The Jewish
Question
The author, Dennis King has generously agreed that we
include in our website: Chapter 6.
“The Jewish Question” All copyrights remain with
the author. 1989 |
|
When the LaRouchians began reaching out to the Ku Klux Klan and other
white supremacist groups, they justified it as a tactical move. The main enemy,
a 1975 NCLC internal memorandum argued, was "Rocky's [Nelson
Rockefeller's] fascism with a democratic face" backed by liberals and
"social fascists" (non-NCLC leftists). The NCLC should
"cooperate with the Right to defeat this common enemy."
There was semantic trickery here. Not only did the memos lump together
neo-Nazis with conservatives in an amorphous right (thus sanitizing the
former), but groups traditionally opposed to fascism were tarred with the
fascist label. It was the same logic
used by Stalin in the early 1930’s when he told the German Communists to
cooperate with Hitler on the ground that the Social Democrats were the main
enemy. (The term "social fascist" was first coined by the
Stalinists to express this idea.)
The 1975 memo also argued that
organizing on the right would bring the NCLC large financial contributions,
allies with real influence, and new recruits. After the Revolution it would be "comparatively easy" to
crush those who refused to be recruited.
The
memorandum divided the "right wing" into "pro-Rocky" and
"anti-Rocky" factions (i.e., pro- and anti-big business). The
"pro-Rocky" side included William F. Buckley and other alleged big
business penetration agents. The "anti-Rocky" side appeared to
include the various Klansmen and neo-Nazis who had expressed interest in the
NCLC. The implication was that these anti-Rocky rightists could be a positive
force for social progress. Some LaRouchians sincerely believed this, but the
NCLC leadership was preparing itself for an ideological shift rather than
merely a tactical one. The previous year
the NCLC had developed an important friend in neo-Nazi circles — Ken Duggan,
editor of The Illuminator. Duggan met regularly with NCLC security
staffers, especially Scott Thompson, and urged them to move further to the
right. Duggan was soon arrested for stabbing a political rival, and was
convicted of attempted murder. While awaiting sentencing at Rikers Island, the
New York City detention center, he used a bedsheet to hang himself from a light
fixture.
But during
his brief relationship with the LaRouchians he introduced them to a number of
contacts and potential allies, the most important being Willis Carto. Carto, founder
of the Liberty Lobby, was by far the most successful and influential American
anti-Semite of the 1970. He was an intellectual disciple of the late
Francis Parker Yockey, who roamed Europe and North America in the 19505
futilely attempting to build an underground movement. Carto met Yockey only
once — in San Francisco in 1960, when Yockey was in jail awaiting trial for
possession of false passports. Several days after their meeting, Yockey
committed suicide in his cell by taking cyanide. Carto, already an
ultrarightist, dedicated himself to carrying out Yockey's mission to save
Western civilization. This mission was set forth in Yockey's Imperium, a
600-page synthesis of Nazi racialism and
Oswald Spengler's philosophy of history. The book was dedicated to the
"Hero of the Second World War" (Hitler). But Carto, although
devoted to Yockey's ideas, had no illusions about Yockey's tactics. Instead of
engaging in inept conspiracies, he concentrated on building a political
movement and developed a populist cover ideology. Although he discreetly sold Mein Kampf and The Protocols of the Elders
of Zion by mail, he publicly denied being either a Nazi or an ant-Semite — he
was merely "anti-Zionist." Carto defended Hitler's heritage, not
by saying the Holocaust had been a good thing, but by denying that it ever look place. He founded the Institute for Historical Review lo prove that the
alleged murder of six million Jews was a hoax invented by Zionists to make
people feel sorry for them. Carto went so far as to publicize a theory that
the gas ovens at Auschwitz were really just an
industrial facility for converting coal into oil, operated by happy well-fed
Jewish prisoners.
Carto's Liberty Lobby, based in Washington, D.C., and nominally headed
by Colonel Curtis B. Dall (a former son-in-law of President Franklin D.
Roosevelt), enjoyed friendly ties with conservative congressmen. It published
a weekly tabloid, The Spotlight, which by 1979 enjoyed a paid
circulation of almost 200,000. Its articles championed income-tax rebels,
protested the plight of family farmers, and promoted quack cancer cures such
as laetrile. Its favorite political targets included the Rockefellers, the
Rothschilds, Henry Kissinger, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the
"Zionist entity" in Palestine.
As early as 1975, Carto chatted
frequently with Scott Thompson, and LaRouche himself visited Liberty Lobby
headquarters to meet with Colonel Dall. A multileveled collaboration soon
developed between the two organizations. They shared intelligence on
various targets, including William F. Buckley and Resorts International. The Spotlight published articles by
Thompson and other NCLC members writing under pen names. It also sold
LaRouchian tracts through its mail-order service.
An initial point of agreement was on the need to expose the Rockefellers.
However, Carto believed the NCLC hadn't cast its conspiracy nets wide enough. A
1976 Spotlight review of an NCLC report on terrorism complained that
the NCLC still failed to recognize the role of the Jewish bankers. LaRouche
received the message loud and clear. A wave of articles in New Solidarity blamed
the Rothschilds and other Jewish bankers for a wide range of crimes, including
the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. A
1977 piece by LaRouche admitted the Liberty Lobby had been ahead of the NCLC in
identifying the main enemy. (LaRouche subsequently met with Carto in Wiesbaden.
Questioned about this meeting during a 1984 deposition, LaRouche recalled that
they had discussed "the Jewish
question" as well as the "abomination" of America's postwar
occupation of Germany.)
The
NCLC also developed ties with persons on the fringes of the Liberty Lobby. Mitchell WerBell III, a friend of Carto,
became La-Rouche's security adviser. Colonel Tom McCrary, a Georgia rightist
often praised in The Spotlight, accompanied Gus Kalimtgis on a national
speaking tour. Edward von Rothkirch, a Lobby contact who ran a small press
service in Washington and had once threatened to sue the LaRouchians for
appropriating his firm's name, now became friendly. Several leaders of the
American Agricultural Movement, a group championed by The Spotlight, began
to work with the LaRouchians on farm issues. By the time LaRouche launched his
1980 presidential campaign, he felt free
to call himself the candidate of The Spotlight's readership, which
he hailed as the quarter million strong " 'Gideon's Army' of American
nationalism."
LaRouche's own "nationalism" had taken a quantum leap after he went to Wiesbaden in 1977 to
straighten out the German organization and romance a young woman named
Helga Zepp. While in Wiesbaden he became fearful of left-wing terrorists. He
hunkered down in his villa and did some hard thinking.
When he returned to the United States late that year, with Helga as his
bride, the war on Jews began in earnest.
New Solidarity and other NCLC publications started to be full of attacks
on wealthy Jewish families, B'nai B'rith, Zionism, the State of Israel, the
American "Jewish Lobby" and the Jewish religion. New
Solidarity published crude
anti-Semitic jokes as well as articles suggesting that Zionists were a kind of
subhuman species.
Actually LaRouche and some of his followers had ruminated along these
lines even in their leftist days. In a 1973 article, "The Case of Ludwig
Feuerbach," LaRouche argued that
the Jewish religion is a fossilized reflection of the life in ancient and
medieval times of the Jewish "merchant-usurer." The Jew of that
epoch was a wretch who "had not yet evolved to the state of Papal
enlightenment, a half-Christian, who had not developed a Christian
conscience." Today's Jew is no
better. His culture is "merely
the residue left to the Jewish home after everything saleable has been marketed
to the Goyim." Any religious feelings today's Jew may have are nothing
but "infantile object elation." LaRouche also offered an
anti-Semitic brand of psychoanalysis: "The brutally sadistic moral castration of the Jewish boy by the domineering
Jewish mother' is the basis for one of the most horrifying models of male
sexual impotence . . . the 'business Jew.' "
Following this article, The Campaigner published an anti-Israel
tirade by Nancy Spannaus, one of LaRouche's top aides. The Israelis, she wrote,
have a "psychotic" fear of anti-Semitism. In particular Jerusalem's
Orthodox Jews are "crazed with the fear of death" and thus engage in
"frightful orgies of sex and violence." Their religion is only the
"thinnest disguise for exacerbated peasant paranoia."
LaRouche's
1974 tirade against the Jews was buried
in a footnote. Many NCLC members passed over it. Others thought it was just
LaRouche engaging in provocative remarks to help his Jewish followers confront
their personal hang-ups. As for Spannaus's remarks, everyone knew she was a
difficult personality. But the anti-Semitic agitation which began in 1977-78
was much more difficult to ignore or rationalize. It was not just a footnote
or personal aberration; it was a
systematic
expression of hatred, revulsion,
and scorn targeting every aspect of Jewish history, culture, religion, and home
life.*
How could the Jewish members of the NCLC—at that time, a quarter of the
membership—let this pass without expressing outrage? Defectors say that many members either didn't hear the message or
simply tuned it out. They were working on the streets or in LaRouche
business enterprises sixteen hours a day. Many of them were too exhausted to read New Solidarity.
Those who did read it were in such a
state of hysteria—mobilizing for the latest NCLC campaign to prevent imminent nuclear war—that the
message didn't register.
Former NCLC member Linda Ray, in her 1986 article "Breaking the
Silence," describes another factor—the NCLC habit of knee-jerk rationalization.
Ray, who is Jewish, says that whenever anyone tried to tell her the NCLC was
anti-Semitic, she instantly denied it, pointing to supposedly anti-Nazi
statements in New Solidarity. She recalls reading in New Solidarity about
LaRouche's concept of a subhuman
oligarchical species. "Although I knew it did not make scientific
sense, I presumed that it was a deep intellectual metaphor that was over my
head." Years later a friend showed her a New Solidarity article in
which the Star of David was used to
symbolize the drug trade. "I quickly replied ... 'It is just a graphic
arts symbol'—which I had naively thought for years. But as soon as I said
it out loud I realized that I sounded ridiculous. It was as if I was waking
from a nightmare."
Ray's article explains the state of mind of many NCLC rank-and-filers.
It does not explain the acquiescence of the NCLC national and regional
leadership cadre, many of them Jewish, who helped develop the anti-Semitic line
and implemented it with alacrity. Here, as during Mop Up and the Chris White
affair, a few rebelled but most bowed to LaRouche's will.
Kevin Coogan, a member of the intelligence staff, did some background
research on Carto and the Liberty Lobby. Shocked by what he discovered, he
quit. Several other members of the national office staff also resigned. They
prepared unsigned reports and met privately with journalists, stating that the NCLC had become an
anti-Semitic organization and that LaRouche was espousing Nazi ideas.
But none were
willing to go public against LaRouche.
Security staffer Bob Cohen
played a key role in stirring up the discontent. He met with several trusted
comrades to point out the similarities
between LaRouche's writings and Mein Kampf. But when his
friends decided to quit, Cohen backed out. His reverence for LaRouche kept him
in the organization until 1981.
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Cohen's brother-in-law and fellow security staffer, Paul Goldstein, came
back seething from a trip down South with LaRouche. The hulking former college
athlete had been present, as LaRouche's bodyguard, when anti-Semitic jokes were
traded among the good old boys. Gold-stein, former friends say, was almost ready to quit. But the leadership put him through an ego-stripping session led by
Helga LaRouche. The session focused on his alleged sexual fantasies, and he
was told his wife would be ordered to leave him if he didn't shape up.
Goldstein, reduced to tears, capitulated totally. Thereafter, he was one of LaRouche's
most loyal followers.
A few more NCLC members protested when LaRouche announced that only one and a half million Jews, not six
million, were killed in the Holocaust. Contemptuously ignoring his
followers' complaints, he issued a press release reaffirming the 1.5 million
figure.
By 1980-81 the protest over LaRouche's anti-Semitism died down. Most
NCLC members who subsequently quit did so for personal reasons, not over
matters of principle. Unlike earlier defectors, most would do nothing to oppose
LaRouche. Don and Alice Roth charged in a resignation letter that the
membership had undergone a process of "moral anaesthetization." They
cited a joke that they said had become popular in the national office:
"How many Jews can you fit into a Volkswagen? One hundred. Four on the
seats and ninety-six in the ashtray."
In
psychological terms the anti-Semitism that seized the NCLC in the late 1970’s
was similar to the violent fantasies that gripped it during Operation Mop Up.
Instead of assaulting Communists with numchukas, the NCLC now attacked
Jews via brutally worded propaganda tracts. Once again LaRouche helped his
followers overcome their moral qualms by refraining reality for them through
semantic tricks and false syllogisms.
The resulting belief structure involved four layers: a redefinition of
"Jew," a redefinition of "Nazi," a denial of the concepts
of "left" and "right" in politics (to totally disorient the
believer), and, for Jewish LaRouchians, a guilt trip and special fears. To
redefine the meaning of "Jew," LaRouche
concocted a distinction between real and false Jews. He said his political
attacks were not aimed at all Jews, just those who advocate evil policies like
Zionism. Using Orwellian semantics, he called the latter "nominal
Jews," the "Jews who are not Jews." Who then are the real Jews?
LaRouche said they are the Jewish members of a "humanist" faction
drawing its inspiration from Philo of Alexandria, a first-century Jewish
Neoplatonist.
Here LaRouche was at his wiliest. For
Philo has no following in modern Judaism. His only professed followers are
LaRouche's own NCLC members, whose interpretation
of Philo bears little relation to the latter's actual writings.
The bogus nature of the "real Jew" faction was further
revealed in LaRouche's polemics against the "unremitting evil" of
Zionism. To be a real Jew, he suggested,
one must repudiate the State of Israel, Zionism, and the mainstream leadership
of the Jewish community. But a sizable minority of Jews are already
anti-Zionist and estranged from the mainstream Jewish leadership—e.g., some of
the Hassidim and many secular Jewish leftists. Are they "real Jews"?
Not at all. In LaRouchian propaganda the Hassidim are portrayed as evil
cultists while leftist Jews appear as dope-pushing terrorists. In the final
analysis the Jewish members of the
LaRouche organization—a few score individuals—are the only real Jews in the
world!
LaRouche
redefined what a Nazi is in tracts such as "The Truth About 'German
Collective Guilt' " and "Hitler: Runaway British Agent." He argued that Hitler was put into power by
the Rothschilds and other wealthy Jews-who-are-not-really-Jews. These evil
oligarchs invented Nazi racialism and brainwashed the Nazis to accept it.
They then urged Hitler and his cronies to persecute the German Jews so the
latter would flee to Palestine, where the Rothschilds had decided to set up a
zombie state as a tool of their world domination. But as this scenario
unfolded, the German people developed their own agenda: a "sound and
intense . . . nationalist enthusiasm" to invade Britain (the Rothschild
headquarters). Hitler at first acquiesced in this desire, but unfortunately he
was ideologically weak—he backed off and returned to the puppet masters' game
plan by attacking the Soviet Union. Thus
did LaRouche place the ultimate blame for Hitler's crimes on the
Jews-who-are-not-Jews-but-really-are-the-Jews-anyway.
LaRouche didn't deny that Hitler and the Nazis were partly responsible
for many horrendous crimes as the Rothschilds' junior accomplices. But he
instructed NCLC members to focus on a
newer and deadlier plot. The
Rothschilds and other "British" families—and the Israelis— were
preparing to launch a Holocaust a hundred times worse than Hitler's.
This new Holocaust was aimed at consolidating "British" power, and
would involve the death of billions of human beings via nuclear war, plagues,
famine, and a New Dark Age—horrors that would make the "Nazi thing"
seem like a "slight mistake." The New Dark Age conspirators were
"a hundred times worse" than Hitler, and anyone collaborating with
them (like Jimmy Carter) was also a hundred times worse.
With his followers thus confused, LaRouche was able to switch labels on his concepts. The New
Dark Age conspirators were not only far worse than the Nazis of the Hitler era,
they were Nazis. The real Nazis were the hundred-times-worse Nazis.
Menachem Begin was a Nazi, Ariel Sharon was a Nazi, the "Jewish
Lobby" in America was "Nazi."
It followed from this relabeling that anyone who opposed Israel and the
"Jewish Lobby" was, objectively, anti-Nazi.
LaRouche's followers thus ended up with a topsy-turvy view in which the
real Nazis were seen as anti-Nazis, and anti-Semitism
was perceived as a moral necessity—to "save" the Jews from themselves.
The LaRouchians accordingly worked seven days a week to build a fascist
movement while imagining they were building an antifascist movement. LaRouche
had used their fears of fascism to further fascist goals.
There was always the possibility that some NCLC members would wake up
and begin to critically examine these Orwellian labels. Stage three guarded
against such a possibility. In "The Secrets Known Only to the Inner
Elites," LaRouche announced that the left and the right in politics don't
really exist. They are a fiction concealing the struggles of two conspiratorial elites—the humanist
elite (LaRouchians or proto-LaRouchians) and the oligarchical elite (the
Jews-who-are-not-Jews, etc.). Hence, in judging a given party or faction one
should not ask where it stands on the political spectrum, but which elite is manipulating it. Depending on the answer, there
are good Communists and bad Communists, good conservatives and bad conservatives,
good Klansmen and bad Klansmen. During World War II there were good Nazis (the
Wehrmacht) and bad Nazis (the Rothschild agents-of-influence in the Nazi Party
leadership).
With
the traditional political spectrum abolished, LaRouche's followers no longer had to deal with the glaring
contradictions between their old leftist and new fascist politics. For all
intents and purposes, the NCLC's political past no longer existed. Fascism and
communism no longer existed. All that mattered were LaRouchism and anti-LaRouch-ism,
which were whatever LaRouche said they were.
When LaRouche first promulgated these views in the late 1970’s, he played on his Jewish followers' guilt
feelings, their anxiety over their possible tainted status in the NCLC, and
their nightmares about the Holocaust. In a 1978 article on the "cult
origins of Zionism," he warned the NCLC Jews: If you don't put aside your
doubts and totally devote yourself to our political goals, you are "just as guilty" as Adolf Hitler. Indeed, you are more guilty, since the
consequences of an NCLC failure to take power will be human death on a far
greater scale than under Hitler. But I know you: Underneath your veneer of
loyalty to the NCLC you still have a residual sense of loyalty to your fellow
Jews—the false Jews. Insofar as you feel that residual loyalty, you are
"on the pathway to becoming a Nazi"—a supporter of the evil
oligarchy's plan to kill off two-thirds of the human race. Forget your narrow
bestial ethnic loyalties! Instead ask yourself: "What is a Jew good for?
What can a Jew contribute to humanity generally which obliges humanity to value
the Jew?"
LaRouche used even sterner language to warn his Jewish followers of the
possible consequences of disloyalty: "You have no right to hide behind the
whimpering, morally degraded profession [of excuses]. . . . Either you take responsibility for the
ultimate consequences of your conduct or you have no moral right to complain
against whatever evil the world's developments bestow upon you."
To
get the full flavor of this threat, one must understand that, in 1978, many
NCLC members fervently believed that LaRouche would soon take power in America.
Jewish members thus could easily
have felt worried—at least on a
subliminal level—for their own safety.
*
A sampling from NCLC publications, much of it written by LaRouche: Early Jewish
settlers in America were prominent in the slave trade. Those who came over in
the early twentieth century became the founders of organized crime, rising to
power through rum-running, drug pushing, and pornography. Their corrupting
influence was supplemented by that of Viennese refugees in the 1930s—an
intellectual "cholera culture" and "intellectual pus"
undermining American values. Their chief organization, the B'nai B'rith,
resurrected the "tradition of the Jews who demanded the crucifixion of
Jesus Christ, the Jews who pleaded with Nero to launch the 'holocaust' against
the Christians." They manipulated the U.S. government, against its best
interests, to support the "kosher nostra" government of Israel. Also
they founded the Zionist Lobby, "the most visible of the internal enemies
of the United States—and of the human race." The policies of the Zionist Lobby are "pure evil." Any
American "professing Zionist loyalties" is, by definition, "a
national security risk." As for Israel itself, it is a
"zombie-nation" and follows policies "a hundred times worse than
Hitler." Its denizens display a "nauseating Jewish hypocrisy over the
murder of one of their children" while "bellow[ing] and belch[ing] in
smug contentment every time hundreds of thousands of ... Palestinians are butchered."
NOTES TO CHAPTER SIXS
TRATEGY FOR INFILTRATING THE RIGHT: Gregory F. Rose, "The Swarmy Life and Times of the NCLC,"
LAROUCHE EMBRACES THE SPOTLIGHT'S VIEW OF ZIONISM: LHL, "Walter Mondale British Agent," NS,
"GIDEON'S ARMY": LHL, What Every Conservative Should Know About Communism (New York: New Benjamin
Franklin House Publishing Company, 1980), p. vi.
EARLY EXAMPLES OF NCLC ANTI-SEMITISM: LM, "The Case of Ludwig Feuerbach," TC, Dec. 1973, p.37;
Nancy Spannaus, "Israeli Psychosis: Rockefeller's Solution to the Jewish Question," TC,Aug.1975, p.59
VIENNESE REFUGEES, CHOLERA CULTURE, "PUS": LHL, The Case of Walter Lippmann (New York: Campaigner
Publications, 1977), p. 121.
CHRIST KILLERS: LHL, "New Pamphlet to Document Cult Origins of Zionism," NS, Dec. 8, 1978.
"KOSHER NOSTRA": Mark Burdman, "Begin Gov't Links to Crime Publicized in France," War on Drugs, Nov. 1980.
"PURE EVIL": LHL, "Zionism and the 'Zionist Lobby,' " NS, Aug. 22, 1978.
"NATIONAL SECURITY RISK": "Register the Zionist Lobby as Foreign Agents!," MS, Sept. 5, 1978.
"ZOMBIE-NATION": LHL, "New Pamphlet to Document the Cult Origins of Zionism."
"NAUSEATING JEWISH HYPOCRISY": "For Peace in the Mideast, Dump the Jewish Lobby!," MS, Mar. 17, 1978.
PASSIVITY OF LOWER-LEVEL NCLC MEMBERS: Linda Ray, "Breaking the Silence: An Ex-LaRouche Follower
ONLY ONE AND A HALF MILLION KILLED IN HOLOCAUST: LHL, "New Pamphlet to Document Cult Origins of
"MORAL ANAESTHETIZATION" AND THE VOLKSWAGEN JOKE: Alice and Don Roth, "A Method in the Madness,"
JEWS ALLEGEDLY PUT HITLER IN POWER: LHL, "Hitler: Runaway British Agent," MS, Jan. 10, 1978;
"SOUND AND INTENSE . . . ENTHUSIASM" OF NAZIS TO CRUSH BRITAIN: LHL, "Hitler: Runaway British Agent."
HITLER'S CRIMES A "SLIGHT MISTAKE" IN COMPARISON TO PLANS OF ZIONISTS: LHL, speech to Michigan
WARNING TO JEWISH NCLC MEMBERS: LHL, "New Pamphlet to Document the Cult Origins of Zionism."
National Review, Mar. 30, 1979.
Sept. 2, 1977.
Tells Her Story," In These Times, Oct. 29, 1986.
Zionism"; "LaRouche Reaffirms '1.5 Millions' Analysis," NSIPS news release, Jan. 17, 1981.
open letter to NCLC members, Feb. 3, 1981.
LHL, "The Truth About 'German Collective Guilt,' " Part I, MS, Oct. 10, 1978.
Anti-Drug Coalition, May 20, 1979, published in MS, June 8, 1979; see editorial correction, June 15, 1979.