The
Great Manchurian Candidate Scare
The author, Dennis King has generously agreed that we
include in our website: Chapter 4.
“The Great Manchurian Candidate Scare” All copyrights remain with
the author. 1989 |
|
In the
summer of 1973, LaRouche began sessions of what he called "ego-stripping." He suggested this would cure his
followers of the cowardice and bourgeois moral qualms they had displayed during
Mop Up. The big problem with most NCLC members, he said, was their psychosexual
fears. LaRouche proposed to use fear to fight fear:
"I
am going to make you organizers—by taking your bedrooms away from you . . .
," he announced. "What I shall do is to expose to you the cruel fact
of your sexual impotence ... I will take
away from you all hope that you can flee the terrors of politics to the safety
of' personal life.' I shall do this by showing
to you that your frightened personal sexual life contains for you such terrors
as the outside world could never offer you. I will thus destroy your
rabbit-holes, mental as well as physical. I shall destroy your sense of safety in
the place to which you ordinarily imagine you can flee. I shall not pull you
back from fleeing, but rather destroy
the place to which you would attempt to flee."
The ego-stripping sessions were similar to the
confrontational therapy practiced by psychological cults. LaRouche would pick
an NCLC member at random, or perhaps one who had failed at some political
assignment. The group would heap nonstop attacks on every aspect of the
victim's behavior. Supposedly it was a
sign of psychic liberation if he or she broke down and started sobbing
hysterically. LaRouche said this was the way in which the individual
"abruptly 'breaks free' as if from a drugged state; a sudden personality change occurs, in which the group sees the
real person come forth, assume control of himself, or herself, and bring the
ego-state under control." Thus ego-stripping was "an act of social
love."
Christine
Berl, who participated in these sessions, gives a different view. The so-called
social love, she writes, was "pure
psychological terror" and resulted in an extreme form of
"depersonalization." The T-group members were "transformed into
sniveling informers vying with each other for [LaRouche's] approval. Even
couples were encouraged to 'inform' on each other's 'progress,' particularly
by singling out any behavior that could be construed as apolitical, or that was
suspected of being 'resistant' to the aims of the sessions."
LaRouche
took to calling himself Der Abscheulicher (the Abominable One). Along with the
ego-stripping, he began to instill in his followers an outlook of all-pervasive paranoia. In the
unconscious mind, he warned, there lurked
dark forces producing impotence,
homosexuality, zombie states, madness. These "pit creatures"
would destroy anyone who let his or her guard down. Meanwhile, in the outside
world, Rockefeller, the CIA, and a vast network of secret agents and assassins
were poised to attack at any moment. Safety could be attained only by following
LaRouche's every command, replicating his thoughts and remaking oneself in his
image.
Some
NCLC members were unconvinced of this, despite their deep admiration for
LaRouche's intellectual abilities. Matters came to a head in January 1974, when
LaRouche seized upon a fantasy that united the demons of the unconscious mind
and the assassins of the outside world into a single horrifying vision. This
was the Great Manchurian Candidate Scare, which wiped the slate clean of
skepticism among the members and completed their transformation into a
totalitarian political cult.
The prologue to this momentous event took place in the
summer of 1973, when LaRouche traveled to
The
George affair did not unduly alarm the NCLC membership. Not only was the story
extremely confused, but it was rumored that George had denied it. Real fear
seized the organization only after LaRouche announced the uncovering of a
second zombie—a Manchurian Candidate in every respect—Christopher White, a twenty-six-year-old NCLC member and British
national who had earned the personal resentment of LaRouche. In 1972, Carol
Schnitzer had left LaRouche and married White, who was ten years her junior.
The Whites had withdrawn to
In
December 1973, LaRouche ordered them to return to
Instead
of calling a doctor, Carol called LaRouche. Chris was rushed into a
deprogramming session at LaRouche's apartment. LaRouche's security aides and
Dr. Gene Inch, a physician and NCLC member, rushed to the scene. Meanwhile,
members from across the country had gathered in
LaRouche mobilized the entire NCLC. They passed out
fliers on a massive scale in
LaRouche's
proof for the story was his tapes of the deprogramming. But New York Times reporter
Paul Montgomery listened to them and gathered only that White was emotionally distraught. "There are sounds of weeping and vomiting,"
The
NCLC brought in three psychiatrists. None would substantiate the Manchurian
Candidate story. Dr. Israel Samuelly suggested that White was suffering from "schizophrenic catatonia with paranoiac features."
Most of the persons listed on the Emergency Commission either quit or said
they had never agreed to serve in the first place.
Within
the NCLC, the atmosphere of hysteria was so intense that facts didn't matter.
LaRouche drilled his followers on what each could expect if kidnapped by the
CIA: "When they really start the heavy programming," he said,
"first of all they give you heavy electric shock. Heavy electric
shock. . . .
"But
then, you know what they do to you? It's not the pain that brainwashes people.
"What
kills you is when you eat excrement as a way of inducing your torturer to lay
off the pain. In permitting a bottle to be inserted in your anus and sitting on
it on a chair for hours while interrogation continues, as a way of avoiding
greater pain. Lying on the floor and whining like a puppy, as a way of getting
your torturers to lay off. Or permitting yourself to be subjected to homosexual
rape, oral and anal. . . . They say your father was nothing, your father was a
queer, your father was a woman. . . ."
As for
the skeptics in his audience, LaRouche cried, "Any of you who say this is
a hoax—you're cruds! You're subhuman! You're not serious. The human race is at stake. Either
we win or there is no humanity."
New Solidarity followed up with
an editorial entitled "Will You Eat Shit for Rockefeller's CIA?" It
warned that the enemy would use "every form of degradation known to
man." During the next few weeks,
each NCLC member was terrified that he or she had been brainwashed. (LaRouche emphasized that the victims would
have total amnesia about the experience—until the moment of utterance of the
fatal trigger word.) The leadership was flooded with requests for
deprogramming from those who found themselves harboring vaguely murderous
thoughts about LaRouche. One member went berserk, screaming, "Cancel me!
Cancel me!" and had to be hospitalized. According to LaRouche, this
individual's "code barrier" had gone out of control.
The
hysteria prompted the issuance of an "intake procedure" manual by
Carol White. "The brainwashed comrade's version of events should be taken
down," Mrs. White wrote, "and particular attention should be paid to
his fantasies—reference to witches, devils, sensitivity to hissing sounds . .
."
Predictably,
any member who expressed skepticism became immediately suspect. Christine Berl
called the story hogwash and withdrew from any active role in the leadership.
LaRouche said that the CIA, acting through her boyfriend, had taken over her
mind. A friend warned her that a plot was afoot to kidnap and deprogram her—to
liberate her from her brainwashed condition. They waited outside her door, but
she didn't come out. Less fortunate was Alice Weitzman, also a skeptic, who was
held captive in her apartment and forced to listen to Beethoven at high volume—a deprogramming technique suggested by
LaRouche. Weitzman managed to throw a note out the window. A passerby
picked it up and alerted the police. When officers went to the apartment, they
heard screams, forced their way in, and freed her. Later that day, they
arrested six NCLC members on kidnapping charges. (The case was ultimately
dismissed after Weitzman refused to press charges.)
NCLC
security chief Jose Torres was another skeptic. "The spook stuff [went] on
for weeks," he recalls, "and for that time I was the functioning head
of the LC because nobody would do shit." Torres decided he'd had enough.
"I [took] Chris White aside and said, 'Do you know who I am?' And he said,
'Yes, I know you.' I said, 'Look, I'm going to bust you up right now if you
give me any bullshit about being brainwashed because you weren't brainwashed so
why the fuck did you put us on like this?' And he said, 'It's too late to turn back now.' He couldn't back out now, it was
all crap, all of it."
Torres says he told LaRouche about this, but LaRouche
dismissed it as part of White's brainwashing. Torres later concluded that White
had known "exactly what he was doing" and had been motivated by a
desire to avoid a psychological dressing-down. Says Torres: "White knew
how Konstantin George had been deemed a victim of brainwashing and forgiven. So
why not be brainwashed? He did it, and . . . Lyn . . . believed him and that
was all it took. . . . He just kept feeding Lyn, and Lyn constructs the whole
big thing out of it."
At the time, an NCLC leaflet
described the deprogramming of White as "opening up a whole new area of
psychology—the solution to psychosis." But LaRouche apparently decided in
later years that the incident was best forgotten. His 1979 and 1987
autobiographies, although boastful about his alleged discoveries in many fields
of knowledge, are silent about his cure for psychosis.
Most
NCLC defectors agree with Jose Torres that LaRouche appeared genuinely spooked
during the Chris White affair. They point out that on several later occasions
LaRouche's belief in being a target of assassination seemed to fill an inner
need. Yet the frequent security alerts to protect LaRouche also serve an
extremely practical goal: They keep the
NCLC membership in a state of mindless hysteria, scrambling frantically to
raise money for LaRouche's coffers.
Various articles and speeches at the
time by LaRouche and top aides suggested a high degree of calculated behavior.*
Key passages dealt with the psychological
weaknesses of the NCLC membership, their vulnerability to brainwashing, and the
various manipulative techniques that might be used on them (for instance,
playing on fears of homosexuality and triggering an infectious group
paranoia). Although these methods were described—as in LaRouche's
To brainwash someone (so the
LaRouchian theory went), it is first necessary
to "terrorize" him into regarding "the entire world as a
police-controlled environment." This was done during the Chris White
affair, when many members believed themselves in imminent danger of being
picked up by the CIA and/or the
LaRouche also described brainwashing
as a system of doublethink, or metalogic, by which a person comes to believe
that it is not he but the rest of the world that is brainwashed. "The
victim's sense of reality is turned inside out," he explained. Christine
Berl and Alice Weitzman accused him of brainwashing the membership, he said,
because the CIA had brainwashed them to say this.
The doublethink during the Chris
White affair went far beyond anything during Mop Up. Thus leading NCLC members
who had readily supported Mop Up, such as Berl and Torres, challenged
LaRouche's credibility during the spring of 1974. They had believed in Mop Up
because it possessed at least a veneer of rational justification: CP members indeed had assaulted NCLC members and
spread exaggerated accusations about them on several prior occasions. Berl and
Torres thus could convince themselves that the CP was a counterinsurgency force
standing in the way of Revolution. But
the Chris White story had no empirical basis at all. It required a leap of
faith, not just contorted logic. NCLC members with a strong sense of reality
found it intolerable. One by one during 1974 they defected.
Those who remained were capable of believing in
anything LaRouche might suggest, even neo-Nazism.
·
·
That LaRouche knew exactly what he was doing was charged by Dr. Fred
Newman, a Stanford University-trained logician-turned-Marxist-activist who
worked with the NCLC during the Manchurian Candidate Scare. Newman was the
author of Explanation by Description (1968), a study of how we believe
what we believe. After splitting with the NCLC in mid-1974, he wrote a pamphlet
analyzing how LaRouchians believe what LaRouchians believe. He charged that LaRouche had a "systematic
plan" to transform his followers' ordinary middle-class values into an
explicitly fascist consciousness, chiefly through the generating of an
artificial paranoia at every level of the organization. (Newman went on to
build his own political cult, the New Alliance Party, which through the years
has mimicked LaRouche's tactics to an uncanny degree.)
NOTES TO CHAPTER FOUR
TAKING AWAY BEDROOMS: LM, "The Politics of Male Impotence," NCLC internal,
THEORY OF SUDDEN PERSONALITY CHANGE: LM, " Trotskyism' As Organized
DEFECTORS' DESCRIPTIONS OF NCLC PSYCHOLOGICAL TECHNIQUES AND SESSIONS:
THE ALLEGED BRAINWASHING OF WHITE: Christopher White, "On the Track of My Assassins,
WITCHES AND HISSING SOUNDS: Carol White, "Intake Procedure for Suspected
PARANOIA ABOUT CHRISTINE BERL: LM, "Why Christine Berl Could Be Turned into
TECHNIQUES OF BRAINWASHING AS ALLEGEDLY PRACTICED BY CIA AND OTHER NCLC FOES:
Aug. 16, 1973.
Sexual Impotence," NCLC internal, Aug. 20, 1973
Christine Berl and Henry Weinfeld, open letter to NCLC membership, Apr. 2, 1974;
Marian Kester, "Thinking the Unthinkable," NCLC factional document, Aug. 15, 1974.
" TC, Feb.-Mar. 1974; LM, "Uncover CIA-Police Plot to Take Over U.S.- Discover
Method to De-program Victims of CIA and Soviet Psycho-Sexual Brainwashing,"
MS special supplement (includes text of LHL's Jan. 3, 1974, speech describing
alleged tortures).
Brainwashing Cases," NCLC internal, 1974.
a Zombie," NCLC internal, Apr. 1, 1974.
LM, "The Real CIA - the Rockefellers' Fascist Establishment," TC, Apr. 1974;
M. Minnicino, "Low Intensity Operations: The Reesian Theory of War," TC,Apr.1974;
LM, "Rockefeller's 1984 Plot," TC, Feb.-Mar. 1974; LM, "Uncover CIA-Police Plot
to Take Over U.S."