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Forwarded from the New Paradigms Project [Not Necessarily Endorsed]:
From: Michael Pugliese <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:      [CTRL] Fwd:Conspiracy Theory
Date: Saturday, January 15, 2000 2:30 AM

-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

A few years ago I sat on a conference panel with G. William Domhoff and
Holly
Sklar talking about the work of C. Wright Mills. We all marveled at how an
overarching conspiracy theory of history completely undercut all of our
work. We
all do power structure analuysis. We do not chase conspiracies. Domhoff and
Slar
show how power elites network and make plans; but they also point out that
different elite networks compete for power. Capitalism and state power are
not
secret conspiracies.

Certainly there are conspiracies in history, but history is not controlled
by
conspiracy, it is shaped by complex forces involving economics, culture,
natural
events, and random action.

People on the left who spend their time chasing conspiracies are not just
wasting their time, but undermining serious institutional, structural, and
systemic analysis.

Speculating about political conspiracies is one step below gossiping about
daytime soap operas as a waste of time.

I spent many years as a paralegal investigator working on ACLU and other
lawsuits against conspiracies by the CIA, FBI, Military Intelligence, and
local
police Red Squads. The resources we expended were astounding. Preparing for
the
deposition of one infiltrator might take three people over a week each in
document analysis and interviews.

Allow me to use the vernacular:

ANYONE WHO THINKS THEY CAN SOLVE THE KENNEDY ASSASSINATION BY SITTING IN A
LIBRARY READING 35-YEAR-OLD DOCUMENTS HAS THEIR HEAD STUCK UP THEIR BUTT!

As for the claim:

>>
I am just realizing that there are a whole bunch of people on this
list who are energetically trying to squash thinking of the normal and
regular operations of the U.S. government, corporations and institutions
as saturated with plots that if widely known would undermine the average
person's confidence and belief in the reasonable fairness and honesty of
the system.
>>

Anyone who thinks solving any plot will change history, or cause the scales
to
fall from the eyes of the average American and reveal the injustice and
inequality all around is charmingly naive, but still wasting our time. There
is
little evidence that this has happened in the past. Look at the conspiracy
involving Oliver North. When that was exposed it certainly changed the
American
Way of Life. There was a palpable lessening of White supremacy...didn't you
feel
it too? WHAT IDIOCY!

I simply disagree with Parenti and others about this.

And let's remember that when Danny Sheehan turned the La Penca bombing case
into
the hunt for a vast conspiracy by the "Secret Team" (the details of which
were
quietly fed to him by the fascist LaRouchites and Liberty Lobby), it
destroyed
the case and wasted millions of dollars.

As a founding editor of Police Misconduct and Civil Rights Law Report, a
litigators guide that emerged from the Fred Hampton case in Chicago, I can
tell
you that our work over the past decades has shown that most cases of police
abuse and government overreaction are the result of bad training, failure to
properly supervise, and aggressive cops on the scene who become enraged. The
conspiracy usually begins back at the cop shop when supervisors try to do
damage
control to cover up what happened. The murderous conspiracy behind the
Hampton
case turned out to be the exception, not the rule.

Here is an excerpt from a working document by Matthew N. Lyons and me that
we
used in writing the forthcoming "Right Wing Populism in America."

= = = = =

Conspiracism often accompanies various forms of populism, and Canovan notes
that
"the image of a few evil men conspiring in secret against the people can
certainly be found in the thinking of the U.S. People's Party, Huey Long,
McCarthy, and others." Criticism of conspiracism, however, does not imply
that
there are not real conspiracies, criminal or otherwise. There certainly are
real
conspiracies throughout history. As Canovan argues:

==="[o]ne should bear in mind that not all forms or cases of populism
involve
conspiracy theories, and that such theories are not always false. The
railroad
kings and Wall Street bankers hated by the U.S. Populists, the New Orleans
Ring
that Huey Long attacked, and the political bosses whom the Progressives
sought
to unseat--all these were indeed small groups of men wielding secret and
irresponsible power.

The US political scene continues to be littered with examples of illegal
political, corporate, and government conspiracies such as Watergate, the
FBI's
Counterintelligence Program (COINTELPRO) of illegally spying on and
disrupting
dissidents, the Iran/Contra scandal, and the systematic looting of the
savings
and loan industry.

The conspiracist analysis of history, however, has become uncoupled from a
logical train of thought...it is a non-rational belief system that manifests
itself in degrees. "It might be possible, given sufficient time and
patience,"
writes David Brion Davis, "to rank movements of countersubversion on a scale
of
relative realism and fantasy," The distance from reality and logic the
conspiracist analysis drifts can range from modest to maniacal. Conspiracism
also needs a conflict--some indigestion in the body politic for which the
conspiracist seeks causation so that blame can be affixed. As Davis observes
sympathetically, most countersubversives "were responding to highly
disturbing
events; their perceptions, even when wild distortions of reality, were not
necessarily unreasonable interpretations of available information." The
interpretations, however, were inaccurate, frequently hysterical, and
created
havoc. As Davis observed:

==="genuine conspiracies have seldom been as dangerous or as powerful as
have
movements of countersubversion. The exposer of conspiracies necessarily
adopts a
victimized, self-righteous tone which masks his own meaner interests as well
as
his share of responsibility for a given conflict. Accusations of conspiracy
conceal or justify one's own provocative acts and thus contribute to
individual
or national self-deception. Still worse, they lead to overreactions,
particularly to degrees of suppressive violence which normally would not be
tolerated."

Conspiracism blames individualized and subjective forces for economic and
social
problems rather than analyzing conflict in terms of systems and structures
of
power. Conspiracist allegations, therefore, interfere with a serious
progressive analysis--an analysis that challenges the objective
institutionalized systems of oppression and power, and seeks a radical
transformation of the status quo.

Bruce Cumings put it like this:

"===But if conspiracies exist, they rarely move history; they make a
difference
at the margins from time to time, but with the unforeseen consequences of a
logic outside the control of their authors: and this is what is wrong with
"conspiracy theory." History is moved by the broad forces and large
structures
of human collectivities. "

Many authors who reject centrist/extremist theory use power structure
research,
a systemic methodology that looks at the role of significant institutions,
social class, and power blocs in a society. Power structure research has
been
used by several generations of progressive authors including C. Wright
Mills, G.
William Domhoff, and Holly Sklar. Some mainstream social scientists,
especially
those enamored of centrist/extremist theory, have unfairly dismissed radical
left critiques of US society as conspiracy theories.

Power structure research is not inherently conspiracist, but conspiracist
pseudo-radical parodies of power structure research abound. Examples include
right-wing populist critics such as Gary Allen, Antony Sutton, "Bo" Gritz,
Craig
Hulet, and Eustace Mullins; and left-wing populist critics such as David
Emory,
John Judge, and Danny Sheehan. There are also a plethora of practitioners
who
have drawn from both the left and the right such as Ace Hayes and Daniel
Brandt.

The subjectivist view of these critics of the status quo is a parody of
serious
research. To claim, for instance, that the Rockefellers control the world,
takes
multiple interconnections and complex influences and reduces them to
mechanical
wire pulling. As one report critical of right-wing populist conspiracism
suggested:

"===There is a vast gulf between the simplistic yet dangerous rhetoric of
elite
cabals, Jewish conspiracies and the omnipotence of "international finance"
and a
thoughtful analysis of the deep divisions and inequities in our society."

Separating real conspiracies from the exaggerated, non-rational, fictional,
lunatic, or deliberately fabricated variety is a problem faced by serious
researchers, and journalists. For progressive activists, differentiating
between
the progressive power structure research and the pseudo-radical allegations
of
conspiracism is a prerequisite for rebuilding a left analysis of social and
political problems.

Unfortunately, when progressive groups like the Coalition for Human Dignity
and
Political Research Associates, and progressive journalists including Sara
Diamond, Joel Bleifuss, and Jonathan Mozzochi spoke out against populist
conspiracism during the Gulf War and its aftermath in the early 1990s, they
were
harshly criticized in some circles as disruptive fools or agents of the
elite.

Radical politics and social analysis have been so effectively marginalized
in
the US that much of what passes for radicalism is actually liberal reformism
with a radical-looking veneer. To claim a link between liberalism and
conspiracism may sound paradoxical, because of the conventional
centrist/extremist assumption that conspiracist thinking is a marginal,
"pathological" viewpoint shared mainly by people at both extremes of the
political spectrum. Centrist/extremist theory's equation of the "paranoid
right"
and "paranoid left" obscures the extent to which much conspiracist thinking
is
grounded in mainstream political assumptions.

Consider a message sent through a computer bulletin board for progressive
political activists. Following an excerpt from a Kennedy assassination book,
which attributed JFK's killing to "the Secret Team--or The Club, as others
call
it...composed of some of the most powerful and wealthiest men in the United
States," the subscriber who posted the excerpt commented,

==="We, the American people, are too apathetic to participate in our own
democracy and consequently, we have forfeited our power, guided by our
principles, in exchange for an oligarchy ruled by greedy, evil men--men who
are
neurotic in their insatiable lust for wealth and power....And George Bush is
just the tip of the iceberg."

Scratch the "radical" surface of this statement and you find liberal
content. No
analysis of the social order, but rather an attack on the "neurotic" and
"greedy, evil men" above and the "apathetic" people below. If only we could
get
motivated and throw out that special interest group, "The Club," democracy
would
function properly.

This perspective resembles that of the Christic Institute with its emphasis
on
the illegal nature of the Iran-Contra network and its appeals to "restore"
American democracy. This perspective may also be compared with liberal
versions
of the "Zionist Lobby" explanation for the United States' massive subsidy of
Israel. Supposedly the Lobby's access to campaign funds and media influence
has
held members of Congress hostage for years. Not only does this argument
exaggerate and conflate the power of assorted Jewish and pro-Israel lobbying
groups, and play into antisemitic stereotypes about "dual-loyalist" Jews
pulling
strings behind the scenes, but it also lets the US government off the hook
for
its own aggressive foreign policies, by portraying it as the victim of
external
"alien" pressure.

All of these perspectives assume inaccurately that (a) the US political
system
contains a democratic "essence" blocked by outside forces, and (b)
oppression is
basically a matter of subjective actions by individuals or groups, not
objective
structures of power. These assumptions are not marginal, "paranoid"
beliefs-they
are ordinary, mainstream beliefs that reflect the individualism, historical
denial, and patriotic illusions of mainstream liberal thought.

To a large degree, the left is vulnerable to conspiracist thinking to the
extent
that it remains trapped in such faulty mainstream assumptions. This
romanticized
vision of US society is mirrored in mainstream conservative criticism of
liberalism as well. As Himmelstein notes, "The core assumption" of post-WWII
conservatism "is the belief that American society on all levels has an
organic
order--harmonious, beneficent, and self-regulating--disturbed only by
misguided
ideas and policies, especially those propagated by a liberal elite in the
government, the media, and the universities."

It is important to see anti-elite conspiracism and scapegoating as not
merely
destructive of a progressive analysis but also as specific techniques used
by
fascist political movements to provide a radical-sounding left cover for a
rightist attack on the status quo. Far from being an aberration or a mere
tactical maneuver by rightists, pseudo-radicalism is a distinctive, central
feature of fascist and proto-fascist political movements. This is why the
early
stages of a potentially-fascist movement are often described as seeming to
incorporate both leftwing and rightwing ideas.

In the best of times, conspiracism is a pointless diversion of focus and
waste
of energy. Conspiracism promotes scapegoating as a way of thinking; and
since
scapegoating in the US is rooted in racism, antisemitism, ethnocentrism, and
xenophobia, conspiracism promotes bigotry. In periods of social or economic
crisis, populist conspiracism facilitates the spread of fascist and
para-fascist
social movements because they too rely on demagogic scapegoating and
conspiracist theories as an organizing tool. Radical-sounding conspiracist
critiques of the status quo are the wedge that fascism uses to penetrate and
recruit from the left. Progressive conspiracism is an oxymoron. Rejecting
the
conspiracist analytical model is a vital step in challenging both right-wing
populism and fascism.

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Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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