities, and financial services in the U.S., during a period when deregulation was embraced by the leadership of both the ] and ] parties. | |||
*They opposed the ] and other international organizations in cases where LaRouche says they interfere with the concept of the ] and the ]nic ideal of a "perfectly sovereign nation-state republic". This holds especially true for their conduct toward the nations of the ], where LaRouche argues that they practice ]. | |||
According to a review by ] in '']'', about half of the book was devoted to dialectical philosophy, "with a strong epistemological stress", with the other half devoted to discussions of economic and general history, anthropology and sociology, and actual economics, including a surprisingly large helping of business administration—Bronfenbrenner noted that LaRouche seemed to have "more private-business experience than the great majority of academic economists", including a familiarity with the way speculative ], operating at the borders of ], creates "fictitious capitals" that later do not match their actual earning power. Like ], LaRouche subscribed to an overcapitalization theory of ].<ref name=HigherEd>{{Cite news|author=McLemee, Scott|url=http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee132|title=The LaRouche Youth Movement|work=]|date=July 11, 2007|access-date=March 26, 2011|archive-date=April 17, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110417133920/http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee132|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name=Bronf /> | |||
===Political science=== | |||
LaRouche's views on politics come out of his ideas about ]. In 1978, he wrote ''The Secrets Known Only to the Inner Elites'', in which he claimed the history of European civilization is a battle between two conflicting images of man, one proposed by ] and the other proposed by ] (this analysis is similar to the one published a century earlier by the German poet/philosopher ]). LaRouche favors the Platonists and opposes the Aristoteleans. As LaRouche describes it, Plato and his followers saw the universe as an ongoing process of creation, in which man plays a central role through his powers of ]. Aristotle and his followers, on the other hand, saw the universe as static and fixed, with humans being just another species of animal. | |||
According to Bronfenbrenner, LaRouche viewed conventional economics as a "withered arm of philosophy", which had taken a wrong turn toward ] under the influence of ] such as ] and ].<ref name=Bronf /> LaRouche's definition of reductionism was as follows: | |||
According to LaRouche, the political expression of Platonism is the ] current, while the rival Aristotelean camp is ]. The republicans seek a form of society which cherishes the creative mental powers of the individual, and seeks to cultivate those powers as the key to economic and cultural progress. The oligarchs seek to suppress the mental powers of the individual, because they prefer a fixed, ] form of society and consider change to be disruptive and dangerous. | |||
<blockquote>The fundamental fallacy of ordinary understanding is the delusion that the universe is reducible to simple substance, or—the more Hume-like view—that the content of human knowledge is limited to simple-substance-like, self-evident sense perceptions. This discredited outlook—whether it takes the naive mechanistic or the equivalent mechanistic outlook of empiricism—is termed ''reductionism''. All varieties of reductionism are formally premised on the fallacious assumption of formal logic, that the universe can be represented as discrete points interconnected by formal relations.<ref name=Bronf /> </blockquote> | |||
In LaRouche's opinion, the conflict between these two camps is the essence of politics, and all of the contemporary notions about "left vs. right" and "liberal vs. conservative" are a ]. | |||
From this it followed, Bronfenbrenner said, that LaRouche viewed bourgeois economists' concern with ''prices'' as reductionism, versus the Marxian concern with ''values''. The reductionist fallacy then lies in adjusting a value theory like ] to fit in with price theory; in LaRouche's view, economists should work in the opposite direction.<ref name=Bronf /> | |||
LaRouche emphasizes the importance of the ] as a point in the history of ] when there was a major resurgence of Platonic thinking. European culture gradually embraced the idea of progress, a radical shift from ], which was characterized by the Aristotelean view of the universe as fixed and unchanging. | |||
According to Bronfenbrenner, LaRouche viewed capitalist America as headed for a kind of ] not much better than that of the Nazis; but he noted that LaRouche's own vision of socialism, and the trade-off between necessity and freedom in a centrally ], seemed apt to result in the justification of a different kind of dictatorship:<ref name=Bronf /> | |||
LaRouche believes that the ] and the adoption of the ] mark a watershed in history, as the most successful attempt to put the republican theory of politics into practice. He also places great importance on the ], believing that it is the mission of the ] to oppose ] and ]. | |||
<blockquote>Judging from his controversial manner, impresses at least one reader as a Me-for-Dictator type to whom it would be dangerous to entrust the task of drawing any boundary between the domain of freedom and that of necessity or order.<ref name=Bronf>{{Cite news|author=Bronfenbrenner, Martin|url=https://www.jstor.org/pss/1830175|title=Economics in Dialectical Dialect|work=]|volume=84|number=1|date=Feb 1976|pages=123–130|jstor=1830175|access-date=September 17, 2017|archive-date=May 28, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220528155641/https://www.jstor.org/stable/1830175|url-status=live}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
===Economics=== | |||
Although he has no academic qualifications, LaRouche has written extensively on economic subjects. LaRouche views ] as the "mother of the sciences," consequently, LaRouche often combines discussion of ] with a discussion of ], ] and ]. | |||
===LaRouche's campaign platforms=== | |||
Although LaRouche espoused Marxism in the 1960s, he abandoned that in favor of what he calls the "]" in the 1970s. The term "American System" was originally associated with ]. LaRouche also says that this school of thought is based on the economic policies of ], ] and Lincoln's advisor ], as well as those of ]. In practice, this means massive state investment in infrastructure projects, such as the locks and dams now decaying all over America, and such necessary protectionist measures as protective tariffs. | |||
The campaign platforms of LaRouche and his followers have included these elements: | |||
* A return to a gold-based national and world monetary system, and fixed exchange rates;<ref name="Anastasia Benshoff 1992">{{cite news |title=Bush and Clinton aren't the only candidates in presidential race|edition=Morning|first= Anastasia |last=Benshoff |agency=The Associated Press |newspaper=Orange County Register |location=Santa Ana, Calif | date= August 27, 1992 |page=A.17}}</ref> and replacement of the ] system, including the U.S. ], with a "national bank";<ref>{{cite news |title=Larouchies set sights on Missouri |edition=National, C |first=Virgil |last=Tipton |newspaper=Chicago Tribune |date=March 31, 1986 |page=3}}</ref> | |||
* A war on ] and prosecution of banks involved in ];<ref name="Boston Globe p. 1">{{cite news|title=On the Lyndon LaRouche Campaign |work=Boston Globe|page=1|date=February 26, 1980}}</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite news|title=County Democrats oppose LaRouche election candidates|author=Wendy Sherman|date=May 14, 1986|page=13}}{{Full citation needed|date=December 2010}}</ref> | |||
* An emphasis on large-scale economic infrastructure, including the building of a world land bridge of railroads and a ],<ref name="Carter"/> the building of ]s,<ref name="Boston Globe p. 1"/><ref name="ReferenceA"/> accelerating research on ], the ],<ref name=Santangelo>{{cite news|title=Impeach Obama??|first=Al |last=Santangelo|work=New Haven Register|location=New Haven, Conn.|date=August 29, 2010|page=1}}</ref> and rebuilding or nationalizing the country's ];<ref>{{cite news |title=Her Political Demonology |author=Wharton, Gray and Henry K. Christopher Hepp |newspaper= Philadelphia Daily News |date=April 3, 1984 |page= 42}}</ref> | |||
*A crash program to build ]s and ]s, including support for elements of the ] (SDI);<ref>{{cite news |title=United States Oddball tycoon wins some battles |first=John |last=King |newspaper=The Globe and Mail |location=Toronto|date= January 26, 1984 |page=8}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Two Democrats who are not quite front-runners |first=Joyce |last=Gemperlein |newspaper=Philadelphia Inquirer |date= April 2, 1984 |page= A.7 }}</ref> | |||
*Opposition to the ] and support for a military buildup to prepare for imminent war;<ref>{{cite news |title=Illinois Winners Spent $200 Everyone Sharing Blame for Far-Right Vote Victory |author=Larry Green, Scott Kraft |work= Los Angeles Times |date=March 21, 1986 |page= 1}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=U.S. extremist grows as political force|edition=SUN|author=William Lowther|work=Toronto Star|date=Mar 30, 1986|page=B.1}}</ref> | |||
*Growth in food production and a farm debt moratorium;<ref>{{cite news |title=Thurmond gets opposition in today's primary voting |page= 14 |newspaper=Daily Intelligencer / Montgomery County Record |date=June 12, 1984 }}</ref> | |||
*Low interest rates and opposition to the ];<ref>{{cite news |title=Lyndon LaRouche has got America's attention now! |date=March 27, 1986 |first=John |last=Dillin |newspaper=The Christian Science Monitor |url=http://www.csmonitor.com/1986/0327/arouche.html |access-date=October 20, 2009 |archive-date=October 14, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121014092302/http://www.csmonitor.com/1986/0327/arouche.html |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
===Later orientation=== | |||
LaRouche believes that capitalism is not, as Marxists argue, the principal enemy of progress. LaRouche has developed the theory described above, in which he says that an oligarchical faction within the financial community is in fact that principal enemy of progress. This ] conspiracy, he says, predates and transcends both capitalism and socialism. | |||
According to '']'', LaRouche was once a Marxist, but later supported heavily regulated capitalism. He supported public control of financial capital and low-interest loans.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.xinhuanet.com/fortune/2010-03/31/c_1210286.htm |title=The Current World Financial System is Unsalvageable (现行的世界金融体系已经无可救药) |first=Ju |last=Hui (鞠辉) |newspaper=] |date=July 24, 2009 |access-date=December 11, 2010 |archive-date=November 7, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107212200/http://news.xinhuanet.com/fortune/2010-03/31/c_1210286.htm |url-status=dead }} Lyndon LaRouche ... used to endorse Marxism, but later switched to supporting the American-style capitalist economy. ... He also states that if the public controlled the financial capital and revitalized industries with low-interest loans, American people can return to the spirit of innovation.</ref> | |||
LaRouche said banks should not be bailed out, but be placed in receivership by the state. He said that a "]" should prevent state aid from being diverted to speculative entities, which should be allowed to fail, and that such failures would clean up the financial markets.<ref name=Caizzi>{{cite news |last=Caizzi |first=Ivo |title=La Bretton Woods 2 di LaRouche e Tremonti |url=http://archiviostorico.corriere.it/2008/ottobre/20/Bretton_Woods_LaRouche_Tremonti_ce_0_081020029.shtml |work=Corriere della Sera |date=October 20, 2008 |access-date=November 16, 2008 |archive-date=January 8, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160108145251/http://archiviostorico.corriere.it/2008/ottobre/20/Bretton_Woods_LaRouche_Tremonti_ce_0_081020029.shtml |url-status=live }} {{cite web |title=Google translation |url=https://translate.google.com/translate?js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&sl=it&tl=en&u=http://archiviostorico.corriere.it/2008/ottobre/20/Bretton_Woods_LaRouche_Tremonti_ce_0_081020029.shtml |access-date=May 28, 2022 |archive-date=May 28, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220528155643/https://archivio-corriere-it.translate.goog/Archivio/interface/landing.html?_x_tr_sl=it&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
LaRouche has said that a fundamental question of economics is the problem of diminishing resources. He argues that this can be overcome through the creative power of the human mind, which makes it possible to harness elements of nature that were once considered useless, such as oil, and then find new resources before the old ones have been depleted. Thus, in LaRouche's theory, the principal subject of economics is the ability of the cognitive powers of the individual human mind to make new "discoveries of universal principles." These discoveries, LaRouche says, lead to revolutions in ], which re-define man's relationship to nature in a ] way (LaRouche's most recent book on economics, entitled ''The Economics of the Nošsphere,'' praises the ideas of ].) Such revolutions, he says, are contingent on the viability of the ], on its capacity to absorb and transmit new ideas: LaRouche asserts that the most historically successful variety of culture is what he terms the classical culture of ] during the time of ], or the culture of ] in the centuries following the ]. A small note to this, the centuries following the Renaissance had their moments, but LaRouche focuses on specific people, showing specific and truthful principles. | |||
LaRouche believes in the principles of the ] of President ], and favors state intervention in the economy. LaRouche also said that he supported the approach of U.S. Treasury Secretary ], who established a banking system geared to develop production.<ref name=Caizzi/> | |||
LaRouche supports extensive government intervention, both in terms of regulating sectors of the economy that are essential to the well-being of the nation (infrastructure), and in terms of providing credits for investment in ] projects and science projects such as ] that are too large and long-term for any private firm to pursue. LaRouche points to policies such as ]'s ] and ]'s ] as examples of successful economic policy. LaRouche also supports the selective use of government's power both to tax and to issue credits (see ]) as a means of encouraging productive investment, while discouraging ]. He calls for greater federal investment in science and technology, particularly the ] and ], with an emphasis on ]. | |||
Italian Economics Minister ] said that he had encountered LaRouche at a debate held in 2007 in Rome, and that he appreciates LaRouche's writings. According to an article by Ivo Caizzi in '']'', a group of Italian Senators led by ] asked the Berlusconi government to tackle the financial crisis using legislation developed by LaRouche in 2007. The legislation proposed that public money should save only the commercial infrastructure required for the financing of productive enterprises.<ref name=Caizzi/> | |||
He believes that if governments do not play a strong role in directing national economies, the gap will be filled by several kinds of ] and ]s. It is because of this that LaRouche opposes ] and ] and supports ]. | |||
The "Triple Curve", or "typical collapse function", is an economic model developed by LaRouche which tries to illustrate the growth of financial aggregates at the expense of the physical economy and how this leads to an inevitably collapsing ]. According to the ''China Youth Daily Online'' interview, LaRouche's main point is that the ] (production) is dropping while the nominal economy (money and financial instruments) is going up. As the nominal economy greatly overreaches the real economy, an unavoidable economic crisis ensues.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://zqb.cyol.com/content/2009-07/24/content_2771606.htm |title=The Current World Financial System is Unsalvageable (现行的世界金融体系已经无可救药) |first=Ju |last=Hui (鞠辉) |newspaper=China Youth Daily |date=July 24, 2009 |access-date=July 28, 2009 |archive-date=November 6, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181106181927/http://zqb.cyol.com/content/2009-07/24/content_2771606.htm |url-status=live }} His basic points about the unavoidability of the current US economic crisis are: the production of real goods is constantly dropping, but the credit supplies are steadily increasing, the real and nominal economies form two curves with one going up, and another one going down, which creates a great contrast. When the nominal economy greatly overreaches the real economy, the world will fall into an economic crisis.</ref> | |||
LaRouche maintains that supranational financial institutions such as the ] are committed to a policy of looting the living standards of the world's populations through ] and ], while contracting the actual productive base of these economies -- a policy that he claims is a revival of the economic approach of the ] central banker ], who held office both before and during the ] government of ]. To remedy this, LaRouche proposes a new international conference, modeled on the ], for the purpose of reorganizing a bankrupt monetary system, and eliminating most of the presently unpayable debt. For example, he advocates the retroactive cancellation of all ] contracts. He proposes that new credits be created for very large ] projects all over the world; LaRouche has published specific proposals for such projects in ], ], ], the ], ] and ], and ]. LaRouche considers it to be the unfinished mission of the ] to end any form of ], which he associates in particular with the ] policies of the International Monetary Fund in the post-1972 period. | |||
Since 2000, the LaRouche movement has: | |||
===LaRouche-Riemann Method=== | |||
*Called for a ] on ] debt.<ref name=Beltran>{{cite news |last=Beltran |first=Jill |title=Group proposes steps vs. economic crisis |url=http://www.sunstar.com.ph/static/man/2008/10/26/news/group.proposes.steps.vs.economic.crisis.html |newspaper=Sun-Star |location=Manila |date=October 26, 2008 |access-date=September 21, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081028234535/http://www.sunstar.com.ph/static/man/2008/10/26/news/group.proposes.steps.vs.economic.crisis.html |archive-date=October 28, 2008 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Qazwini |first=Iqbal |title=Major International Crises Need a Giant Project to Overcome Them |url=http://www.aawsat.com/leader.asp?section=3&issueno=8822&article=148496 |newspaper=] |date=January 23, 2003 |access-date=September 21, 2009 |archive-date=July 16, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716202344/http://www.aawsat.com/leader.asp?section=3&issueno=8822&article=148496 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The '''LaRouche-Riemann Method''' was built on the application of ] concepts to the theories of ] | |||
*Opposed ].<ref name=Smith/> According to LaRouche's publications, "LaRouche has consistently called for reregulation of utilities, transportation, health care (under the "Hill-Burton" standard), the financial (especially the speculative markets) and other sectors ..."<ref>{{cite web |title=Campaign 2004: Where they stand |url=http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2003/3050wh_th_stand_econ.html |publisher=larouchepub.com |date=December 26, 2003 |access-date=September 1, 2009 |archive-date=November 12, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081112034821/http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2003/3050wh_th_stand_econ.html |url-status=live }}</ref> They support the renewal of ] regulations on banks.<ref name="Santangelo"/> | |||
*In 2007, LaRouche proposed a "Homeowners and Bank Protection Act". This called for the establishment of a federal agency that would "place federal- and state-chartered banks under protection, freeze all existing home mortgages for a period of time, adjust mortgage values to fair prices, restructure existing mortgages at appropriate interest rates, and write off speculative debt obligations of mortgage-backed securities". The bill envisioned a foreclosure moratorium, allowing homeowners to make the equivalent of rental payments for an interim period, and an end to bank bail-outs, forcing banks to reorganize under bankruptcy laws. A LaRouche spokesman said that bank bail-outs "reward corrupt swindlers with taxpayer money". The proposal attracted support from Democrats at city council and state legislature level. Pennsylvania Democrat ] opposed the bill, stating it would involve government seizure of "every American bank". Mike Colpitts of ''Housing Predictor'' stated that LaRouche's economic forecasts had been correct, and that he might have received more mainstream credibility had it not been for his controversial history.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716011342/http://www.saukvalley.com/articles/2007/11/02/news/state/293146607163817.txt |date=July 16, 2011 }}, saukvalley.com, November 2, 2007.</ref> | |||
==Neoplatonism== | |||
LaRouche posits axiomatically non-linear notions of individual human cognition to the science of physical economy, established in the late 17th century by ]. LaRouche claims to have located the determining, non-linear factor in increase of society's potential relative population-density in the relation to the development of advanced productive designs. In his subsequent search for a measurable standard for this treatment of the role of human cognition, LaRouche adopted the Leibniz-]-] standpoint, as represented by Riemann's ] ] to form the LaRouche-Riemann Method. | |||
]. Aristotle gestures to the earth, representing his belief in knowledge through empirical observation. Plato gestures to the heavens, representing his belief in ].<ref name="Johnson 1983 193">{{harvnb|Johnson|1983|pp=193}}</ref>]] | |||
LaRouche's philosophy references an old dispute between Plato and Aristotle. Aristotle believed in knowledge through empirical observation and experience. Plato believed in ]. | |||
According to LaRouche, history has always been a battle between ]—], idealists and utopians who believe in absolute truth and the ]—and ]—relativists who rely on ] data and sensory perception. Platonists in LaRouche's worldview include figures such as ], ], ], ], and ]. LaRouche states that many of the world's ills are due to the fact that Aristotelianism, as embraced by British philosophers like Locke, Hume, ], ] and represented by "oligarchs", foremost among them wealthy British families, has dominated, leading to a culture that favors the empirical over the ], embraces ], and seeks to keep the general population uninformed. LaRouche frames this struggle as an ancient one, and sees himself and his movement in the tradition of the ]s in Plato's '']''.<ref>{{harvnb|Toumey|1996|p=85ff.}} | |||
<br />{{*}} {{harvnb|Johnson|1983|pp=187ff.}} | |||
<br />{{*}} {{harvnb|George|Wilcox|1996|pp=285ff.}} | |||
<br />{{*}} For the English empiricists, see also {{harvnb|Robins|Post|1997}}, p. 196. | |||
<br />{{*}} For the list of friends and foes, see {{harvnb|Johnson|1983}}, pp. 22, 188, 192–193.</ref> | |||
LaRouche and his followers use Neoplatonism as the basis for an economic model that posits "the absolute necessity of progress". Economies evolve in stages as humanity devises new technologies, stages that LaRouche compares to the hierarchical spheres in Kepler's model of the solar system based on the ]. The purpose of science, technology and business must be to assist this progress, enabling the Earth to support an ever-growing humanity. Human life is the supreme value in LaRouche's world view; environmentalism and ] are seen as retrogressive steps, promoting a return to the Dark Ages. Rather than curtailing progress, because of dwindling resources, LaRouche advocates using nuclear technology to make more energy available to humanity, freeing humanity to enjoy music and art.{{sfn|Johnson|1983|pp=196, 198}} | |||
With the formulation of this method, LaRouche claims success as a long-range forecaster. LaRouche says that he predicted that if the policies of the ] and ] presidencies persisted, the second half of the 1960s would experience a series of international financial-monetary crises, leading toward a breakdown in the existing ] system. The LaRouche-Riemann Method predictions for the future include a systemic crisis, and a general breakdown crisis" of the global system if ] forms of austerity measures are continued. | |||
]'' (1596)]]In LaRouche's view, the people opposing this vision are part of the Aristotelian conspiracy. They may not necessarily be in contact with one another: "From their standpoint, are proceeding by instinct", LaRouche has said. "If you're asking how their policy is developed—if there is an inside group sitting down and making plans—no, it doesn't work that way ... History doesn't function quite that consciously."{{sfn|Johnson|1983|p=198}} Left and right are false distinctions for LaRouche; what matters is the Platonic versus Aristotelian outlook, a position that has led LaRouche to form relationships with groups as disparate as farmers, nuclear engineers, Black Muslims, Teamsters, ], and followers of the Ku Klux Klan—even though LaRouche counts the Klan itself among his foes. | |||
===Triple Curve=== | |||
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: ] --> | |||
], in ''Architects of Fear'' (1983), has described LaRouche's Neoplatonist conspiracy theory as a "distortion of a real philosophical distinction".<ref name="Johnson 1983 193"/> He has written that the resulting philosophy can be applied to any number of situations in a manner that becomes plausible once one accepts its basic premise. In his view, it forms the foundation of a conspiracy theory that rationalizes paranoid thinking, an opinion echoed by John George and ] in ''American Extremists: Militias, Supremacists, Klansmen, Communists & Others'' (1996).<ref name=Johnson2>{{harvnb|Copulus|1984}}, p. 2. | |||
The "Triple Curve" or "typical collapse function", is an economic model developed by LaRouche which purports to illustrate the growth of financial aggregates at the expense of the ] and how this leads to an inevitably collapsing ]. | |||
<br />{{*}} {{harvnb|Johnson|1983}}, p. 187ff. | |||
<br />{{*}} {{harvnb|George|Wilcox|1996|pp=285ff.}} | |||
<br />{{*}} Also see {{harvnb|Robins|Post|1997|p=194}}. Discussing LaRouche's view of history, they write: "We have found no person who has developed a more complex, or more ingenious, paranoid theory than Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche, Jr." | |||
<br />{{*}} For the relationships LaRouche has formed, including with Klan followers, see {{harvnb|Johnson|1989}}. | |||
<br />{{*}} For the list of friends and foes, see {{harvnb|Johnson|1983}}, pp. 22, 188, 192–193. See p. 22 for inclusion of the Klan among his foes. | |||
<br />{{*}} For LaRouche on his philosophy, see {{Cite news|author=LaRouche, Lyndon|url=http://wlym.com/PDF-77-85/CAM7806.pdf|title=The Secrets Known Only to the Inner Elites|work=The Campaigner|date=May–June 1978|pages=5ff|access-date=September 3, 2007|archive-date=June 9, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110609111116/http://wlym.com/PDF-77-85/CAM7806.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> Writing in '']'' in 1989, Johnson described LaRouche as "a kind of ] gone mad" who seems to "believe the nonsense he spouts", a view of the world in which Aristotelians use "sex, drugs and rock-and-roll" and "environmentalism and quantum theory" to support wealthy oligarchs and create a civilization-destroying "new Dark Age".{{sfn|Johnson|1989}} | |||
==Conspiracies== | |||
According to this model, speculative gains in financial markets are sustained by diverting monetary flows out of the ], into financial markets. This is sustained, increasingly, by looting the economic basis through large-scale attrition in basic economic infrastructure, and by driving down the net after-inflation prices paid for wages and production of operatives. Thus, the charting economic data should show a "Triple Curve": | |||
LaRouche wrote that conspiracy was natural in human beings. In 1998, he responded to critics of his conspiracism, such as ] and said that Pipes wrongly believed that all reports of conspiracy are axiomatically false. | |||
LaRouche's critics, particularly Dennis King and ], characterize his current orientation as being a ] worldview. They say the Marxist concept of the ] was converted by LaRouche into a conspiracy theory, in which world capitalism was controlled by a cabal including the ]s, the ]s, ], and the ].<ref name=King1989>{{Cite book | last = King | first = Dennis | year = 1989 | title = Lyndon LaRouche and the new American fascism | isbn = 978-0-385-23880-9 | publisher = Doubleday | location = New York | oclc = 18684318 | url = https://archive.org/details/lyndonlarouchene0000king | url-access = registration }}</ref><ref name=BerletBellman>{{Cite book|last=Berlet|first=Chip|author-link=Chip Berlet|author2=Joel Bellman|year=1989|title=Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism Wrapped in an American Flag|publisher=Political Research Associates|url=http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/nclc1.html|access-date=January 7, 2005|archive-date=August 31, 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090831042037/http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/nclc1.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name=BerletLyons>{{cite news | last1 = Berlet | first1 = Chip | last2 = Lyons | first2 = Matthew N. | year = 2000 | title = Right-wing populism in America: Too Close for Comfort | isbn = 978-1-57230-562-5 | publisher = Guilford Press | location = New York | oclc = 185635579 | url = https://archive.org/details/rightwingpopulis00berlrich | url-access = registration }}</ref> ] said that LaRouche personalizes his conspiracy theories, and associates "all of his adversaries with the forces of darkness."<ref>{{Cite book|title=Conspiracy: How the Paranoid Style Flourishes and Where It Comes From|first =Daniel|last=Pipes|page=12|publisher=Middle East Forum|year= 1999 |isbn=978-0-684-87111-0}}</ref> | |||
*A hyperbolic curve, upward, of financial aggregates; | |||
*A slower, but also hyperbolic curve, upward, of monetary aggregate needed to sustain the financial bubble; | |||
*An accelerating, downward, curve in net per-capita real output. This reflects the accelerated looting of the physical economy's base to sustain the financial bubble. | |||
The '']'' (EIR), a LaRouche publication, ran an "investigative report" titled "Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy At It Again, With a New Twist" in 2007. The article states: | |||
LaRouche developed this concept, which was an outgrowth of his theories of physical principle, dating from a project he conducted during the late ] and early ]. These theories arose out of his opposition to ] devotee ]'s efforts, as in the latter's ] "]," to apply ] to communication of ideas. As part of that same project, he also opposed what he calls Russell devotee ]'s efforts to degrade real economic processes to solutions for systems of simultaneous linear inequalities. | |||
{{blockquote|Perhaps the only name that sends the VRWC gang more into orbit than either Bill and Hillary Clinton, is the name Lyndon LaRouche. The very same apparatus that waged a billion-dollar slander campaign against the President and the First Lady throughout much of the mid- and late 1990s, has an even longer track record of venomous slander and frame-up campaigns against LaRouche and his political movement. | |||
Of course, the reality is that it was the Bush-Cheney campaign, backed by the Scalia Supreme Court, that actually stole the 2000 election in Florida.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111015084610/http://larouchepub.com/other/2007/3432vast_rtwing_conspiracy.html |date=October 15, 2011 }} ''Executive Intelligence Review'', August 17, 2007</ref>}} | |||
==Marxist roots== | |||
Lyndon LaRouche began his political career as a ] but he and his ] abandoned this outlook in the ]s. LaRouche no longer opposes ] as an economic system, and his analysis of political events is no longer phrased in terms of ]. To LaRouche, the main enemy is now the conspiracy of financiers he calls the ]. | |||
In 2001, LaRouche said that rogue elements within the American military took part in, or planned, the ] as part of a ''coup d'état''.<ref name=Witt>{{cite news|title=No Joke; Eight-time presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche may be a punchline on 'The Simpsons,' but his organization – and the effect it has on young recruits – is dead serious|first=April|last=Witt|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=October 24, 2004|page=W.12|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A46883-2004Oct20.html|access-date=August 27, 2009|archive-date=September 26, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110926204322/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A46883-2004Oct20.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.schillerinstitute.org/lar_related/lar_brz_122301.html |title=Zbigniew Brzezinski and September 11th |first=Lyndon H |last=LaRouche, Jr |date=December 23, 2001 |access-date=May 22, 2009 |archive-date=June 16, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090616131854/http://www.schillerinstitute.org/lar_related/lar_brz_122301.html |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
During and after the period of his break with orthodox ], LaRouche's theory was influenced by what he called his "Theory of Hegemony" which was derived from ]'s view of the role of intellectuals in being a ] helping workers develop their consciousness and realise their leading role in society. He was also influnced by ]'s concept of a ] as an intellectual and cultural elite which directs social thought. LaRouche's theory saw himself and his followers as being able to become such a hegemonic force. He rejected, however, Gramsci's notion of "organic intellectuals" being developed by the working class itself. Rather, the working class would be led by elite intellectuals such as himself. | |||
===The "British" conspiracy=== | |||
LaRouche was also influenced by his readings of ]'s ''The Accumulation of Capital'' and ]'s '']'' developing his own "theory of reindustralization," arguing that the west would attempt to industrialize the ], particularly ], and attempt to solve the economic crisis both by developing new markets in the Third World and using its cheap and surplus labor to increase profits and minimise costs (see ].) This attempt would be unsuccessful, however, and would lead to catastrophic economic collapse. To oppose this, LaRouche argued for a "reindustrialization" of the United States with himself at the vanguard of the effort allowing him to personally resolve the crisis of capitalism. Though his arguments have since been stripped of their quasi-Marxist language and citations, his core theories have remained essentially the same since the late ]s. | |||
LaRouche is known for alleging conspiracies by the British. LaRouche has said that the dominant imperialist strategic force acting on the planet today is not the United States, but the "Anglo-Dutch liberal system" of the ], which he asserts is an ] financial consortium like that of medieval ], more like a "financial slime-mold" than a nation.<ref>{{cite news |last=Vasilyev |first=Mikhail |title=Attacks in India staged by England |url=http://news.km.ru/terakty_v_indii_ustroila_angliya/print |newspaper={{ill|KM.Ru News|ru|Кирилл и Мефодий (компания)}}|date=March 2, 2009 |access-date=October 1, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090207114600/http://news.km.ru/terakty_v_indii_ustroila_angliya/print |archive-date=February 7, 2009 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> According to this theory, London financial circles protect themselves from competition by using techniques of "controlled conflict" first developed in Venice, and LaRouche attributes many wars in recent memory to this alleged activity by the British.<ref>{{cite web|last=Schenk |first=Vladimir |title=Warmongers |url=http://nacbez.ru/society/article.php?id=1644 |publisher=Project NatsBez.ru |date=April 26, 2006 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060524102919/http://nacbez.ru/society/article.php?id=1644 |archive-date=May 24, 2006 }}</ref> | |||
According to ] and Dennis King, LaRouche has always been stridently anti-British and has included ], the British Royal Family, and others, in his list of conspirators who are said to control the world's political economy and the international drug trade.<ref name=King1989/><ref name=BerletBellman/><ref>{{cite web |title=THE OUTER LIMITS OF AMERICAN POLITICS – ''Lyndon LaRouche And the New American Fascism'' by Dennis King; ''The Silent Brotherhood: Inside America's Racist Underground'' by Kevin Flynn and Gary Gerhardt |author=David J. Garrow |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=July 30, 1989 |url=http://lyndonlarouche.org/review4.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090617221143/http://lyndonlarouche.org/review4.htm |archive-date=2009-06-17 |url-status=usurped |via=lyndonlarouche.org}}</ref> According to Jonathan Vankin and John Whalen, LaRouche is the "most illustrious" ].<ref>{{Cite book |title=Eighty greatest conspiracies of all time |author1=Jonathan Vankin |author2=John Whalen |publisher=Citadel Press |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-8065-2531-0}}</ref> These views are reflected in three books authored by members of his organization: | |||
] writes: | |||
:This scheme, which shaped LaRouche writings and agitation in the late '60s and early '70s, was presented in an increasingly frenetic manner, bolstered by predictions of economic doom. LaRouche was a crisis-monger of the highest order. LaRouche and his followers became increasingly convinced that the fate of the world rested with their group and their great leader. The problem lay with the stupidity of the nation's leaders and the boorishness of the masses. If only LaRouche were in power, all the world's troubles - perhaps even the rats problem in ] - would be resolved swiftly. | |||
*''Dope, Inc.'' by ], Konstandinos Kalimtgis and Jeffrey Steinberg, 1978 ({{ISBN|0-918388-08-2}}): this book discusses the history of narcotics trafficking, beginning with the ], and alleges that British interests have continued to dominate the field up to the modern era, for example through ] in British ] colonies. The heart of the conspiracy, according to LaRouche, is the financial elite of the ].<!--<ref name="nbc-queen-01"/><ref name="newsnight1980"/>--> | |||
==Fascism== | |||
*''The Civil War and the American System'' by Allen Salisbury, 1979 ({{ISBN|0918388023}}): alleges that British interests encouraged and financed the secession movement and supported the ] against the Union in the ], because they preferred North America to be a primitive agrarian economy that they could dominate through policies of ]. | |||
According to LaRouche, the first ] state was France under ]. European oligarchical forces, he claims, intervened in the ] to prevent it from becoming a republican, American-style revolution, and steered it instead toward becoming a bloodbath followed by a dictatorship. LaRouche calls this the beginning of modern ], a revival of feudal-Venetian methods. | |||
*''The New Dark Ages Conspiracy'' by Carol White, 1980 ({{ISBN|0-933488-05-X}}): alleges that a group of British intellectuals led by ] and ] attempted to control scientific progress in order to keep the world backward and more easily managed by ]. In this conspiracy theory, Wells wished science to be controlled by some kind of priesthood and kept from the common man, while Russell wished to stifle it altogether by restricting it to a closed system of formal ], that would prohibit the introduction of new ideas. This conspiracy also involved the promotion of the ]. | |||
====The Queen and Prince Philip==== | |||
Most contemporary definitions of ] emphasize components such as ], ], ], and ]. Organizationally, fascist movements are characterized by the use or advocacy of violence, lack of internal democracy and regimentation in the service of charismatic personal leadership. ], and specifically ], are often characteristics of fascists and fascist parties, but are generally not held to be essential elements of fascism. | |||
According to book critic and columnist Scott McLemee:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bookcriticscircle.blogspot.com/2008/05/nbcc-good-reads-3-long-tail-scott.html|title=Blogger|website=bookcriticscircle.blogspot.com|access-date=April 9, 2011|archive-date=July 8, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708030723/http://bookcriticscircle.blogspot.com/2008/05/nbcc-good-reads-3-long-tail-scott.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
<blockquote>The emergence of the is all the more surprising, given that LaRouche himself has long since become the walking punchline to a very strange joke. He is known for some of the most baroque conspiracy theories ever put into circulation. Members of the LYM now deny that he ever accused the {{sic|Queen of England}} of drug trafficking—though in fact, he did exactly that throughout the 1980s. At the time, he won admirers on the extreme right wing by denouncing Henry Kissinger as an agent of the KGB and calling for AIDS patients to be quarantined.<ref name=McLemee>{{cite news |first=Scott |last=McLemee |url=http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee132 |title=The LaRouche Youth Movement |work=Inside Higher Ed |date=July 11, 2007 |archive-date=April 17, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110417133920/http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee132 |url-status=dead |df=mdy }}</ref></blockquote> | |||
LaRouche, however, points to a specific economic policy as the foundation of fascism: it is a situation where the financial system has become insolvent, and rather than put it through a bankruptcy reorganization, the ruling powers attempt to prop it up by cannibalizing the workforce through radical ] and forced-labor policies. LaRouche identifies these policies particularly with ] finance minister ], whom LaRouche considers to be instrumental in bringing ] to power. With the collapse of the ] in 1972, LaRouche warned that key financial institutions of the world were committed to a revival of Schacht's policies, first in the form of intensified ] of the Third World, and increasingly with respect to the economic policies of the more wealthy nations toward their own populations. | |||
In 2004, in a segment about the death of ] during a LaRouche Youth Movement cadre school in Wiesbaden in March 2003, BBC's '']'' re-broadcast a BBC interview with LaRouche from 1980, in which he said about the ]: "Of course she's pushing drugs. That is, in the sense of a responsibility, the head of a gang that is pushing drugs, she knows it's happening and she isn't stopping it."<ref name=Samuels>Samuels, Tim. "Jeremiah Duggan's death and Lyndon LaRouche", ''Newsnight'', BBC, February 2004, at 3:49 of part 1 as hosted on ''YouTube''.</ref> | |||
LaRouche himself frequently describes his enemies as fascists or proto-fascists. On the other hand, LaRouche himself is frequently described by left-wing writers and orators as a ]. Journalist ] used this thesis in the title of his book ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism.'' | |||
A 1998 editorial in LaRouche's '']'' cited a statement by ] in '']'' that described LaRouche as the "publisher of a book that accuses the Queen of being the world's foremost drug dealer", characterising it as a "bit of black propaganda" and a "reference to the book Dope, Inc., ... which laid bare the role of the London-centered offshore financial institutions and allied intelligence services, in running the global drug trade, from the time of Britain's nineteenth-century Opium Wars against China."<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929095721/http://www.larouchepub.com/other/1998/eir_edit_2524.html |date=September 29, 2007 }}, ''Executive Intelligence Review'', June 12, 1998.</ref> Evans-Pritchard further said LaRouche had claimed that the Queen was involved in the ].<ref name=Telegraphcult>Pritchard-Evans, Ambrose. , ''The Daily Telegraph'', June 4, 1998.</ref> The ''Executive Intelligence Review'' responded that Evans-Pritchard's article was "pure fiction", written in response to EIR reporter Jeff Steinberg's appearance on a British ] television program about the ]. In a brief part of an interview with Steinberg broadcast the following day by ]'s '']'', Steinberg said that while there was "no smoking gun proof" that Prince Philip asked British intelligence to assassinate Diana, he could not "rule out" the possibility.<ref>Steinberg, Jeffrey, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070416060853/http://www.larouchepub.com/other/1998/2525_diana_wars.html |date=April 16, 2007 }}, ''Executive Intelligence Review'', June 19, 1998</ref> | |||
Fascism is a difficult word to define, and has been debased since ] by its frequent use of a term of general abuse. | |||
===Leo Strauss=== | |||
LaRouche does not openly advocate American nationalism or militarism. ''],'' which consisted of violent physical attacks on left-wing meetings, is the genesis of most accusations of LaRouche being a fascist; however, the LaRouche network has not engaged in physical violence against its political opponents since the 1970s. In fact, the LaRouche movement has opposed most recent U.S. military actions, including both invasions of Iraq, the bombing of Yugoslavia, and attacks on Grenada and Panama. | |||
LaRouche's initial essay on the influence of ] within ] and the George W. Bush administration, "The Essential Fraud of Leo Strauss", was written in March 2003.<ref name="ZuckertZuckert2006">{{cite book|author-link1=Catherine Zuckert|author-link2=Michael Zuckert|last1=Zuckert|first1=Catherine H.|last2=Zuckert|first2=Michael P.|title=The truth about Leo Strauss: political philosophy and American democracy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P-PpPtGojpoC|year=2006|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-99332-4|pages=11–17}}</ref> In the same year, a series of pamphlets entitled "Children of Satan" later consolidated into a book, began appearing. LaRouche charges that there was a conspiracy dominated by what are called ] (followers of ]) within the Bush administration, and that the dominant personality in this conspiracy was ] (whose photo appears on the cover of the book.) LaRouche claimed that these conspirators deliberately misled the American public and the US Congress in order to initiate the ]. He writes that the Straussians created the ] in order to fabricate intelligence and bypass traditional intelligence channels.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2003/3019lar_expose_strauss.html |last=Steinberg |first=Jeffrey |title=LaRouche Exposé of Straussian 'Children of Satan' Draws Blood |work=Executive Intelligence Review |date=May 16, 2003 |access-date=January 10, 2007 |archive-date=February 17, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070217215953/http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2003/3019lar_expose_strauss.html |url-status=live }}</ref> According to LaRouche movement member Tony Papert, an important part of this theory is the LaRouchian analysis of the ideas of Leo Strauss which borrows heavily from the writings of ].<ref>Papert, Tony, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929104500/http://www.larouchepub.com/pr/site_packages/2003/leo_strauss/3015secret_kingdom_ap_.html |date=September 29, 2007 }}, ''Executive Intelligence Review'', April 18, 2003</ref> | |||
] of '']'' has condemned LaRouche's views on this subject, and says that it may have influenced other commentators who subsequently published a similar analysis, such as ] and ] in their articles for '']''. Bartley quotes the assertion by LaRouche movement member Jeffrey Steinberg that a "cabal of Strauss disciples, along with an equally small circle of allied neo-conservative and Likudnik fellow-travelers" have plotted a "not-so-silent coup" using the ] as a justification, similar to the ] of 1933. Bartley complains that Strauss's "words are twisted from their meaning" in order to justify the theory.<ref name=Bartley>{{cite news|title=Joining LaRouche In the Fever Swamps|url=http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/rbartley/?id=110003602|first=Robert L.|last=Bartley|work=The Wall Street Journal|date=June 9, 2003|access-date=January 10, 2007|archive-date=December 3, 2006|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061203064431/http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/rbartley/?id=110003602|url-status=live}}</ref> Canadian journalist ] has commented that LaRouche's followers "argue that Strauss is the evil genius behind the Republican Party".<ref>{{cite news|title=The philosopher, the late Leo Strauss has emerged as the thinker of the moment in Washington, but his ideas remain mysterious. Was he an ardent opponent of tyranny or an apologist for the abuse of power ? |first=Jeet|last=Heer|work=Boston Globe|date=May 11, 2003|page=H.1}}</ref> Political science scholars Catherine and Michael Zuckert say that LaRouche's writings were the first to connect Strauss to neoconservatism and the Bush foreign policy and initiated the discussion of the topic, though the views about it changed as it percolated through to international journalism.<ref name="ZuckertZuckert2006"/> | |||
The perceived abusive and demagogic nature of his political speech also leads to him being accused of being a fascist. | |||
===Bush family=== | |||
Since the 1980s, a new set of theories about fascism has gained attention in academia. These include the work of Roger Griffin (fascism as a right-wing populist movement calling for heroic rebirth - ''palingenesis'') and Emilio Gentile (the sacralization of politics). Using these and related theories, critics such as ] and Matthew N. Lyons have described LaRouche as a neofascist. | |||
{{Primary sources section|date=July 2024}} | |||
The ''Executive Intelligence Review'' (EIR) published an article by ] alleging that ] "had persevered with his comrades in the old Auschwitz gang" and that "the smoldering bodies in Auschwitz followed logically upon the race propaganda festival which had been staged by the Harriman-Bush enterprise a decade earlier in New York."<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101217052142/http://larouchepub.com/other/2000/2733_prescott_bush_hitler.html |date=December 17, 2010 }} by Anton Chaitkin, ''Executive Intelligence Review'' August 25, 2000</ref> | |||
EIR published a book, ''George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography'', by ] and Anton Chaitkin, in 1992, which said that "virtually all the Nazi trade with the United States was under the supervision of the Harriman-Bush interests", and that "Bush's family had already played a central role in financing and arming Adolf Hitler for his takeover of Germany; in financing and managing the buildup of Nazi war industries for the conquest of Europe and war against the U.S.A.; and in the development of Nazi genocide theories and racial propaganda, with their well-known results. ... The President's family fortune was largely a result of the Hitler project. The powerful Anglo-American family associations, which later boosted him into the Central Intelligence Agency and up to the White House, were his father's partners in the Hitler project."<ref> {{dead link|date=July 2021|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} by Anton Chaitkin, EIR 1992</ref><ref>Gary Indiana (May 18, 2004). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100805013316/http://www.villagevoice.com/2004-05-18/news/no-such-thing-as-paranoia/1 |date=August 5, 2010 }}, '']''</ref> | |||
According to Berlet and Lyons: | |||
In 2006, The LaRouche Political Action Committee and EIR published "LaRouche to Rumsfeld: FDR Defeated the Nazis, While Bushes Collaborated", which stated: | |||
:"Though often dismissed as a bizarre political cult, the LaRouche organization and its various front groups are a fascist movement whose pronouncements echo elements of Nazi ideology....Beginning in the 1970s, the LaRouchites combined populist antielitism with attacks on leftists, environmentalists, feminists, gay men and lesbians, and organized labor. They advocated a dictatorship in which a 'humanist' elite would rule on behalf of industrial capitalists. They developed an idiosyncratic, coded variation on the Illuminati Freemason and Jewish banker conspiracy theories. Their views, though exotic, were internally consistent and rooted in right-wing populist traditions." | |||
{{blockquote|LaRouche blasted Rumsfeld, reminding him that it was President Franklin Delano Roosevelt who defeated Hitler and the Nazis, while many American right-wingers of the 1930s and '40s were promoters of Mussolini, Hjalmar Schacht, and Hermann Goering. And among the extreme American Fascists and Nazis of the period, there were some who openly sympathized with Adolf Hitler, by intention or practice. | |||
:::<small>Berlet & Lyons, ''Right-Wing Populism in America'', p. 273.{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletLyons|2}}</small> | |||
"Let us not ignore the role of George Shultz, the man behind the Bush Presidency, the power of Vice President Cheney, and the promotion of Don Rumsfeld as Secretary of Defense. Even leading Republicans know Shultz to be an outright totalitarian, who has used the Bush Presidency to impose a 'Pinochet Model' of top-down dictatorship and radical free-market economics upon the United States. Shultz's promotion of the privatization of war, on the SS model, has been backed", LaRouche noted, "by Felix Rohatyn."<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2006/eirv33n37-20060915/eirv33n37-20060915_042-larouche_to_rumsfeld_fdr_defeate.pdf|title=LaRouche to Rumsfeld: FDR Defeated the Nazis, While Bushes Collaborated|work=Executive Intelligence Review|volume=33|issue=37|date=September 15, 2006|pages=42–3|access-date=October 8, 2017|archive-date=August 17, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170817224313/http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2006/eirv33n37-20060915/eirv33n37-20060915_042-larouche_to_rumsfeld_fdr_defeate.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref>}} | |||
Several critics of LaRouche argue that his ideas about economics are not original and are similar to the policies of ] under ]; and the ] of ] under ], ] under ], and ] under ].{{Fact}} | |||
==PANIC proposal and AIDS== | |||
According to research conducted by journalist ], LaRouche developed an intense interest in ] in the 1970s, and began to adopt some of its slogans and practices, while maintaining an outward stance of ]. King generally claims that LaRouche's public statements do not reflect his actual views.<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small> | |||
In 1974, an organisation affiliated to LaRouche predicted that there would be pandemics in Africa.<ref>{{cite news|at=introduction|author=Warren Hammerman|work=EIR Special Report|title=AIDS Global Showdown, Mankind's Total Victory or Total Defeat|date=January 1, 1988}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|author=Baker, Marcia Merry|title=NYC's Big Mac: Rohatyn's Model for Destroying Gov'ts|work=EIR|date=August 25, 2006}}</ref> When ] was first recognized as a medical phenomenon in the early 1980s, LaRouche activists were convinced that this was the pandemic about which the task force had warned. LaRouche and his followers stated (incorrectly) that HIV, the AIDS virus, could be transmitted by casual contact,<ref name=Roderick10-06>{{Cite news| issn = 0458-3035| page = 21| last = Roderick| first = Kevin| title = Paper Tied to LaRouche Attacks Gay Movement| work = Los Angeles Times |date = October 6, 1986}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book| publisher = Rutgers University Press| isbn = 9780813522852| page = 84| last = Toumey| first = Christopher P.| title = Conjuring science| year = 1996}}</ref> citing as supporting evidence the high incidence of the disease in Africa, the Caribbean and southern Florida.<ref name="Air, Mosquitoes 1986. pg. 30">{{Cite news|title=AIDS Spread by Air, Mosquitoes, LaRouche Says|work=Los Angeles Times|date=Jul 13, 1986|page=30}}</ref> LaRouche said that the transmission by insect bite was "thoroughly established".<ref>{{Cite news|title=Strange Twists Mark Prop. 64 Campaign|author=Kevin Roderick|work=Los Angeles Times|date=October 30, 1986|page=25}}</ref> ], medical director of the BHTF, told reporters that the Soviet Union may have started the epidemic and that U.S. health officials aided the Soviets by not doing more to stop AIDS.<ref name=Roderick>{{cite news|title=Decision on AIDS Measure Draws Appeals|author=Kevin Roderick|work=Los Angeles Times|date=Aug 12, 1986|page=3}}</ref> | |||
AIDS became a key plank in LaRouche's platform.<ref name=Roderick10-17/> His slogan was "Spread Panic, not AIDS!"<ref>{{Cite book| publisher = Basic Books| isbn = 9780465022885| page = | last = Faderman| first = Lillian| author2 = Stuart Timmons| title = Gay L.A.| date = January 1, 2006| url = https://archive.org/details/gaylahistoryofse00lill/page/308}}</ref> LaRouche's followers created "]" (PANIC), which sponsored California Proposition 64, the "LaRouche Initiative", in 1986. Mel Klenetsky, co-director of political operations for the Larouche-affiliated National Democratic Policy Committee and LaRouche's campaign director,<ref>{{Cite news|title=Democrats Scrutinize Larouche Bloc|author=Robin Toner|work=New York Times|date=March 30, 1986|page=A.22}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=CBS Sells Time To Fringe Candidate For Talk|author=Kerr, Peter|work=]|date=January 22, 1984|page=A.23}}</ref> said that there must be universal testing and mandatory quarantining of HIV carriers. "Twenty to 30 million out of 100 million people in central Africa have AIDS", Klenetsky said. "It is spreading because of impoverished economic conditions, and that is a direct result of IMF policies that have destroyed people's means of resisting the disease." Klenetsky said that LaRouche believed that not only drug users and homosexuals are vulnerable to the disease.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Looking at the World As Lyndon LaRouche Sees It; His Enemies List An Eclectic Mix|author=Thomas Oliphant|work=Boston Globe|date=Apr 6, 1986|page=24}}</ref> | |||
As for moving from the left to the right, historically a number of fascists started out as socialists, and critics argue this is the case with LaRouche.<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletBellman|1}}{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletLyons|2}}{{NamedRef|CriticsBerlet-1|3}}{{NamedRef|CriticsFraser1|4}}{{NamedRef|CriticsGilbert|5}}{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}{{NamedRef|CriticsWohlforth|8}}</small> | |||
The measure was met with strong opposition and was defeated. A second AIDS initiative qualified for the ballot in 1988, but the measure failed by a larger margin. In response to a survey which predicted that 72% of voters would oppose the measure, a spokesman called the poll "an obvious fraud", saying that pollsters deliberately worded questions to prejudice respondents against the initiative. He additionally said that the poll was part of a "big lie ... witch hunt" orchestrated by ] and ].<ref>{{Cite news|title=LaRouche backers repeat anti-AIDS initiative|author=Marc Lifsher|work=Orange County Register|location=Santa Ana, California|date=May 7, 1988|page=A.03}}</ref> | |||
==Conspiracy Theories== | |||
LaRouche steered the NCLC away from the Marxist left while retaining some of the slogans and attitudes of the left. LaRouche's critics, particularly ] and ], characterize his new orientation as ] worldview, or ]. They say the Marxist concept of the ] was converted by LaRouche into a conspiracy theory, in which world capitalism was controlled by a cabal including the ]s, the ]s, ], the ] and other standard villains of the extreme right, many though not all of them Jewish.<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletBellman|1}}{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletLyons|2}}{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small> | |||
As early as 1985, NDPC members ran for local school boards on a platform of keeping infected students out of school.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Top Issue In Elgin Schools Is Growth|author=Andrew Bagnato|work=Chicago Tribune|date=Oct 31, 1985|page=2}}</ref> In 1986, LaRouche supporters traveled from ] to ] to urge the school board there to reverse a policy that would allow children with AIDS to enroll.<ref name="Seattle Times 1986">{{Cite news|title=Larouche Backer Urges Ban On Aids Victims|work=Seattle Times|date=Apr 16, 1986|page=H.1}}</ref> In 1987, followers tried to organize a boycott of an elementary school in the Chicago neighborhood of ], sending a van with loudspeakers through the district.<ref name="Wrestles With Aids Fears 1987. pg. 1">{{Cite news|title=Pilsen Wrestles With Aids Fears, LaRouche Tactics|author=Karen M Thomas|work=Chicago Tribune|date=Mar 11, 1987|page=1}}</ref> They disrupted an informational meeting and, according to press accounts, told parents that "The blood of your own children will be on your hands if you allow this child with AIDS in your school", or shouted at opponents, "He has AIDS! He has AIDS!"<ref name="School 1987. pg. 12">{{Cite news|title=The High Road When A Child With Aids Comes To School, It Doesn't Have To Be A Crisis|author=David L. Kirp|work=Chicago Tribune|date=Dec 6, 1987|page=12}}</ref> | |||
In the 1960s and 1970s, LaRouche was particularly focused on the supposed danger posed by liberal Republicans such as ] believing that they were attempting to rescue a debt-strapped international financial system by imposing ] and forced-labor programs on impoverished populations in order to facillitate debt collection. LaRouche called this "Fascism with a Democratic Face," and charged that it was similar to the tactics of German Economics Minister ]. | |||
LaRouche purchased a national TV spot during his 1988 presidential campaign, in which he summarized his views and proposals with respect to the AIDS epidemic. He said most statements about how AIDS is spread were an "outright lie" and that talk of ] was just propaganda put out by the government to avoid spending the money required to address the crisis.<ref>{{Cite news| page = 3| agency = Associated Press| via= Google News Archive Search| work = Deseret News| access-date = 2009-07-06| date = February 5, 1988| url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=336&dat=19880205&id=XP4OAAAAIBAJ&pg=7146,1238472 |title=DEAD LINK}}{{dead link|dte=February 2021|date=February 2021}}</ref> | |||
The heart of the conspiracy, according to LaRouche, was the financial elite of the ]. LaRouche has always been stridently anti-British and has included ], the British Royal Family, and others, in his list of conspirators who are said to control the world's political economy and the international drug trade.<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletBellman|1}}{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small>. In addition, "The Sexual Congress for Cultural Fascism" (2004) names the British ] as a potential source of international conspiratorial authority, citing the membership of prominent British ] and ], especially within the ] and the British government.<small>{{NamedRef|Sexualcongress|1}}</small> | |||
The AIDS disinformation of the LaRouche movement occurred during the Soviets' ] propaganda campaign. According to researcher Douglas Selvage, "a cycle of misinformation and disinformation... arose between U.S.-based conspiracy theorists—especially Lyndon LaRouche and his followers—and authors and publications espousing Moscow's preferred theses regarding AIDS."<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Selvage|first=Douglas|date=2019-10-01|title=Operation "Denver": The East German Ministry of State Security and the KGB's AIDS Disinformation Campaign, 1985–1986 (Part 1)|url=https://doi.org/10.1162/jcws_a_00907|journal=Journal of Cold War Studies|volume=21|issue=4|pages=71–123|doi=10.1162/jcws_a_00907|s2cid=204771850|issn=1520-3972|access-date=November 9, 2021|archive-date=May 28, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220528155644/https://direct.mit.edu/jcws/article-abstract/21/4/71/13815/Operation-Denver-The-East-German-Ministry-of-State?redirectedFrom=fulltext|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In 1999, an article in the LaRouche-controlled ''Executive Intelligence Review'' accused senior advisers to the Royal family and MI6 of planning to assassinate him, after a British women's magazine called ''Take a Break'' published a critical article about him. | |||
LaRouche-affiliated candidates used AIDS as an issue as late as 1994.<ref>{{cite news|title=LaRouche Candidate Stirs Crowd|author=Jo Mannies|work=St. Louis Post–Dispatch|date=Apr 26, 1994|page=02.B}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=LaRouche Disciple Bucks Democrats; Therese Mallory Is Opposing Party-Endorsed Sara Nichols|author=Reid Kanaley|work=Philadelphia Inquirer|date=Apr 20, 1994|page=B.1}}</ref> | |||
On August 2, 1999, Debra Hanania-Freeman, national spokeswoman for LaRouche, issued the following statement about the alleged threat: "After consulting with security experts familiar with the ''modus operandi'' of British intelligence networks, we are treating the piece as a cover for an MI6 order, probably with direct backing from someone in the royal household, to assassinate Lyndon LaRouche.... The inflammatory article ... reflects a growing hysteria around Buckingham Palace, over the growing global influence of LaRouche's ideas and his continuing exposé of the British oligarchy... | |||
Opponents characterized it as an anti-gay measure that would force HIV-positive individuals out of their jobs and into ],<ref>{{Cite news|title=AIDS initiative already causing lots of firework|author=John Marelius|work=The San Diego Union|date=Jun 26, 1986|page=A.3}}</ref> or create "concentration camps for AIDS patients."<ref>{{Cite news|title=LaRouche-Supported Initiative on AIDS Policy In California Spurs Debate on Handling Disease|author=John Emshwiller|work=Wall Street Journal|date=Aug 11, 1986|page=1}}</ref> According to newspaper reports, the LaRouche newspaper ''New Solidarity'' said the initiative was opposed by Communist gangs composed of the "lower sexual classes" and he warned of the recruitment of millions of Americans into the ranks of "AIDS-riddled homosexuality".<ref name=Roderick10-06/> | |||
"We are also passing the information on to the White House so they can assess whether the article also constitutes a threat to the security of President Clinton." | |||
==Environment and energy== | |||
LaRouche has also argued that ] was brought to power by the British; ]'s "policies are indistinguishable... from Nazi policies"; ] were "a product shaped according to British ] Division specifications; and that rogue elements within the American military took part in, or planned, the ] attacks as part of a '']''. | |||
Meštrović says LaRouche followed ] in seeing the human mind as a force transforming the ] into a higher form, the ].<ref name="Meštrović" /> LaRouche favored a highly industrialized civilization reaching for innovation and interplanetary colonization. The movement said that the theory of ] prevents the development of emerging economies.<ref>Rodriguez, Martin, , ''Noticias Urbanas'', December 5, 2008</ref> It also said that the top level organizations in the command structure of the environmental movement include the ], headed by Prince Philip, the ], and the ]. | |||
According to Chip Berlet, "Pro-LaRouche publications have been at the forefront of denying the reality of global warming".<ref>{{cite web|title=Lyndon LaRouche: Man of Vision or Venom?: What's the Real Story?|first=Chip|last=Berlet|publisher=Political Research Associates|date=September 13, 2007|url=http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/truestory.html|access-date=May 12, 2011|archive-date=May 14, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514144919/http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/truestory.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The LaRouche movement's '']'' magazine has been called "anti-environmental" by '']'' magazine.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://motherjones.com/politics/1997/12/wingnuts-sheeps-clothing|title=Wingnuts in Sheep's Clothing: Meet the kooks and corporations behind the astroturf group called EC|first=Keith|last=Hammond|date=December 4, 1997|work=Mother Jones|access-date=May 12, 2011|archive-date=May 20, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110520063755/http://motherjones.com/politics/1997/12/wingnuts-sheeps-clothing|url-status=live}}</ref> LaRouche publications denounced the concept of a ], the theory that nuclear war could lead to global cooling, as early as 1983, calling it a "fraud" and a "hoax" popularized by the Soviet Union to weaken the U.S.<ref name="SaganTurco1990">{{cite book|last1=Sagan|first1=Carl|author-link1=Carl Sagan|last2=Turco|first2=Richard P.|author-link2=Richard P. Turco|title=A path where no man thought: nuclear winter and the end of the arms race|url=https://archive.org/details/pathwherenomanth00saga|url-access=registration|date=November 27, 1990|publisher=Random House|isbn=978-0-394-58307-5|pages=–316}}</ref> Some of the movement's ideas were later adopted by the ].<ref name="Kintz1997">{{cite book|last=Kintz|first=Linda|title=Between Jesus and the market: the emotions that matter in right-wing America|url=https://archive.org/details/betweenjesusmark0000kint|url-access=registration|access-date=May 27, 2011|year=1997|publisher=Duke University Press|isbn=978-0-8223-1967-2|page=}}</ref><ref name="Berry1999">{{cite book|last=Berry|first=Thomas Mary|title=The piracy of America: profiteering in the public domain|url=https://archive.org/details/piracyofamerica00judi|url-access=registration|access-date=May 27, 2011|date=January 1999|publisher=Clarity Press|isbn=978-0-932863-28-7}}</ref><ref name="EbyEcheverria1995">{{cite book|last1=Eby|first1=Raymond Booth|last2=Echeverria|first2=John D.|title=Let the people judge: wise use and the private property rights movement|url=https://archive.org/details/letpeoplejudgewi00eche|url-access=registration|page=|access-date=May 27, 2011|date=March 1995|publisher=Island Press|isbn=978-1-55963-276-8}}</ref> The LaRouche movement opposed ratification of the ], which failed in the U.S. Senate in 1994.<ref name="Rowell1996"/><ref>{{cite news|title=BIODIVERSITY TREATY HITS GOP-LAROUCHE ROADBLOCK|first=Jon |last=Margolis |agency=CHICAGO TRIBUNE|work=The Salt Lake Tribune|date=October 2, 1994|page=A.10}}</ref> | |||
According to his critics, LaRouche's personal egotism is a significant force driving his politics<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletBellman|1}}{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletLyons|2}}{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small> In ] he wrote: "My principal accomplishment is that of being, by a large margin of advantage, the leading economist of the twentieth century to date." | |||
===Energy-flux density=== | |||
In "An Open Letter to President ]" (], ]) LaRouche identified those pushing the world toward war as "the forces behind the ], the ], and the heritage of ] and the evil ]." | |||
LaRouche asserts a concept ''energy-flux density'', which is the rate of energy use per person and per unit area of the economy as a whole. He asserts that an increase in energy flux density as a fundamental principle of the universe in general (contrary the second law of thermodynamics), and the appropriate destiny or goal for mankind in general. Consequently, policies or ideologies deemed to oppose this increase must be opposed and are foolish and dangerous: for example, moves to decrease energy consumption or improve efficiency, or to reduce consumption, or to reduce population; policies deemed increase it should be pursued: higher energy fuels such as nuclear fuels, higher populations, higher consumption.<ref>Video of LaRouche and others asserting energy-flux density, among numerous subjects {{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oiRwF8KXjiA|title=Q2: The Necessity of focusing on the Queen of England|website=]|date=June 2013 |access-date=April 5, 2019|archive-date=May 25, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170525162207/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oiRwF8KXjiA|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
===Nuclear power=== | |||
LaRouche claims there is also a conspiracy by the "Establishment" and the press it allegedly controls to deny him coverage and prevent his views becoming known. | |||
LaRouche says that nuclear and especially fusion power is necessary for the continued growth of civilization. He founded the ], which published the journal ''Fusion'' (later renamed to ''21st Century Science & Technology''). In his 1980 presidential platform, LaRouche promised 2500 nuclear power plants if elected.<ref name="Rowell1996">{{cite book|last=Rowell|first=Andrew|title=Green backlash: global subversion of the environmental movement|url=https://archive.org/details/greenbacklashglo0000rowe|url-access=registration|access-date=May 15, 2011|year=1996|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0-415-12828-5}}</ref> In 2007, LaRouche reiterated his position, saying that only the "massive investment" in fission and fusion technology could prevent the "collapse of human existence on this planet".<ref>{{cite news|date=March 9, 2007|work=Executive Intelligence Review|title=The Great Luddite Hoax of 2007|first=Lyndon H.|last=LaRouche, Jr.|url=http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n10-20070309/04_710_feat.pdf|access-date=May 16, 2011|archive-date=May 21, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110521122343/http://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n10-20070309/04_710_feat.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
The movement has targeted opponents of nuclear power. Members of the ], non-violent protesters at the ] in New Hampshire, were called "terrorists" in 1977. Representatives of LaRouche's ] gave incriminating information to law enforcement about them,<ref name="Jones1982">{{cite news|last=Foster|first=Dennis|work=]|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ouYDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA53|access-date=May 27, 2011|date=January 1982|title=Teamster Madness|issn=0362-8841}}</ref> which the FBI later determined had been fabricated, according to King.<ref>King (1989) ch.24</ref> During a large demonstration against the plant in 1989, an airplane carried a banner overhead which read, "Free LaRouche! Kill Satan – Open Seabrook".<ref>{{cite news|title=TOWN'S HALL OFF LIMITS TO 'UNCLE SAM' VT. ACTOR ARRESTED FOR BEING DISORDERLY|work=Boston Globe |date=June 5, 1989|page=20}}</ref> | |||
===John Train Salon=== | |||
The "John Train Salon" is the name given by supporters of LaRouche to three meetings they allege took place between 1983 and 1985 at the home of New York investment banker ]. Articles published by the LaRouche organization and by Internet analyst ] <!-- spam filtered: --> claim that these meetings, which were attended by a number of journalists and others, were held in order to plan the publication of articles critical of LaRouche. According to LaRouche publications, one participant, Michael Hudson, told a LaRouche investigator that the meetings were held to "coordinate national magazine stuff about you guys, and work with Federal law enforcement to deny you funding and tax exemption, is the delicate way to put it." According to the LaRouche organization, those who attended the meetings included: | |||
The movement blames cabalists, including then-congressman ], for inciting anti-nuclear sentiments during the late 1970s.<ref name=Ainsworth>{{cite news|title=The New Environmentalist Eugenics: Al Gore's Green Genocide|first=Rob|last=Ainsworth|pages=36–46|date=March 30, 2007|work=Executive Intelligence Review|url=http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n13-20070330/36-46_713_ainsworth.pdf|access-date=May 16, 2011|archive-date=October 14, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111014203924/http://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n13-20070330/36-46_713_ainsworth.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> LaRouche sources described the incident at the nuclear power plant at ] as sabotage, since they considered the control systems too sophisticated to fail by accident.<ref>{{cite news|title=Pro-Nuclear Group Claims Sabotage Caused TMI Accident|work=Indiana Evening Gazette|date=April 8, 1980|page=8}}</ref> | |||
*], a New York investment banker, who hosted the meetings | |||
*], political analyst | |||
*], journalist | |||
*], journalist | |||
*Roy Godson, academic, then a consultant to the ] and the ] (PFIAB) | |||
*], head of fact-finding at the Washington, D.C. offices of the ] and former employee of the ] | |||
*], a Pittsburgh businessman known for contributing to conservative causes | |||
*Journalists from '']'' (Patricia Lynch), '']'', '']'', '']'' and '']'' | |||
===DDT=== | |||
In ], a new series of articles appeared in LaRouche-affiliated publications.[ | |||
''21st Century Science & Technology'''s managing editor, Marjorie Mazel Hecht, called the campaign against DDT the "'mother' of all the environmental hoaxes".<ref name=Rowell>Rowell (1996) pp 135–136</ref> Other articles compared anti-DDT campaigner ] to Nazi propagandist ].<ref name=Rowell/> ''21st century'', which is produced by LaRouche supporters,<ref name=Beder/> has published papers by entomologist ], including one that urged the return of the insecticide ] because he said it has "saved more millions of lives than any other man-made chemical".<ref>{{cite news|title=Mosquitoes, DDT, and Human Health|first=J. Gordon|last=Edwards|work=]|url=http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/Fall02/Mosquitoes.html|date=Fall 2002|access-date=May 16, 2011|archive-date=May 19, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110519053000/http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/Fall02/Mosquitoes.html|url-status=live}}</ref> Rogelio (Roger) Maduro, an associate editor, wrote that the ban on DDT was part of a plan to reduce the population and had caused the deaths of 40 million people via a resurgence of ].<ref name="Helvarg2004">{{cite book|last=Helvarg|first=David|title=The war against the greens: the "Wise-Use" movement, the New Right, and the browning of America|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=giTwwvtIkdEC|access-date=May 13, 2011|date=May 2004|publisher=Big Earth Publishing|isbn=978-1-55566-328-5|page=232}}</ref> | |||
] They claimed that the "Train Salon" had entered a new phase, focussed on controlling the political environment on college campuses, suppressing opposition to the ] and the policies of the ], and halting student recruitment by the ]. It is claimed that this conspiracy includes "the ]; John Train's own ]; Stalinist turned right-winger ]; ] guru ]; the ], ], and ] founder ]. They also claim that despite regular "media-hyped food fights against one another," ] and ] are essentially on the same side in this matter. | |||
== |
===Ozone hole=== | ||
LaRouche was part of what was called the "ozone backlash".<ref name=DavidsonFeb>{{cite news|title=Seismologists take hard line on construction|first=KEAY |last=DAVIDSON|work=San Francisco Examiner|date=February 10, 1995|page=A.2}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|first=G.|last=Taubes|title=The Ozone Backlash|journal=Science|volume=260|date=June 11, 1993|doi=10.1126/science.260.5114.1580|pmid=17810191|pages=1580–1583|issue=5114|bibcode=1993Sci...260.1580T}}</ref><ref name="MilburnConrad1998"/> ''21st Century Science & Technology'', which conducted what has been called "a very effective campaign of misinformation on the issue of ozone depletion",<ref name="EhrlichEhrlich1998"/> published ''The Holes in the Ozone Scare'' in 1992.<ref name="MaduroSchauerhammer1992">{{cite book|last1=Maduro|first1=Rogelio|last2=Schauerhammer|first2=Ralf|title=The holes in the ozone scare: the scientific evidence that the sky isn't falling|url=https://archive.org/details/holesinozonesc00madu|url-access=registration|date=July 1992|publisher=21st Century Science Associates|isbn=978-0-9628134-0-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=The Holes in the Ozone Hole – The Scientific Evidence That The Sky Isn't Falling: Excerpts from the book|first=Rogelio|last=Maduro|work=American Almanac|date=January 1994|url=http://american_almanac.tripod.com/cfc.htm|access-date=May 12, 2011|archive-date=July 5, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110705030926/http://american_almanac.tripod.com/cfc.htm|url-status=live}}</ref> The book, by LaRouche followers Rogelio Maduro and Ralf Schauerhammer, said that ]s (CFCs) were not destroying the ] and opposed the proposal to ban them. It asserted that most chlorine in the atmosphere came from oceans, volcanoes, or other natural sources, and that CFCs were too heavy to reach the ozone layer.<ref name=Beder>{{cite book|title=Global spin: the corporate assault on environmentalism|first=Sharon |last=Beder|publisher=Green Books|year=2002|isbn=978-1-903998-09-0|page=94}}</ref><ref name="MilburnConrad1998">{{cite book|last1=Milburn|first1=Michael A.|last2=Conrad|first2=Sheree D.|title=The Politics of Denial|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ntVE1n3g51wC|access-date=May 14, 2011|date=January 10, 1998|publisher=MIT Press|isbn=978-0-262-63184-6|page=211}}</ref><ref name="EhrlichEhrlich1998">{{cite book|last1=Ehrlich|first1=Paul R.|last2=Ehrlich|first2=Anne H.|title=Betrayal of science and reason: how anti-environmental rhetoric threatens our future|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1vkYnktbFK4C|access-date=May 13, 2011|date=January 1, 1998|publisher=Island Press|isbn=978-1-55963-484-7|page=144}}</ref> It went on to say that even if the ozone layer were depleted there would not be any harmful effects from additional ultraviolet radiation.<ref>{{cite book|last=van der Leun|first=J.C. |editor=S. Zwerver|title=Climate change research: evaluation and policy implications : proceedings of the International Climate Change Research Conference, Maastricht, the Netherlands, 6–9 December 1994|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HYkd4Uy41WMC&pg=PA983|date=November 1, 1995|publisher=Elsevier|isbn=978-0-444-82143-0|page=983|chapter=Assessment report on NRP subtheme 'Effects of enhanced UV-B radiation'}}</ref> It predicted that a ban would result in an additional 20 to 40 million deaths due to food spoilage.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/content/printVersion/161814/|title=FREON EASY: ARIZONA'S REPUBLICAN LEADERS WANT THE STATE TO BUCK FEDERAL LAWS ON CFC PRODUCTION. THAT'S WHAT HAPPENS WHEN WEIRD SCIENCE MIXES WITH WACKY POLITICS|first=Amy|last=Silverman|date=May 4, 1995|work=Phoenix New Times|access-date=May 12, 2011|archive-date=November 4, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121104105454/http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/content/printVersion/161814/|url-status=live}}</ref> Lewis DuPont Smith, an heir to the DuPont Chemical fortune and a LaRouche follower, told Maduro that the DuPont Company had schemed to ban CFCs, which they had invented but which had become generic, in order to replace them with more expensive proprietary compounds.<ref>{{cite news|title=DU PONT HEIR PRESSES CASE ON FITNESS|first=Rich |last=Henson|work=Philadelphia Inquirer|date=December 21, 1989|page=B.8}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=BLOWING A HOLE IN THE TALE OF OZONE|first=Donella H. |last=Meadows|work= St. Louis Post–Dispatch |date=September 7, 1993|page=07.B}}</ref> It has been called "probably the best known and most widely quoted text aimed at debunking the concept of ozone depletion".<ref name="Newton1995">{{cite book|last=Newton|first=David E.|title=The ozone dilemma: a reference handbook|url=https://archive.org/details/ozonedilemmarefe0000newt|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-0-87436-719-5|page=}}</ref> Its assertions were repeated by ] in her 1993 book ''Environmental Overkill'', by ], and by ].<ref name="MilburnConrad1998"/><ref name="Newton1995"/> Some atmospheric scientists have said that it is based on poor research.<ref name="MilburnConrad1998"/> | |||
] | |||
LaRouche wrote a series of articles while imprisoned for conspiracy to commit ] and ] in the ], in which he discussed the relationship of artistic creativity to scientific creativity, and how an original discovery may be communicated to others; these articles were entitled "On the Subject of ]." | |||
At a 1994 shareholder's meeting, Smith called on DuPont to continue producing CFCs, saying there was no evidence of their harmfulness and that "This is nothing less than genocide".<ref name=Dominguez>{{cite news|title=LOOKING AHEAD AT DUPONT; COST CUTS HELPED IN THE PAST, THE CHAIRMAN SAID.; NOW WHAT'S NEEDED ARE HIGHER SALES AND PRICES|first=Alex |last=Dominguez|work=Philadelphia Inquirer|date=April 28, 1994|page=B.9}}</ref> By 1995 LaRouche was noted as calling the ozone hole a "myth".<ref>{{cite news|title=Ozone hole' found to be twice as big as last year It's now about the size of Europe|first=Keay |last=Davidson|work=San Francisco Examiner|date=September 13, 1995|page=A.2}}</ref> Maduro's writings were the basis for the Arizona legislature's passage of a 1995 bill to allow the production of CFCs in the state despite federal and international prohibitions.<ref name="CroninKennedy1997">{{cite book|last1=Cronin|first1=John| last2=Kennedy | first2=Robert F. Jr. |title=The Riverkeepers: two activists fight to reclaim our environment as a basic human right|url=https://archive.org/details/riverkeeperstwoa00cron|url-access=registration|access-date=May 13, 2011|year=1997|publisher=Scribner|isbn=978-0-684-83908-0}}</ref> | |||
LaRouche frequently recounts an incident which took place during his wartime service: | |||
===Global warming=== | |||
:Later, as a young man, shortly after the close of World War II, I first heard a recorded performance by conductor ], while I was stationed temporarily at an army camp outside ], ]. My recognition of the qualitative superiority of Furtwängler's conducting, an effect which I later identified with his use of the phrase "playing between the notes," had a profound impact, in its contribution to shaping my view of Classical artistic composition in general. | |||
''The "Greenhouse effect" hoax: a world federalist plot'', another book by Maduro, says that the theory of anthropogenic ] (AGW) is a plot by the British royal family and communists to undermine the U.S.<ref name="Maduro1989">{{cite book|last1=Maduro|first1=Rogelio|author2=EIR staff|title=The "Greenhouse effect" hoax: a world federalist plot|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fgFEAQAAIAAJ|access-date=May 16, 2011|year=1989|work=Executive Intelligence Review|archive-date=July 17, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210717131127/https://books.google.com/books?id=fgFEAQAAIAAJ|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Paranoia within reason: a casebook on conspiracy as explanation |first=George E. |last=Marcus |publisher=University of Chicago Press |year=1999 |page=130 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WJOknreVQJsC&pg=PA130 |isbn=9780226504575 |access-date=October 9, 2016 |archive-date=July 17, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210717131127/https://books.google.com/books?id=WJOknreVQJsC&pg=PA130 |url-status=live }}</ref> It was cited by science writer ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Monbiot|first=George|url=https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2005/may/10/environment.columnists|title=Junk science: David Bellamy's inaccurate and selective figures on glacier shrinkage are a boon to climate change deniers|work=The Guardian|date=May 10, 2005|location=London|access-date=December 13, 2016|archive-date=March 15, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170315035623/https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2005/may/10/environment.columnists|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Central to LaRouche's theory of economics (see above) is the idea that there are certain higher mental capacities, associated with ] formation, that are the essential topic of study in economics, and LaRouche came to believe that classical art, and in particular ], provided the most useful domain in which to investigate these capacities. Consequently, classical music has played a central role in the history of LaRouche and his network, and brought LaRouche into a collaborative relationship with artists such as ] and ]. | |||
LaRouche followers have promoted the documentary '']'' and attacked ]'s '']'', infiltrating showings to promote their viewpoints.<ref>{{cite news|title=EARTH DAY 2007 / Regular folks join Gore's fight to rescue the planet|first=Patricia |last=Yollin|work=San Francisco Chronicle|date=April 22, 2007|page=A.1}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Lyndon LaRouche group hacks Swindle debate |first1=Michael |last1=Bodey |first2=Matthew |last2=Warren |work=The Australian |date=July 14, 2007 |url=http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/television/radicals-hijack-swindle-debate/story-e6frfmyi-1111113954601 |access-date=May 12, 2011 |archive-date=May 28, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220528155642/https://www.news.com.au/entertainment/television/radicals-hijack-swindle-debate/story-e6frfmyi-1111113954601 |url-status=live }}</ref> They have stood on street corners proclaiming the falsity of global warming,<ref>{{cite news|title=Celebrating Independence|first1=Bob |last1=Warner|first2=Chris |last2=Brennan|work=Knight Ridder Tribune Business News|location=Washington|date=July 5, 2006|page=1}}</ref> and have protested Gore's appearances.<ref>{{cite news |title=Al Gore's Assault on the Upper East Side |first=Miriam |last=Datskovsky |work=] |date=May 25, 2007 |url=https://nymag.com/daily/intel/2007/05/gore.html |access-date=February 20, 2020 |archive-date=May 17, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080517153818/http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2007/05/gore.html |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
LaRouche's views about several other areas of culture have been controversial; especially comments about ]s and the ], women and ], and ] and homosexuals. | |||
'']'' has published papers by ] contrarians including ], ], Hugh Ellsaesser, and Robert E. Stevenson. A 2007 article by LaRouche science advisor Laurence Hecht suggested that the varying levels of cosmic rays, whose change is dependent on Earth's motion through the galaxy, has a larger effect on the climate than local factors such as greenhouse gases or solar and orbital cycles.<ref>{{cite news|title=Cosmoclimatology, Kepler, and Moon's Model of the Nucleus|first=Laurence|last=Hecht|work=Executive Intelligence Review|date=March 9, 2007|pages=19–21|url=http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n10-20070309/19_710_feat.pdf|access-date=May 16, 2011|archive-date=May 21, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110521122516/http://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n10-20070309/19_710_feat.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> ] was praised as the leading spokesman of the "global warming swindle" in the introduction to an '']'' interview with him in 2009, but he was also considered to have a relatively limited view of the cabal behind the hoax.<ref>{{cite news|title=Interview: Lord Christopher Monckton: Destroying National Sovereignty: The Real Face of 'Global Warming'|first=Gregory |last=Murphy|date=June 12, 2009|work=Executive Intelligence Review|pages=47–50}}</ref> A movement newsletter says that environmental groups seek to "force ... CO2 emissions agreements down the throats of governments as a way of finishing off the nation-state system" on behalf of synarchist networks.<ref name=Ainsworth/> | |||
===Jews and the Holocaust=== | |||
Although LaRouche condemns ] in his published writings, he has been accused of anti-Semitism and also ]. | |||
==Music and science== | |||
From the early 1970s he regularly criticized ]. In NCLC publications during the 1970s, some Jewish individuals were accused of running the ], controlling ], and the ]. LaRouche also claimed that the "Zionist lobby" significantly influenced the U.S. government. Any American professing "Zionist loyalties" was, he said, a "national security risk." However, during this period LaRouche publications such as ''Campaigner'' magazine often promoted ] and ] as positive examples of the "Platonic humanist current in Judaism," and most of the leadership of the NCLC was Jewish. In ] the LaRouche publication ''Campaigner'' published an issue entitled "Zionism is not Judaism." | |||
LaRouche was fascinated by musical theory, as well as mathematics and physics, and this fascination also translates into his teachings; his followers for example have attempted to link the musical scale to his Neoplatonist model of economic evolution, and study singing and geometry. A common teaser used by the movement is to ask people whether they know how to "double the square"—draw a square whose area is twice the size of an existing square. A motto of LaRouche's European Workers' Party is "Think like Beethoven"; movement offices typically include a piano and posters of German composers, and members are known for their choral singing at protest events, using satirical lyrics tailored to their targets.<ref>For LaRouche's interests, see LaRouche, Lyndon. "Correspondence: Classical Composition", ''The New Republic'', December 26, 1988. | |||
<br />{{*}} For the movement's interests, see {{Cite news|author=Roderick. Kevin|title=Raid Stirs Reports of LaRouche's Dark Side|work=Los Angeles Times|date=October 14, 1986}} | |||
<br />{{*}} For "Think like Beethoven", see {{Cite news|author=Smith, Susan J.|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=aiwrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=HnIFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1095,596948&dq=bonn+exhibit+depicts+germany%27s+beethoven+cult&hl=en|title=Bonn exhibit depicts Germany's Beethoven cult|agency=Associated Press|date=September 29, 1986|access-date=October 9, 2016|archive-date=October 17, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151017120129/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=aiwrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=HnIFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1095,596948&dq=bonn+exhibit+depicts+germany%27s+beethoven+cult&hl=en|url-status=live}} | |||
<br />{{*}} For singing at events, see {{Cite news|author=Fitzgerald, Michael|title=Plenty of weirdness in 2007|work=The Record|location=Stockton, California|date=January 2, 2008}} | |||
<br />{{*}} For an example of a LaRouche choir singing at a protest, see {{Cite news|author=Milbank, Dana|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/04/26/AR2005042601248.html|title=Where Does the Bean Soup Fit In?|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=April 27, 2005|access-date=September 17, 2017|archive-date=December 10, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161210083822/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/04/26/AR2005042601248.html|url-status=live}} | |||
<br />{{*}} {{Cite news|author=Roddy, Dennis|title=LaRouchies, Anarchists doth protest, but not too much|work=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|date=July 30, 2004}} | |||
<br />{{*}} {{Cite news|author=Yamamura, Kevin|title=Governor begins Mexico visit with praise for Dems|work=Knight Ridder Tribune Business News|date=November 10, 2006}} | |||
<br />{{*}} For doubling the square, see {{Cite news|author=Witt, April|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A46883-2004Oct20_2.html|title=No joke|newspaper=Washington Post|date=October 24, 2004|access-date=September 17, 2017|archive-date=September 21, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170921174405/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A46883-2004Oct20_2.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
LaRouche and his wife had an interest in classical music up to ]. LaRouche abhorred contemporary music; holding that rock music is subversive, and was deliberately created to be so by British intelligence.<ref>For rock, see {{Cite news|author=Hume, Ellen|title=LaRouche Trying to Lose Splinter Label|work=Los Angeles Times|date=February 1980}} | |||
] has described LaRouche as expressing anti-Semitic ideas in both open and coded form. As an example of the open form, King cites LaRouche's statement (under the pen name L. Marcus) in ''The Case of ]'' (]), where he said that "Jewish culture ... is merely the residue left to the Jewish home after everything saleable has been marketed to the Goyim." As an example of the coded form, King alleges that when LaRouche and his followers use the term "British" in certain contexts which King characterizes as "conspiracist" or "racialist", they actually mean "Jewish."<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small> One example is an unsigned editorial in the official LaRouche newspaper ''New Solidarity'' in ] which states: "America must be cleansed for its righteous war by the immediate elimination of the Nazi Jewish Lobby and other British agents from the councils of government, industry, and labor." King also writes that a photograph from the ] of a fusion experiment, published in various LaRouche publications, was "reminiscent of the swastika." | |||
<br />{{*}} for the Beatles, see {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107165346/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/newsday/access/410201901.html?dids=410201901:410201901&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Sep+23%2C+2003&author=Jeff+Pearlman.+STAFF+WRITER&pub=Newsday+%28Combined+editions%29&desc=Lyndon+LaRouche%27s+LONG+Campaign+%2F+He+ran+one+presidential+campaign+from+a+federal+jail+cell+and+can%27t+even+vote+for+himself%2C+but+the+quadrennial+candidate+is+back+on+the+stump+again&pqatl=google |date=November 7, 2012 }}.</ref> LaRouche is quoted as saying that ] music was "foisted on black Americans by the same oligarchy which had run the U.S. slave trade".<ref>{{cite news|title=Jewish Group Hits Out Again At LaRouche|work=San Francisco Chronicle|date=May 22, 1986}}</ref> This dislike for modern music also extends to classical music the movement disapproves of; LaRouche movement members have protested at performances of ]'s operas, denouncing Wagner as an anti-Semite who found favor with the Nazis, and called a conductor "satanic" because he played contemporary music.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/culturemonster/2010/05/las-ring-cycle-begins-with-protests-outside-mixed-reaction-inside.html|last=Ng|first=David|work=Los Angeles Times|date=May 30, 2010|title=L.A.'s 'Ring' cycle begins with protests outside, mixed reaction inside|access-date=March 26, 2011|archive-date=February 4, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110204171719/http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/culturemonster/2010/05/las-ring-cycle-begins-with-protests-outside-mixed-reaction-inside.html|url-status=live}}<br />{{*}} {{cite news|last=Ng|first=David |title=Protesters greet start of 'Ring'|work=Los Angeles Times |date=May 31, 2010}}</ref> | |||
In 1988, LaRouche advocated that classical orchestras should return to the "Verdi pitch", a pitch that ] had enshrined in Italian legislation in 1884. Orchestras' pitches have risen since the 18th century, because a higher pitch produces a more brilliant orchestral sound, while imposing an additional strain on singers' voices. Verdi succeeded in 1884 in having legislation passed in Italy that fixed the reference pitch for ] at 432 Hz, but in 1938, the international standard was raised to 440 Hz, with some major orchestras tuning as high as 450 Hz in recent times. LaRouche spoke about the resulting strain on singers' voices in his 1988 presidential campaign videos. By 1989 the initiative had attracted support from more than 300 opera stars, including ], ], ] and ]. While many of these singers may or may not have been aware of LaRouche's politics, ] and ] ran for the European Parliament on LaRouche's "Patriots for Italy" platform and appeared as featured speakers at a conference organised by the ]. (The institute was founded by LaRouche and his wife, ].)<ref name="Boyes">{{cite news|last=Boyes|first=Roger|author-link=Roger Boyes|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/blame-the-jews-scr5svbhz0q|title=Blame the Jews|work=The Times|location=London (UK)|date=November 7, 2003|access-date=October 4, 2019|page=4|archive-date=August 5, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200805105524/https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/blame-the-jews-scr5svbhz0q|url-status=live}}{{subscription required}}</ref> The discussions led to debates in the Italian parliament about reinstating Verdi's legislation. LaRouche himself gave an interview to ] on the initiative in 1989 from prison. ], the editor of ''Opera Fanatic'' (and, incidentally, the "world's highest tenor") opposed the initiative on the grounds that it would result in the establishment of a "pitch police", arguing that the way it presented the history of the tuning pitch was a "simplification", and that LaRouche was using the issue to gain credibility. The initiative in the Italian Senate failed to result in corresponding legislation being passed.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/timesdispatch/access/615637631.html?dids=615637631:615637631&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Sep+16%2C+1989&author=Francis+Church&pub=Richmond+Times+-+Dispatch&desc=SHALL+LYNDON+LAROUCHE+CALL+THE+TUNING+PITCH%3F&pqatl=google|title=Shall Lyndon LaRouche call the tuning pitch?|work=Richmond Times Dispatch|date=September 16, 1989}}{{dead link|date=September 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} | |||
LaRouche has also been accused of ]. In ], LaRouche wrote (in "New Pamphlet to Document Cult Origins of Zionism," ''New Solidarity'', ], ]) that only 1.5 million Jews died during ]<nowiki>:</nowiki> | |||
<br />{{*}} {{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=hv4gAAAAIBAJ&sjid=NXQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2431,360446&dq=larouche+verdi+tuning&hl=en|title=Eavesdropping|work=The Hour|date=May 2, 1989|access-date=October 9, 2016|archive-date=October 17, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151017120129/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=hv4gAAAAIBAJ&sjid=NXQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2431,360446&dq=larouche+verdi+tuning&hl=en|url-status=live}}. | |||
<br />{{*}} {{cite news|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1193003.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121105190322/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1193003.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=November 5, 2012|title=Lyndon LaRouche's Pitch Battle; At Lisner, a Concert With A Verdi Special Difference|newspaper=]|date=May 27, 1989}}<br />{{*}} {{Cite news|author=Abdella, Fred T.|url=https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0716FC3D540C708DDDA10894D1484D81&pagewanted=all|title=As Pitch in Opera Rises, So Does Debate|work=The New York Times|date=August 13, 1989|access-date=February 20, 2017|archive-date=May 28, 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220528151552/https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0716FC3D540C708DDDA10894D1484D81&pagewanted=all&legacy=true&status=nf|url-status=live}} | |||
<br />{{*}} {{Cite news|author=McLemee, Scott|url=http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee132|title=The LaRouche Youth Movement|work=]|date=July 11, 2007|access-date=March 26, 2011|archive-date=April 17, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110417133920/http://www.insidehighered.com/views/mclemee/mclemee132|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
LaRouche considered pitch important, believing that the Verdi pitch has a direct relation to the structure of the universe, and that ] singing at the correct pitch maximizes the music's impact on both singers and listeners.<ref>McLemee, Scott. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201117010749/https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2007/07/11/larouche-youth-movement |date=November 17, 2020 }}, '']'', July 11, 2007</ref> | |||
:It is argued that the culmination of the persecution of the Jews in the Nazi holocaust proves that Zionism is so essential to 'Jewish survival' that any anti-Zionist is therefore not only an anti-Semite, but that any sort of criminal action is excusable against anti-Zionists in memory of the mythical 'six million Jewish victims' of the Nazi "holocaust." | |||
==Opposition to Obama's health reforms== | |||
:This is worse than sophistry. It is a lie. True, about a million and a half Jews did die as a result of the Nazi policy of labor-intensive "appropriate technology" for the employment of "inferior races," a small fraction of the tens of million of others - especially Slavs - who were murdered in the same way Jewish refugee Felix Rohaytin proposes today. Even on a relative scale, what the Nazis did to Jewish victims was mild compared with the virtual extermination of ] and the butchery of Communists. | |||
LaRouche's organization opposed the Obama administration's ] proposals.{{Why|date=June 2018}} Posters of Obama wearing a Hitler-style mustache appeared at a LaRouche movement rally.<ref>{{cite news|title=Obama's plan blasted as Nazi-like: LaRouche demonstrations across the North Fork question health care policy|work=The Suffolk Times|location=Long Island, New York|date=July 23, 2009|first=Erin|last=Schultz|url=http://www2.timesreview.com/ST/Stories/T071609_Obama_ES|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120218141859/http://www2.timesreview.com/ST/Stories/T071609_Obama_ES|archive-date=February 18, 2012|df=mdy-all}}</ref> | |||
LaRouche places the word "holocaust" in inverted commas. In addition, his assertion that Jews died only as a result of forced labor may be read as a denial that the ] existed, a denial of the fact that the Nazis directly and deliberately killed millions of Jews, both in these camps and by means of the '']''. | |||
As town-hall meetings on this issue during the summer of 2009 began to attract very large and angry crowds, the comparison of Obama to Hitler began to show up on many signs and banners. '']'' wrote that LaRouche supporters "patented the Obama-is-Nazi theme".<ref>{{cite news |first=Marc |last=Ambinder |title=The Town Halls, Independents, And Lyndon LaRouche |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2009/08/the-town-halls-independents-and-lyndon-larouche/23208/ |newspaper=The Atlantic |date=August 13, 2009 |access-date=June 15, 2017 |archive-date=March 14, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160314024649/http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2009/08/the-town-halls-independents-and-lyndon-larouche/23208/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
LaRouche's critics claim he is a "disguised anti-Semite," in that he takes the classical anti-Semitic conspiracy theory and substitutes the word "Zionist" for the word "Jew", and ascribes the classical anti-Semitic caricature of the "scheming Jew" to particular Jewish individuals and groups of Jews, rather than to the Jews as a whole.<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletBellman|1}}{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletLyons|2}}{{NamedRef|CriticsBerlet-1|3}}{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small> According to LaRouche: | |||
==Sexuality and politics== | |||
:The Czarist ]'s '']'' include a hard kernel of truth which no mere Swiss court decision could legislate out of existence. The fallacy of the ''Protocols of Zion'' is that it attributes the alleged conspiracy to Jews generally, to Judaism. A corrected version of ''The Protocols'' would stipulate that the evil oaths cited were actually the practices of variously a Paris branch of ] and the evidence the Okhrana turned up in tracing the penetration of the Romanian branch of B'nai B'rith (Zion) into such Russian centres of relevance as ]... | |||
{{Primary sources section|date=July 2024}} | |||
In 1973, LaRouche wrote an article called "Beyond Psychoanalysis". He theorized that each culture had characteristic flaws that resulted in blocks to effective political organizing. LaRouche and his colleagues conducted studies of different "national ideologies", including German, French, Italian, English, Latin American, Greek, and Swedish.<!-- <ref>http://www.ex-iwp.org/docs/1973/beyondpsychoanalysis.htm {{Dead link|date=February 2022}}</ref> --><ref>LaRouche, Lyndon, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929095740/http://www.larouchepub.com/lar/2001/2825_greenspin.html |date=September 29, 2007 }}, ''Executive Intelligence Review'', June 29, 2001</ref> | |||
In an article, "The Sexual Impotency of the ]", LaRouche criticised ]. Regarding the role of women, he adds, "The task of real women's liberation is to generally strengthen women's self-consciousness and their power and opportunities to act upon self-consciousness."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ex-iwp.org/related001.php |title=The sexual impotence of the Puerto Rican Socialist Party |access-date=August 16, 2007 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120723211253/http://ex-iwp.org/related001.php |archive-date=July 23, 2012 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
LaRouche's stated principal target in his article is "]." Zionism is a Jewish political movement supporting the creation and, since 1948, defense of ] as a Jewish state. LaRouche believes that Zionism is an underground conspiracy existing since the 16th century.{{fact}} "Modern Zionism was not created by Jews, but was a project developed chiefly by ]," LaRouche says. | |||
==Minority politics== | |||
In 1978, the same year LaRouche's article cited ''The Protocols'', the LaRouche group published ''Dope, Inc.: Britain’s Opium War against the U.S.,'' which cited the Protocols and defended its authenticity, liking the "Elders of Zion" to the Rothschild banking family, the British Royal family, and the Italian Mafia, and the Israeli Mossad, General Pike, and the B'nai B'rith.(Dope, Inc.) Later editions left out cites to ''The Protocols''. This is the genesis of the claim that LaRouche has said the Queen of England runs drugs. When asked by an NBC reporter in 1984 about the Queen of England and drug running, LaRouche replied, "Of course she's pushing drugs...that is in a sense of responsibility: the head of a gang that is pushing drugs; she knows it's happening and she isn't stopping it." <small>(NBC News, First Camera, March 4, 1984, transcript from NBC News, excerpt used with permission).</small> | |||
Critics say the movement is ], ], and ], and that its political and economic proposals are a cover for its actual beliefs.<ref>]. "Protocols to the Left, Protocols to the Right: Conspiracism in American Political Discourse at the Turn of the Second Millennium." Reconsidering "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion": 100 Years After the Forgery, October 30–31, 2005, Boston<br />¤ Berlet, Chip & Bellman Joe. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090831042037/http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/nclc1.html |date=August 31, 2009 }}, Political Research Associates, March 10, 1989<br />¤ Berlet, Chip & Lyons, Matthew. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050207135000/http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/synthesis.html |date=February 7, 2005 }}, Guilford, 2000. {{ISBN|1-57230-562-2}}</ref><ref>King, Dennis. ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', New York: Doubleday, 1989. {{ISBN|0-385-23880-0}} Online text at {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071022200156/http://lyndonlarouchewatch.org/newamericanfascism.htm |date=October 22, 2007 }}<br />¤ Mintz, John. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514001206/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/cult/larouche/main.htm |date=May 14, 2011 }}, ''The Washington Post'', January 14, 1985<br />{{Cite news|author=Wohlforth, Tim|url=http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/Wohlforth.html|title=A '60's Socialist Takes a Hard Right|publisher=Political Research Associates|date=March 16, 2006|access-date=December 29, 2005|archive-date=January 25, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210125020518/http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/Wohlforth.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Helmut Lorscheid/Leo A. Müller|title=Deckname Schiller – Die deutschen Patrioten des Lyndon LaRouche|publisher=Reinbek|date=1986}}</ref> | |||
Today, LaRouche says, Zionism is controlled by the financiers of London: "Zionism is the state of collective psychosis through which London manipulates most of the international Jewry", and "Zionist cultism is among the most important of the levers through which British criminality and miscalculation is plunging the world towards ." | |||
===Homosexuality=== | |||
LaRouche denies equating "Zionism" with Judaism. "You cannot be a Zionist and also a Jew," he writes. | |||
During the 1980s, LaRouche and his supporters made comments that were seen as anti-gay.{{clarification needed|date=January 2024}}<ref name=Roderick10-17>{{Cite news| issn = 0458-3035| page = 3| last = Roderick| first = Kevin| title = LaRouche Wrote of Using AIDS to Win Presidency| work = Los Angeles Times| date = October 17, 1986}}</ref><ref name=Berlet>{{Cite book| publisher = South End Press| isbn = 9780896085237| page = 99| last = Berlet| first = Chip| title = Eyes right!| year = 1995}}</ref> A LaRouche-affiliated newspaper wrote that demonstrators against the LaRouche-sponsored AIDS initiative in California were from the "lower sexual classes."<ref>{{Cite news|author=Roderick, Kevin|title=Paper Tied to LaRouche Attacks Gay Movement|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-10-06-mn-4531-story.html|work=Los Angeles Times|date=October 6, 1986|access-date=February 20, 2020|archive-date=August 9, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160809041253/http://articles.latimes.com/1986-10-06/news/mn-4531_1_larouche-supporters|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
===Judaism and Zionism=== | |||
LaRouche has never explicitly repudiated the views expressed in the 1978 article. In 1980, New York state Judge Michael Dontzin ruled that: "Upon consideration of the voluminous evidence presented to the court, it is clear that ADL's characterization of plaintiffs as anti-Semitic constitutes ]. Plaintiffs have continuously expressed highly critical views about prominent Jewish figures, families and organizations, such as ADL and B'nai Brith and have connected them with plaintiffs' critical views on Zionism, Zionists, Mid-East foreign policy and international monetary policies." . | |||
British journalist ] wrote, "Anti-Semitism is at the core of LaRouche's conspiracy theories, which he adapts to modern events — most recently the ] in ]."<ref name="Boyes" /> Daniel Levitas wrote in 1995 that LaRouche "has been consistent in creating and elaborating conspiracy theories that contain a strong dose of antisemitism".<ref>{{Cite book|author=Daniel Levitas|title=Antisemitism and the Far Right: "Hate" Groups, White Supremacy, and the Neo-Nazi Movement|editor=]|work=Antisemitism in America Today: Outspoken Experts Explode the Myths|location=New York|publisher=Birch Lane Press/Carol Publishing|date=1995|pages=191–192}}</ref> As an example of LaRouche's alleged antisemitism, Dennis King cited LaRouche's statement (under the pen name L. Marcus) in ''The Case of Ludwig Feuerbach'' (1973), "Jewish culture ... is merely the residue left to the Jewish home after everything saleable has been marketed to the ]."<ref>{{cite book |chapter=The Jewish Question |chapter-url=http://lyndonlarouche.org/fascism6.htm |title=Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism |first=Dennis |last=King |year=1989 |publisher=Doubleday |isbn=978-0-385-23880-9 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/lyndonlarouchene0000king }}</ref> | |||
The charge of antisemitism in the LaRouche network resurfaced in the media in 2004 in accounts of the death of a Jewish student, ], who had been attending a Schiller Institute event in Germany. British press reports described LaRouche as "the American leader of a sect with a fascist and antisemitic ideology".<ref>{{cite news|title=National: Courts: Victory for family of man found dead in Germany|first=Afua|last=Hirsch|work=The Guardian|location=London (UK)|date=November 6, 2008|page=20}}</ref> | |||
In recent years, however, LaRouche may have modified his views on these subjects. In 1999, he published an article called "A Personal Statement from Lyndon LaRouche on Music, Judaism, and Hitler," referring several times to "the Jew." In the course of a discussion on ], he says: "Germany can never be truly freed from the legacy of Hitler's crimes, until the contributions of German Jews, in particular, are celebrated as an integral part of the honorable history of Germany." The article contains several other statements in similar vein, including praise for ], a Jewish business figure. | |||
LaRouche denied over a long period that his movement is antisemitic.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sj-r.com/firstinprint/x227288797/First-in-Print-Former-LaRouche-aide-lands-state-job |title=Former LaRouche aide lands state job |first=Bernard |last=Schoenberg |date=July 5, 2010 |access-date=September 5, 2010 |archive-date=July 27, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100727055334/http://www.sj-r.com/firstinprint/x227288797/First-in-Print-Former-LaRouche-aide-lands-state-job |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2006, LaRouche said, "Religious and racial hatred, such as anti-Semitism the most evil expression of criminality to be seen on the planet today."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://larouchepub.com/lar/2006/3339_pope_press_hoax.html |title=Britain's Bernard Lewis and His Crimes |date=September 17, 2006 |first=Lyndon H. |last=LaRouche, Jr |access-date=December 5, 2010 |archive-date=December 17, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101217180807/http://larouchepub.com/lar/2006/3339_pope_press_hoax.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Debra Freeman, a spokesperson for LaRouche, told a newspaper in 2010 that, "Hitler was a lunatic, but his policies were based principally on economic policy and staying in power. We mourn the loss of six million Jews and countless others."<ref>{{cite news |title=Larouche supporters make their case on the Taunton Green on Election Day |date=November 3, 2010 |first=CHARLES |last=WINOKOOR |work=Taunton Gazette |url=http://my.ojornal.com/sports-news/larouche-supporters-make-their-case-taunton-green-election-day |archive-date=August 22, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110822205623/http://my.ojornal.com/sports-news/larouche-supporters-make-their-case-taunton-green-election-day |url-status=dead |df=mdy }}</ref> | |||
In the same article, he acknowledges that the Holocaust is neither "mythological" nor "Zionist": "We cannot allow 2,000 years of Jewish survival in Europe to be buried under the faceless stone epitaph which speaks only of a bare 13-odd years of Hitler's Holocaust." He explicitly states that "Yes, Hitler killed millions of Jews," a seeming contradiction of his ] statement that only 1.5 million died. This article has been perceived as a welcome modification of his controversial views of the Holocaust. In recent years, LaRouche publications have begun to feature articles praising the ], such as . LaRouche and his organization have also maintained a public dialogue with Israeli and Jewish leaders, such as ], who advocates peaceful reconciliation with the ]. LaRouche supporters cite these and other recent statements in asserting that LaRouche is not an anti-Semite. | |||
LaRouche's critics have said he is a "disguised anti-Semite", in that he takes the classical antisemitic conspiracy theory and substitutes the word "Zionist" for the word "Jew", and ascribes the classical antisemitic caricature of the "scheming Jew" to particular Jewish individuals and groups of Jews, rather than to the Jews as a whole.<ref name=King1989/><ref name=BerletBellman/><ref name=BerletLyons/><ref name=Berlet2005>{{Cite conference|last=Berlet|first=Chip|title=Protocols to the Left, Protocols to the Right: Conspiracism in American Political Discourse at the Turn of the Second Millennium (dedicated to Jeremiah Duggan) | conference = Reconsidering "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion": 100 Years After the Forgery | location = The Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies, Boston University|date= October 30–31, 2005}}</ref> "Modern Zionism was not created by Jews, but was a project developed chiefly by ]", LaRouche says. He says, "Zionism is not Judaism."<ref name="Zionism is not Judaism,">Special issue, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071202135035/http://wlym.com/PDF-77-85/CAM7812.pdf |date=December 2, 2007 }} ''Campaigner'', December 1978</ref> In 1978, the same year LaRouche's article cited '']'', the LaRouche group published ''Dope, Inc.: Britain's Opium War against the U.S.'', which cited the Protocols and defended its authenticity, likening the "Elders of Zion" to the ] banking family, the ], and the ], and the Israeli ], ], and the ]. Later editions left out cites to ''The Protocols''. This is the genesis of the claim that LaRouche has said Queen Elizabeth runs drugs. When asked by an ] reporter in 1984 about the Queen and drug running, LaRouche replied, "Of course she's pushing drugs ... that is in a sense of responsibility: the head of a gang that is pushing drugs; she knows it's happening and she isn't stopping it."<ref>(NBC News, First Camera, March 4, 1984, transcript from NBC News, excerpt used with permission).</ref> | |||
The charge of anti-Semitism in the LaRouche network resurfaced in the media in 2004 in accounts of the death of a young Jewish student, ], who had been attending a Schiller Institute event in Germany; and in criticism of how the LaRouche group framed the issue of the U.S.-led war in Iraq in ways that recalled anti-Semitic stereotypes. | |||
] argues that LaRouche indirectly expresses antisemitism through the use of "coded language" and by attacking ].<ref name=Berlet2005/> Dennis King maintains, for example, that words like "British" were really code words for "Jew".{{sfn|George|Wilcox|1996|p={{page needed|date=February 2021}}}} Other critics of LaRouche believe that LaRouche's anti-British statements disparage the British system rather than the Jewish religion. ] and John George write that, "Dennis King goes to considerable lengths to paint LaRouche as a neo-Nazi, even engaging in a little conspiracy-mongering of his own."{{sfn|George|Wilcox|1996|p={{page needed|date=July 2024}}}} | |||
LaRouche delivered a speech which was highly critical of ]'s film ]. This speech, and related articles from the LaRouche movement, attacked Holocaust deniers and anti-Semites . | |||
===Race=== | |||
] argues that LaRouche indirectly expresses anti-Semitism throught the use of "coded language" and by attacking ].{{NamedRef|CriticsBerlet-1|3}}. According to Berlet: | |||
] of ] wrote in a 1997 column that LaRouche had a "long attempted to destroy and manipulate black leaders, political organizations and the black church".<ref>{{cite news |title=No Compromise with Racism: Farrakhan, Chavis and Lyndon La Rouche – Part One of a Two Part Series |author-link=Manning Marable|first=Manning |last=Marable|date= January 17, 1997 |work=Columbus Free Press}}</ref>{{sfn|Marable|1998|p=}} | |||
:Antisemitic conspiracism is aggressively peddled to progressives by several rightwing groups including the international network run by Lyndon LaRouche, a frequently unsuccessful US presidential candidate. While LaRouche rhetoric can seem bonkers, his followers are successful in recruiting students on college campuses and in networking with some Black Nationalist groups. Sometimes Arab publications circulate articles from LaRouche group analysts. When LaRouche publications condemn the neoconservative policy advisers to President Bush as the ‘Children of Satan’, it echoes historic antisemitic rhetoric about evil Jewish conspiracies tracing back to medieval Europe. | |||
During LaRouche's slander suit against NBC in 1984, ], leader of the ], took the stand for LaRouche as a character witness, stating under oath that LaRouche's views on racism were "consistent with his own." Asked whether he had seen any indication of racism in LaRouche's associates, he replied that he had not.{{sfn|George|Wilcox|1992|pp=317, 322}} Innis received criticism from many blacks for having testified on LaRouche's behalf.{{sfn|Marable|1998|p={{page needed|date=February 2021}}}}<ref>Bivins, Larry. "Frist embraces King's legacy", ''USA Today'', January 21, 2003.</ref> | |||
Daniel Levitas writes: | |||
The African-American civil-rights leader ] was LaRouche's running mate in the 1992 presidential election, and in the mid-1990s, the LaRouche movement entered into an alliance with ]'s ].{{sfn|Marable|1998|pp=177–182}} Another LaRouche movement member with a record in civil-rights issues is ], then the vice-president of the Schiller Institute, a LaRouche organization; she has described the movement as following in the footsteps of ]: "Mr. {{sic|And}} Mrs. LaRouche built a movement, taking up where Dr. King had left off. They realized ... there must be {{sic|an}} universal image of mankind, which transcends all racial differences and barriers."<ref>{{cite news|title=Pres. candidate LaRouche spurs support, controversy |date= October 1, 2003 |url=https://www.michigandaily.com/uncategorized/pres-candidate-larouche-spurs-support-controversy/ |work=] |access-date=July 31, 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-85200835.html|title=LaRouche supporter discusses civil rights movement at U. Michigan|work=] |date=October 2, 2003}}{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref><ref> {{cite news|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-79520133.html|title=Civil Rights Heroine Wins Iranian Hearts|work=]|date=July 17, 2002}}{{dead link|date=July 2021|fix-attempted=yes}}</ref> | |||
:For almost three decades, Lyndon LaRouche has engaged in political activities that have been chameleonlike in their shifts from left to right; however, he has been consistent in creating and elaborating conspiracy theories that contain a strong dose of antisemitism. <small> Daniel Levitas, "Antisemitism and the Far Right: "Hate" Groups, White Supremacy, and the Neo-Nazi Movement," in ed. Jerome A. Chanes, ''Antisemitism in America Today: Outspoken Experts Explode the Myths'', (New York: Birch Lane Press/Carol Publishing, 1995), pp. 191-192.</small> | |||
==Accusations of fascism against the LaRouche movement== | |||
===Women and feminism=== | |||
]"]] | |||
In 1972 LaRouche's second wife, Carol Larrabee (also known as Carol Schnitzer), left him for Christopher White, a younger man who was a member of the LaRouche network in Britain. Following the personal crisis of his marital breakdown, his writings became, in the view of some critics, anti-] to the point of ], and obsessed with sex. | |||
LaRouche's movement has frequently been accused of being fascist. Those making the accusation include Democratic National Committee chairman ],<ref>{{cite news|title=PRESIDENT'S NEWS CONFERENCE ON FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC ISSUES|work=The New York Times|date=August 13, 1986|page=A.18}}</ref> a local Texas Democratic district committee,<ref>{{cite news|title=White, GOP brass come out swinging on convention rounds|work=Houston Chronicle |date=May 18, 1986|page=37}}</ref> and Democratic activist ].<ref>{{cite news|title=ELECTIONS '88 39TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Marquis Finds LaRouche Link Wins Enemies|first=DANA |last=PARSONS|work=Los Angeles Times |date=October 19, 1988|page=1}}</ref> | |||
According to Chip Berlet and Joel Bellman: | |||
Dennis King, a former ] and member of the ] in the 1960s and early 1970s, used this thesis in the title of his book-length study of LaRouche and his movement, ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'' (1989). '']'', which is said to have consisted of violent physical attacks on left-wing meetings, is used as a basis for such accusations.<ref>"Chronology of Labor Committee Attacks", issued by New York Committee to Stop Terrorist Attacks, 1973;<br />{{*}} contemporary articles and photographs in the ''Daily World'', the ''Militant'', ''Workers Power'', the ''Fifth Estate'', the ''Boston Phoenix'', and the ''Drummer'';<br />{{*}} "An Introduction to NCLC: The Word is Beware", Liberation New Service, #599, March 23, 1974;<br />{{*}} Charles M. Young, "Mind Control, Political Violence & Sexual Warfare: Inside the NCLC", Crawdaddy, June 1976, p. 48–56;<br />{{*}} TIP, 1976, NCLC: Brownshirts of the Seventies, Arlington, Virginia: Terrorist Information Project (TIP)</ref> | |||
: previous conspiratorial inclinations had now grown into a bizarre tapestry weaving together classical conspiracy theories of the 19th century and post-Marxian economics. He began articulating a `psycho-sexual' theory of political organizing. ] and ] became central themes of the organization's theories....The problem with making the revolution, LaRouche apparently had concluded, was that women are ] bitches. One former member left in disgust when she was told women's feelings of degradation in modern society could be traced to the physical placement of female sexual organs near the ] which caused women to confuse sex with ].<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletBellman|1}}</small> | |||
{{ill|Andrei Fursov|ru|Фурсов, Андрей Ильич}}, a Russian historian and academician at the International Academy of Sciences in Innsbruck, Austria, was interviewed in 2012 by the Russian think tank and web portal ''Terra America'' and asked to comment on the characterizations of LaRouche in Western media. He replied that intellectuals who have called LaRouche a fascist do not deserve to be called intellectuals, and that the charge has no basis in any real scientific analysis of politics. According to Fursov, it comes from the fact that LaRouche criticizes the supposedly "democratic" but actually "liberal totalitarian" system of the West. Fursov said that in Russia not so many people know of LaRouche and that the important thing is not the quantity, but the quality.<ref>Benedictine, Kyrill, interview with Andrei Fursov, {{Webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20120715220632/http://terra-america.ru/intellektuali-nazivaushie-larusha-fashistom-ne-yavlyautsya-intellektualami.aspx |date=July 15, 2012 }}, Terra-America, April 19, 2012</ref> | |||
In an article, "The Sexual Impotency of the Puerto Rican Socialist Party", LaRouche wrote: | |||
], in a review of King's book in '']'', said that King's presentation of LaRouche as a "would-be Führer" was "too neat", and that it failed to take into account that several members of LaRouche's inner circle were themselves Jewish, while acknowledging that LaRouche's "conspiracy theory is designed to appeal to anti-Semitic right-wingers as well as to Black Muslims and nuclear engineers".{{sfn|Johnson|1989}} In his 1983 book, ''Architects of Fear'', Johnson described LaRouche's dalliances with radical groups on the right as "a marriage of convenience", and less than sincere; as evidence he cited a 1975 party memo that spoke of uniting with the right simply for the purpose of overthrowing the established order: "Once we have won this battle, eliminating our right-wing opposition will be comparatively easy." At the same time, Johnson says, LaRouche also sought contact with the Soviet Union and the ] in Iraq; failing to recruit either the Soviets or right-wingers to his cause, LaRouche attempted to adopt a more mainstream image in the 1980s.{{sfn|Johnson|1983|pp=207–208}} ] and John George similarly stated that King had gone too far in trying "to paint LaRouche as a neo-Nazi" and that LaRouche's most severe critics, like King and Berlet, came from extreme leftist backgrounds themselves.{{sfn|George|Wilcox|1992|pp=, 321, 324}} | |||
:The classical case is the sexually athletic Macho who regards himself as a successful performer in bed, the Macho who has much to say and think respecting his capacities for various modes of ] and frequency and cubic centimeters of ]s. The ugly secret of the matter is that he is almost totally sexually impotent. | |||
==References== | |||
In 1974 and 1975, on the heels of Operation Mop-Up, the LaRouche organization issued an article called "Beyond Psychoanalysis," which instituted a regime of "ego-stripping" sessions and what has been called social coercion, in which individuals would be subjected to incessant group criticism. | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==Sources== | |||
According to disaffected ex-members, LaRouche's theories of sexual dynamics and female domination of men resulted in a breakdown of relations between the sexes and the break up of dozens of relationships as women were attacked for being "sadistic bitches" and "witches," and for "mother-dominating" men. | |||
*{{Cite book|last=Berlet|first=Chip|author-link=Chip Berlet|author2=Joel Bellman|year=1989|title=Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism Wrapped in an American Flag|publisher=Political Research Associates|url=http://www.publiceye.org/larouche/nclc1.html}} | |||
<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletBellman|1}}{{NamedRef|CriticsFraser1|4}}{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small> | |||
*{{Cite news | last1 = Berlet | first1 = Chip | last2 = Lyons | first2 = Matthew N. | year = 2000 | title = Right-wing populism in America: Too Close for Comfort | isbn = 978-1-57230-562-5 | publisher = Guilford Press | location = New York | oclc = 185635579 | url = https://archive.org/details/rightwingpopulis00berlrich | url-access = registration }} | |||
*{{Cite conference|last=Berlet|first=Chip|title=Protocols to the Left, Protocols to the Right: Conspiracism in American Political Discourse at the Turn of the Second Millennium (dedicated to Jeremiah Duggan) | conference = Reconsidering "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion": 100 Years After the Forgery | location = The Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies, Boston University|date= October 30–31, 2005}} | |||
A September 1973 editorial in the NCLC's ''Campaigner'' charged that "oncretely, all across the U.S.A., there are workers who are prepared to fight. They are held back, most immediately, by pressure from their wives." | |||
*{{cite web |last=Copulus |first=Milton R. |date=July 19, 1984 | title=The Larouche Ntwork | url=http://www.heritage.org/Research/PoliticalPhilosophy/upload/91214_1.pdf | access-date=January 19, 2006 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060119064440/http://www.heritage.org/Research/PoliticalPhilosophy/upload/91214_1.pdf | archive-date=January 19, 2006}} | |||
*{{cite book |last1=George |first1=John |last2=Wilcox |first2=Laird |year=1992 |title=Nazis, communists, klansmen, and others on the fringe: political extremism in America |publisher=Prometheus Books|isbn=978-0-87975-680-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/naziscommunistsk0000geor|url-access=registration|access-date=March 12, 2011}} | |||
In an ], ] internal memo, "The Politics of Male Impotence," LaRouche told his followers: | |||
*{{cite book |last1=George |first1=John |last2=Wilcox |first2=Laird |year=1996 |title=American Extremists: Militias, Supremacists, Klansmen, Communists & Others |publisher=Prometheus Books |place=Amherst, New York}} | |||
*{{Cite book | last1 = Beyes-Corleis | first1 = Aglaja | year = 1994 | title = Verirrt | isbn = 978-3-451-04278-2 | publisher = Herder | location = Freiburg | oclc = 33502596 }} | |||
:The principle source of impotence, both male and female, is the mother. ... o the extent that my physical powers do not prevent me, I am now confident and capable of ending your political — and sexual — impotence; the two are interconnected aspects of the same problem. ... I am going to make you organizers — by taking your bedrooms away from you until you make the step to being effective organizers. What I shall do is to expose to you the cruel fact of your sexual impotence, male and female. ... I shall destroy your sense of safety in the place to which you ordinarily imagine you can flee. I shall not pull you back from fleeing, but rather destroy the place to which you would attempt to flee. | |||
*{{cite book|last=Johnson|first=George|year=1983|chapter=The 'New Dark Ages' Conspiracy|title=Architects of Fear: Conspiracy Theories and Paranoia in American Politics|publisher=J.P Tarcher|isbn=978-0-87477-275-3|url=https://archive.org/details/architectsoffear00john}} | |||
*{{cite news|last=Johnson|first=George|author-link=George Johnson (writer)|title=A menace or just a crank?|work=The New York Times|date=June 18, 1989|url= https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE5DF123CF93BA25755C0A96F948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=3 }} | |||
===AIDS and Gays=== | |||
*{{Cite book | last = King | first = Dennis | year = 1989 | title = Lyndon LaRouche and the new American fascism | isbn = 978-0-385-23880-9 | publisher = Doubleday | location = New York | oclc = 18684318 | url = https://archive.org/details/lyndonlarouchene0000king | url-access = registration }} | |||
LaRouche activists formed the "Prevent AIDS Now Initiative Committee" (PANIC) in ] and in ] the "Prevent AIDS Now In California" (also PANIC) committee, each of which placed initiatives on the state ballot. The measures would have required that AIDS be returned to the California state list of communicable diseases, which are subject to ] laws. | |||
*{{Cite book|last1 = Kalimtgis | first1 = Konstandinos| last2 = Goldman | first2 = David | last3 = Steinberg | first3 = Jeffrey | year = 1978 | title = Dope, inc | isbn = 978-0-918388-08-7 | publisher = New Benjamin Franklin House Pub. Co. | location = New York | oclc = 4492671}} On the Protocols, see pp. 31–33; on the Rothschilds, see the chart on pp. 154–55, consult index for more than 20-page entries on the Rothschilds. | |||
*{{cite book|first=Manning|last=Marable|year=1998|publisher=Columbia University Press|title=Black Leadership |isbn=978-0-231-10746-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/blackleadership00mara}} | |||
"The initiative declares that people who have AIDS, or who are "carriers" of the virus generally believed to cause AIDS, would have an "infectious, contagious and communicable" condition. The initiative would require that people in these categories be reported to public health authorities," wrote the ''Wall Street Journal''. "Opponents, including state political and medical leaders and gay-rights activists, say there is little simple or reasonable about the initiative. AIDS victims and those exposed to the virus — many of whom, researchers believe, probably will never contract the disease — could be barred from jobs involving the handling of food and could be banned from working in, or even attending, schools. The initiative also could bar people from traveling without permission of health officials, opponents say. Possible use of the state's quarantine powers has led Bruce Decker, chief fund-raiser of the opposition effort and head of a state advisory committee on AIDS, to raise the specter of "concentration camps" for AIDS patients. Both measures were overwhelmingly defeated at the polls. | |||
*{{cite book|last1=Robins |first1=Robert S. |last2=Post |first2=Jerrold M. |year=1997 |title=Lyndon LaRouche: The Extremity of Reason |work=Political Paranoia: The Psychopolitics of Hatred |publisher=Yale University Press}} | |||
*Wohlforth, Tim. (n.d.) | |||
The argument in support of Proposition 69 which appeared in the Voter's Guide published by the State of California said that "These measures are not new; they are the same health measures applied, {by law,} every day, to every other contagious disease." | |||
Opponents of these initiatives characterized them as anti-gay. Since the gay community was initially one of the major sectors of the population to be affected by AIDS in the United States, the relationship of the disease to so-called gay lifestyles was hotly contested; among the measures which could have been implemented, had the initiative passed, were sexual contact tracing, which was depicted as an invasion of privacy by opponents of the initiatives, and possibly the closing of bathhouses or other environments where anonymous sexual contacts might take place. Under public health law, persons with communicable diseases may be subject to quarantine at the discretion of the health department; this possibility was raised to suggest that LaRouche wished to use the measure to persecute gays. Jean V. Hardisty, then director of ], charged that the "initiatives sought, in effect, to require quarantine for people with AIDS." | |||
In 1986, the LaRouche publication, ''Executive Intelligence Review'' (EIR) published a transcript of a speech by LaRouche, where he said the following about gay people, AIDS and civil rights: | |||
:"We have another purpose in fighting AIDS, for our fighting AIDS — for our inducing people to do what they should have done anyway without our speaking a word. Government agencies should have done this. There should be no issue! But government agencies didn't! That's the issue. Why didn't they? Because of a cultural paradigm shift. They did not want, on the one hand, to estrange the votes of a bunch of faggots and cocaine sniffers, the organized gay lobby, as it's called in the United States. (I don't know why they're "gay," they're the most miserable creatures I ever saw! The socalled gay lobby, 8% of the population, the adult electorate; the drug users. There are 20 million cocaine sniffers in the United States, at least. Of course it does affect their mind; it affects the way they vote!" | |||
:"What was the problem? The problem was the cultural paradigm shift. If someone comes up and says, "Yeah, but you can't interfere with the civil rights of an AIDS victim" — what the devil is this? You can't interfere with an AIDS victim killing hundreds of people, by spreading the disease to hundreds of people, which will kill them, during the period before he himself dies? So therefore, should we allow people with guns to go out and shoot people as they choose? Isn't that a matter of the civil rights of gun carriers? Or, if you've got an ax — if you can't aim too well, and just have an ax or a broad sword — shouldn't we allow people with broad swords and axes to go out and kill people indiscrimately as they choose, as a matter of their civil rights? | |||
:"Where did this nonsense come from? Oh, we don't want to offend the gays! Gays are sensitive to their civil rights; this will lead to discrimination against gays! | |||
:"They're already beating up gays with baseball bats around the country! Children are going to playgrounds, they go in with baseball bats, and they find one of these gays there, pederasts, trying to recruit children, and they take their baseball bats and they beat them up pretty bad. They'll kill one sooner or later. In Chicago, they're beating up gays that are hanging around certain schools, pederasts; children go out with baseball bats and beat them up-which is perfectly moral; they have the civil right to do that! It's a matter of children's civil rights!"</small> | |||
::<small>Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., "The End of the Age of Aquarius?" EIR (Executive Intelligence Review), January 10, 1986, p. 40.</small> | |||
In the 1970s and 1980s, LaRouche and his supporters frequently wrote articles containing animosity toward gay people. In ], an editorial in the LaRouche publication ''Illinois Tribunal'' wrote that "... as a category, gays and lesbians do not represent a valid voting constituency, and neither do prostitutes, drug pushers, child molesters, warlocks, witches, pornographers, or others who are morally equivalent." <small>("End Harold Washington's Consistently Disgusting Career," ''Illinois Tribunal'', July 7, 1986, editorial page).</small> | |||
LaRouche has written that history might not judge harshly those who joined lynch-mobs and beat gay people to death with baseball bats to stop the spread of AIDS: | |||
:"The lynchers…are a special variety of political revolutionary, and express, spontaneously, the conspiratorial and other ethical characteristics of political revolutionaries…. | |||
:"The impact of this pattern of developments on Britain's youth gangs of violence-prone football fans is predictable. One can read their general line of thinking in advance. Since the idea of touching the person of the carrier is abhorrent, stones and the nadiest approximation of a collection of baseball bats, come to mind. Certain individuals, of known haunts, first suggest themselves as easy targets.... | |||
:"The point is fast approaching, that increasing portions of these populations will focus upon the fact, that a dead AIDS carrier ceases to be a carrier. If governments were to proceed with repeated mass-screenings of the population, and isolation of carriers, the likelihood of a teenager lynch-mob phenomenon would be small. If not, then other ways of reducing the number of carriers will become increasingly popular. | |||
:"In that case, the lynch-mobs might be seen by later generations’ historians, as the only political force which acted to save the human species from extinction." <small>Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., "Teenage Gangs’ Lynchings of Gays is Foreseen Soon," ''New Solidarity'', February 9, 1987, p. 8.</small> | |||
LaRouche seemed later to modify his views. In a town meeting which was webcast on December 11, 1999, LaRouche said: | |||
:"Look, take the case of AIDS, which I've been attacked for by all kinds of crazy people. I proposed that we mobilize $40 billion from the Federal government — that's back in the middle of the 1980s — to combat a danger, an epidemic disease of a new type, which implicitly threatens all mankind, which has — it's also in the United States, and it's in Africa: In Africa, because of environmental conditions and other tropical-disease conditions, the rate of spread of AIDS is now that most of the population of black Africa is threatened by virtual extinction — not total extinction, but near-extinction. | |||
:"We have a little better conditions in the United States. Some people get drugs which they can't afford in Africa, because Al Gore won't let them, among other reasons. But that we're all victims of it. Who ''cares'' about whether the guy's a homosexual? It's irrelevant! It's a human being who is suffering from a disease, who needs help and protection--in the interests of the General Welfare. Who wants to make a category of "homosexuals"? I don't believe in it; it's not a legitimate category. It's just ''people,'' people who are suffering and dying." | |||
===Classical Culture or Eurocentrism?=== | |||
LaRouche often disparages the ]. In ], he wrote that "The ] had no genuine musical talent, but were a product shaped according to British Psychological Warfare Division (]) specifications, and promoted in Britain by agencies which are controlled by British intelligence." <small>("Why Your Child Became A Drug Addict," Campaigner Special Report, 1978).</small> | |||
What LaRouche supporters see as praising classic culture, LaRouche critics see as a bias against non-White, non-European, non-patriarchal, non-heterosexual cultures and identities.<small>{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletBellman|1}}{{NamedRef|CriticsBerletLyons|2}}{{NamedRef|CriticsFraser1|4}}{{NamedRef|CriticsGilbert|5}}{{NamedRef|CriticsKing-1|6}}</small> For example, LaRouche has written: "Can we imagine anything much more viciously sadistic than the Black Ghetto mother?" <small>(Internal memo, "The Politics of Male Impotence," - Lyndon H. LaRouche, writing as Lyn Marcus, New York: NCLC 1973).</small> | |||
He has also disparaged pre-revolutionary Chinese culture, and chastised the Chinese communists for failing to replace it with Western classical culture: | |||
:"The paranoid state is characteristic of the 'village commune' culture. Objectively, the model 'oriental village commune' is characterized by the fixing of the mode of production with a rigidity paralleling the behavioral stagnation of lower animal life....All the cognitive and related cultural achievements of capitalist development in music, philosophy, and so forth, are symptomatically denounced as 'in favor of the philosophical and cultural ideological relics of pre-1949 China's long barbarian past. Out of this hideous muck comes first a reactionary, actually counterrevolutionary rejection of the working class..." <small>(Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., "What Happened to Integration?" ''The Campaigner'', (Journal of the National Caucus of Labor Committees), Vol. 8, No. 8, August 1975, pp. 5-40; quote from section: "The Maoism Parallel," pages 26-27)."</small> | |||
On the other hand, LaRouche routinely praises the tradition of ]. | |||
==Notes== | |||
*{{NamedNote|CriticsBerletBellman|1}} Berlet & Bellman 1989. | |||
*{{NamedNote|CriticsBerletLyons|2}} Berlet & Lyons 2000. | |||
*{{NamedNote|CriticsBerlet-1|3}} Berlet 2005. | |||
*{{NamedNote|CriticsFraser|4}} Fraser nd. | |||
*{{NamedNote|CriticsGilbert|5}} Gilbert 2003. | |||
*{{NamedNote|CriticsKing-1|6}} King 1989. | |||
*{{NamedNote|SexualCongress|4}} LaRouche 2004. | |||
*{{NamedNote|CriticsMintz|7}} Mintz 1985. | |||
*{{NamedNote|CriticsWohlforth|8}} Wohlforth nd. | |||
==References== | |||
*Berlet, Chip and Joel Bellman. (1989) ''Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism Wrapped in an American Flag''. Political Research Associates. | |||
*Berlet, Chip and Matthew N. Lyons. (2000). ''Right-Wing Populism in America: Too Close for Comfort.'' New York: Guilford Press. . | |||
*Berlet, Chip. (2005). "Protocols to the Left, Protocols to the Right: Conspiracism in American Political Discourse at the Turn of the Second Millennium," (dedicated to Jeremiah Duggan), paper presented at the conference: Reconsidering "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion": 100 Years After the Forgery, The Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies, Boston University, October 30-31, 2005. | |||
*Beyes-Corleis, Aglaja (1994) ''Verirrt: Mein Leben in einer radikalen Politorganisation'', Herder/Spektrum, ISBN 3-451-04278-9 | |||
*Fraser, Clara. ''LaRouche: Sex Maniac & Demagogue.'' . | |||
*Gilbert, Helen (2003) ''Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism restyled for the new Millennium'', Red Letter Press, ISBN 0-932323-21-9. . | |||
*King, Dennis (1989) ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', Doubleday, ISBN 0-385-23880-0 | |||
*Mintz, John. (1985). Ideological Odyssey: From Old Left to Far Right. ''Washington Post''.. | |||
*U.S. Labor Party Investigating Team (Kostandinos Kalimtgis, David Goldman, Jeffrey Steinberg), ''Dope, Inc.: Britain’s Opium War against the U.S.,'' New York: New Benjamin Franklin House, 1978. On the Protocols, see pp. 31-33; on the Rothschilds, see the chart on pp. 154-155, consult index for more than 20 page entries on the Rothschilds. | |||
*Wohlforth, Tim. (n.d.) ''A '60's Socialist Takes a Hard Right''. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
===General=== | |||
* includes a 1995 series on LaRouche by John Mintz and links to other ''Washington Post'' articles on LaRouche | |||
* , ''The Washington Post'', December 17, 1988 | |||
* – ''Washington Post'', October 2004 | |||
* | |||
===Supportive=== | |||
* | |||
* | * | ||
* | * | ||
* | |||
===Critical=== | |||
* by Dennis King and others; reviews of King's book on LaRouche from the mainstream and alternative press; interviews with King by Neenyah Ostrom and other journalists | |||
* by ] and others. | |||
* by Nizkor Project | |||
* Series of articles from the ] Institute for the Study of Destructive Cults | |||
* 1975 article published by the ] whose members joined LaRouche's NCLC for a period in the early 1970s. | |||
* by Terry Kirby, July 2004 (''The Independent'' of London) | |||
===Train Meetings=== | |||
*, Statement issued by the ''LaRouche in 2004'' campaign committee | |||
*, LaRouche publication, undated, no byline; retrieved January 3, 2004 | |||
*, LaRouche publication, undated, no byline; retrieved January 3, 2004 | |||
* by Chip Berlet | |||
*, refers to the Train meetings, published by the Center for Media & Democracy, undated; retrieved January 4, 2004 | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
{{LaRouche movement}} | |||
{{911ct|state=collapsed}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Views Of Lyndon Larouche}} | |||
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Lyndon LaRouche (1922–2019) and the LaRouche movement have expressed controversial views on a wide variety of topics. The LaRouche movement is made up of activists who follow LaRouche's views.
Economics and politics
According to Matko Meštrović, emeritus senior research fellow at the Institute of Economics of Zagreb, Croatia, LaRouche's economic policies call for a program modeled on the economic-recovery program of the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration, including fixed exchange rates, capital controls, exchange controls, currency controls, and protectionist price and trade agreements among partner-nations, although Roosevelt generally pursued trade liberalization. LaRouche also called for a reorganization of debt world-wide, and a global plan for large-scale, continental infrastructure projects. He rejects free trade, deregulation, and globalization.
Marxist roots
Lyndon LaRouche began his political career as a Trotskyist and praised Marxism, but he and the National Caucus of Labor Committees abandoned this ideology in the late 1970s. From then on, LaRouche no longer opposed private ownership of the means of production, and his analysis of political events is no longer phrased in terms of class.
According to Tim Wohlforth, during and after his break with Trotskyism, LaRouche's theory was influenced by what he called his "Theory of Hegemony" derived from Vladimir Lenin's view of the role of intellectuals in being a vanguard helping workers develop their consciousness and realize their leading role in society. He was influenced by Antonio Gramsci's concept of hegemony as an intellectual and cultural elite which directs social thought. LaRouche's theory saw himself and his followers as becoming such a hegemonic force. He rejected Gramsci's notion of "organic intellectuals" being developed by the working class itself. Rather, the working class would be led by elite intellectuals such as himself.
LaRouche was influenced by his readings of Rosa Luxemburg's The Accumulation of Capital and Karl Marx's Capital developing his own "theory of reindustrialization", saying that the West would attempt to industrialize the Third World, particularly India, and attempt to solve the economic crisis both by developing new markets in the Third World and using its cheap and surplus labor to increase profits and minimize costs (see neocolonialism.) To oppose this, LaRouche argued for a "reindustrialization" of the United States with himself at the vanguard of the effort allowing him to personally resolve the crisis of capitalism. Though his arguments had since been stripped of their quasi-Marxist language and citations, his core theories had remained essentially the same since the late 1960s.
Dialectical Economics
In the book Dialectical Economics: An Introduction to Marxist Political Economy, which was published in 1975 by D. C. Heath and Company under the pen name Lyn Marcus, LaRouche tried to show that numerous Marxists—ranging from the Monthly Review group to Ernest Mandel, Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong, Fidel Castro and the "Soviet economists"—had failed to understand and to interpret correctly Marx's writing. Marxists he admired—apart from Marx himself—were Rosa Luxemburg and Yevgeni Preobrazhensky.
According to a review by Martin Bronfenbrenner in The Journal of Political Economy, about half of the book was devoted to dialectical philosophy, "with a strong epistemological stress", with the other half devoted to discussions of economic and general history, anthropology and sociology, and actual economics, including a surprisingly large helping of business administration—Bronfenbrenner noted that LaRouche seemed to have "more private-business experience than the great majority of academic economists", including a familiarity with the way speculative overcapitalization, operating at the borders of white-collar crime, creates "fictitious capitals" that later do not match their actual earning power. Like Thorstein Veblen, LaRouche subscribed to an overcapitalization theory of economic depression.
According to Bronfenbrenner, LaRouche viewed conventional economics as a "withered arm of philosophy", which had taken a wrong turn toward reductionism under the influence of British empiricists such as John Locke and David Hume. LaRouche's definition of reductionism was as follows:
The fundamental fallacy of ordinary understanding is the delusion that the universe is reducible to simple substance, or—the more Hume-like view—that the content of human knowledge is limited to simple-substance-like, self-evident sense perceptions. This discredited outlook—whether it takes the naive mechanistic or the equivalent mechanistic outlook of empiricism—is termed reductionism. All varieties of reductionism are formally premised on the fallacious assumption of formal logic, that the universe can be represented as discrete points interconnected by formal relations.
From this it followed, Bronfenbrenner said, that LaRouche viewed bourgeois economists' concern with prices as reductionism, versus the Marxian concern with values. The reductionist fallacy then lies in adjusting a value theory like labor theory to fit in with price theory; in LaRouche's view, economists should work in the opposite direction.
According to Bronfenbrenner, LaRouche viewed capitalist America as headed for a kind of fascism not much better than that of the Nazis; but he noted that LaRouche's own vision of socialism, and the trade-off between necessity and freedom in a centrally planned economy, seemed apt to result in the justification of a different kind of dictatorship:
Judging from his controversial manner, impresses at least one reader as a Me-for-Dictator type to whom it would be dangerous to entrust the task of drawing any boundary between the domain of freedom and that of necessity or order.
LaRouche's campaign platforms
The campaign platforms of LaRouche and his followers have included these elements:
- A return to a gold-based national and world monetary system, and fixed exchange rates; and replacement of the central bank system, including the U.S. Federal Reserve System, with a "national bank";
- A war on drug trafficking and prosecution of banks involved in money laundering;
- An emphasis on large-scale economic infrastructure, including the building of a world land bridge of railroads and a tunnel under the Bering Strait, the building of nuclear power plants, accelerating research on fusion energy, the North American Water and Power Alliance, and rebuilding or nationalizing the country's steel industry;
- A crash program to build particle-beam weapons and lasers, including support for elements of the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI);
- Opposition to the USSR and support for a military buildup to prepare for imminent war;
- Growth in food production and a farm debt moratorium;
- Low interest rates and opposition to the Gramm–Rudman balanced-budget law;
Later orientation
According to China Youth Daily Online, LaRouche was once a Marxist, but later supported heavily regulated capitalism. He supported public control of financial capital and low-interest loans.
LaRouche said banks should not be bailed out, but be placed in receivership by the state. He said that a "firewall" should prevent state aid from being diverted to speculative entities, which should be allowed to fail, and that such failures would clean up the financial markets.
LaRouche believes in the principles of the New Deal of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and favors state intervention in the economy. LaRouche also said that he supported the approach of U.S. Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton, who established a banking system geared to develop production.
Italian Economics Minister Giulio Tremonti said that he had encountered LaRouche at a debate held in 2007 in Rome, and that he appreciates LaRouche's writings. According to an article by Ivo Caizzi in Corriere della Sera, a group of Italian Senators led by Oskar Peterlini asked the Berlusconi government to tackle the financial crisis using legislation developed by LaRouche in 2007. The legislation proposed that public money should save only the commercial infrastructure required for the financing of productive enterprises.
The "Triple Curve", or "typical collapse function", is an economic model developed by LaRouche which tries to illustrate the growth of financial aggregates at the expense of the physical economy and how this leads to an inevitably collapsing bubble economy. According to the China Youth Daily Online interview, LaRouche's main point is that the real economy (production) is dropping while the nominal economy (money and financial instruments) is going up. As the nominal economy greatly overreaches the real economy, an unavoidable economic crisis ensues.
Since 2000, the LaRouche movement has:
- Called for a moratorium on Third World debt.
- Opposed deregulation. According to LaRouche's publications, "LaRouche has consistently called for reregulation of utilities, transportation, health care (under the "Hill-Burton" standard), the financial (especially the speculative markets) and other sectors ..." They support the renewal of Glass–Steagall Act regulations on banks.
- In 2007, LaRouche proposed a "Homeowners and Bank Protection Act". This called for the establishment of a federal agency that would "place federal- and state-chartered banks under protection, freeze all existing home mortgages for a period of time, adjust mortgage values to fair prices, restructure existing mortgages at appropriate interest rates, and write off speculative debt obligations of mortgage-backed securities". The bill envisioned a foreclosure moratorium, allowing homeowners to make the equivalent of rental payments for an interim period, and an end to bank bail-outs, forcing banks to reorganize under bankruptcy laws. A LaRouche spokesman said that bank bail-outs "reward corrupt swindlers with taxpayer money". The proposal attracted support from Democrats at city council and state legislature level. Pennsylvania Democrat Paul Kanjorski opposed the bill, stating it would involve government seizure of "every American bank". Mike Colpitts of Housing Predictor stated that LaRouche's economic forecasts had been correct, and that he might have received more mainstream credibility had it not been for his controversial history.
Neoplatonism
LaRouche's philosophy references an old dispute between Plato and Aristotle. Aristotle believed in knowledge through empirical observation and experience. Plato believed in The Forms. According to LaRouche, history has always been a battle between Platonists—rationalists, idealists and utopians who believe in absolute truth and the primacy of ideas—and Aristotelians—relativists who rely on empirical data and sensory perception. Platonists in LaRouche's worldview include figures such as Beethoven, Mozart, Shakespeare, Leonardo da Vinci, and Leibniz. LaRouche states that many of the world's ills are due to the fact that Aristotelianism, as embraced by British philosophers like Locke, Hume, Thomas Hobbes, Jeremy Bentham and represented by "oligarchs", foremost among them wealthy British families, has dominated, leading to a culture that favors the empirical over the metaphysical, embraces moral relativism, and seeks to keep the general population uninformed. LaRouche frames this struggle as an ancient one, and sees himself and his movement in the tradition of the philosopher-kings in Plato's Republic.
LaRouche and his followers use Neoplatonism as the basis for an economic model that posits "the absolute necessity of progress". Economies evolve in stages as humanity devises new technologies, stages that LaRouche compares to the hierarchical spheres in Kepler's model of the solar system based on the Platonic solids. The purpose of science, technology and business must be to assist this progress, enabling the Earth to support an ever-growing humanity. Human life is the supreme value in LaRouche's world view; environmentalism and population control are seen as retrogressive steps, promoting a return to the Dark Ages. Rather than curtailing progress, because of dwindling resources, LaRouche advocates using nuclear technology to make more energy available to humanity, freeing humanity to enjoy music and art.
In LaRouche's view, the people opposing this vision are part of the Aristotelian conspiracy. They may not necessarily be in contact with one another: "From their standpoint, are proceeding by instinct", LaRouche has said. "If you're asking how their policy is developed—if there is an inside group sitting down and making plans—no, it doesn't work that way ... History doesn't function quite that consciously." Left and right are false distinctions for LaRouche; what matters is the Platonic versus Aristotelian outlook, a position that has led LaRouche to form relationships with groups as disparate as farmers, nuclear engineers, Black Muslims, Teamsters, pro-lifers, and followers of the Ku Klux Klan—even though LaRouche counts the Klan itself among his foes.
George Johnson, in Architects of Fear (1983), has described LaRouche's Neoplatonist conspiracy theory as a "distortion of a real philosophical distinction". He has written that the resulting philosophy can be applied to any number of situations in a manner that becomes plausible once one accepts its basic premise. In his view, it forms the foundation of a conspiracy theory that rationalizes paranoid thinking, an opinion echoed by John George and Laird Wilcox in American Extremists: Militias, Supremacists, Klansmen, Communists & Others (1996). Writing in The New York Times in 1989, Johnson described LaRouche as "a kind of Allan Bloom gone mad" who seems to "believe the nonsense he spouts", a view of the world in which Aristotelians use "sex, drugs and rock-and-roll" and "environmentalism and quantum theory" to support wealthy oligarchs and create a civilization-destroying "new Dark Age".
Conspiracies
LaRouche wrote that conspiracy was natural in human beings. In 1998, he responded to critics of his conspiracism, such as Daniel Pipes and said that Pipes wrongly believed that all reports of conspiracy are axiomatically false.
LaRouche's critics, particularly Dennis King and Chip Berlet, characterize his current orientation as being a conspiracist worldview. They say the Marxist concept of the ruling class was converted by LaRouche into a conspiracy theory, in which world capitalism was controlled by a cabal including the Rothschilds, the Rockefellers, Henry Kissinger, and the Council on Foreign Relations. Daniel Pipes said that LaRouche personalizes his conspiracy theories, and associates "all of his adversaries with the forces of darkness."
The Executive Intelligence Review (EIR), a LaRouche publication, ran an "investigative report" titled "Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy At It Again, With a New Twist" in 2007. The article states:
Perhaps the only name that sends the VRWC gang more into orbit than either Bill and Hillary Clinton, is the name Lyndon LaRouche. The very same apparatus that waged a billion-dollar slander campaign against the President and the First Lady throughout much of the mid- and late 1990s, has an even longer track record of venomous slander and frame-up campaigns against LaRouche and his political movement. Of course, the reality is that it was the Bush-Cheney campaign, backed by the Scalia Supreme Court, that actually stole the 2000 election in Florida.
In 2001, LaRouche said that rogue elements within the American military took part in, or planned, the September 11, 2001, attacks as part of a coup d'état.
The "British" conspiracy
LaRouche is known for alleging conspiracies by the British. LaRouche has said that the dominant imperialist strategic force acting on the planet today is not the United States, but the "Anglo-Dutch liberal system" of the British Empire, which he asserts is an oligarchic financial consortium like that of medieval Venice, more like a "financial slime-mold" than a nation. According to this theory, London financial circles protect themselves from competition by using techniques of "controlled conflict" first developed in Venice, and LaRouche attributes many wars in recent memory to this alleged activity by the British.
According to Chip Berlet and Dennis King, LaRouche has always been stridently anti-British and has included Queen Elizabeth II, the British Royal Family, and others, in his list of conspirators who are said to control the world's political economy and the international drug trade. According to Jonathan Vankin and John Whalen, LaRouche is the "most illustrious" Anglophobe. These views are reflected in three books authored by members of his organization:
- Dope, Inc. by David P. Goldman, Konstandinos Kalimtgis and Jeffrey Steinberg, 1978 (ISBN 0-918388-08-2): this book discusses the history of narcotics trafficking, beginning with the Opium War, and alleges that British interests have continued to dominate the field up to the modern era, for example through money laundering in British offshore banking colonies. The heart of the conspiracy, according to LaRouche, is the financial elite of the City of London.
- The Civil War and the American System by Allen Salisbury, 1979 (ISBN 0918388023): alleges that British interests encouraged and financed the secession movement and supported the Confederacy against the Union in the American Civil War, because they preferred North America to be a primitive agrarian economy that they could dominate through policies of free trade.
- The New Dark Ages Conspiracy by Carol White, 1980 (ISBN 0-933488-05-X): alleges that a group of British intellectuals led by Bertrand Russell and H. G. Wells attempted to control scientific progress in order to keep the world backward and more easily managed by imperialism. In this conspiracy theory, Wells wished science to be controlled by some kind of priesthood and kept from the common man, while Russell wished to stifle it altogether by restricting it to a closed system of formal logic, that would prohibit the introduction of new ideas. This conspiracy also involved the promotion of the counterculture.
The Queen and Prince Philip
According to book critic and columnist Scott McLemee:
The emergence of the is all the more surprising, given that LaRouche himself has long since become the walking punchline to a very strange joke. He is known for some of the most baroque conspiracy theories ever put into circulation. Members of the LYM now deny that he ever accused the Queen of England [sic] of drug trafficking—though in fact, he did exactly that throughout the 1980s. At the time, he won admirers on the extreme right wing by denouncing Henry Kissinger as an agent of the KGB and calling for AIDS patients to be quarantined.
In 2004, in a segment about the death of Jeremiah Duggan during a LaRouche Youth Movement cadre school in Wiesbaden in March 2003, BBC's Newsnight re-broadcast a BBC interview with LaRouche from 1980, in which he said about the Queen: "Of course she's pushing drugs. That is, in the sense of a responsibility, the head of a gang that is pushing drugs, she knows it's happening and she isn't stopping it."
A 1998 editorial in LaRouche's Executive Intelligence Review cited a statement by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard in The Daily Telegraph that described LaRouche as the "publisher of a book that accuses the Queen of being the world's foremost drug dealer", characterising it as a "bit of black propaganda" and a "reference to the book Dope, Inc., ... which laid bare the role of the London-centered offshore financial institutions and allied intelligence services, in running the global drug trade, from the time of Britain's nineteenth-century Opium Wars against China." Evans-Pritchard further said LaRouche had claimed that the Queen was involved in the Death of Diana, Princess of Wales. The Executive Intelligence Review responded that Evans-Pritchard's article was "pure fiction", written in response to EIR reporter Jeff Steinberg's appearance on a British ITV television program about the conspiracy theories surrounding the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. In a brief part of an interview with Steinberg broadcast the following day by Channel 4's Dispatches, Steinberg said that while there was "no smoking gun proof" that Prince Philip asked British intelligence to assassinate Diana, he could not "rule out" the possibility.
Leo Strauss
LaRouche's initial essay on the influence of Leo Strauss within neoconservatism and the George W. Bush administration, "The Essential Fraud of Leo Strauss", was written in March 2003. In the same year, a series of pamphlets entitled "Children of Satan" later consolidated into a book, began appearing. LaRouche charges that there was a conspiracy dominated by what are called Straussians (followers of Leo Strauss) within the Bush administration, and that the dominant personality in this conspiracy was Dick Cheney (whose photo appears on the cover of the book.) LaRouche claimed that these conspirators deliberately misled the American public and the US Congress in order to initiate the 2003 invasion of Iraq. He writes that the Straussians created the Office of Special Plans in order to fabricate intelligence and bypass traditional intelligence channels. According to LaRouche movement member Tony Papert, an important part of this theory is the LaRouchian analysis of the ideas of Leo Strauss which borrows heavily from the writings of Shadia Drury.
Robert Bartley of The Wall Street Journal has condemned LaRouche's views on this subject, and says that it may have influenced other commentators who subsequently published a similar analysis, such as Seymour Hersh and James Atlas in their articles for The New York Times. Bartley quotes the assertion by LaRouche movement member Jeffrey Steinberg that a "cabal of Strauss disciples, along with an equally small circle of allied neo-conservative and Likudnik fellow-travelers" have plotted a "not-so-silent coup" using the September 11 attacks as a justification, similar to the Reichstag fire of 1933. Bartley complains that Strauss's "words are twisted from their meaning" in order to justify the theory. Canadian journalist Jeet Heer has commented that LaRouche's followers "argue that Strauss is the evil genius behind the Republican Party". Political science scholars Catherine and Michael Zuckert say that LaRouche's writings were the first to connect Strauss to neoconservatism and the Bush foreign policy and initiated the discussion of the topic, though the views about it changed as it percolated through to international journalism.
Bush family
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The Executive Intelligence Review (EIR) published an article by Anton Chaitkin alleging that Prescott Bush "had persevered with his comrades in the old Auschwitz gang" and that "the smoldering bodies in Auschwitz followed logically upon the race propaganda festival which had been staged by the Harriman-Bush enterprise a decade earlier in New York."
EIR published a book, George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography, by Webster Griffin Tarpley and Anton Chaitkin, in 1992, which said that "virtually all the Nazi trade with the United States was under the supervision of the Harriman-Bush interests", and that "Bush's family had already played a central role in financing and arming Adolf Hitler for his takeover of Germany; in financing and managing the buildup of Nazi war industries for the conquest of Europe and war against the U.S.A.; and in the development of Nazi genocide theories and racial propaganda, with their well-known results. ... The President's family fortune was largely a result of the Hitler project. The powerful Anglo-American family associations, which later boosted him into the Central Intelligence Agency and up to the White House, were his father's partners in the Hitler project."
In 2006, The LaRouche Political Action Committee and EIR published "LaRouche to Rumsfeld: FDR Defeated the Nazis, While Bushes Collaborated", which stated:
LaRouche blasted Rumsfeld, reminding him that it was President Franklin Delano Roosevelt who defeated Hitler and the Nazis, while many American right-wingers of the 1930s and '40s were promoters of Mussolini, Hjalmar Schacht, and Hermann Goering. And among the extreme American Fascists and Nazis of the period, there were some who openly sympathized with Adolf Hitler, by intention or practice. "Let us not ignore the role of George Shultz, the man behind the Bush Presidency, the power of Vice President Cheney, and the promotion of Don Rumsfeld as Secretary of Defense. Even leading Republicans know Shultz to be an outright totalitarian, who has used the Bush Presidency to impose a 'Pinochet Model' of top-down dictatorship and radical free-market economics upon the United States. Shultz's promotion of the privatization of war, on the SS model, has been backed", LaRouche noted, "by Felix Rohatyn."
PANIC proposal and AIDS
In 1974, an organisation affiliated to LaRouche predicted that there would be pandemics in Africa. When AIDS was first recognized as a medical phenomenon in the early 1980s, LaRouche activists were convinced that this was the pandemic about which the task force had warned. LaRouche and his followers stated (incorrectly) that HIV, the AIDS virus, could be transmitted by casual contact, citing as supporting evidence the high incidence of the disease in Africa, the Caribbean and southern Florida. LaRouche said that the transmission by insect bite was "thoroughly established". John Grauerholz, medical director of the BHTF, told reporters that the Soviet Union may have started the epidemic and that U.S. health officials aided the Soviets by not doing more to stop AIDS.
AIDS became a key plank in LaRouche's platform. His slogan was "Spread Panic, not AIDS!" LaRouche's followers created "Prevent AIDS Now Initiative Committee" (PANIC), which sponsored California Proposition 64, the "LaRouche Initiative", in 1986. Mel Klenetsky, co-director of political operations for the Larouche-affiliated National Democratic Policy Committee and LaRouche's campaign director, said that there must be universal testing and mandatory quarantining of HIV carriers. "Twenty to 30 million out of 100 million people in central Africa have AIDS", Klenetsky said. "It is spreading because of impoverished economic conditions, and that is a direct result of IMF policies that have destroyed people's means of resisting the disease." Klenetsky said that LaRouche believed that not only drug users and homosexuals are vulnerable to the disease.
The measure was met with strong opposition and was defeated. A second AIDS initiative qualified for the ballot in 1988, but the measure failed by a larger margin. In response to a survey which predicted that 72% of voters would oppose the measure, a spokesman called the poll "an obvious fraud", saying that pollsters deliberately worded questions to prejudice respondents against the initiative. He additionally said that the poll was part of a "big lie ... witch hunt" orchestrated by Armand Hammer and Elizabeth Taylor.
As early as 1985, NDPC members ran for local school boards on a platform of keeping infected students out of school. In 1986, LaRouche supporters traveled from Seattle to Lebanon, Oregon to urge the school board there to reverse a policy that would allow children with AIDS to enroll. In 1987, followers tried to organize a boycott of an elementary school in the Chicago neighborhood of Pilsen, sending a van with loudspeakers through the district. They disrupted an informational meeting and, according to press accounts, told parents that "The blood of your own children will be on your hands if you allow this child with AIDS in your school", or shouted at opponents, "He has AIDS! He has AIDS!"
LaRouche purchased a national TV spot during his 1988 presidential campaign, in which he summarized his views and proposals with respect to the AIDS epidemic. He said most statements about how AIDS is spread were an "outright lie" and that talk of safe sex was just propaganda put out by the government to avoid spending the money required to address the crisis.
The AIDS disinformation of the LaRouche movement occurred during the Soviets' Operation "INFEKTION" propaganda campaign. According to researcher Douglas Selvage, "a cycle of misinformation and disinformation... arose between U.S.-based conspiracy theorists—especially Lyndon LaRouche and his followers—and authors and publications espousing Moscow's preferred theses regarding AIDS."
LaRouche-affiliated candidates used AIDS as an issue as late as 1994.
Opponents characterized it as an anti-gay measure that would force HIV-positive individuals out of their jobs and into quarantine, or create "concentration camps for AIDS patients." According to newspaper reports, the LaRouche newspaper New Solidarity said the initiative was opposed by Communist gangs composed of the "lower sexual classes" and he warned of the recruitment of millions of Americans into the ranks of "AIDS-riddled homosexuality".
Environment and energy
Meštrović says LaRouche followed Vladimir Vernadsky in seeing the human mind as a force transforming the biosphere into a higher form, the noösphere. LaRouche favored a highly industrialized civilization reaching for innovation and interplanetary colonization. The movement said that the theory of man-caused global warming prevents the development of emerging economies. It also said that the top level organizations in the command structure of the environmental movement include the World Wildlife Fund, headed by Prince Philip, the Aspen Institute, and the Club of Rome.
According to Chip Berlet, "Pro-LaRouche publications have been at the forefront of denying the reality of global warming". The LaRouche movement's 21st Century Science & Technology magazine has been called "anti-environmental" by Mother Jones magazine. LaRouche publications denounced the concept of a nuclear winter, the theory that nuclear war could lead to global cooling, as early as 1983, calling it a "fraud" and a "hoax" popularized by the Soviet Union to weaken the U.S. Some of the movement's ideas were later adopted by the Wise use movement. The LaRouche movement opposed ratification of the Convention on Biological Diversity, which failed in the U.S. Senate in 1994.
Energy-flux density
LaRouche asserts a concept energy-flux density, which is the rate of energy use per person and per unit area of the economy as a whole. He asserts that an increase in energy flux density as a fundamental principle of the universe in general (contrary the second law of thermodynamics), and the appropriate destiny or goal for mankind in general. Consequently, policies or ideologies deemed to oppose this increase must be opposed and are foolish and dangerous: for example, moves to decrease energy consumption or improve efficiency, or to reduce consumption, or to reduce population; policies deemed increase it should be pursued: higher energy fuels such as nuclear fuels, higher populations, higher consumption.
Nuclear power
LaRouche says that nuclear and especially fusion power is necessary for the continued growth of civilization. He founded the Fusion Energy Foundation, which published the journal Fusion (later renamed to 21st Century Science & Technology). In his 1980 presidential platform, LaRouche promised 2500 nuclear power plants if elected. In 2007, LaRouche reiterated his position, saying that only the "massive investment" in fission and fusion technology could prevent the "collapse of human existence on this planet".
The movement has targeted opponents of nuclear power. Members of the Clamshell Alliance, non-violent protesters at the Seabrook Nuclear Power Plant in New Hampshire, were called "terrorists" in 1977. Representatives of LaRouche's U.S. Labor Party gave incriminating information to law enforcement about them, which the FBI later determined had been fabricated, according to King. During a large demonstration against the plant in 1989, an airplane carried a banner overhead which read, "Free LaRouche! Kill Satan – Open Seabrook".
The movement blames cabalists, including then-congressman Dick Cheney, for inciting anti-nuclear sentiments during the late 1970s. LaRouche sources described the incident at the nuclear power plant at Three Mile Island as sabotage, since they considered the control systems too sophisticated to fail by accident.
DDT
21st Century Science & Technology's managing editor, Marjorie Mazel Hecht, called the campaign against DDT the "'mother' of all the environmental hoaxes". Other articles compared anti-DDT campaigner Rachel Carson to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels. 21st century, which is produced by LaRouche supporters, has published papers by entomologist J. Gordon Edwards, including one that urged the return of the insecticide DDT because he said it has "saved more millions of lives than any other man-made chemical". Rogelio (Roger) Maduro, an associate editor, wrote that the ban on DDT was part of a plan to reduce the population and had caused the deaths of 40 million people via a resurgence of malaria.
Ozone hole
LaRouche was part of what was called the "ozone backlash". 21st Century Science & Technology, which conducted what has been called "a very effective campaign of misinformation on the issue of ozone depletion", published The Holes in the Ozone Scare in 1992. The book, by LaRouche followers Rogelio Maduro and Ralf Schauerhammer, said that chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) were not destroying the ozone layer and opposed the proposal to ban them. It asserted that most chlorine in the atmosphere came from oceans, volcanoes, or other natural sources, and that CFCs were too heavy to reach the ozone layer. It went on to say that even if the ozone layer were depleted there would not be any harmful effects from additional ultraviolet radiation. It predicted that a ban would result in an additional 20 to 40 million deaths due to food spoilage. Lewis DuPont Smith, an heir to the DuPont Chemical fortune and a LaRouche follower, told Maduro that the DuPont Company had schemed to ban CFCs, which they had invented but which had become generic, in order to replace them with more expensive proprietary compounds. It has been called "probably the best known and most widely quoted text aimed at debunking the concept of ozone depletion". Its assertions were repeated by Dixy Lee Ray in her 1993 book Environmental Overkill, by Rush Limbaugh, and by Ronald Bailey. Some atmospheric scientists have said that it is based on poor research.
At a 1994 shareholder's meeting, Smith called on DuPont to continue producing CFCs, saying there was no evidence of their harmfulness and that "This is nothing less than genocide". By 1995 LaRouche was noted as calling the ozone hole a "myth". Maduro's writings were the basis for the Arizona legislature's passage of a 1995 bill to allow the production of CFCs in the state despite federal and international prohibitions.
Global warming
The "Greenhouse effect" hoax: a world federalist plot, another book by Maduro, says that the theory of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) is a plot by the British royal family and communists to undermine the U.S. It was cited by science writer David Bellamy.
LaRouche followers have promoted the documentary The Great Global Warming Swindle and attacked Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth, infiltrating showings to promote their viewpoints. They have stood on street corners proclaiming the falsity of global warming, and have protested Gore's appearances.
21st Century Science & Technology has published papers by climate change contrarians including Zbigniew Jaworowski, Nils-Axel Mörner, Hugh Ellsaesser, and Robert E. Stevenson. A 2007 article by LaRouche science advisor Laurence Hecht suggested that the varying levels of cosmic rays, whose change is dependent on Earth's motion through the galaxy, has a larger effect on the climate than local factors such as greenhouse gases or solar and orbital cycles. Christopher Monckton was praised as the leading spokesman of the "global warming swindle" in the introduction to an Executive Intelligence Review interview with him in 2009, but he was also considered to have a relatively limited view of the cabal behind the hoax. A movement newsletter says that environmental groups seek to "force ... CO2 emissions agreements down the throats of governments as a way of finishing off the nation-state system" on behalf of synarchist networks.
Music and science
LaRouche was fascinated by musical theory, as well as mathematics and physics, and this fascination also translates into his teachings; his followers for example have attempted to link the musical scale to his Neoplatonist model of economic evolution, and study singing and geometry. A common teaser used by the movement is to ask people whether they know how to "double the square"—draw a square whose area is twice the size of an existing square. A motto of LaRouche's European Workers' Party is "Think like Beethoven"; movement offices typically include a piano and posters of German composers, and members are known for their choral singing at protest events, using satirical lyrics tailored to their targets.
LaRouche and his wife had an interest in classical music up to Johannes Brahms. LaRouche abhorred contemporary music; holding that rock music is subversive, and was deliberately created to be so by British intelligence. LaRouche is quoted as saying that jazz music was "foisted on black Americans by the same oligarchy which had run the U.S. slave trade". This dislike for modern music also extends to classical music the movement disapproves of; LaRouche movement members have protested at performances of Richard Wagner's operas, denouncing Wagner as an anti-Semite who found favor with the Nazis, and called a conductor "satanic" because he played contemporary music.
In 1988, LaRouche advocated that classical orchestras should return to the "Verdi pitch", a pitch that Giuseppe Verdi had enshrined in Italian legislation in 1884. Orchestras' pitches have risen since the 18th century, because a higher pitch produces a more brilliant orchestral sound, while imposing an additional strain on singers' voices. Verdi succeeded in 1884 in having legislation passed in Italy that fixed the reference pitch for A at 432 Hz, but in 1938, the international standard was raised to 440 Hz, with some major orchestras tuning as high as 450 Hz in recent times. LaRouche spoke about the resulting strain on singers' voices in his 1988 presidential campaign videos. By 1989 the initiative had attracted support from more than 300 opera stars, including Joan Sutherland, Plácido Domingo, Luciano Pavarotti and Montserrat Caballé. While many of these singers may or may not have been aware of LaRouche's politics, Renata Tebaldi and Piero Cappuccilli ran for the European Parliament on LaRouche's "Patriots for Italy" platform and appeared as featured speakers at a conference organised by the Schiller Institute. (The institute was founded by LaRouche and his wife, Helga.) The discussions led to debates in the Italian parliament about reinstating Verdi's legislation. LaRouche himself gave an interview to National Public Radio on the initiative in 1989 from prison. Stefan Zucker, the editor of Opera Fanatic (and, incidentally, the "world's highest tenor") opposed the initiative on the grounds that it would result in the establishment of a "pitch police", arguing that the way it presented the history of the tuning pitch was a "simplification", and that LaRouche was using the issue to gain credibility. The initiative in the Italian Senate failed to result in corresponding legislation being passed.
LaRouche considered pitch important, believing that the Verdi pitch has a direct relation to the structure of the universe, and that bel canto singing at the correct pitch maximizes the music's impact on both singers and listeners.
Opposition to Obama's health reforms
LaRouche's organization opposed the Obama administration's health-care reform proposals. Posters of Obama wearing a Hitler-style mustache appeared at a LaRouche movement rally.
As town-hall meetings on this issue during the summer of 2009 began to attract very large and angry crowds, the comparison of Obama to Hitler began to show up on many signs and banners. The Atlantic wrote that LaRouche supporters "patented the Obama-is-Nazi theme".
Sexuality and politics
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In 1973, LaRouche wrote an article called "Beyond Psychoanalysis". He theorized that each culture had characteristic flaws that resulted in blocks to effective political organizing. LaRouche and his colleagues conducted studies of different "national ideologies", including German, French, Italian, English, Latin American, Greek, and Swedish.
In an article, "The Sexual Impotency of the Puerto Rican Socialist Party", LaRouche criticised Machismo. Regarding the role of women, he adds, "The task of real women's liberation is to generally strengthen women's self-consciousness and their power and opportunities to act upon self-consciousness."
Minority politics
Critics say the movement is antisemitic, conspiracist, and anti-LGBT, and that its political and economic proposals are a cover for its actual beliefs.
Homosexuality
During the 1980s, LaRouche and his supporters made comments that were seen as anti-gay. A LaRouche-affiliated newspaper wrote that demonstrators against the LaRouche-sponsored AIDS initiative in California were from the "lower sexual classes."
Judaism and Zionism
British journalist Roger Boyes wrote, "Anti-Semitism is at the core of LaRouche's conspiracy theories, which he adapts to modern events — most recently the war in Iraq." Daniel Levitas wrote in 1995 that LaRouche "has been consistent in creating and elaborating conspiracy theories that contain a strong dose of antisemitism". As an example of LaRouche's alleged antisemitism, Dennis King cited LaRouche's statement (under the pen name L. Marcus) in The Case of Ludwig Feuerbach (1973), "Jewish culture ... is merely the residue left to the Jewish home after everything saleable has been marketed to the Goyim."
The charge of antisemitism in the LaRouche network resurfaced in the media in 2004 in accounts of the death of a Jewish student, Jeremiah Duggan, who had been attending a Schiller Institute event in Germany. British press reports described LaRouche as "the American leader of a sect with a fascist and antisemitic ideology".
LaRouche denied over a long period that his movement is antisemitic. In 2006, LaRouche said, "Religious and racial hatred, such as anti-Semitism the most evil expression of criminality to be seen on the planet today." Debra Freeman, a spokesperson for LaRouche, told a newspaper in 2010 that, "Hitler was a lunatic, but his policies were based principally on economic policy and staying in power. We mourn the loss of six million Jews and countless others."
LaRouche's critics have said he is a "disguised anti-Semite", in that he takes the classical antisemitic conspiracy theory and substitutes the word "Zionist" for the word "Jew", and ascribes the classical antisemitic caricature of the "scheming Jew" to particular Jewish individuals and groups of Jews, rather than to the Jews as a whole. "Modern Zionism was not created by Jews, but was a project developed chiefly by Oxford University", LaRouche says. He says, "Zionism is not Judaism." In 1978, the same year LaRouche's article cited The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, the LaRouche group published Dope, Inc.: Britain's Opium War against the U.S., which cited the Protocols and defended its authenticity, likening the "Elders of Zion" to the Rothschild banking family, the British Royal family, and the Italian Mafia, and the Israeli Mossad, General Pike, and the B'nai B'rith. Later editions left out cites to The Protocols. This is the genesis of the claim that LaRouche has said Queen Elizabeth runs drugs. When asked by an NBC reporter in 1984 about the Queen and drug running, LaRouche replied, "Of course she's pushing drugs ... that is in a sense of responsibility: the head of a gang that is pushing drugs; she knows it's happening and she isn't stopping it."
Chip Berlet argues that LaRouche indirectly expresses antisemitism through the use of "coded language" and by attacking neoconservatives. Dennis King maintains, for example, that words like "British" were really code words for "Jew". Other critics of LaRouche believe that LaRouche's anti-British statements disparage the British system rather than the Jewish religion. Laird Wilcox and John George write that, "Dennis King goes to considerable lengths to paint LaRouche as a neo-Nazi, even engaging in a little conspiracy-mongering of his own."
Race
Manning Marable of Columbia University wrote in a 1997 column that LaRouche had a "long attempted to destroy and manipulate black leaders, political organizations and the black church".
During LaRouche's slander suit against NBC in 1984, Roy Innis, leader of the Congress of Racial Equality, took the stand for LaRouche as a character witness, stating under oath that LaRouche's views on racism were "consistent with his own." Asked whether he had seen any indication of racism in LaRouche's associates, he replied that he had not. Innis received criticism from many blacks for having testified on LaRouche's behalf.
The African-American civil-rights leader James Bevel was LaRouche's running mate in the 1992 presidential election, and in the mid-1990s, the LaRouche movement entered into an alliance with Louis Farrakhan's Nation of Islam. Another LaRouche movement member with a record in civil-rights issues is Amelia Boynton Robinson, then the vice-president of the Schiller Institute, a LaRouche organization; she has described the movement as following in the footsteps of Martin Luther King Jr.: "Mr. And [sic] Mrs. LaRouche built a movement, taking up where Dr. King had left off. They realized ... there must be an [sic] universal image of mankind, which transcends all racial differences and barriers."
Accusations of fascism against the LaRouche movement
LaRouche's movement has frequently been accused of being fascist. Those making the accusation include Democratic National Committee chairman Paul G. Kirk, a local Texas Democratic district committee, and Democratic activist Bob Hattoy.
Dennis King, a former Marxist–Leninist and member of the Progressive Labor Party in the 1960s and early 1970s, used this thesis in the title of his book-length study of LaRouche and his movement, Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism (1989). Operation Mop-Up, which is said to have consisted of violent physical attacks on left-wing meetings, is used as a basis for such accusations.
Andrei Fursov [ru], a Russian historian and academician at the International Academy of Sciences in Innsbruck, Austria, was interviewed in 2012 by the Russian think tank and web portal Terra America and asked to comment on the characterizations of LaRouche in Western media. He replied that intellectuals who have called LaRouche a fascist do not deserve to be called intellectuals, and that the charge has no basis in any real scientific analysis of politics. According to Fursov, it comes from the fact that LaRouche criticizes the supposedly "democratic" but actually "liberal totalitarian" system of the West. Fursov said that in Russia not so many people know of LaRouche and that the important thing is not the quantity, but the quality.
George Johnson, in a review of King's book in The New York Times, said that King's presentation of LaRouche as a "would-be Führer" was "too neat", and that it failed to take into account that several members of LaRouche's inner circle were themselves Jewish, while acknowledging that LaRouche's "conspiracy theory is designed to appeal to anti-Semitic right-wingers as well as to Black Muslims and nuclear engineers". In his 1983 book, Architects of Fear, Johnson described LaRouche's dalliances with radical groups on the right as "a marriage of convenience", and less than sincere; as evidence he cited a 1975 party memo that spoke of uniting with the right simply for the purpose of overthrowing the established order: "Once we have won this battle, eliminating our right-wing opposition will be comparatively easy." At the same time, Johnson says, LaRouche also sought contact with the Soviet Union and the Ba'ath Party in Iraq; failing to recruit either the Soviets or right-wingers to his cause, LaRouche attempted to adopt a more mainstream image in the 1980s. Laird Wilcox and John George similarly stated that King had gone too far in trying "to paint LaRouche as a neo-Nazi" and that LaRouche's most severe critics, like King and Berlet, came from extreme leftist backgrounds themselves.
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- Berlet, Chip. "Protocols to the Left, Protocols to the Right: Conspiracism in American Political Discourse at the Turn of the Second Millennium." Reconsidering "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion": 100 Years After the Forgery, October 30–31, 2005, Boston
¤ Berlet, Chip & Bellman Joe. "Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism Wrapped in an American Flag" Archived August 31, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Political Research Associates, March 10, 1989
¤ Berlet, Chip & Lyons, Matthew. Right-Wing Populism in America: Too Close for Comfort Archived February 7, 2005, at the Wayback Machine, Guilford, 2000. ISBN 1-57230-562-2 - King, Dennis. Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism, New York: Doubleday, 1989. ISBN 0-385-23880-0 Online text at here Archived October 22, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
¤ Mintz, John. "Ideological Odyssey: From Old Left to Far Right" Archived May 14, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, The Washington Post, January 14, 1985
Wohlforth, Tim (March 16, 2006). "A '60's Socialist Takes a Hard Right". Political Research Associates. Archived from the original on January 25, 2021. Retrieved December 29, 2005. - Helmut Lorscheid/Leo A. Müller (1986). Deckname Schiller – Die deutschen Patrioten des Lyndon LaRouche. Reinbek.
- Berlet, Chip (1995). Eyes right!. South End Press. p. 99. ISBN 9780896085237.
- Roderick, Kevin (October 6, 1986). "Paper Tied to LaRouche Attacks Gay Movement". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on August 9, 2016. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
- Daniel Levitas (1995). Jerome A. Chanes (ed.). Antisemitism and the Far Right: "Hate" Groups, White Supremacy, and the Neo-Nazi Movement. New York: Birch Lane Press/Carol Publishing. pp. 191–192.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - King, Dennis (1989). "The Jewish Question". Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism. Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-23880-9.
- Hirsch, Afua (November 6, 2008). "National: Courts: Victory for family of man found dead in Germany". The Guardian. London (UK). p. 20.
- Schoenberg, Bernard (July 5, 2010). "Former LaRouche aide lands state job". Archived from the original on July 27, 2010. Retrieved September 5, 2010.
- LaRouche, Jr, Lyndon H. (September 17, 2006). "Britain's Bernard Lewis and His Crimes". Archived from the original on December 17, 2010. Retrieved December 5, 2010.
- WINOKOOR, CHARLES (November 3, 2010). "Larouche supporters make their case on the Taunton Green on Election Day". Taunton Gazette. Archived from the original on August 22, 2011.
- ^ Berlet, Chip (October 30–31, 2005). Protocols to the Left, Protocols to the Right: Conspiracism in American Political Discourse at the Turn of the Second Millennium (dedicated to Jeremiah Duggan). Reconsidering "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion": 100 Years After the Forgery. The Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies, Boston University.
- Special issue, "Zionism is not Judaism," Archived December 2, 2007, at the Wayback Machine Campaigner, December 1978
- (NBC News, First Camera, March 4, 1984, transcript from NBC News, excerpt used with permission).
- George & Wilcox 1996, p. .
- George & Wilcox 1996, p. .
- Marable, Manning (January 17, 1997). "No Compromise with Racism: Farrakhan, Chavis and Lyndon La Rouche – Part One of a Two Part Series". Columbus Free Press.
- Marable 1998, p. 177.
- George & Wilcox 1992, pp. 317, 322.
- Marable 1998, p. .
- Bivins, Larry. "Frist embraces King's legacy", USA Today, January 21, 2003.
- Marable 1998, pp. 177–182.
- "Pres. candidate LaRouche spurs support, controversy". Michigan Daily. October 1, 2003. Retrieved July 31, 2024.
- "LaRouche supporter discusses civil rights movement at U. Michigan". Michigan Daily. October 2, 2003.
- "Civil Rights Heroine Wins Iranian Hearts". Oakland Post. July 17, 2002.
- "PRESIDENT'S NEWS CONFERENCE ON FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC ISSUES". The New York Times. August 13, 1986. p. A.18.
- "White, GOP brass come out swinging on convention rounds". Houston Chronicle. May 18, 1986. p. 37.
- PARSONS, DANA (October 19, 1988). "ELECTIONS '88 39TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Marquis Finds LaRouche Link Wins Enemies". Los Angeles Times. p. 1.
- "Chronology of Labor Committee Attacks", issued by New York Committee to Stop Terrorist Attacks, 1973;
• contemporary articles and photographs in the Daily World, the Militant, Workers Power, the Fifth Estate, the Boston Phoenix, and the Drummer;
• "An Introduction to NCLC: The Word is Beware", Liberation New Service, #599, March 23, 1974;
• Charles M. Young, "Mind Control, Political Violence & Sexual Warfare: Inside the NCLC", Crawdaddy, June 1976, p. 48–56;
• TIP, 1976, NCLC: Brownshirts of the Seventies, Arlington, Virginia: Terrorist Information Project (TIP) - Benedictine, Kyrill, interview with Andrei Fursov, Intellectuals who have called LaRouche a fascist do not deserve to be called intellectuals Archived July 15, 2012, at archive.today, Terra-America, April 19, 2012
- Johnson 1983, pp. 207–208.
- George & Wilcox 1992, pp. 313, 321, 324.
Sources
- Berlet, Chip; Joel Bellman (1989). Lyndon LaRouche: Fascism Wrapped in an American Flag. Political Research Associates.
- Berlet, Chip; Lyons, Matthew N. (2000). "Right-wing populism in America: Too Close for Comfort". New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 978-1-57230-562-5. OCLC 185635579.
- Berlet, Chip (October 30–31, 2005). Protocols to the Left, Protocols to the Right: Conspiracism in American Political Discourse at the Turn of the Second Millennium (dedicated to Jeremiah Duggan). Reconsidering "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion": 100 Years After the Forgery. The Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies, Boston University.
- Copulus, Milton R. (July 19, 1984). "The Larouche Ntwork" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 19, 2006. Retrieved January 19, 2006.
- George, John; Wilcox, Laird (1992). Nazis, communists, klansmen, and others on the fringe: political extremism in America. Prometheus Books. ISBN 978-0-87975-680-2. Retrieved March 12, 2011.
- George, John; Wilcox, Laird (1996). American Extremists: Militias, Supremacists, Klansmen, Communists & Others. Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books.
- Beyes-Corleis, Aglaja (1994). Verirrt. Freiburg: Herder. ISBN 978-3-451-04278-2. OCLC 33502596.
- Johnson, George (1983). "The 'New Dark Ages' Conspiracy". Architects of Fear: Conspiracy Theories and Paranoia in American Politics. J.P Tarcher. ISBN 978-0-87477-275-3.
- Johnson, George (June 18, 1989). "A menace or just a crank?". The New York Times.
- King, Dennis (1989). Lyndon LaRouche and the new American fascism. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-23880-9. OCLC 18684318.
- Kalimtgis, Konstandinos; Goldman, David; Steinberg, Jeffrey (1978). Dope, inc. New York: New Benjamin Franklin House Pub. Co. ISBN 978-0-918388-08-7. OCLC 4492671. On the Protocols, see pp. 31–33; on the Rothschilds, see the chart on pp. 154–55, consult index for more than 20-page entries on the Rothschilds.
- Marable, Manning (1998). Black Leadership. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-10746-4.
- Robins, Robert S.; Post, Jerrold M. (1997). Lyndon LaRouche: The Extremity of Reason. Yale University Press.
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ignored (help) - Wohlforth, Tim. (n.d.) A '60's Socialist Takes a Hard Right
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