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Eisenhower's Forgotten Warning and the Threat of Authoritarian Currents in Our Politics

In this summer of town hall disruptions and birth-certificate controversies, it is worth recalling a now-obscure warning from President Eisenhower.
September 3, 2009  |  
 
 
 
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In this summer of town hall disruptions and birth-certificate controversies, a summer when it seemed as if the Republican Party had been captured by its extremist wing, it is worth recalling a now-obscure letter from President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Although Eisenhower is commonly remembered for a farewell address that raised concerns about the “military-industrial complex,” his letter offers an equally important — and relevant — warning: to beware the danger posed by those seeking freedom from the “mental stress and burden” of democracy.

The story began in 1958, when Eisenhower received a letter from Robert Biggs, a terminally ill World War II veteran. Biggs told the president that he “felt from your recent speeches the feeling of hedging and a little uncertainty.” He added, “We wait for someone to speak for us and back him completely if the statement is made in truth.”

Eisenhower could have discarded Biggs’s note or sent a canned response. But he didn’t. He composed a thoughtful reply. After enduring Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin, who had smeared his old colleague Gen. George C. Marshall as a Communist sympathizer, and having guarded the Republican Party against the newly emergent radical right John Birch Society, which labeled him and much of his cabinet Soviet agents, the president perhaps welcomed the opportunity to expound on his vision of the open society.

“I doubt that citizens like yourself could ever, under our democratic system, be provided with the universal degree of certainty, the confidence in their understanding of our problems, and the clear guidance from higher authority that you believe needed,” Eisenhower wrote on Feb. 10, 1959. “Such unity is not only logical but indeed indispensable in a successful military organization, but in a democracy debate is the breath of life.”

Eisenhower also recommended a short book — “The True Believer” by Eric Hoffer, a self-educated itinerant longshoreman who earned the nickname “the stevedore philosopher.” “Faith in a holy cause,” Hoffer wrote, “is to a considerable extent a substitute for the lost faith in ourselves.”

Though Eisenhower was criticized for lacking an intellectual framework or even an interest in ideas, he was drawn to Hoffer’s insights. He explained to Biggs that Hoffer “points out that dictatorial systems make one contribution to their people which leads them to tend to support such systems — freedom from the necessity of informing themselves and making up their own minds concerning these tremendous complex and difficult questions.” The authoritarian follower, Eisenhower suggested, desired nothing more than insulation from the pressures of a free society.

Alluding to Senator McCarthy and his allies, Eisenhower pointed out that cold war fears were distorted and exploited for political advantage. “It is difficult indeed to maintain a reasoned and accurately informed understanding of our defense situation on the part of our citizenry when many prominent officials, possessing no standing or expertness as they themselves claim it, attempt to further their own ideas or interests by resorting to statements more distinguished by stridency than by accuracy.”

It is worth noting, of course, that these Cold War exaggerations weren’t just a Republican specialty: John F. Kennedy was making a supposed “missile gap” between the United States and the Soviet Union a key element of his presidential campaign.

In closing his letter, Eisenhower praised Biggs for his “fortitude in pondering these problems despite your deep personal adversity.” Perhaps it was the president’s sense of solidarity with a fellow soldier that prompted him to respond to Biggs with such care; and perhaps it was his experience as supreme commander of Allied forces in Europe that taught him that the rise of extreme movements and authoritarianism could take root anywhere — even in a democracy.


Max Blumenthal is a senior writer for The Daily Beast and writing fellow at The Nation Institute. His new book, Republican Gomorrah (Basic/Nation Books) has just been released. Contact him at maxblumenthal3000@yahoo.com.
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Threat, Hell!!
Posted by: RevolutionNet on Sep 4, 2009 12:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A threat is something that may or may not happen in the future. It's happening here and now.


FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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» RE: Threat, Hell!! Posted by: cplot

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Petraeus/Powell 2012!
Posted by: TailgunnerJoe on Sep 4, 2009 12:59 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've said it before and I'll say it again: Eisenhower was the best (or least-worst) president of the 20th century.

The rest were commies and imperialists.

It makes me long for another general-president.

David Petraeus in 2012?

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» RE: Petraeus/Powell 2012! Posted by: Truelass
» RE: Petraeus/Powell 2012! Posted by: Perry Logan
» RE: Petraeus/Powell 2012! Posted by: grokagain
» Powell an unrepentant traitor Posted by: whole2th
» RE: Petraeus/Powell 2012! Posted by: melloe2
» Petraeus/Powell -- MY ASS Posted by: James T. Swaggart

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The last legitimately-elected President of the United States was Bill Clinton
Posted by: Perry Logan on Sep 4, 2009 2:51 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author's point about the dangers of the right wing is well taken, but...

How can we be tired of democracy when our elections keep getting stolen?

A quick check reveals that the last legitimately-elected President of the United States was Bill Clinton. Bush II was elected for neither term, and Obama stole the election from Hillary.

That's at least twelve years without a real President.

Far from being exhausted by democracy, the American people are selecting the right candidates, but the elections are being stolen from us. We're starved for democracy!

I like Ike, by the way. He was basically a New Dealer.

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If Eisenhower were alive today, he'd be neither a Republican nor a Democrat.
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 4, 2009 4:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all that Eisenhower stood for, he wouldn't be able to get elected dog catcher in today's political climate. In fact, if it were Eisenhower vs Obama today, Alternet would still endorse Obama over Eisenhower despite Obama being far more rightwing than Eisenhower just because Obama is a Black Democrat while Eisenhower is a Caucasian Republican.

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My, My . . .!
Posted by: Walks-in-Storms on Sep 4, 2009 5:50 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My, my - echoes of a time when to be President of the United States required of one more qualifications than having graduated from college.

Who would have thought?! But, then, once any system has reached maximum complexity - chaos, in other words - anything is possible, nothing predictable.

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Eisenhower decided to have Lumumba, democratically elected, assassinated.
Posted by: Whittey on Sep 4, 2009 6:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Church Commission, in the '70s, exposed this in Congress for anyone who paid or pays attention.
An excellent historical fiction portrayal of this is The Poisonwood Bible

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Fresh Air
Posted by: throck on Sep 4, 2009 6:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the rest of Alternet were as good as this guy,We would have something worthwhile!!Good Job.

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» RE: Fresh Air Posted by: halg

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The Search for a political savior
Posted by: Jbuuty on Sep 4, 2009 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I like reading Blumenthal's writing. But I want to comment on the comment section. It is mostly about Eisenhower, or someone else, either being a political savior or not being one. It's as if we expect our presidents and other political leaders to be supermen or superwomen, that can solve all problems in a single bound.

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Otto
Posted by: otto on Sep 4, 2009 7:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks, Max Blumenthal, for the article. I was too young at the time to appreciate anything about Eisenhauer, and influenced by my dad's Democratic prejudices; he seemed only an old bumbler to me. I was surprised in later years about his warning on the military industrial complex (though he seemed to wait until it was safe to announce it), and now this is the second issue that shows he was capable of deeper thought. Thanks again!

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The Problem is
Posted by: EncinoM on Sep 4, 2009 7:44 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That science and reason are no longer regarded in debates.

Look at Four Horse Men of the New American Apocalypse:

Glen Beck (Fear)and ALex Jones (Paranoia): Listen to their programs, they both spin wild tales of the government out to get teh indidvdaul. They are not bases their claims on any facts, but on their own twisted interpetations of the facts. Alex Jones, especially does not have respected experts come on to his program, no, he searches for the puesdo scientists that would back up his cliams.

Hannity (Haterd): Again watching his program is like watching a 60 minute long rant by an ignorant redneck who's threatened by OBama, and lashes out with pure hatered. Again teh facts and logic don't matter only the wildest possible spin.

And finally, Rush (Ignorance): He is the grand daddy of the bunch and again his programs run from facts and learned debate but go for pure emotional response.

The Deatherws, Birthers, and the lot are not about democracy, nor are they about protecting the Constitution, their only goal is to live in Mayberry, a fantasy world were everyone knew their place.

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» Good post, EncinoM... Posted by: MaxBridges
» RE: Good post, EncinoM... Posted by: EncinoM
» True but Posted by: maxpayne

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ODD THAT THE REPUBLCANS PREFER "RON"
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Sep 4, 2009 8:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dwight Eisenhower was a great man not just a good president. He had great faith in the American people and saw the danger in people allowing themselves to be controlled and oppressed. That's what he warned against. I read " The True Believer" (Eric Hoffer) and Ike saw the way things and people could be manipulated. I guess that's why they prefer Ron. Making up their own minds is too much work. ANNA

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Eisenhower did not have to contend with Faux Noise
Posted by: bettyn on Sep 4, 2009 8:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If he did, everyone would have gone nutz over his warnings about the "military industrial complex" (which now is fully in control) and they would have replaced him with Joe McCarthy!

Does anyone really think "Tail Gunner Joe" was worse than Dick Cheney...or George W. Bush? Look at what the wingnuts today are doing to Obama: They'd do the same thing to Ike.

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Who The Republican Party must get back to
Posted by: Purple Girl on Sep 4, 2009 8:13 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The emergence of the Neo cons and their unholy alliance with the Moral Majority was far more an internal attack against Ike Like Republicans than the Dems or the Liberals.
Most of America had shown they were not into the 'Free Love' culture long before the Moral Majority showed up to create a movement against it. Those who bought into the 'hippie' ideals were already out of reach for the Holey Rollers, so who do you think they were being used to 'strong arm' with defintions regarding what constitutes 'morality'? The moderates.
It's not good enough you follow a Christian faith, but instead must be of the 'new' evangelical faith.Now, It wasn't good enough to be a protestant Republican, or a Lutheran,to be considered a 'True' republican, you have to be an Evangelical. Atheist, Buddhists (etal) and pagans don't give a shit about what defines a 'True' Christian.but those of the various sects of Christianity do.
so the Neo cons not only highjacked the Republican plateform, they highjacked Christianity too.
Haven't these 'non conformist' Republicans figured out this element of their party hates catholics (The 'Great Whore'), Hates Protestants (Work leads to salavation), hates Lutherans (can't buy salvation), Presbyterians (egalitarian equality)...
When the Evangelicals go on the attack about morality, my Devote Friends they are far more focused on attacking your belief system than Mine.
It is not me they are to court or pressure (they lost me along time ago)- its the others in their party who have yet to convert to their Political Religious philososphy.
Who do you think they blame for the 'moral downfall' of this country, the "hedonistic" Left or the Religions that were supposed to be keeping them in check?
It's time for those Old School Republicans and the various demominations they represent push back on these Corp Whores and Snake oil Dealers. They are Both Unamerican and UnChristian at their core.

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» RE: They're gone. Posted by: oregoncharles

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Merely an excuse to mention Eric Hoffer's The True Believer
Posted by: MichaelG on Sep 4, 2009 10:22 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Blumenthal's piece is merely an excuse to mention Eric Hoffer's The True Believer, which has not survived the test of time and evolving social and political perspectives.

Arrogance, racism, and religious bigotry clearly seem to have negatively informed Hoffer's analysis of what he refers to as holy causes. For instance, Hoffer, in language not atypical of the most ardent Zionists, proclaims that, “. . . it seems almost providential that Zionism should be on hand in the Jew’s darkest hour to enfold him in its corporate embrace and cure him of his individual isolation. Israel is indeed a rare refuge: it is home and family, synagogue and congregation, nation and revolutionary party all in one” (page 44). Compare that to the air of racial superiority evident in his dismissive view of Arabs and what he refers to as “the illiterate Arab world”: “The American college at Beirut, which is directed and supported by Godfearing, conservative Americans, is a school for revolutionaries in the illiterate Arab world” (page 132). Hoffer seems to be unaware that Arab civilization was busy inventing the fields of medicine, higher mathematics (algebra), and astronomy during the Dark Ages when Europeans were living in caves and hovels, the bare remnants of European intellectual life, knowledge, and accomplishment preserved by a few dozen monks in a handful of monasteries.

Hoffer’s writings display not merely irreverent and irreligious attitudes but rather an obdurate, determined, and distinctly anti-religious perspective. “The vanity of the selfless, even those who practice utmost humility, is boundless” (page 15). “Jesus Himself might not have preached a new Gospel had the dominant Pharisees taken Him into the fold, called Him Rabbi, and listened to Him with deference” (page 133). “A sublime religion inevitably generates a strong feeling of guilt. There is an unavoidable contrast between loftiness of profession and imperfection of practice. And, as one would expect, the feeling of guilt promotes hate and brazenness. Thus it seems that the more sublime the faith, the more virulent the hatred it breeds” (page 96).

Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung, writing in The Undiscovered Self, addressed directly many of the issues that exercised Hoffer. One difference between Hoffer’s writing in The True Believer and Jung’s in The Undiscovered Self is that in the latter one finds little of the arrogance, racism, and religious bigotry, and no evidence of Hoffer’s characteristic assumption that Western/European culture is inherently superior to other cultures, especially Asian (or Oriental) cultures, which is so persistently and glaringly evident in The True Believer. On the contrary, Jung’s far more objective and even-handed approach to these issues takes into consideration both the shortcomings of Christianity and the historical failings of Western/European culture. “Quite apart from the barbarities and blood baths perpetrated by the Christian nations among themselves throughout European history, the European also has to answer for all the crimes he has committed against the dark-skinned peoples during the process of colonialization. In this respect, the white man carries a very heavy burden indeed” (Jung, page 95).

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Very interesting
Posted by: badkitty on Sep 4, 2009 10:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As my father (a die hard supporter of Adlai Stevenson) said several years ago, "Eisenhower looks better and better all the time." The letter is very interesting and thoughfully written--it's hard to imagine even Obama writing like this, much less Reagan or the Bushes.

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Sadly your point comes too late.....
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Sep 4, 2009 10:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the masses have been dumbed down and are parroting, nay, even fighting for the status quo - listen to them at the town halls, listen to them on the airways - fighting for the WELFARE OF THE CORPORATE ESTATE over WE THE PEOPLE! Many others that are dissatisfied with the current President have forgotten that it takes more than just voting to ensure that "our democracy" remains ours!

I can't say when it happened, but far too many - even those that have been affected by: off-shoring, downsizing, wage freezes, higher taxes (unless you're making over 1Million), are fighting against their own interests! When did people decide to stop thinking and analyzing for themselves? When did Faux News, the pill-popping Rush, and other loud-mouthed know-nothings on the right become anointed with the knowledge of all things best for America? They didn't, they haven't and the agenda they are pimping for are the corporate profits! Wake up America, because the time is NOW!

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We got lucky with Ike
Posted by: willymack on Sep 4, 2009 11:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm old enough to remember him running against a polished, dignified, and well-educated statesman by the Name of Adlai Stevenson, who was far more qualified for the job, but because of the shameful anti-intellectual bent of our people, went for Ike's charisma and dazzling smile.
When I say we got lucky with Ike, I mean he turned out to be as perceptive and smart as Adlai, and a whole lot tougher.
His tendency to run the country from his Gettysburg farm, showed that he knew when to lay off and let the country run itself.
Ike was a moralist and student of human nature in the finest traditions of the Army and as Chief Executive.
His book "Mandate for a Change" should be required reading in all high school history classes.

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WAKE UP!
Posted by: wormfarmer on Sep 4, 2009 11:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The majority of postings regarding this article are indicative of the distractive nature of the
internet. If half the thought and energy were put into re-establishing values, standards, and
ethics in this society, we could have a responsible and productive populace that would not tolerate the manipulative acts by people in positions of power.WAKE UP AMERICA!
Until we insist on behavior that reflects responsibility by us as a people, a nation, we'll keep having the same pointless arguments and never exercise accountability. Stand fast by
the standards and ethics we all should strive to uphold, and create a climate that we all can
support.

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Bell, Lipset & the vanished ideals of citizenship
Posted by: goodsensecynic on Sep 4, 2009 12:52 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is tempting to delve into the now best-forgotten works of Eric Hoffer in order to reclaim some sense of an independent spirit who is not preternaturally aligned with some ideology or other. The temptation should be resisted, for Hoffer and others of his ilk not only failed to live up to their anti-authoritarian ideals, but also diminished the value of thought itself.

Although reluctant to pin-point any particular "tipping point," I am inclined to think that our contemporary cultural and political malaise began somewhere around 1960, when two sociologists, Daniel Bell and Seymour Martin Lipset, authored two separate but related books - one an influential text in intellectual circles generally and the other a key sociological treatise that summed up what, for sum, was the legacy of the Eisenhower administration.

Bell's The End of Ideology like Fukuyama's The End of History forty years later, proclaimed the cultural victory of liberal democracy and free market capitalism, declaring that it was just a matter of time before the rest of the world came to realize that social injustice could be ameliorated without the requirement of overarching commitments to toxic value systems such as those offered by fascism or revolutionary communism.

Lipset followed suit with Political Man, a study that claimed, with no irony, that the basic questions of American democracy had already been settled, that transformative political ideals were now redundant and (on p. 403), that the United States was "the good society in operation."

Although these volumes were not widely read by audiences outside university and other elite domains, their message filtered down and provided a convenient excuse for citizens to flee to the idiocy (from the Greek, meaning "private" as in idiosyncracy, rather than "stupid" as is the common meaning now) of their private lives. They made it a mark of normalcy to eschew public commitments and to disdain politics and government as an unwarranted invasion of their private space.

Becoming informed, much less active in civic life, was deemed an unacceptable intrusion into "real" life. It became acceptable and even necessary to remain uniformed and apathetic, alientated and even anomic with regard to politics. The burdens of politics and not its promise and pleasures, were stressed (so to speak). So, the middle class, especially, retreated to the womb of its family rooms and its basement dens.

Politics became a matter of "brands," of casual entertainment and of symbolic consumables - the citizen willingly became a client of public services and a customer of public goods. Politics became a commodity exchange.

Lipset was, understandably I suppose, not prescient, for the civil rights movement, the anti-war movement and the re-emergence of femisinism would soon give the lie to such complacency; moreover, the contemporary bipolar political disorder of the American republic makes clear that the ship of state is not soon to be righted, for we have not yet rediscovered the civic virtues of popular engagement, but engage mainly in mobtalk and listen besottedly to talking heads telling us, often stridently, about what the world is all about. We are increasingly in thrall to demagogues eager to gain (or lose) advertising dollars at the end of our TV clickers.

It is, moreover, worth mentioning that neither President Obama (whose most ardent supporters recently considered a demi-god) nor his opponents (who now consider him a demon) are helping much. The old and seemingly odd belief that human beings are inherently capable of self-government seems to have vanished into the ether of our electronic, decentered civilization. It may be too late to rediscover authentic citizenship, but it is surely worth a try.

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Thank You
Posted by: VoxMagi on Sep 4, 2009 3:50 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...Mr. Blumenthal, for bringing to the forefront a sliver of history that deserves to be better remembered. Ike's words were not obscure to me, or to any of my friends. Even so, it was a pleasure to see them brought back to us, here, so that others might gain from them.

Be well.

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Not good, actually.
Posted by: luzmejor on Sep 5, 2009 11:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems you are a vender of 'goods,' a business person? who has no interest in any topic on this site.

A total disinterest in everything except profit for businesses is exactly what posters here are fighting to change.

There is much more in life to engage our sympathies than just a profound love for money.

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Common Sense Man
Posted by: macdon1 on Sep 8, 2009 2:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember Ike and his common sense. That is something sadly lacking in today's political leadership. When he said that America would be in deep do-do if the military industrial complex got into power he couldn't have been more right. The state and the corporation are now married to each other and are busy giving birth to fascist offspring.

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Military/Industrial/Prison complex
Posted by: Cybershaman on Sep 8, 2009 5:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think Eisenhower was warning us of the people that were behind his vice-president, in the military and the business community. This person was heavily into what McCarthy was doing, and was actually considered one of Joe's protoges, even though he hit the fast track to power and surpassed Joe. Who was this vice? Richard M. Nixon. And it is also worth noting that one of McCarthy's biggest Hollywood supporters, and a prominent blacklister, was Ronald Reagan. There is video footage on Utube of LBJ complaining about not being able to get our troops out of Vietnam because of the 'Nixon men' in the military that were preventing him from withdrawing so they could get Tricky Dick into the presidency. That inability to get our boys out has been successfully used for decades to blame LBJ for the Vietnam conflict even though it was actually Nixon that sent the CIA into the area to stir up trouble when he was under Eisenhower.

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Alternet Comments:

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Threat, Hell!!
Posted by: RevolutionNet on Sep 4, 2009 12:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A threat is something that may or may not happen in the future. It's happening here and now.


FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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» RE: Threat, Hell!! Posted by: cplot

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Petraeus/Powell 2012!
Posted by: TailgunnerJoe on Sep 4, 2009 12:59 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've said it before and I'll say it again: Eisenhower was the best (or least-worst) president of the 20th century.

The rest were commies and imperialists.

It makes me long for another general-president.

David Petraeus in 2012?

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» RE: Petraeus/Powell 2012! Posted by: Truelass
» RE: Petraeus/Powell 2012! Posted by: Perry Logan
» RE: Petraeus/Powell 2012! Posted by: grokagain
» Powell an unrepentant traitor Posted by: whole2th
» RE: Petraeus/Powell 2012! Posted by: melloe2
» Petraeus/Powell -- MY ASS Posted by: James T. Swaggart

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The last legitimately-elected President of the United States was Bill Clinton
Posted by: Perry Logan on Sep 4, 2009 2:51 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author's point about the dangers of the right wing is well taken, but...

How can we be tired of democracy when our elections keep getting stolen?

A quick check reveals that the last legitimately-elected President of the United States was Bill Clinton. Bush II was elected for neither term, and Obama stole the election from Hillary.

That's at least twelve years without a real President.

Far from being exhausted by democracy, the American people are selecting the right candidates, but the elections are being stolen from us. We're starved for democracy!

I like Ike, by the way. He was basically a New Dealer.

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If Eisenhower were alive today, he'd be neither a Republican nor a Democrat.
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 4, 2009 4:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all that Eisenhower stood for, he wouldn't be able to get elected dog catcher in today's political climate. In fact, if it were Eisenhower vs Obama today, Alternet would still endorse Obama over Eisenhower despite Obama being far more rightwing than Eisenhower just because Obama is a Black Democrat while Eisenhower is a Caucasian Republican.

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My, My . . .!
Posted by: Walks-in-Storms on Sep 4, 2009 5:50 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My, my - echoes of a time when to be President of the United States required of one more qualifications than having graduated from college.

Who would have thought?! But, then, once any system has reached maximum complexity - chaos, in other words - anything is possible, nothing predictable.

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Eisenhower decided to have Lumumba, democratically elected, assassinated.
Posted by: Whittey on Sep 4, 2009 6:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Church Commission, in the '70s, exposed this in Congress for anyone who paid or pays attention.
An excellent historical fiction portrayal of this is The Poisonwood Bible

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Fresh Air
Posted by: throck on Sep 4, 2009 6:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the rest of Alternet were as good as this guy,We would have something worthwhile!!Good Job.

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» RE: Fresh Air Posted by: halg

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The Search for a political savior
Posted by: Jbuuty on Sep 4, 2009 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I like reading Blumenthal's writing. But I want to comment on the comment section. It is mostly about Eisenhower, or someone else, either being a political savior or not being one. It's as if we expect our presidents and other political leaders to be supermen or superwomen, that can solve all problems in a single bound.

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Otto
Posted by: otto on Sep 4, 2009 7:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks, Max Blumenthal, for the article. I was too young at the time to appreciate anything about Eisenhauer, and influenced by my dad's Democratic prejudices; he seemed only an old bumbler to me. I was surprised in later years about his warning on the military industrial complex (though he seemed to wait until it was safe to announce it), and now this is the second issue that shows he was capable of deeper thought. Thanks again!

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The Problem is
Posted by: EncinoM on Sep 4, 2009 7:44 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That science and reason are no longer regarded in debates.

Look at Four Horse Men of the New American Apocalypse:

Glen Beck (Fear)and ALex Jones (Paranoia): Listen to their programs, they both spin wild tales of the government out to get teh indidvdaul. They are not bases their claims on any facts, but on their own twisted interpetations of the facts. Alex Jones, especially does not have respected experts come on to his program, no, he searches for the puesdo scientists that would back up his cliams.

Hannity (Haterd): Again watching his program is like watching a 60 minute long rant by an ignorant redneck who's threatened by OBama, and lashes out with pure hatered. Again teh facts and logic don't matter only the wildest possible spin.

And finally, Rush (Ignorance): He is the grand daddy of the bunch and again his programs run from facts and learned debate but go for pure emotional response.

The Deatherws, Birthers, and the lot are not about democracy, nor are they about protecting the Constitution, their only goal is to live in Mayberry, a fantasy world were everyone knew their place.

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» Good post, EncinoM... Posted by: MaxBridges
» RE: Good post, EncinoM... Posted by: EncinoM
» True but Posted by: maxpayne

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ODD THAT THE REPUBLCANS PREFER "RON"
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Sep 4, 2009 8:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dwight Eisenhower was a great man not just a good president. He had great faith in the American people and saw the danger in people allowing themselves to be controlled and oppressed. That's what he warned against. I read " The True Believer" (Eric Hoffer) and Ike saw the way things and people could be manipulated. I guess that's why they prefer Ron. Making up their own minds is too much work. ANNA

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Eisenhower did not have to contend with Faux Noise
Posted by: bettyn on Sep 4, 2009 8:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If he did, everyone would have gone nutz over his warnings about the "military industrial complex" (which now is fully in control) and they would have replaced him with Joe McCarthy!

Does anyone really think "Tail Gunner Joe" was worse than Dick Cheney...or George W. Bush? Look at what the wingnuts today are doing to Obama: They'd do the same thing to Ike.

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Who The Republican Party must get back to
Posted by: Purple Girl on Sep 4, 2009 8:13 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The emergence of the Neo cons and their unholy alliance with the Moral Majority was far more an internal attack against Ike Like Republicans than the Dems or the Liberals.
Most of America had shown they were not into the 'Free Love' culture long before the Moral Majority showed up to create a movement against it. Those who bought into the 'hippie' ideals were already out of reach for the Holey Rollers, so who do you think they were being used to 'strong arm' with defintions regarding what constitutes 'morality'? The moderates.
It's not good enough you follow a Christian faith, but instead must be of the 'new' evangelical faith.Now, It wasn't good enough to be a protestant Republican, or a Lutheran,to be considered a 'True' republican, you have to be an Evangelical. Atheist, Buddhists (etal) and pagans don't give a shit about what defines a 'True' Christian.but those of the various sects of Christianity do.
so the Neo cons not only highjacked the Republican plateform, they highjacked Christianity too.
Haven't these 'non conformist' Republicans figured out this element of their party hates catholics (The 'Great Whore'), Hates Protestants (Work leads to salavation), hates Lutherans (can't buy salvation), Presbyterians (egalitarian equality)...
When the Evangelicals go on the attack about morality, my Devote Friends they are far more focused on attacking your belief system than Mine.
It is not me they are to court or pressure (they lost me along time ago)- its the others in their party who have yet to convert to their Political Religious philososphy.
Who do you think they blame for the 'moral downfall' of this country, the "hedonistic" Left or the Religions that were supposed to be keeping them in check?
It's time for those Old School Republicans and the various demominations they represent push back on these Corp Whores and Snake oil Dealers. They are Both Unamerican and UnChristian at their core.

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» RE: They're gone. Posted by: oregoncharles

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Merely an excuse to mention Eric Hoffer's The True Believer
Posted by: MichaelG on Sep 4, 2009 10:22 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Blumenthal's piece is merely an excuse to mention Eric Hoffer's The True Believer, which has not survived the test of time and evolving social and political perspectives.

Arrogance, racism, and religious bigotry clearly seem to have negatively informed Hoffer's analysis of what he refers to as holy causes. For instance, Hoffer, in language not atypical of the most ardent Zionists, proclaims that, “. . . it seems almost providential that Zionism should be on hand in the Jew’s darkest hour to enfold him in its corporate embrace and cure him of his individual isolation. Israel is indeed a rare refuge: it is home and family, synagogue and congregation, nation and revolutionary party all in one” (page 44). Compare that to the air of racial superiority evident in his dismissive view of Arabs and what he refers to as “the illiterate Arab world”: “The American college at Beirut, which is directed and supported by Godfearing, conservative Americans, is a school for revolutionaries in the illiterate Arab world” (page 132). Hoffer seems to be unaware that Arab civilization was busy inventing the fields of medicine, higher mathematics (algebra), and astronomy during the Dark Ages when Europeans were living in caves and hovels, the bare remnants of European intellectual life, knowledge, and accomplishment preserved by a few dozen monks in a handful of monasteries.

Hoffer’s writings display not merely irreverent and irreligious attitudes but rather an obdurate, determined, and distinctly anti-religious perspective. “The vanity of the selfless, even those who practice utmost humility, is boundless” (page 15). “Jesus Himself might not have preached a new Gospel had the dominant Pharisees taken Him into the fold, called Him Rabbi, and listened to Him with deference” (page 133). “A sublime religion inevitably generates a strong feeling of guilt. There is an unavoidable contrast between loftiness of profession and imperfection of practice. And, as one would expect, the feeling of guilt promotes hate and brazenness. Thus it seems that the more sublime the faith, the more virulent the hatred it breeds” (page 96).

Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung, writing in The Undiscovered Self, addressed directly many of the issues that exercised Hoffer. One difference between Hoffer’s writing in The True Believer and Jung’s in The Undiscovered Self is that in the latter one finds little of the arrogance, racism, and religious bigotry, and no evidence of Hoffer’s characteristic assumption that Western/European culture is inherently superior to other cultures, especially Asian (or Oriental) cultures, which is so persistently and glaringly evident in The True Believer. On the contrary, Jung’s far more objective and even-handed approach to these issues takes into consideration both the shortcomings of Christianity and the historical failings of Western/European culture. “Quite apart from the barbarities and blood baths perpetrated by the Christian nations among themselves throughout European history, the European also has to answer for all the crimes he has committed against the dark-skinned peoples during the process of colonialization. In this respect, the white man carries a very heavy burden indeed” (Jung, page 95).

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Very interesting
Posted by: badkitty on Sep 4, 2009 10:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As my father (a die hard supporter of Adlai Stevenson) said several years ago, "Eisenhower looks better and better all the time." The letter is very interesting and thoughfully written--it's hard to imagine even Obama writing like this, much less Reagan or the Bushes.

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Sadly your point comes too late.....
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Sep 4, 2009 10:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the masses have been dumbed down and are parroting, nay, even fighting for the status quo - listen to them at the town halls, listen to them on the airways - fighting for the WELFARE OF THE CORPORATE ESTATE over WE THE PEOPLE! Many others that are dissatisfied with the current President have forgotten that it takes more than just voting to ensure that "our democracy" remains ours!

I can't say when it happened, but far too many - even those that have been affected by: off-shoring, downsizing, wage freezes, higher taxes (unless you're making over 1Million), are fighting against their own interests! When did people decide to stop thinking and analyzing for themselves? When did Faux News, the pill-popping Rush, and other loud-mouthed know-nothings on the right become anointed with the knowledge of all things best for America? They didn't, they haven't and the agenda they are pimping for are the corporate profits! Wake up America, because the time is NOW!

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We got lucky with Ike
Posted by: willymack on Sep 4, 2009 11:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm old enough to remember him running against a polished, dignified, and well-educated statesman by the Name of Adlai Stevenson, who was far more qualified for the job, but because of the shameful anti-intellectual bent of our people, went for Ike's charisma and dazzling smile.
When I say we got lucky with Ike, I mean he turned out to be as perceptive and smart as Adlai, and a whole lot tougher.
His tendency to run the country from his Gettysburg farm, showed that he knew when to lay off and let the country run itself.
Ike was a moralist and student of human nature in the finest traditions of the Army and as Chief Executive.
His book "Mandate for a Change" should be required reading in all high school history classes.

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WAKE UP!
Posted by: wormfarmer on Sep 4, 2009 11:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The majority of postings regarding this article are indicative of the distractive nature of the
internet. If half the thought and energy were put into re-establishing values, standards, and
ethics in this society, we could have a responsible and productive populace that would not tolerate the manipulative acts by people in positions of power.WAKE UP AMERICA!
Until we insist on behavior that reflects responsibility by us as a people, a nation, we'll keep having the same pointless arguments and never exercise accountability. Stand fast by
the standards and ethics we all should strive to uphold, and create a climate that we all can
support.

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Bell, Lipset & the vanished ideals of citizenship
Posted by: goodsensecynic on Sep 4, 2009 12:52 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is tempting to delve into the now best-forgotten works of Eric Hoffer in order to reclaim some sense of an independent spirit who is not preternaturally aligned with some ideology or other. The temptation should be resisted, for Hoffer and others of his ilk not only failed to live up to their anti-authoritarian ideals, but also diminished the value of thought itself.

Although reluctant to pin-point any particular "tipping point," I am inclined to think that our contemporary cultural and political malaise began somewhere around 1960, when two sociologists, Daniel Bell and Seymour Martin Lipset, authored two separate but related books - one an influential text in intellectual circles generally and the other a key sociological treatise that summed up what, for sum, was the legacy of the Eisenhower administration.

Bell's The End of Ideology like Fukuyama's The End of History forty years later, proclaimed the cultural victory of liberal democracy and free market capitalism, declaring that it was just a matter of time before the rest of the world came to realize that social injustice could be ameliorated without the requirement of overarching commitments to toxic value systems such as those offered by fascism or revolutionary communism.

Lipset followed suit with Political Man, a study that claimed, with no irony, that the basic questions of American democracy had already been settled, that transformative political ideals were now redundant and (on p. 403), that the United States was "the good society in operation."

Although these volumes were not widely read by audiences outside university and other elite domains, their message filtered down and provided a convenient excuse for citizens to flee to the idiocy (from the Greek, meaning "private" as in idiosyncracy, rather than "stupid" as is the common meaning now) of their private lives. They made it a mark of normalcy to eschew public commitments and to disdain politics and government as an unwarranted invasion of their private space.

Becoming informed, much less active in civic life, was deemed an unacceptable intrusion into "real" life. It became acceptable and even necessary to remain uniformed and apathetic, alientated and even anomic with regard to politics. The burdens of politics and not its promise and pleasures, were stressed (so to speak). So, the middle class, especially, retreated to the womb of its family rooms and its basement dens.

Politics became a matter of "brands," of casual entertainment and of symbolic consumables - the citizen willingly became a client of public services and a customer of public goods. Politics became a commodity exchange.

Lipset was, understandably I suppose, not prescient, for the civil rights movement, the anti-war movement and the re-emergence of femisinism would soon give the lie to such complacency; moreover, the contemporary bipolar political disorder of the American republic makes clear that the ship of state is not soon to be righted, for we have not yet rediscovered the civic virtues of popular engagement, but engage mainly in mobtalk and listen besottedly to talking heads telling us, often stridently, about what the world is all about. We are increasingly in thrall to demagogues eager to gain (or lose) advertising dollars at the end of our TV clickers.

It is, moreover, worth mentioning that neither President Obama (whose most ardent supporters recently considered a demi-god) nor his opponents (who now consider him a demon) are helping much. The old and seemingly odd belief that human beings are inherently capable of self-government seems to have vanished into the ether of our electronic, decentered civilization. It may be too late to rediscover authentic citizenship, but it is surely worth a try.

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Thank You
Posted by: VoxMagi on Sep 4, 2009 3:50 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...Mr. Blumenthal, for bringing to the forefront a sliver of history that deserves to be better remembered. Ike's words were not obscure to me, or to any of my friends. Even so, it was a pleasure to see them brought back to us, here, so that others might gain from them.

Be well.

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Not good, actually.
Posted by: luzmejor on Sep 5, 2009 11:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems you are a vender of 'goods,' a business person? who has no interest in any topic on this site.

A total disinterest in everything except profit for businesses is exactly what posters here are fighting to change.

There is much more in life to engage our sympathies than just a profound love for money.

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Common Sense Man
Posted by: macdon1 on Sep 8, 2009 2:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember Ike and his common sense. That is something sadly lacking in today's political leadership. When he said that America would be in deep do-do if the military industrial complex got into power he couldn't have been more right. The state and the corporation are now married to each other and are busy giving birth to fascist offspring.

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Military/Industrial/Prison complex
Posted by: Cybershaman on Sep 8, 2009 5:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think Eisenhower was warning us of the people that were behind his vice-president, in the military and the business community. This person was heavily into what McCarthy was doing, and was actually considered one of Joe's protoges, even though he hit the fast track to power and surpassed Joe. Who was this vice? Richard M. Nixon. And it is also worth noting that one of McCarthy's biggest Hollywood supporters, and a prominent blacklister, was Ronald Reagan. There is video footage on Utube of LBJ complaining about not being able to get our troops out of Vietnam because of the 'Nixon men' in the military that were preventing him from withdrawing so they could get Tricky Dick into the presidency. That inability to get our boys out has been successfully used for decades to blame LBJ for the Vietnam conflict even though it was actually Nixon that sent the CIA into the area to stir up trouble when he was under Eisenhower.

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