Monday, April 19, 2010

Menace from the Right: The John Birch Society - Part 1

This series of articles is based on a research paper I wrote in 1964 during the heyday of the John Birch Society (JBS). I dug it up and dusted it off to see what, if any, resemblances there might be between it and the modern day Tea Party (TP).

Enough similarities exist to make the two organizations appear to be mirror images of one another but sometimes one reflection is a little distorted or a little off. Much depends on the silver backing – or the foundation.

The JBS was founded at the end of 1958 when candy manufacturer Robert Welch secretly gathered together 11 unidentified men in Indianapolis.* For two days they listened to Welch explain his deep-seated belief that the Communists were infiltrating all segments of the United States, threatening to destroy our schools, our churches, our government, and virtually, our entire way of life.

In time, most Americans would come to believe that such threats did not come from the Communists but from the very organization that was supposed to be championing the cause of freedom.

JBS Attacks on the Government

Robert Welch was firmly convinced that the U. S. government had been corrupted and infiltrated by Communist agents. He argued that they dominated the presidency, the legislative branches and the U. S. Supreme Court.

He began writting a letter in 1954 which nine years and 305 pages later was turned into a book called The Politician. Welch claimed the Communists captured the presidency in three stages beginning with Franklin Roosevelt and continuing on through the Harry Truman and Dwight Eisenhower administrations.

R. B. Cooney, in his article, “John Birchers On the March – the Politics of Fear,” quoted the following passages which had been recorded in the Congressional Record :

In my opinion, the chances are very strong that Milton Eisenhower is actually Dwight Eisenhower’s superior and boss within the Communist Party . . . .

I personally believe (John Foster) Dulles to be a Communist agent who has had one clearly defined role to play: namely, always to say the right things and to always do the wrong ones. (1)

Welch wrote in another private letter that quickly became public, “the Communists have one of their own actually in the Presidency - Eisenhower. That word is ‘treason.” He went on to accuse the president of being "a dedicated conscious agent of the Communist conspiracy."

Conservative writer William F. Buckley, an early friend and admirer of Welch, regarded his accusations against Eisenhower as "paranoid and idiotic libels" and attempted unsuccessfully to purge Welch from the JBS.

At Houston’s American Opinion Library, the JBS store and reading room, I purchased a postcard inscribed, “Save Our Republic – Impeach Earl Warren.” On the back it read:

Chief Justice Warren has taken the lead in both the decisions and the attitudes of the Supreme Court, aimed at doing away with those safeguards of law which maintain this nation as a constitutional republic, and at converting it into a democracy – in which all individual rights would be completely subject to the whims and views of demagogues temporarily in power. The logical and traditional redress in our governmental system for such violations of the oath of office is impeachment.

JBS Attacks on Schools
Education was the field in which the JBS was most active and where they had the greatest impact. Welch continuously urged members to join PTA groups and school boards. If they could subvert the educational system, they would win a major battle against their war on Communism.

In  Amarillo, Texas – a town known for its far right groups – the JBS began a campaign to rid the school libraries of reading materials they deemed unfit. Such books as John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, Oliver La Farge’s Laughing Boy, Mackinley Kantor’s Andersonville, and A. B. Guthrie’s The Way West were forced from the shelves.

George Orwell’s 1984 was also purged – rather ironical since it is generally regarded as a critique of life under Communism. (2) Even more interesting was the fact that the Houston American Opinion Library carried copies of Orwell’s Animal Farm.

Even high school students were encouraged to rat on their teachers. Instructors who had been idolized for years were suddenly disloyal and treasonous. It wasn’t long before paranoid parents jumped on the bandwagon. Neighbors who used to be bridge partners began playingWar. (3)

At a Wichita, Kansas high school, JBS members tried, but failed, to have courses altered and  the teachers fired. Again students were urged to report anything their teachers said that, in their opinions, smacked of Communist propaganda. (4)

Some University of Wichita faculty members were accused of being traitors and attempts were made to have them fired. According to an assistant economics professor at the time, the charges of treason made the faculty insecure enough that they were afraid to teach anything that dealt with Communist theory in politics and economics. (5)

By obtaining control of local PTA and school board groups, Welch believed the Society would be able to influence the choice of courses, teachers and textbooks. If they succeeded, social science courses would be altered to such an extent that history and government as most of the country knows it would be unrecognizable.

* Since this paper was written,the names of the founding members have become known.
1. R. B. Cooney, “John Birchers On the March – the Politics of Fear,” American Federalist, v. 68, (June, 1961), p. 13.
2. Arnold Forster and Benjamin Epstein, Danger on the Right, 1966, p.4.
3. Ibid.
4. Donald Janson, The Far Right, 1963, p. 169.
5. Ibid. p. 169-170.

17 comments:

  1. Excellent, Leslie. Looking forward to more.

    Those sonsofabirchers sound like fathers of today's teabaggers. The names have changed, but the cause and tactics look eerily similar.

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  2. Very good information.

    I would like to add one further aspect to this. The John Birch Society's world view was heavily involved with notions about the "illuminati," the secret society (usually portrayed as Masonic or Jewish or both, which they claim actually controls the world.) Though the notion of the illuminati existed before the JBS it was through the claims of the John Birch Society that the illuminati came to be a stock in trade of the right.

    This was, at the time, restricted to what used to be called the lunatic fringe, but like all their other vicious lies, it is working its way today into tea party discourse as a serious notion.

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  3. Koch's suckers, I calls them. The JBS resembles the Protocols of the Elders of Zion in the sense they are both lies perpetrated by billionaires to push a far-right agenda that just happens to support lower taxes on billionaires.

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  4. Excellent piece, tnlib. Green Eagle's point is also well taken -- this sort of organization has nothing less than hyper-religious fervor: they have a total world view and much passion for pushing it on everyone else.

    In my view, the Birchers are indeed similar in their paranoid, narcissistic and distorted views to the present-day 'baggery: white people determined to maintain their longstanding privileges and filled with rage against minorities and anything that seems even mildly different from what they approve of.

    And what will defeat them? Demographics -- the Teabaggers are the last gasp of the Ugly White-Supremacist American. Their day is past, and they live in nostalgic anticipation.

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  5. Well what they say must be true 'cause all y'all are so angry about it. Angry and hate filled, in fact.

    Have I got the formula right?

    Turtullian said in his De Carne Christi that he believes the tenets of Christianity because they are impossible. "Credo quia absurdum." Obamahate and other far right blief systems are religions and the more absurd the claim, the more it must be true.

    Absolutely true that Eisenhower was a Jew controlled commie and absolutely true that Obama has destroyed freedom of speech and when you get angry at the idiocy, you've already lost and they've already won. All we have are reason and facts and such were never an adequate defense against the madness.

    (Hey look - the Libruls are calling us crazy. Look how angry they are!)

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  6. Back in the late '60's the Birchers ran an American Opinion bookstore in suburban Burien. During my formative years I'd visit once in a while to peruse the material. Fascinating stuff. I was unpacking some books the other day in a periodic purge and found my copy of 'The Blue Book...' Now that's a keeper. Was and remains one of the most interesting books I've ever read. At the time I first encountered this stuff the audience tended toward younger men who presumably lived in their Mom's basement and middle-aged, middle management types. Now suburban soccer Moms are onboard.

    Another American success story.

    The Blue Book is highly recommended. Read it & you'll. never look at a Sugarbaby in the same way.

    What's with these candymen anyway? The Mars brothers have a similar reactionary view.

    Hmmm.

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  7. But don't you know that Eisenhower was Jewish himself? From one of the blogs in my collection:

    "Dwight (David Jacob) Eisenhower
    1.Eisenhower's Year Book of West point clearly states that he is a Swedish Jew.
    ๏ผ’.Eisenhower's father had a typical Jewish name of David Jacob Eisenhower.
    3. Eisenhower was singled out by Stealth Jewish president, Roosevelt to become the top of U.S. Forces though there were many senior officers to him such as General Patton. His ethnicity could be the key for his unprecedented promotion."

    Oh yes, Roosevelt was Jewish too, as you can see. By the way, this same guy also claims that Abraham Lincoln was Jewish, and that his real name was Abraham Springstein. I wonder if he played the guitar.

    Well, what good did truth ever do anyway?

    I even have a blog which claims that Eisenhower is both Jewish and Black, all at the same time. Maybe they had him mixed up with Sammy Davis Junior.

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  8. Your comments are not accurate. "The Politician" by Welch was NOT a "newsletter".

    It began as a lengthy letter to several friends who asked Welch to substaniate comments he made about the Eisenhower Administration during a car trip. The "private letter" grew substantially over the years and was produced in spiral-bound book form but only loaned to specific individuals who were required to return their copy to Welch. The first edition was written in 1954 and the last updated version was written in 1958.

    Then, in 1963, Welch decided to release a published edition of his former "private letter" but he deleted several of the most damaging comments that he made in his original private letter and he added an extensive bibliography.

    For anyone who would like to see an actual scanned copy of the material which Welch deleted from the published version, see:
    http://ernie1241.googlepages.com/documents

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  9. If I were to comment on each of your thoughts, I wouldn't have to write Parts 2 and 3. Not a bad idea. Everyone of you has some very interesting thoughts.

    The more I read about Welch the more I wonder if his retirement from the candy company was entirely voluntary or if the family could already discern that he was getting a little tetched in the ole knoggin.

    Matt, I did see your piece on Koch and plan to link to it at some point.

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  10. In answer to tnlib --- Robert Welch worked for the candy company which his brother, James, owned [the James O. Welch Company.]

    James and Robert had a conversation about Robert's political views and activities because James did not want his candy company associated with those views.

    As a consequence, Robert agreed to retire from the company and he resigned in 1957. The JBS was formed in December 1958.

    For more details see New York Times, 4-23-61, p62 for article captioned "Welch's Brother Denies Birch Ties"

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  11. tnlib - the names of the founding members have become known.

    Defending America from the communist menace? Sheesh! Some of these founders were little more than criminals themselves. Some noteworthy resumรฉs:

    N.B. Hunt – convicted of conspiracy to corner silver market in 1988

    Robert Mathews – white supremacist who died in shootout with FBI (criminal record: armed robbery, bank robbery, and murder)

    Tom Metzger – white supremacist and KKK member

    William Pierce –a member of the American Nazi Party

    Kevin Strom – pled guilty to child pornography

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  12. Why am I not surprised at the criminal behavior of some of these far right-wing wacko conservatives? Some things never change!

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  13. Green Eagle:

    Don't forget that Truman was a commie too, who ruined our freedom by integrating the armed forces, but if these three people couldn't turn us all into Commies and since the Soviets are long gone, I don't think we have anything to worry about - except maybe creeping Judaism.

    I think JewWatch still has the proof of Ike's Judaism on line. Makes perfect sense to me, but let's not mention that Jew Goldwater - it would just confuse our position.

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  14. Ernie: Haven't seen you since Dec., when I wrote my last piece on the JBS on my own blog.

    You said: "Your comments are not accurate. "The Politician" by Welch was NOT a "newsletter".

    I told some people I was having trouble getting the sequence of events in order, that dates and facts were hard to come by. The issue of the letter/newsletter is one of the areas I'd been having the biggest problem with.

    I can't say you're right or wrong.
    My original student paper did call it a letter which was begun in 1954but the dates of publication vary from '63 or '64(and even '61). But I have since seen it referred to as a newsletter.

    Maybe I'm assuming too much, but a "newsletter" makes more sense. Why in heck would someone take nine years to write a single 305 page letter? What makes more sense to me is that Welch did publish a newsletter for years - but the statements accusing Ike of being a Commie were contained in a separate semi-private letter. To me it is a very cloudy area - not unusual for a paranoid control freak.

    I think when you take a document that was written several decades earlier and try to update it, problems are going to arise.

    Anyway, the thesis of this article is about the activities of the JBS back in the 60s and a comparison to the TPs of today. Whether a document is a letter or newsletter is not the big issue here, but I will note your objections in the footnotes as soon a I have time.

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  15. Octo: The makeup of the JBS is not unlike that of the thugs in the various sectors of the Nazi Party.
    Don't forget ole Walker.

    Capt.: LOL LOL LOL! Don't forget that Ike called out the National Guard to protect the Little Rock Nine.

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  16. Yes he did and without regard to or telling us about his personal feelings. He did it because the court said it's the law. He did it in spite of the right wing screaming and the idiots out in the street.

    He refused to play along with the war mongers, he ignored the Missile Gap liars and I've come to appreciate him a lot even though at the time I thought he was too conservative. We could use some more of that kind of conservatism and we sure as hell don't have it today - unless you want to recognize how conservative the Democrats have been since Clinton.

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