-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

from:
http://www.salon.com/books/it/2000/01/21/bones/index1.html
Click Here: <A
HREF="http://www.salon.com/books/it/2000/01/21/bones/index.html">Untitled</A>
-----
--Are the rumors true? Certainly not all of them; the society is probably not
the fountainhead of a vast international conspiracy to spread Hegel's
dialectic via the drug trade. --

Well, now that links to parascope and a familiar story.;-)
Om
K
-----


    Skulls in the closet
What does membership in a bastion of privilege say about George W. Bush's
character?

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Stephen Prothero
Jan. 21, 2000 | One evening in May 1967, a man dressed in a black hood and
sporting a gold pin emblazoned with a skull and crossbones approached George
W. Bush, slapped him on the back and offered him membership in Yale's oldest
secret society. The governor-to-be accepted and, like his grandfather and
father before him, became a member of Skull and Bones.

Skull and Bones is one of the nation's most exclusive and powerful secret
societies. The list of past and present Bonesmen, as members are called,
makes California's Bohemian Grove retreat (also patronized by Gov. Bush and
his dad) look like your local Rotary Club. Members have served as senators,
secretaries of state, national security advisors, attorneys general, CIA
directors and Supreme Court justices. They have also become presidents of
universities, CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, foundation presidents and
founders of investment banks. Two Bonesmen, William Howard Taft and George
Bush, were elected president, a post Gov. Bush now hopes to fill.

Much has been made of the Texas governor's "youthful indiscretions" and of
his gentleman's C's at Yale. But membership in Bones shaped George W. Bush
far more than road trips or college courses. In the wake of the
Clinton-Lewinsky mess, character has emerged as a leading theme in
presidential politics. An examination of the culture of Skull and Bones
should shed some light on the character of the latest Bush who would be
president.

Though a seniors-only society, Skull and Bones is more than a tad sophomoric.
Each May on "Tap Day," senior Bonesmen troll around Yale's campus, selecting,
or "tapping," 15 juniors for membership in the upcoming class. The initiation
rites that follow sound like something out of Fred Flintstone's Water Buffalo
Lodge or a Robert Bly retreat. Each knight, as neophytes are called,
reportedly regales his fellow initiates with his sexual exploits. (He may or
may not be naked and may or may not be lying in a coffin.) During initiation,
he endures some sort of physical challenge (mud wrestling? diving into a dung
pile?) before being born again with a new name and a new identity. In the
outside world, members are never to speak about their society. If outsiders
raise the topic, Bonesmen are supposed to leave the room.

Members take their secrecy oath seriously -- no insider has ever published an
expos� -- so it is impossible to separate the realities from the rumors that
swirl around the society. One rumor has each new member receiving a $15,000
payout. Another says the interior of the "Tomb" (the eerie Gothic
headquarters where twice-a-week meetings are held) is decorated with human
remains, including the skulls and bones of notables such as Mexican
revolutionary Pancho Villa and Apache warrior Geronimo.

Are the rumors true? Certainly not all of them; the society is probably not
the fountainhead of a vast international conspiracy to spread Hegel's
dialectic via the drug trade. But Bush is not helping to clear the air. Like
his father, who has consistently refused to discuss Skull and Bones, he isn't
talking. And members of his 1968 Skull and Bones class whom I contacted
either neglected to return my calls or refused to comment on what goes on
inside the Tomb. "We don't discuss those things," said Roy Leslie Austin, now
a sociology professor at Penn State. "We just don't."

Skull and Bones was founded by William H. Russell in 1832, more than a decade
before Texas joined the union. At the time, men's fraternal organizations
were so popular that politicians like former President John Quincy Adams were
denouncing their secret oaths as cancers on the body of the republic. When
Phi Beta Kappa responded to the anti-masonry in the air by abolishing its
oath of secrecy, Russell (who later become Yale's valedictorian) founded "The
Scull and Bones" as an alternative. For the next century and a half, Skull
and Bones, as Russell's society came to be known, guarded its secrecy with
the zeal of Howard Hughes and the nuttiness of J.D. Salinger.

In 1856, Bones incorporated as the Russell Trust Association and members
built the grim sandstone mausoleum that is still used as society
headquarters. In 1876, pranksters broke into that crypt through a window and
investigated its interior. Bonesmen responded by bricking up all the windows,
which remain sealed today. Supporters describe Skull and Bones as a
meritocracy that, by rewarding excellence in academics, athletics and the
arts, has fostered achievement at Yale and beyond. From this perspective, the
society's rites, however secretive or sophomoric, promote fading virtues such
as friendship and loyalty. And the society does have an astonishing record
when it comes to turning out leaders.
 Next page | Meritocracy or bastion of privilege?
=====

Russell saw the society as a way to promote and reward academic excellence.
But Bones gradually expanded its mission, tapping not only outstanding
scholars but also football captains, Yale Daily News editors and members of
the a cappella group the Whiffenpoofs. Eventually, the society also began
selecting Bonesmen not for what they had accomplished in life but for who
they were by birth.

George Herbert Walker Bush was no doubt selected in part because his father,
Prescott S. Bush, was a U.S. senator and a Bonesman. But the president-to-be
was also a decorated World War II pilot and captain of the Yale baseball
team. George W. Bush, who had a less illustrious youth than his father, is
more plainly a legacy member, tapped because of his genes and not his deeds.

>From its inception, Skull and Bones has been a bastion of privilege -- an
ideal steppingstone from a preppie past to an establishment future. And so
the society has been regularly denounced for its elitism as well as its
secrecy. In 1878, the Yale Courant ripped Bonesmen as "vampires of darkness."
Bones, it wrote, was a "a curse to the college" that promoted "royal and
stylish living" and divided the undergraduate classes into "castes." That
same year, the Yale Daily News called the society's mummeries "supremely
silly." During the 1960s, critics claimed Skull and Bones and other Yale-only
secret societies rewarded conformity rather than achievement. Today,
denouncing those societies as anti-democratic cults is almost as routine at
Yale as Tap Day itself.

Bones waited about a century to respond to the criticism. After World War II,
it began admitting blacks and Jews. In 1991, the outgoing Bones delegation
tried to tap the first Boneswomen. Patriarchs, as Bones alumni are called,
literally barred the doors to the Tomb. Led by conservative William F.
Buckley Jr., they obtained a court order temporarily blocking non-male
members. In the society-wide vote that followed, however, the conservative
blue bloods were defeated and a few women were admitted to the rolls.

There are likely many things this society does well. I would love to have
been a skull on the wall in a private debate between, say, Sen. David Boren
and Sen. John Kerry or authors Archibald MacLeish and John Hersey (all
Bonesmen). But I doubt the Tomb fosters the sort of character necessary for
leadership in multicultural America and the new global economy. And I am
certain it is an unsuitable incubator for the presidency in the 21st century.
This is true for Bonesmen tapped for their accomplishments in rowing or
debating. But it is doubly true of those who, like Bush, were tapped
primarily for the accomplishments of their forebears.

Since our country's inception, Americans have been profoundly ambivalent
about power and wealth. That is why Horatio Alger is as much a part of the
American mythos as is the Titanic. We like to worship the high and the
mighty, but we love to see them go under. True, the rich are different from
the rest of us. So are the powerful. But both are supposed to live, at least
in this country, by some rules. The rich are expected to earn their money
through hard work or cunning. And the powerful are to earn their power in
public elections, not private clubs. Just as many years ago George W. Bush
was suddenly tapped for an exclusive society, critics today might charge that
he similarly coasted into becoming an odds-on favorite for the White House
before a single ballot had been cast.

salon.com | Jan. 21, 2000

- - - - - - - - - - - -
About the writer
Stephen Prothero graduated from Yale in 1982. He teaches in the religion
department at Boston University and is the author of "The White Buddhist: The
Asian Odyssey of Henry Steel Olcott" (Indiana University Press).
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