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This may sound like a hyper-partisan article. It is not. It is based on actions by Republicans of all stripes that are verifiable and quantifiable. All Americans are being played irrespective of party affiliation. Republican leadership and political sidekicks are the masters of the game, the citizenry the pawns.
Republicans have never been known as a party fighting for the poor or the middle class. They have never been known as a party that believed in a social safety net. The problem for Republicans is that 90+% of Americans fall into that category.
The level of intolerance by the GOP is incomprehensible until the strategy is understood. It is easy to dismiss comments by a few. However, when it becomes a chorus line that is perfectly synchronized, it becomes a strategy.
Republicans balk when one speaks about the Republican war on women, war on the poor, war on the environment, war on gays, war on minorities, and many other select micro wars. They don’t want these wars called out. And the reality is these should not be called wars at all. It is much too simplistic.
It is a war on democracy. How do you win a war on democracy when there are many more subjects than you? You fight many battles. So the battle against the poor, the battle against women, the battle against gays, the battle against minorities, the battle against education, and any other micro battle to keep the subjects occupied is the modus operandi. Poor people cannot afford the medicines they need and are not always helped by the availability of generic drugs (read more) on the market. It does not matter if in the process a few of the battles are lost. After all, their eyes are on the ball, the destruction of a functional democracy.
It was all in the Powell Memo
This week I interviewed Jeff Clements, co-founder of Free Speech for People, and author of Corporations Are Not People about corporate personhood and the Citizens United ruling. In that interview, he brought up the Powell Memo. Read the memo in its entirety. It gives the necessary perspective.
The Powell Memo illustrates the fear that Lewis Powell, a corporate lawyer and member of the boards of varies corporations had for the masses. Powell was subsequently confirmed as a Supreme Court justice.
Powell lays out the game plan. The Powell Memo is a plan that was forward looking. It is a plan that so far has been well implemented. How did they do it?
The success of the Powell Memo is in the ubiquity of its implementation.
They created think tanks responsible for dispersing misleading information with a false cloak of authenticity. The Heritage Foundation is a classic example of this. They took control of the airwaves to disperse misleading information (e.g., talk radio, Fox News, CNBC, etc.). A relenting Chamber of Commerce uses corporate monies to bully policy and politicians to squeeze the masses (e.g., support for free trade agreements, outsourcing etc.).
They infiltrated college campuses with directed research for planned outcomes. They infiltrated the elementary and secondary schools’ textbook evaluation process to attempt Right Wing indoctrination. They used graduate business schools to indoctrinate students on an irresponsible form of capitalism. They flooded the country with books and paid advertising promoting their message. They continue to destroy unions.
The implementation has been successful thus far. The problem is that in Powell’s days there was no Internet. There was no way to form disjointed communities in mass that could rise up when knowledge was not controlled in a top-down manner. A new tactic had to be added. This new tactic is not new. It is the war to divide and conquer.
The current strategy is simply a modification of the Powell Memo to achieve the same result.
If one keeps a community, a city, a country in a constant state of disarray or chaos, it is easy for the subjects to take their eyes off real problems. That is the same tactics used in countries where a functioning Plutocracy reigns like Panama and many ‘third world’ countries around the world. Underlying human behavior is the same throughout the world. The world then becomes the testing ground for successful suppressive tactics. The successful ones are effectively being used against Americans now.
All the little battles described above occurring at the same time are nothing more than death by a thousand cuts. Americans are so busy trying to survive, fighting these culture battles and sub-class battles that they are unable to fight what really ails. What ails is the Plutocracy Powell’s memo aimed to preserve. The Republican assault on the fabric of America is but that implementation.
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Karen Green says
Father of modern conservatism.
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fm.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D8GBAsFwPglw%26app%3Dm&h=XAQGgAbsR&enc=AZN_5HtpawpjejajcKRrK0PIrZ72jtlg89nsutvpo9DBa24GK4dn5qIwAIhje2KBrSlBI5o5V7dlHdTyJLRxAcPcodtcz18AMPoDM8Y-3Wn-xbWQBTRA_wPEWdy9nIocWalDrBBGF7dU9onrxI5-Whus&s=1
Marika Gerrard says
Here’s an idea for Powell, spend corporate money making Corporations more responsible and you will cut the legs out from under the opposition. It might actually be cheaper than silencing your critics.
roaming says
Okay,,, but what’s the Powell memo, and what does it say? You presume your readers know something they may not.
Elaine Erck says
If we took all the welfare that corporate America is receiving our country would be fine. Poor, middle class, working, non working, blacks, whites, Hispanics, union, non union, must not turn on each other, that is what they want. We must unite against the corporate take over and not pay attention to their distractions, we have a government to run, lets vote and return our government to the people!
Rob Houck says
So, where is the fire? Powell was concerned about the left having some important spokesmen (yes, all men). He wanted there to be some on-campus voiced on what was then the right. (Now the right is so much farther right that it’s comical.) The memo isn’t much. Indeed, he didn’t say that much in all those pages. He had about 4 bullet points – less than 1/2 a page. The shocking part is that he was so vapid and long-winded.