September 6, 2013
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This is an adapted version of an article that first appeared on
NSFWCORP. Published daily online and monthly in print, NSFWCORP is The
Future of Journalism (With Jokes). For more features, or to subscribe, click here.
This
important article kicks off what will be a focus of coverage of
AlterNet over the next few months on the corporate-funded "pro-market" arm of libertarianism in America and the sophisticated methods of inserting business propaganda into the public debate.
***
Every
couple of years, mainstream media hacks pretend to have just discovered
libertarianism as some sort of radical, new and dynamic force in
American politics. It’s a rehash that goes back decades, and hacks love
it because it’s easy to write, and because it’s such a non-threatening
“radical” politics (unlike radical left politics, which threatens the
rich). The latest version involves a summer-long pundit debate in the
pages of the
New York Times,
Reason magazine and
elsewhere over so-called “libertarian populism.” It doesn’t really
matter whose arguments prevail, so long as no one questions where
libertarianism came from or why we’re defining libertarianism as
anything but a big business public relations campaign, the winner in
this debate is Libertarianism.
Pull up libertarianism’s
floorboards, look beneath the surface into the big business PR
campaign’s early years, and there you’ll start to get a sense of its
purpose, its funders, and the PR hucksters who brought the peculiar
political strain of American libertarianism into being — beginning with
the libertarian movement’s founding father, Milton Friedman. Back in
1950, the House of Representatives held hearings on illegal lobbying
activities and exposed both Friedman and the earliest libertarian
think-tank outfit as a front for business lobbyists. Those hearings have
been largely forgotten, in part because we’re too busy arguing over the
finer points of “libertarian populism.”
Milton Friedman. In his
early days, before millions were spent on burnishing his reputation,
Friedman worked as a business lobby shill, a propagandist who would say
whatever he was paid to say. That's the story we need to revisit to get
to the bottom of the modern American libertarian "movement," to see
what it's really all about. We need to take a trip back to the post-war
years, and to the largely forgotten Buchanan Committee hearings on
illegal lobbying activities, led by a pro-labor Democrat from
Pennsylvania, Frank Buchanan.
What the Buchanan Committee
discovered was that in 1946, Milton Friedman and his U Chicago cohort
George Stigler arranged an under-the-table deal with a Washington
lobbying executive to pump out covert propaganda for the national real
estate lobby in exchange for a hefty payout, the terms of which were
never meant to be released to the public. They also discovered that a
lobbying outfit which is today credited by libertarians as the
movement’s first think-tank — the Foundation for Economic Education —
was itself a big business PR project backed by the largest corporations
and lobbying fronts in the country.
It starts just after the
end of World War Two, when America’s industrial and financial giants,
fattened up from war profits, established a new lobbying front group
called the Foundation for Economic Education (FEE) that focused on
promoting a new pro-business ideology—which it called “libertarianism”—
to supplement other business lobbying groups which focused on specific
policies and legislation.
The FEE is generally regarded as “the first libertarian think-tank” as Reason’s
Brian Doherty calls it in his book “Radicals For Capitalism: A
Freewheeling History of the Modern Libertarian Movement” (2007). As the
Buchanan Committee discovered, the Foundation for Economic Education was
the best-funded conservative lobbying outfit ever known up to that
time, sponsored by a Who’s Who of US industry in 1946.
A
partial list of FEE’s original donors in its first four years— a list
discovered by the Buchanan Committee — includes: The Big Three auto
makers GM, Chrysler and Ford; top oil majors including Gulf Oil,
Standard Oil, and Sun Oil; major steel producers US Steel, National
Steel, Republic Steel; major retailers including Montgomery Ward,
Marshall Field and Sears; chemicals majors Monsanto and DuPont; and
other Fortune 500 corporations including General Electric, Merrill
Lynch, Eli Lilly, BF Goodrich, ConEd, and more.
The FEE was
set up by a longtime US Chamber of Commerce executive named Leonard
Read, together with Donaldson Brown, a director in the National
Association of Manufacturers lobby group and board member at DuPont and
General Motors.
That is how libertarianism in America started: As an arm of big business lobbying.
Before
bringing back Milton Friedman into the picture, this needs to be
repeated again: “Libertarianism” was a project of the corporate lobby
world, launched as a big business “ideology” in 1946 by The US Chamber
of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers. The FEE’s
board included the future founder of the John Birch Society, Robert
Welch; the most powerful figure in the Mormon church at that time, J
Reuben Clark, a frothing racist and anti-Semite after whom BYU named its
law school; and United Fruit president Herb Cornuelle.
The
purpose of the FEE — and libertarianism, as it was originally created —
was to supplement big business lobbying with a pseudo-intellectual,
pseudo-economics rationale to back up its policy and legislative attacks
on labor and government regulations.
This background is
important in the Milton Friedman story because Friedman is a founding
father of libertarianism, and because the corrupt lobbying deal he was
busted playing a part in was arranged through the Foundation for
Economic Education.
According to Congressional hearings on
illegal lobbying activities 1946 was the year that Milton Friedman and
his U Chicago cohort George Stigler arranged an under-the-table deal
with a Washington lobbying executive to pump out covert propaganda for
the national real estate lobby in exchange for a hefty payout, the terms
of which were never meant to be released to the public.
The
arrangement between Friedman and Stigler with the Washington real estate
lobbyist was finally revealed during a congressional review of illegal
lobbying activities in 1950, called the Buchanan Committee. Yes, there
was something called accountability back then. I only came across the
revelations about Friedman’s sordid beginnings in the footnotes of an
old book on the history of lobbying by former Newsweek book editor
Karl Schriftgiesser,
published in 1951, shortly after the Buchanan Committee hearings ended.
The actual details of Milton Friedman’s PR deal are sordid and
familiar, with tentacles reaching into our ideologically rotted-out era.
False,
whitewashed history is as much a part of the Milton Friedman mythology
as it is the libertarian movement’s own airbrushed history about its
origins; the 1950 Buchanan Committee hearings expose both as creations
of big business lobby groups whose purpose is to deceive and defraud the
public and legislators in order to advance the cause of corporate
America.
The story starts like this: In 1946, Herbert Nelson
was the chief lobbyist and executive vice president for the National
Association of Real Estate Boards, and one of the highest paid lobbyists
in the nation. Mr. Nelson’s real estate constituency was unhappy with
rent control laws that Truman kept in effect after the war ended. Nelson
and his real estate lobby led what House investigators discovered was
the most formidable and best-funded opposition to President Truman in
the post-war years, amassing some $5,000,000 for their lobby
efforts—that’s $5mln in 1946 dollars, or roughly $60 million in 2012
dollars.
So Herbert Nelson contracted out the PR services of the
Foundation for Economic Education to concoct “third party” propaganda
designed to shore up the National Real Estate lobby’s legislative drive —
and the propagandists who took on the job were Milton Friedman and his U
Chicago cohort, George Stigler.
To understand the sort of
person Herbert Nelson was, here is a letter he wrote in 1949 that
Congressional investigators discovered and recorded:
"I do not
believe in democracy. I think it stinks. I don’t think anybody except
direct taxpayers should be allowed to vote. I don’t believe women should
be allowed to vote at all. Ever since they started, our public affairs
have been in a worse mess than ever."
It’s an old libertarian
mantra, libertarianism versus democracy, libertarianism versus women’s
suffrage; a position most recently repeated by billionaire
libertarian Peter Thiel — who was Ron Paul’s main campaign funder in his 2012 presidential campaign.
So
in 1946, this same Herbert Nelson turned to the Foundation for Economic
Education to manufacture some propaganda to help the National
Association of Real Estate Boards fight rent control laws. Nelson chose
to work with the FEE because he knew that the founder of the first
libertarian think-tank, Leonard Read, agreed with him on a lot of
important issues. Such as their mutual contempt for democracy, and their
disdain for the American public.
Leonard Read, the legendary
(among libertarians) founder/head of the FEE, argued that the public
should not be allowed to know which corporations donated to his
libertarian front-group because, he argued, the public could not be
trusted to make “sound judgments” with disclosed information:
"The
public reporting would present a single fact—the amount of a
contributor’s donation—to casual readers, persons having only a cursory
interest in the matter at issue, persons who would not and perhaps could
not possess all the facts. These folks of the so-called public thus
receive only oversimplifications or half-truths from which only
erroneous conclusions are almost certain to be drawn. If there is a
public interest in the rightness or wrongness of corporate or personal
donations to charitable, religious or education institutions, and I am
not at all ready to concede that there is, then that interest should be
guarded by some such agency as the Bureau of Internal Revenue, an agency
that is in a position to obtain all the facts, not by Mr. John Public
who lacks relevant information for the forming of sound
judgments...Public reporting of a half-truth is indeed a significant
provocation."
So in May 1946, Herbert Nelson of the Real
Estate lobby, looking for backup in his drive to abolish federal rent
control laws on behalf of landlords, contacted libertarian founder
Leonard Read of the FEE with an order for a PR pamphlet “with some such
title as ‘The Case against Federal Real Estate Control’,” according to
Karl Schriftgiesser’s book The Lobbyists.
What happened next, I’ll quote from Schriftgiesser:
"They
were now busily co-operating on the new project which the foundation
had engaged Milton Friedman and George J. Stigler to write. It was to be
called Roofs and Ceilings and it was to be an outright attack on rent
controls. When Nelson received a copy of the manuscript he wrote Read to
say, “The pamphlet...is a dandy. It is just what I wanted."
The
National Association of Real Estate Boards was so pleased with Milton
Friedman’s made-to-order propaganda that they ordered up 500,000
pamphlets from the FEE, and distributed them throughout the real estate
lobby’s vast local network of real estate brokers and agents.
In
libertarianism’s own airbrushed history about itself, the Foundation
for Economic Education was a brave, quixotic bastion of libertarian
“true believers” doomed to defeat at the all-powerful hands of the
liberal Keynsian Leviathan and the collectivist mob. Here is how
libertarian historian Brian Doherty describes the FEE and its chief
lobbyist Leonard Read:
"[Read]
would never explicitly scrape for funds... He never directly asked
anyone to give anything, he proudly insisted, and while FEE would sell
literature to all comers, it was also free to anyone who asked. His
attitude toward money was Zen, sometimes hilariously so. When asked how
FEE was doing financially, his favorite reply was, “Just perfectly.”...
Read wanted no endowments and frowned on any donation meant to be held
in reserve for some future need."
And here is what the committee’s own findings reported—findings lost in history:
"It
is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the Foundation for Economic
Education exerts, or at least expects to exert, a considerable influence
on national legislative policy....It is equally difficult to imagine
that the nation’s largest corporations would subsidize the entire
venture if they did not anticipate that it would pay solid, long-range
legislative dividends."
Or in the words of Rep. Carl Albert (D-OK): "Every bit of this literature is along propaganda lines."
The
manufactured history about libertarian’s origins, or its purpose,
parallels the manufactured myths about one of big business’s key
propaganda tools, Milton Friedman. As the author of The Lobbyists, not
knowing who Milton Friedman was at the time, wrote of Friedman’s
collaborative effort with Stigler:
“Certainly [the FEE’s]
booklet, Roofs or Ceilings, was definitely propaganda and sought to
influence legislation....This booklet was printed in bulk by the
foundation and half a million copies were sold at cost to the National
Association of Real Estate Boards, which had them widely distributed
throughout the country by its far-flung network of local member boards.”
There's
no idealism here. The notion that libertarian ideas have captured the
political imagination of millions in this country is a root problem: if
we're going to escape the corporate oligarchy that is running this
country--their ideas can't possibility be the alternative solution. This
movement has to be recognized for what it is.
Published daily online and monthly in print, NSFWCORP is The Future of Journalism (With Jokes). For more features, or to subscribe, click here.
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