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Vol. 16, No. 10
May 8, 2000
Table of Contents
More on Conspiracy
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The Skulls, the Bell, and Skull & Bones
by William Norman Grigg

The Order of Skull & Bones, and the Establishment of which it is a part, offers
an inviting target for Hollywood, but the makers of The Skulls miss the mark.
The Brotherhood of the Bell, on the other hand, credibly illustrates both how
actual conspiracies operate and the moral responsibility to combat such
entrenched evil.

��I can honestly say that there are good things about secret societies,"
declares screenwriter John Pogue, who scripted the current Universal Pictures
feature The Skulls. Film patrons who have seen Pogue�s movie might find that
statement a bit odd, considering the fact that the secret society for which his
film is named is a vicious elitist cabal that has no compunctions about using
murder and other foul means to achieve its objectives. Pogue�s qualified defense
of secret societies is also difficult to reconcile with Universal�s description
of the picture as "an original thriller that is rooted in undisputable facts
that are more frightening than any film." However, The Skulls ends with a
none-too-subtle hint that secret societies can be quite benign once they are
taken over by "good" men � and that their machinations are best ignored, rather
than exposed and fought.

Pogue�s qualified endorsement of secret societies makes perfect sense once it is
understood that he was "tapped" for membership in a secret society during his
senior year at Yale, although he doesn�t specify whether he was recruited by
Wolf�s Head, Scroll & Key, or Skull & Bones (the model for his screenplay).
During his freshman year, Pogue noticed that a senior counselor wore a curious
pin on the inside of his jacket. "I asked him if he was a member of a secret
society," Pogue recounts. "Without a word he just turned on his heel and walked
away. It was obvious to me that he took his organization very seriously and was
willing to put its interests ahead of his responsibilities as a counselor."
Nonetheless, when membership was extended to Pogue in his senior year, he
eagerly accepted � although he now insists that secret societies are part of "an
anachronistic system which is more appropriate for the Robber Barons of the 19th
Century than for today�s world."

The Order of Skull & Bones, which is also known as the Russell Trust, was
founded at Yale College in 1833 as chapter 322 of a German secret society. Every
year "the Order" invites 15 promising senior students into its ranks, offering
them entr�e into the inner core of the Power Elite. In 1873, an anonymous writer
for Yale�s The Iconoclast observed: "Out of every class Skull and Bones takes
its men. They have gone out into the world and have become, in many instances,
leaders in society. They have obtained control of Yale."

"Bonesmen" are arrayed in positions of influence in academia, high finance, and
diplomacy. The society�s historical roster includes Presidents William Howard
Taft and George Bush (as well as presidential aspirant George W. Bush), Supreme
Court Justice Potter Stewart, financial giants such as Percy Rockefeller and W.
Averell Harriman, and scores of other architects of the American Establishment.
Each of these men (the Order was closed to women until 1991) was required, as
part of the initiation rite, to lie naked in a coffin, disclose every detail of
his sexual history to his associates (which could be used as leverage against
the initiate, should he prove insufficiently submissive), and wrestle naked with
his fellow initiates in a mud pile. The purpose of these arcane rituals,
commented Ron Rosenbaum in a September 1977 Esquire magazine expos�, was to
transform "the idle progeny of the ruling class into morally serious leaders of
the establishment."

Obviously, the Order, and the Establishment of which it is a part, offers an
inviting target for Hollywood, but the makers of The Skulls have made the least
of their opportunity.

Although the film�s producers maintain that it is a socially consequential
examination of serious issues, they have created a fairly standard paranoid
thriller that is calculated to appeal to the teen market. Director Rob Cohen
describes the film as a "morally complex tale, that in a way speaks to many of
the issues young men and women are faced with as they start out in life �
friendship, loyalty, ambition, success." To its credit, the film does offer a
useful endorsement of the virtue of honorable friendship, in contrast to the
amoral networking that characterizes secret societies. "If it�s secret and
elite, it can�t be good," observes Will Beckford (Hill Harper), a student
journalist and the best friend to the film�s hero, Luke McNamara (Joshua
Jackson).

But in its treatment of a potent and important subject, The Skulls is
ultimately trite and surprisingly inert, and it fares very poorly in comparison
with The Brotherhood of the Bell, a 1970 made-for-television film starring Glenn
Ford that covered the same territory in much more compelling fashion. Not only
did The Brotherhood of the Bell offer a much sounder depiction of the genuine
evil that is wrought by elite secret societies such as Skull & Bones, its
ending, although dramatically ambiguous, illustrated the moral responsibility of
honorable people to expose conspiracies, rather than simply to co-exist with
them.

The Privileged Few
Luke McNamara, The Skulls� central character, is a hard-working New Haven
"Townie" who is working his way through Yale (the name is never mentioned, but
the setting is unmistakable) on the strength of his self-discipline and talent
for the challenging sport of crewing. Luke serves the wealthier students in the
school cafeteria, while using his spare time to refine his rowing ability.
Although he aspires to attend an Ivy League law school, his meager means all but
foreclose that possibility, unless he is willing to indenture himself by
accepting the crushing burden of additional student loans. Luke is also
convinced that his modest background precludes a future with Chloe (Leslie
Bibb), a classmate and friend for whom he nurses a secret crush. Luke�s fortunes
seem to change after he leads the crewing team in a dramatic regatta victory.
(In keeping with the dictates of Hollywood political correctness, the regatta
features crew teams that are not only racially diverse, but sex-integrated as
well.) Luke�s athletic prowess attracts the attention of recruiters for the
"Skulls," and he is tapped for membership � much to the disapproval of his best
friend Will Beckford. Luke is drugged and taken into the Skulls� inner sanctum
for his initiation, where he is assigned a "soul-mate" � Caleb Mandrake (Paul
Walker), the son of Judge Litten Mandrake (Craig T. Nelson). Luke�s friendship
to the aristocratic Caleb, which is reinforced with oaths of secrecy, quickly
alienates both Chloe and Will; nevertheless, Luke believes that the Skulls may
offer him his only chance to achieve his dreams.

Luke quickly discovers the privileges that come with membership in the elite. A
mysterious $20,000 deposit leaves his bank account swollen beyond recognition;
he and the other recruits are presented with an array of new sports cars, as
well as the purchased attentions of a bevy of pricey prostitutes. While Luke is
reveling in his sudden affluence, Will has launched an investigation of the
secret society � and in short order turns up dead. The predictable cover-up
ensues, and The Skulls becomes a fairly conventional action movie, distinguished
only by the fact that its climax (which will not be described here, in the
interest of those who have yet to see the film) is built upon an appeal to honor
and compassion, rather than a resort to simple violence on the part of the hero.

Fanning the Flames of War
Like the 1997 Mel Gibson vehicle Conspiracy Theory, The Skulls is a somewhat
cartoonish treatment of a serious subject � respectively, the CIA�s MK-Ultra
program and the influence of Yale�s Skull & Bones society (which, in the view of
some observers, essentially created the CIA). The only hint offered in The
Skulls that secret societies might be involved in anything grander than Ivy
League networking and petty corruption is offered by Senator Ames Levritt
(William Petersen), a "Skull" veteran assigned to mentor Luke. Asked by Luke why
the word "War" is carved into a marble wall of the Skulls� ritual room, Levritt
explains that it is through war that the society�s members prove their valor.
"But what if we�re at peace?" asks a puzzled Luke, to which Levritt offers the
knowing reply, "There are always wars to be fought."

In America�s Secret Establishment (1986), former Hoover Institution scholar
Antony C. Sutton argues, quite convincingly, that members of Skull & Bones have
carefully abetted conflicts � including world wars � in pursuit of a
"dialectical" strategy for world government. The machinations of "Bonesmen" in
the world of high finance and diplomacy, contends Sutton, have resulted in "the
deliberate creation of war, the knowing finance of revolution to change
governments, and the use of conflict to create a new world order."

Sutton has written several densely researched studies of Western financial
support to the Soviet and German National Socialist regimes. In America�s Secret
Establishment, Sutton documents the intricate network of Skull & Bones veterans
who were involved in creating the Communist and Nazi threats to Western
survival. His working hypothesis is that the Bones-dominated Establishment has
nurtured and controlled conflict as part of a grand dialectical strategy: "In
the dialectical process a clash of opposites brings about a synthesis," observes
Sutton � in this case, the use of war or the threat of war to tutor the masses
about the supposed need to submit to a world government. "There is no question
that the so-called establishment in the U.S. uses �managed conflict� [and that]
decisions of war and peace are made by a few in the elite and not by the many in
the voting process...."

In other words, The Skulls has it right when it has a conspirator observe that
"there are always wars to be fought." However, in the film the "wars" in
question take the form of internecine power struggles within the conspiracy,
rather than geopolitical tragedies that are orchestrated by Insiders seeking
global dominion.

Secrecy and Death
For Luke McNamara, the moral predicament in The Skulls is precipitated by the
death of his friend and the vows of secrecy that keep him from pursuing the
truth of that tragedy. Professor Andrew Patterson (Glenn Ford), the hero of The
Brotherhood of the Bell, also confronts the death of a close friend � but there
the similarities end. Professor Patterson learns that the seemingly innocuous
oaths he had sworn decades before as an undergraduate had granted him wealth,
influence, and prestige � but that the "due bill" of these perquisites was
little less than his soul.

The Brotherhood of the Bell opens with an initiation ritual held in a
fraternity house in the mythical St. George�s College in San Francisco.
Patterson is present to serve as a "senior" to a college student named Philip
Dunning (Robert Pine), who is to be inducted at a pre-dawn ceremony. Presiding
over the affair is financier Chad Halmon (Dean Jagger), who is Patterson�s
"senior." The brotherhood, Halmon informs Dunning, "will continue long after all
of us are dead. That continuity depends on one thing � obedience. Absolute
obedience." He advises the young student that his "due bill" for the Bell�s
benedictions "may come in twenty years, or not at all. It will be an act of
fealty, a royalty to the Brotherhood of the Bell." (This line of dialogue,
incidentally, is echoed in The Skulls.)

"You know, I could get anything I want," muses Dunning after his initiation.
"Anything that one can get with money, power, and the best connections," replies
Patterson. Pondering his status further, the student muses, "We�re part of the
Establishment now." "We are the Establishment," declares Patterson, just before
being presented with his own "due bill" from the Bell.

Halmon advises Patterson that the Bell has an assignment for him: He is to go to
an address and receive his assignment and "the means to carry it out." His
instructions are to discourage, by whatever necessary means, a close friend � a
defector from a Communist country � from taking an academic position at an
eastern university. Should his friend refuse to cooperate, Patterson is to use
the "means" provided him, a list containing the names of every person who helped
his friend defect.

Patterson protests his assignment to Halmon: "This file is the death sentence
for over thirty people if I send it to the embassy." His reluctance earns a
frigid rebuke from his superior in the conspiracy: "Your presence at the
initiation this morning was no accident. It was a reminder of your vow of
obedience.... You have received an assignment and the means to carry it out. Do
it, Andy. Do it � and be grateful more isn�t asked of you."

Patterson performs as ordered, telling his friend � who has survived
depression, war, the Nazis, the Communists, and the death of his family in a
concentration camp � that, "if you fail to turn down the appointment, that list
will be sent to people who will use it." "These are men and women who will be
shot," his friend exclaims. "They will be taken beneath the police station,
tortured, and killed." Reeling from the betrayal and heartbroken over the
threatened exposure of his fellow freedom-fighters, Patterson�s friend kills
himself. "I have no place left to go," explains the suicide note.

Subtle but Deadly
Stricken in conscience by his role as a blackmailer and convinced that he is
little better than a murderer, Patterson confides in his wife and resolves to
expose the conspiracy that effectively murdered his friend. When he tries to
resign from the Bell, Halmon tells him, "You had your option twenty-two years
ago.... You have received every option, every fellowship, every post you�ve ever
wanted. You have never competed for any thing in the last twenty-two years,
since you took that oath at sunrise." What the conspiracy has given Patterson,
the same conspiracy was now taking away, with a vengeance. When Patterson goes
to work he learns that the funding for his Institute has been cut off by its
bank, the chairman of which is a "brother." After Patterson calls a press
conference to denounce the Bell, his father�s business is suddenly hit with an
IRS audit and the media resounds with insinuations that he is in need of
psychiatric care.

Where The Skulls depicts the rewards and punishments offered by elite
conspiracies in vulgar, lowest-common-denominator terms, The Brotherhood of the
Bell dealt with the same issues with a degree of subtlety. Patterson hadn�t
suddenly discovered a bulging bank account or been instantly rewarded with the
accoutrements of wealth and power; rather, he and his father had received, at
crucial junctures, covert preferential treatment that gave them prosperity and
prestige. And when Patterson rebelled he discovered that he remained dependent
upon his hidden benefactors, who were able to destroy his life with a few simple
phone calls. "It�s as though your name is on an invisible national blacklist,"
observes one of Patterson�s friends.

With his livelihood destroyed, his marriage in peril, and his reputation all but
destroyed, Patterson decides that his only hope would be to persuade Philip
Dunning � the undergraduate student whom he inducted into the Bell � to help him
expose the cabal. "I�m at war with them," he tells Dunning. "You�ve either got
to be at war with them or you�re in their service." Just as importantly, he
advises the young man, "I�m your way out.... I�m giving you a chance to see what
your �due bill� will be before you take anything from them. That bill is a blank
check." Eventually Dunning overcomes his reluctance and allies himself with
Patterson in an effort to expose and rout the Bell � at whatever cost to his
personal prospects. By way of contrast, The Skulls ends with Luke McNamara
having been freed from the secret society by the benevolent "reformer" who is in
control of the cabal by the film�s end. In the film, McNamara, ostensibly the
hero, seeks nothing more than to extricate himself. Now that his "war" is over
(a point made explicitly in the film), Luke is content to row off into the New
England sunset with his badly undernourished girlfriend, meaning � as Andrew
Patterson would put it � that he sees nothing amiss in serving the conspiracy by
refusing to fight the evil it represents.

For all of its campiness, The Brotherhood of the Bell offers a credible
illustration of how actual conspiracies operate, and a very sound moral message
about the responsibility to confront entrenched evil. The Skulls is little more
than a diversionary confection for those � and their numbers are legion � who
eagerly consume lurid fiction depicting conspiracies, but can�t be troubled to
investigate the evidence regarding the real thing. .

 � Copyright 1994-2000 American Opinion Publishing Incorporated


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