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The Neoconservatives: Tyranny's Fifth Column
http://www.thedailybell.com/ ^ | April 30, 2015 | Nelson Hultberg

Posted on 04/30/2015 6:46:34 AM PDT by B4Ranch

The term "Fifth Column" came into popular use in the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s and thereafter as socialism and fascism were sweeping into conflict to take over the nations of the West. It means a group of guerrillas, activists, intellectuals, etc. who work to undermine a nation (or some larger organization) from within. Its activities can be out in the open, or they can be secret.

Today in America, the neoconservative political movement represents a "Fifth Column" for the forces of collectivism. Its intellectuals and activists promote themselves as conservatives who oppose the liberals, but their political philosophy has nothing to do with what is known as American conservatism, which has always stood for a limited constitutional government and free enterprise. These values are anathema to today's "neoconservatives" in the nation's political, literary and scholarly circles.

The late Irving Kristol, editor of The Public Interest, and Norman Podhoretz, editor of Commentary, were the founders of the neoconservative movement in the late 1960s. In their youth during the 1930s and 1940s, they were followers of the communist Leon Trotsky. Having bought into the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, they saw socialism as an ideal that needed to be spread to the West. While they and their followers subsequently modified the Marxist roots of their ideology in favor of a more gradualist methodology, they always remained adamant supporters of collectivism for America. Are they outright socialists? No, but their policy proposals have always been in favor of massive government welfarism domestically and an aggressive militaristic foreign policy that seeks what is termed "benevolent global hegemony," in which the U.S. military is to be used preemptively to spread democracy throughout the world.

The paradigm that neoconservatives have given their lives to is built upon a centralized mega-state running American society from Washington and also, as much as possible, the rest of the world.

In Irving Kristol's eyes, the laissez-faire vision of the Founders was a "doctrinaire fantasy." Its ideals "make it inadequate... for a political community," he wrote in 1977. In other words, to adhere today to what Jefferson and Madison advocated is anachronistic foolishness. According to Kristol and his fellow neoconservatives, such a view must be phased out of our collective conscience.1

Kristol died in 2009, but his worldview dominates all of today's younger neoconservatives. He believed that capitalism and individual rights are dangerous institutions. They must be constantly modified by a powerful state that redistributes wealth whenever necessary to mold market enterprises into an appropriately egalitarian social structure. In the neoconservative mind, freedom, while desirable, is not a primary political value. Machiavelli had the better idea; expediency is the best way to rule. People need to be manipulatively led by statist elites – via open dialogue and democracy if possible, but by deception, coercion and expediency when necessary.2

The neoconservatives, thus, represent tyranny's Fifth Column in America. They are deceiving the people into believing that they are genuine conservatives, but like the socialists who were their mentors, they call themselves what they know the people want to hear. These ersatz conservatives have now grown to dominate Washington's think tanks, Wall Street's brokerages and banks, and many major publications and universities. They are highly influential writers, scholars, pundits, publishers, institute heads, bankers and corporate moguls.

The Serpents

What follows are eight of the more influential neoconservatives in America, past and present. These are not friends of freedom, but enemies. They need to be recognized for who they are, traitors to what America was meant to be. They need to be exposed and attacked as we would attack serpents that are slithering into our back yards to threaten our safety and our families.

Irving Kristol
Considered to be the "godfather of neoconservatism." A powerful liberal writer during the 1950s and 1960s, he had grown disenchanted with the Democratic Party by 1970 and switched to the Republican Party, coining the name "neoconservative" for the band of intellectuals he brought with him. Immensely persuasive in the shaping of the movement.

Norman Podhoretz
One of the major founders with Irving Kristol of neoconservatism in the late 1960s, he served as Editor-in-Chief of Commentary magazine from 1960 to 1995, pouring out a myriad of articles and books on the need to build America into an all-pervasive "collectivist state," but one that respects traditional values instead of the amoral values of liberalism.

Richard Perle
Called the "Prince of Darkness" because of his extreme hawkish military stands. A member of the Reagan Pentagon, now serves in Washington think tanks such as the Hudson Institute and the American Enterprise Institute. Vehemently promoted the invasion of Iraq, and to this day favors extensive intervention in the Middle East to bring about regime changes.

Paul Wolfowitz
The most hawkish advocate in the Bush administration and the architect of the Bush Doctrine. A visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, he is a former World Bank chief and Pentagon official who was closely involved in the decision to invade Iraq in 2003. He has been back and forth between academia and government for the entirety of his career.

William Kristol
Son of Irving Kristol and editor of the prestigious Weekly Standard, he was the cofounder of PNAC (Project for the New American Century) with Robert Kagan. He is a widely recognized pundit and influential Washington political operative. Director at the Foreign Policy Initiative and member of numerous think tanks in Washington as well as a Fox News regular.

Robert Kagan
Cofounder with Bill Kristol of the Project for the New American Century, Kagan is a policy pundit and historian based at the Brookings Institution. He serves also as a contributing editor at The New Republic and, thus, personifies the collectivist liberalism that infuses neoconservatism. They are statist ideological brothers.

Frank Gaffney
The director of the hawkish neoconservative Center for Security Policy, Gaffney has been a longtime advocate of interventionist U.S. foreign policies, ever-increasing military budgets and aggressive attacks upon the Islamic world. A regular on Fox News.

Charles Krauthammer
A writer for The Washington Post, Charles Krauthammer is considered to be the most influential neoconservative political columnist in America. He is a Pulitzer Prize winner, Fox News talking head and was a weekly panelist on the PBS show "Inside Washington" from 1990 to 2013.

There are, of course, many other prominent neoconservatives than just these eight. Hundreds of others like Bill Bennett, Elliott Abrams, Joshua Muravchik, James Woolsey, John Bolton, Max Boot, Karl Rove, David Frum and Condoleezza Rice are assiduously working to advance mega-statism throughout America and the world.

Socialist Roots of Neoconservatism

By 1910, socialism had become the new wave of the future in European universities. The Fabians were growing to power in Britain and numerous socialist intellectuals were emigrating to America to begin subversion of the citadel of capitalism.

One problem, however, confronted the invading intellectuals coming to our shores. The American people were vehemently resistant to socialism. Fabians and Cultural Marxists soon realized that the socialist revolution would never take hold in America as "socialism." They realized they must redefine their revolution and disguise it. Thus, between 1910 and 1920 they began to refer to themselves as "progressives," which solved their alienation problem. Americans were willing to listen to "progressive" ideas, but not to "socialist" ideas.

This is classic Marxist strategy: Become in name and image whatever will more readily convince potential converts. Retain your fundamental collectivist principles, but change the methods of implementation to fit the situation.

In the years between 1920 and 1940 the original neoconservatives like Irving Kristol, Norman Podhoretz, Daniel Bell, Nathan Glazer, and Sidney Hook were coming of age and developing their worldview. At first openly socialist, they soon adopted the label of "progressive," and eventually began to use the term "liberal" because of it's widespread acceptance in American intellectual circles. Thus socialists became progressives who then became liberals who promoted progressive policies. The intellectual coup d'état was complete. Tyrannical socialism could now be promoted as something liberal, benign and progressive.

All intellectuals of the left were now solidified around promoting socialist ideology under the name of "liberalism." Such a strategy became spectacularly successful up through the late 1960s, moving America insidiously toward the collectivist ideal of an egalitarian society via massive government coercion. The goal was to bring about "equality of results" in life by leveling down productive people as much as possible to the lowest common denominator. The Marxist vision was making great progress by eroding the individualism that had created and built America.

Unfortunately, the mid-1960s came unglued socially because America's youth went bonkers by adopting a New Left radicalism that shook the politics of liberalism to its core. Counterculture rebellion raged among millions of young people who came home from college to kill their donkey parents ideologically. Stability and sanity collapsed into a heap of drugs, nihilism, and contempt for conventional liberalism. It was at this time that Kristol, Podhoretz and numerous of their powerhouse liberal colleagues switched to the Republican Party in face of George McGovern's 1972 takeover of the Democratic Party. They cast off the name "liberal" and adopted the name "neoconservative" so as to break totally from what they perceived as the lunatic fringe of New Left liberalism. Thus the neoconservative revolution was born via yet another name change. Socialists who became progressives who became liberals had now become "neoconservatives."

Of course, the fundamental principles of collectivism and mega-statism were not discarded, only the name of liberalism. Ideologically the neoconservatives were still very much collectivists and statists. But the new name gave them a new life in which they felt they could thrive more successfully. Mega-statism with traditional values had always been their political vision; now it could be openly promoted as neoconservatism. It caught on and attracted droves of big league scholars and pundits to join with it, which grew into today's neoconservative hold over Wall Street, the nation's corporate moguls, the Republican Party and many of Washington's prestigious think tanks.

The serpents had propagated. The Fifth Column had done its job. Thousands in the media became quite comfortable subscribing to "neo" conservatism and discarded the philosophy of "libertarian" conservatism, which had built the country and was the true conservatism, the true opposition to liberalism. The American people (conservative by nature) fell for the hoax and loyally supported the neoconservative movement, assuming it was what would keep the country free when actually it was working to do just the opposite. It was smuggling America into statism.

Thus both liberals and neoconservatives and their respective political parties – the Democrats and Republicans – are relentlessly moving our country into mega-statism today with full support from our professors, our media and our people. "Corrupt the money and the language," said Marx. Freedom and capitalism will then fall. Today's neoconservatives are not conservative; they are rabid collectivists. But you won't hear that from the American people. They have been bamboozled.

The only solution to this ideological deception and corruption is to revive the vision of "libertarian conservatism" subscribed to by the Founders. This means a free market, not a mega-state. It means the protection of equal rights, not the conveyance of special privileges. It means a mind-our-own-business foreign policy, not the pursuit of world hegemony. If the Founders were alive today they would be heaping the same scorn on the "neoconservatives" that they heaped on the Tories and King George. Tyranny is still tyranny whether it calls itself socialism, fascism, liberalism or neoconservatism.


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1 posted on 04/30/2015 6:46:34 AM PDT by B4Ranch
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“neo” is the prefix acronym for ‘new economic order’.


2 posted on 04/30/2015 6:52:34 AM PDT by B4Ranch ( Refuse to live in fear of life or death.)
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To: B4Ranch

Yes, that’s right....Charles Krauthammer is an evil Jewish neo-con who means to establish a Marxist world order under the guise of conservatism. Sure. My advice to you....lay off the LSD.


3 posted on 04/30/2015 6:56:26 AM PDT by driftless2
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To: B4Ranch

Misnamed “conservatives”… also known as the GOPe. With their (also misnamed) “progressive” allies they are guardians of the 1%. Both favor top-down all powerful centralized government with strangling taxes and regulations on the common folk! When the GOP swept the 2014 midterms, sadly these people (Boehner, McConnell, etc.) were left in place. They and Obama have few disagreements. Think pro wrestling... it looks like a fight, sounds like a fight... but all is scripted and the outcome predetermined!

Jeb Bush (and also Hillary?) is their preferred candidate for 2016.


4 posted on 04/30/2015 6:59:20 AM PDT by FiddlePig
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To: driftless2
Some of these are wrong, notably Krauthammer.

But some are right.

5 posted on 04/30/2015 6:59:23 AM PDT by Lazamataz (Jeb Bush makes John McCain look like Barry Goldwater.)
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To: Branch; Zionist Conspirator

So these neo-cons sound like some kind of illuminati... Or even, Elders... Elders of or from some kind of ancient paradise. Or perhaps some kind of “sign.” Hey, Zion means ‘sign’ in Hebrew!

Holy Moses, Batman!


6 posted on 04/30/2015 7:01:20 AM PDT by Phinneous
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To: B4Ranch

I’m surprised that Nelson Hultberg isn’t pimping his blog in person, he usually does.


7 posted on 04/30/2015 7:01:54 AM PDT by Tijeras_Slim
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To: B4Ranch

This article implies we don’t belong in the middle east and the writer is sadly mistaken. Power abhors a vacuum. If we abandon our allies over there, they will find new allies. I promise you, we won’t like their new friends (Russia and China). I agree we don’t stick our nose in every business, but we do need to get involved when our national security interests are at stake. We are in a new type of war since 9/11. Really, since the fall of the Shah of Iran. This is assymetrical warfare and most times will not involve large armies and big campaigns. If we don’t do this work, there will be many more 9/11’s.

It has also fallen to us (mostly) to keep the world’s waterways open and free to commerce. Most of our international trade is by ship. Would we rather go back to the days of our founders and just pay off rogue states to allow us to conduct trade near their waterways (Barbary Pirates)? For many years, this job was mostly tackled by the UK. After WWII it fell to us. Do we abandon this role? Get ready to pay a lot higher prices for those goods as the cost of doing business in the modern world increases with payoffs to jackboot thugs overseas so they don’t attack the worlds shipping.


8 posted on 04/30/2015 7:07:01 AM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden
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To: B4Ranch
Gaffney has been a longtime advocate of interventionist U.S. foreign policies, ever-increasing military budgets and aggressive attacks upon the Islamic world.

Gaffney rocks. The hit piece forgot to mention though that Gaffney has been going after Grover Norquist for being a closet Muslim Brotherhood supporter. Yet another reason to be a Gaffney supporter.

9 posted on 04/30/2015 7:13:32 AM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: B4Ranch

Krauthamer is no friend of conservatives.


10 posted on 04/30/2015 7:23:59 AM PDT by subterfuge (Minneseeota: the laughingstock of the nation - for lots of reasons!)
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To: Tijeras_Slim
I’m surprised that Nelson Hultberg isn’t pimping his blog in person, he usually does.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't it only pimping if they don't post the whole article, so you have to click to read the rest?

11 posted on 04/30/2015 7:27:21 AM PDT by JimRed (Excise the cancer before it kills us; feed & Ifwater the Tree of Liberty! TERM LIMITS NOW & FOREVER!)
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To: JimRed

Point taken.


12 posted on 04/30/2015 7:28:55 AM PDT by Tijeras_Slim
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To: Old Teufel Hunden

>> It has also fallen to us (mostly) to keep the world’s waterways open and free to commerce. <<

Absolutely. It’s a very important aspect of our military preparedness.

But in today’s world, here’s what might be a more important reason for a strong U. S. Navy:

To deter a rogue atomic power, like Iran, from using a ship-based missile to launch a nuclear attack on the USA — especially a missile carrying an EMP weapon.


13 posted on 04/30/2015 7:33:39 AM PDT by Hawthorn
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To: vbmoneyspender

Gaffney is a loon.

This article is spot on that this group is very collectivist and statist. However this group also enjoys kiling Muslims, so its all good on FR


14 posted on 04/30/2015 7:33:58 AM PDT by MadIsh32 (In order to be pro-market, sometimes you must be anti-big business)
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To: B4Ranch

Neo-conservative is an odd term since they are the ideological heirs of Teddy Roosevelt’s economic activism in domestic affairs, and imperialism in foreign affairs.


15 posted on 04/30/2015 7:36:27 AM PDT by NRx (An unrepentant champion of the old order and determined foe of damnable Whiggery in all its forms.)
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To: JimRed

>> I’m surprised that Nelson Hultberg isn’t pimping his blog in person, he usually does.<<

Maybe he doesn’t need to do the job himself. Putin’s FSB Internet trolls in St. Petersburg can probably handle the task nicely.


16 posted on 04/30/2015 7:37:02 AM PDT by Hawthorn
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To: B4Ranch

Just can’t understand how lying about what you really believe is good.


17 posted on 04/30/2015 7:48:53 AM PDT by reasonisfaith ("...because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved." (2 Thessalonians))
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To: B4Ranch

Why is this article just showing up now?

The present administration has been Bush-bashing, in true Soviet style, for the last 7 years.

I find this ‘discovered truth’, rather conveniently timed, since the on-air “krauthammer, you are a neocon .. No, i’m not!” recently, and the few days ago anti-Obama verbage spoken by G.W. Bush, former President.

As to the correctness of all the information, since there are a lot of hidden Internet links, I doubt it.

As to someone’s grand idea, that ‘the neocon’ still lives, and is oppressing the minds of those in fly-over America, they need another ex-lax tablet.


18 posted on 04/30/2015 7:50:31 AM PDT by Terry L Smith
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To: Old Teufel Hunden

What about the larger point regarding neoconservatism and neoconservatives?


19 posted on 04/30/2015 7:51:08 AM PDT by reasonisfaith ("...because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved." (2 Thessalonians))
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To: Terry L Smith

On the other hand, it’s clear that people like Kristol and Krauthammer speak with forked tongues.


20 posted on 04/30/2015 7:53:45 AM PDT by reasonisfaith ("...because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved." (2 Thessalonians))
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