"The Spiritualization of Science, Technology and Education in a One-World Society,
The Frankfurt School, the key to the moral decay
The Frankfurt School is a major key to the moral decline in America that has been all but forgotten.
One of its members, Herbert Marcuse, became synonymous with the sexual revolution, the most powerful tool, which broke down the personal moral code of millions of Americans, leaving them without an anchor.
This was far more devastating than any political policy pursued since that time. In fact, without the cultural relativism that these activists spawned, neither abortion nor 'gay' marriage would be an issue today.
Ultimately, the fight has been spiritual, but few precious noticed.
And now the churches have bought into it.
We are a long way from home, without a compass.
Don Hank
????What is 'cultural Marxism?' Why should it even be considered when the
world's vast experiment with the economic theory of Karl Marx has recently gone
down to defeat with the disintegration of Soviet communism? Didn't America win
the Cold War against the spread of communism? The answer is a resounding 'yes,
BUT. We won the 55-year Cold War but, while winning it abroad, we have failed
to understand that an intellectual elite has subtly but systematically and
surely converted the economic theory of Marx to culture in American society.
And they did it while we were busy winning the Cold War abroad. They introduced
'cultural Marxism' into the mainstream of American life over a period of thirty
years, while our attention was diverted elsewhere.
About the Frankfurt School
Dr. Gerald L. Atkinson CDR
USN (Ret.)
Copyright August 1999
Who
in America today is at work destroying our traditions, our family bonds, our
religious beginnings, our reinforcing institutions, indeed, our entire culture?
What is it that is changing our American civilization?
Suppose you were to learn that nearly all of the observations made in this
series of essays are completely consistent with a 'design' -- that is a concept,
a way of thinking, and a process for bringing it about. And suppose one could
identify a small core group of people who designed just such a concept and
thought through the process of infusing it into a culture. Wouldn't you be
interested in at least learning about such a core group? Wouldn't you want to
know who they were, what they thought, and how they conjured up a process for
bringing their thoughts into action? For Americans with even a
smidgeon of curiosity,
the answer should be a resounding yes!
Just such a core group did, indeed, exist. History identifies a small group of German intellectuals who devised concepts, processes, and action plans which conform very closely to what Americans presently observe every day in their culture. Observations, such as those made in this series of essays, can be directly traced to the work of this core group of intellectuals. They were members of the Frankfurt School, formed in Germany in 1923. They were the forebears of what some proclaim as 'cultural Marxism,' a radical social movement that has transformed American culture. It is more commonly known today as 'political correctness.'
'Cultural Marxism' and 'critical theory' are concepts developed by a group
of German intellectuals, who, in 1923, founded the Institute of Social
Research at Frankfurt University. The Institute, modeled after the
Marx-Engels Institute in Moscow, became known as the Frankfurt School [1]. In
1933, when the Nazis came to power in Germany, the members of the Frankfurt
School fled to the United States. While here, they migrated to major U.S.
universities (Columbia, Princeton, Brandeis, and California at Berkeley). These
intellectual Marxists included Herbert Marcuse, who coined the phrase, 'make
love, not war,' during the anti-Vietnam War demonstrations.
By promoting the dialectic of 'negative' criticism, that is, pointing out
the rational contradictions in a society's belief system, the Frankfurt School
'revolutionaries' dreamed of a utopia where their rules governed [2]. "Their
Critical Theory had to contain a strongly imaginative, even
utopian strain, which
transcends the limits of reality." Its tenets would never be subject to
experimental evidence. The pure logic of their thoughts would be
incontrovertible. As a precursor to today's 'postmodernism' in the intellectual
academic community, [3] "...it recognized that disinterested scientific research
was impossible in a society in which men were themselves not yet
autonomous...the researcher was always part of the social object he was
attempting to study." This, of course, is the concept which led to the current
fetish for the rewriting of history, and the vogue for our universities' law,
English literature, and humanities disciplines -- deconstruction.
Critical theory rejected the ideal of Western Civilization in the age of
modern science, that is, the verification or falsifying [4] of theory by
experimental evidence. Only the superior mind was able to fashion the 'truths'
from observation of the evidence. There would be no need to test these
hypotheses against everyday experience.
The Frankfurt school studied the 'authoritarian personality' which became
synonymous with the male, the patriarchal head of the American family. A modern
utopia would be constructed by these idealistic intellectuals by 'turning
Western civilization' upside down. This utopia would be a product of their
imagination, a product not susceptible to criticism on the basis of the
examination of evidence. This 'revolution' would be accomplished by fomenting a
very quiet, subtle and slowly spreading 'cultural Marxism' which would apply to
culture the principles of Karl Marx bolstered by the modern psychological tools
of Sigmund Freud. Thus, 'cultural Marxism' became a marriage of Marx and Freud
aimed at producing a 'quiet' revolution in the United States of America. This
'quiet' revolution has occurred in America over the past 30 years. While
America slept!
??? What is 'cultural Marxism?' Why should it even be considered when the world's vast experiment with the economic theory of Karl Marx has recently gone down to defeat with the disintegration of Soviet communism? Didn't America win the Cold War against the spread of communism? The answer is a resounding 'yes, BUT. We won the 55-year Cold War but, while winning it abroad, we have failed to understand that an intellectual elite has subtly but systematically and surely converted the economic theory of Marx to culture in American society. And they did it while we were busy winning the Cold War abroad. They introduced 'cultural Marxism' into the mainstream of American life over a period of thirty years, while our attention was diverted elsewhere.???
The vehicle for this introduction was the idealistic Boomer elite, those young
middle-class and well-to-do college students who became the vanguard of
America's counter-culture revolution of the mid-1960s -- those draft-dodging,
pot-smoking, hippies who demonstrated against the Vietnam War and who fomented
the destructive (to women) 'women's liberation' movement. These New
Totalitarians [5] are now in power as they have come to middle-age and control
every public institution in our nation. But that is getting ahead of the story.
The cauldron for implementing this witches brew were the elites of the
Boomer generation. They are the current 'foot soldiers' of the original
Frankfurt School gurus. The counter-culture revolution of the 1960s was set in
motion and guided intellectually by the 'cultural Marxists' of the Frankfurt
School -- Herbert Marcuse, Eric Fromm, Theodor
Adorno, Max
Horkheimer, Wilhelm Reich, and others [6,7].
Its influence is now felt in nearly every institution in the United States. The
elite Boomers, throwbacks to the dangerous idealist Transcendental generation of
the mid-1800s, are the 'agents of change,' who have introduced 'cultural
Marxism' into American life.
William S. Lind relates [8] that 'cultural Marxism' is an ideology with
deep roots. It did not begin with the counter-culture revolution in the
mid-1960s. Its roots go back at least to the 1920s and the writings of the
Italian Communist Antonio Gramsci
[9]. These roots, over time, spread to the writings of Herbert Marcuse.
Herbert
Marcuse was one of the most prominent Frankfurt School promoters of Critical
Theory's social revolution among college and university students in the 1960s.
It is instructive to review what he has written on the subject:
"One can rightfully speak of a cultural revolution, since the
protest is directed toward the whole cultural establishment, including the
morality of existing society
... there is one thing we can say with complete assurance. The traditional
idea of revolution and the traditional strategy of revolution have ended.
These ideas are old-fashioned
... what we must undertake is a type of diffuse and dispersed disintegration of
the system."
This sentiment was first expressed by the early 20th
century Italian Marxist, Antonio
Gramsci.
Gramsci, a young
communist who died in one of Mussolini's prisons in 1937 at the age of 46,
conjured up the notion of a 'quiet' revolution that could be diffused throughout
a culture -- over a period of time -- to destroy it from within. He was the
first to suggest that the application of psychology to break the traditions,
beliefs, morals, and will of a people could be accomplished quietly and without
the possibility of resistance. He deduced that "The civilized world had been
thoroughly saturated with Christianity for 2,000 years..." and a culture based
on this religion could only be captured from within.
Gramsci
insisted that alliances with non-Communist leftist groups would be essential to
Communist victory. In our time, these would include radical feminist groups,
extremist environmental organizations, so-called civil rights movements,
anti-police associations, internationalist-minded groups, liberal church
denominations, and others. Working together, these groups could create a united
front working for the destructive transformation of the old
Judeo-Christian culture
of the West.
By winning 'cultural hegemony,'
Gramsci pointed out that they could control the
deepest wellsprings of human thought -- through the medium of mass psychology.
Indeed, men could be made to 'love their servitude.' In terms of the gospel of
the Frankfurt School, resistance to 'cultural Marxism' could be completely
negated by placing the resister in a psychic 'iron cage.' The tools of mass
psychology could be applied to produce this result.
The essential nature of Antonio
Gramsci's revolutionary strategy is reflected
in a 1990s book [10] by the American Boomer author, Charles A. Reich, 'The
Greening of America.' "There is a revolution coming. It will not be like
revolutions of the past. It will originate with the individual and the culture,
and it will change the political structure as its final act. It will not
require violence to succeed, and it cannot be successfully resisted by
violence. This is the revolution of the New Generation." Of course this New
Generation would be Reich's elite Boomer generation. And the mantra for these
New Age 'foot soldiers' of the Frankfurt School prophets, would be 'have the
courage to change [11].'
Gramsci insisted that
alliances with non-Communist leftist groups would be essential to Communist
victory. In our time, these would include radical feminist groups, extremist
environmental organizations, so-called civil rights movements, anti-police
associations, internationalist-minded groups, liberal church denominations, and
others. Working together, these groups could create a united front working for
the destructive transformation of the old
Judeo-Christian culture of the West.
By winning 'cultural hegemony,'
Gramsci pointed out that they could control the
deepest wellsprings of human thought -- through the medium of mass psychology.
Indeed, men could be made to 'love their servitude.' In terms of the gospel of
the Frankfurt School, resistance to 'cultural Marxism' could be completely
negated by placing the resister in a psychic 'iron cage.' The tools of mass
psychology could be applied to produce this result.
The essential nature of Antonio
Gramsci's revolutionary strategy is reflected
in a 1990s book [10] by the American Boomer author, Charles A. Reich, 'The
Greening of America.' "There is a revolution coming. It will not be like
revolutions of the past. It will originate with the individual and the culture,
and it will change the political structure as its final act. It will not
require violence to succeed, and it cannot be successfully resisted by
violence. This is the revolution of the New Generation." Of course this New
Generation would be Reich's elite Boomer generation. And the mantra for these
New Age 'foot soldiers' of the Frankfurt School prophets, would be 'have the
courage to change [11].'
The Frankfurt School theorized that the 'authoritarian personality' is a
product of the patriarchal family. This idea is in turn directly connected to
Frederich Engels' 'The Origins of the Family, Private Property and the State,'
which promotes matriarchy. Furthermore, it was Karl Marx who wrote about the
radical notion of a 'community of women' in the Communist manifesto. And it was
Karl Marx who wrote disparagingly about the idea that the family was the basic
unit of society in 'The German Ideology' of 1845.
'The Authoritarian personality,' studied by the Frankfurt School in the
1940s and 1950s in America, prepared the way for the subsequent warfare against
the masculine gender promoted by Herbert Marcuse and his band of social
revolutionaries under the guise of 'women's liberation' and the New Left
movement in the 1960s. The evidence that psychological techniques for changing
personality is intended to mean emasculation of the American male is provided by
Abraham Maslow, founder
of Third Force Humanist Psychology and a promoter of the
psychotherapeutic classroom, who wrote that,
'...the next step in personal evolution is a transcendence of both masculinity
and femininity to general humanness.' The Marxist revolutionaries knew exactly
what they wanted to do and how to do it. They have succeeded in accomplishing
much of their agenda.
But how can we claim the 'causes' of the breakdown of our schools, our
universities, indeed, the very fiber of our culture were a product of a tiny
group of intellectuals who immigrated from Germany in 1933? Given all of the
special-interest groups involved in these activities, how can we trace these
'causes' to the Frankfurt school? Look at some of the evidence.
As an example, postmodern reconstruction of the history of Western
Civilization (now prevalent in our universities) has its roots in the Critical
Theory of the Frankfurt School. This rewriting of history by the postmodern
scholars in America has only recently come under attack. Keith
Windschuttle, in his
book, 'Killing of History,' has severely criticized the rush to 'relativism' by
historiographers. What is truly astonishing, however, is that 'relativism' has
largely supplanted the pursuit of truth as a goal in historical study [12].
George G. Iggers'
recently published book, 'Historiography in the Twentieth Century: From
Scientific Objectivity to the Postmodern Challenge,' reminds us of the now
famous line by Hayden White, a postmodernist, "Historical narratives...are
verbal fictions, the contents of which are more invented than found." He quotes
other postmodernists, mostly non- historians, who [13] "...reinforce the
proposition that truth and reality are primarily authoritarian weapons of our
times." We now recognize the source of this postmodern assault -- the cultural
Marxists of the Frankfurt School who became experts in criticizing the
'authoritarian personality' in American culture.
Herbert London refutes White's proposition by observing, "...if history is
largely invention, who can say with authority that the American Revolution came
before the French Revolution?" He observes that evidence has
takmen a back seat to
inventiveness. He thus cuts right to the chase -- the inventions of
postmodernism, which are cutting successive generations of Americans off from
their culture and their history, evolved directly from the 'cultural Marxist'
scholars of the Frankfurt School.
How did this situation come about in America's universities? Gertrude
Himmelfarb has observed
[14] that it slipped past those traditional academics almost unobserved until it
was too late. It occurred so 'quietly' that when they 'looked up,'
postmodernism was upon them with a vengeance. "They were surrounded by a tidal
wave of faddish multicultural subjects such as radical feminism, deconstructed
relativism as history and other courses" which undermine the perpetuation of
Western Civilization. Indeed, this tidal wave slipped by just as Antonio
Gramsci and the
Frankfurt School had envisioned -- a 'quiet' revolution. A revolution that
could not be resisted by force.
It is of interest to note that the 'sensitivity training' techniques used
in our public schools over the past 30 years and which are now employed by the
U.S. military to educate the troops about 'sexual harassment' were developed
during World War II and thereafter by Kurt
Lewin [15] and his proteges. One of them,
Abraham Maslow, was a
member of the Frankfurt school and the author [16] of 'The Art of Facilitation'
which is a manual used during such 'sensitivity' training. Thereby teachers
were indoctrinated not to teach but to 'facilitate.' This manual describes the
techniques developed by Kurt Lewin
and others to change a person's world view via participation in small-group
encounter sessions. Teachers were to become amateur group therapists. The
classroom became the center of self-examination, therapeutic circles where
children (and later on, military [17] personnel) talked about their own
subjective feelings. This technique was designed to convince children they were
the sole authority in their own lives.
It is important to realize that this movement, 'cultural Marxism,'
exists, understand where it came from, and what its objectives were -- the
complete destruction of Western Civilization in America. That is, these
'cultural Marxists' aimed to destroy, slowly but surely from the bottom up, the
entire fabric of American Civilization.
By the end of World War II, almost all the original Frankfurt School
members had become American citizens. This meant the beginning of a new
English-speaking audience for the school. Now the focus was on American forms
of authoritarianism. With this shift in subject matter came a subtle change in
the center of the Institute's
work. In America, authoritarianism appeared in different forms than its European
counterpart. Instead of terror or coercion, more gentle forms of enforced
conformism had been developed. According to Martin Jay, [18] "Perhaps the most
effective of these were to be found in the cultural field. American mass
culture thus became one of the central concerns of the Frankfurt School in the
1940s."
Since the 1940s, subtle changes appeared in the Frankfurt School's
descriptions of their work. For example, the opposite of the 'authoritarian
personality' was no longer the 'revolutionary,' as it had been in previous
studies aimed at Europeans. In America, it was now the 'democratic' who opposed
the 'authoritarian personality.' Thus, their language matched more closely the
liberal [19] "...New Deal rather than Marxist or radical.." language. Education
for tolerance, rather than praxis
for revolutionary change, was the ostensible goal of their research. They were
cleverly merging their language with the mainstream of liberal left thought in
America while maintaining their 'cultural Marxist' objectives.
Toleration had never been an end in itself for the Frankfurt School, and
yet the non-authoritarian (utopian)
personality, insofar as it was defined, was posited as a person with a
non-dogmatic tolerance for diversity [20]. This thought is dominant in today's
power elite of the Boomer generation, the New Totalitarians.
One of the basic tenets of Critical Theory was the necessity to break
down the contemporary family. The Institute scholars preached that [21]
"...Even a partial breakdown of parental authority in the family might tend to
increase the readiness of a coming generation to accept social change." The
'generation gap' of the 1960s and the 'gender gap' of the 1990s are two aspects
of the attempt by the elite Boomers (taking a page out of 'cultural Marxism') to
transform American culture into their 'Marxist' utopia.
The transformation of American culture envisioned by the 'cultural
Marxists' is based on matriarchal theory. That is, they propose transforming
American culture into a female-dominated one. This is a direct throwback to
Wilhelm Reich, a Frankfurt School member who considered matriarchal theory in
psychoanalytic terms. In 1933, he wrote in The Mass Psychology of Fascism that
matriarchy was the only genuine family type of 'natural society.'
Eric Fromm, another charter member of the Institute, was also one of the
most active advocates of matriarchal theory. Fromm was especially taken with
the idea that all love and altruistic feelings were ultimately derived from the
maternal love necessitated by the extended period of human pregnancy and
postnatal care. "Love was thus not dependent on sexuality, as Freud had
supposed. In fact, sex was more often tied to hatred and destruction.
Masculinity and femininity [22] were not reflections of 'essential' sexual
differences, as the romantics had thought. They were derived instead from
differences in life functions, which were in part socially determined." This
dogma was the precedent for today's radical feminist pronouncements appearing in
nearly every major newspaper and TV program, including the television
newscasts. For these current day radicals, male and female roles result from
cultural indoctrination in America -- an indoctrination carried out by the male
patriarchy to the detriment of women. Nature plays no role in this matter.
But in terms of destruction and disintegration, Critical Theory absorbed
by the 'change agents' and other social revolutionaries has led them to declare
their intent to restructure America. As they proclaim, this means their
activities have been directed toward the disintegration of the traditional white
male power structure. As anyone with eyes to view present-day television and
motion pictures can confirm, this has been largely achieved. In other words,
Critical Theory, as applied mass psychology, brought forth a 'quiet' psychic
revolution which facilitated an actual physical revolution that has become
visible everywhere in the United States of America.
It was the destructive criticism of the primary elements of American
culture that inspired the 1960s counter-culture revolution. As the name
implies, this false 'spiritual awakening' by the idealist Boomers in their
coming-of-age years was an effort to transform the prevailing culture into an
inverted or opposite kind of culture that is a necessary prelude to social
revolution. Now that these elite Boomers are in positions of power in the
United States, they are completing their work of destroying every institution
that has been built up over 200 years of American history. Their aim is to
destroy any vestige of the Anglo-American path [23] taken by Western
Civilization in forming the unique American culture.
Most Americans do not yet realize that they are being led by social
revolutionaries who think in terms of the destruction of the existing social
order in order to create a new social order in the world. These revolutionaries
are the New Age elite Boomers, the New Totalitarians [24]. They now control
every public institution in the United States of America. Their 'quiet'
revolution, beginning with the counter-culture revolution of their youth, is
nearly complete. It was based on the intellectual foundation of the 'cultural
Marxists' of the Frankfurt School. Its completion depends on keeping the
American male in his psychic 'iron cage.'
The confluence of radical feminism and 'cultural Marxism' within the span
of a single generation, that of the elite Boomers (possibly the most dangerous
[25] generation in America's history), has imposed this yoke on the American
male. It remains to be seen whether or not he will continue his 'voluntary
submission' to a future of slavery in a new American matriarchy, the precursor
to a state of complete anarchy.
If we allow this subversion of American values and interests to continue,
we will (in future generations) lose all that our ancestors suffered and died
for. We are forewarned. A reading of history -- it is all in mainstream
historical accounts -- tells us that we are about to lose the most precious
thing we have -- our individual freedoms.
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Footnotes:
1) Raehn, Raymond V.,
"The Historical Roots of 'Political Correctness,'" Free Congress Foundation,
Number 44, June 1997.
2) Jay, Martin, "The Dialectical Imagination: A History of the Frankfurt School
and the Institute of Social Research, 1923-1950," pp. 77, University of
California Press, 1973.
3) Ibid, pp. 81.
4) Ibid, pp. 82.
5) Atkinson, Gerald L., "The New Totalitarians: Bosnia as a Mirror of America's
Future," Atkinson Associates Press, 1996.
6) Jay, Martin, "The Dialectical Imagination: A History of the Frankfurt School
and the Institute of Social Research, 1923-1950," University of California
Press, 1973.
7) Wiggershaus, Rolf,
"The Frankfurt School: Its History, Theories, and Political Significance," The
MIT Press, 1994.
8) Lind, William S., "What is 'Political Correctness?," Essays on our Times,
Free Congress Foundation, Number 43, March 1997.
9) Ibid.
10) Reich, Charles A., "The Greening of America," Crown Trade Paperbacks, 1995.
11) A phrase commonly heard during the 1992 Presidential campaign.
12) London, Herbert, "Discipline of history under assault," The Washington
Times, 26 October 1997.
13) Ibid.
14) Himmelfarb,
Gertrude, Panel on 'Academic Reform: Internal Sources,' National Association of
Scholars, NAS Sixth
General Conference, 3-5 May 1996.
15) Marrow, Alfred Jay, "The Practical Theorist: The Life and Work of Kurt
Lewin," Teachers College
Press, new York, 1977. Kurt Lewin
was a primary figure in the wartime research that was later translated into the
techniques used today in 'sensitivity training.'
16) Raehn, Raymond V.,
"Critical Theory: A Special Research Report, 1 April 1996.
17) Editorial, "The crying of the admirals," The Washington Times, 3 November
1995. The U.S. Naval Academy has added female 'role models' to the faculty. In
August 1994, the Academy placed a new emphasis on conflict resolution and
consciousness-raising. "As 'Lean On Me' started playing, Master Chief Liz
Johns gave the plebes her final orders: stand in a circle, sway to the music,
sing along, and hug. From the circle came the sharp sniffle of sobs. The
future admirals of America were crying."
18) Ibid, Jay, Martin, pp. 172.
19) Ibid, Jay, Martin, pp. 227.
20) Ibid, Jay, Martin, pp. 248.
21) Ibid, Jay, Martin, pp. 135.
22) Ibid, Jay, Martin, pp. 95.
23) Vazsonyi,
Balint, "America's
Thirty Years War: Who is Winning?,"
Regnery, 1998.
24) Ibid, Atkinson, Gerald L.
25) Strauss, William and Howe, Neil, "Generations: The History of America's
Future -- 1584 to 2069," pp. 382, William Morrow & Company, 1991. "We can
foresee a full range of possible outcomes, from stirring achievement to
apocalyptic tragedy...Boomers can best serve civilization by restraining
themselves (or by letting themselves be restrained by others) until their
twilight years, when their spiritual energy would find expression not in midlife
leadership [for which they are not equipped], but in elder stewardship."