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Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.mega.nu:8080/ampp/">The Architecture of
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Agency of Fear
Opiates and Political Power in America
By Edward Jay Epstein
Chapter 4 - The Barker of Slippery Gulch
A coup consists of the infiltration of a small but critical segment of the
state apparatus, which is then used to displace the government from its
control of the remainder.
-EDWARD LUTTWAK, Coup d'Etat
 Of course the fragmentation of the police in the United States has largely
resulted from the deliberate intention of denying the federal government a
possible instrument of tyranny.
-EDWARD LUTTWAK, Coup dEtat


Richard Milhous Nixon did not follow any of the charted channels of American
politics in his extraordinary passage to the presidency. Whereas other
American presidents could point to their "humble origins" with some sort of
romantic pride (or even describe their family summer home as a "log cabin"),
Nixon really suffered during his childhood from poverty. His father, Frank
Nixon, moved to California at the turn of the century after having been
frostbitten working in an open streetcar in Columbus, Ohio. After working as
a farmhand and oil roustabout, he attempted to cultivate lemons outside Los
Angeles. After Richard was born, on January 9, 1913, Nixon abandoned the
"lemon -ranch," and the family moved to the Quaker community of Whittier,
California. They were so impoverished that Nixon's mother was forced to work
as a scrubwoman in a sanatorium in Arizona in order to pay for the treatment
of Richard's brother Harold, who suffered from tuberculosis. At the age of
ten Richard Nixon was sent to work as a farm laborer to help out his family.
He fully understood the degrading nature of poverty; at the age of fourteen
he was forced to work as a barker for a fortune wheel for the Slippery Gulch
Rodeo, a cover for illegal gambling rooms in back of the rodeo."

Young Nixon also exercised his oratory skills on the Whittier High School
debating team and won prizes for the best oration on the Constitution. He
graduated from high school in the. depths of the Depression, and worked his
way through a small Quaker college in Whittier while living at home and
supporting his family. Then, winning a scholarship, he attended law school at
Duke University. Although he distinguished himself and graduated third in his
class, all the prestigious New York law firms where he applied for a job
turned down his application, apparently because he did not have the right
contacts or connections. He continued to eke out a living as a clerk in a
local law office in Whittier for the first few years after law school; then,
when World War II broke out, he joined the Navy as a junior officer. He was
eventually sent to Middle River, Maryland, to assist the Navy in liquidating
contracts for a flying-boat project (in which Howard Hughes also took an
active interest).

Late in 1945, a few months after he completed the settlement for the Navy on
the boat project, Nixon was invited by a group of local businessmen, in his
hometown of Whittier, to seek the Republican nomination for the congressional
seat then held by Jerry Voorhis, a liberal Democrat. But until that time,
Nixon had had no grounding in local California politics-indeed, he attended
his first political rally in 1945-and therefore, in lieu of local issues, he
played upon a more generalized fear: the fear of communism. In likening
communism to an invisible virus that infects the body politic, he was able to
arouse fears among the public that even avowed non-Communists might serve as
carriers of this dread disease. Thus, even though his opponent Voorhis was
outspoken in his criticism Of Communism, Nixon labeled him in the public's
mind as a tool of communism. The politics of fear worked for Nixon, and he
was elected to Congress in 1946 and reelected in 1948. In 1950 he defeated
Helen Gahagan Douglas for her seat in the United States Senate, having
defamed his opponent as the "pink lady" and a "dupe" of communism. In the
Senate, he so adroitly managed the putative menace of international communism
that General Dwight D. Eisenhower chose him as his vice-presidential
candidate. In 1952, seven years after he entered politics as a Navy veteran,
the former barker from Slippery Gulch was elected vice-president of the
United States.

During the next eight years, as vice-president, Nixon traveled widely to the
various power centers of the world, including the Soviet Union, and served as
one of President Eisenhower's main liaisons with the National Security
Council. In a sense then, even as vice-president, Nixon had relatively little
experience with domestic issues in America.

In 1960, however, Nixon found that times had changed in American politics:
the fears of communism which he had so successfully exploited in the late
forties and early fifties had subsided, and Americans were becoming
increasingly concerned with domestic problems rather than international ones.
In a close election in 1960 he was defeated for the presidency by John F.
Kennedy; and two years later he was defeated by Pat Brown for the
governorship of California. Rather than a national hero of the Republican
party, he was now a defeated man without a future in politics. In 1963 former
vice-president Nixon moved to New York City and joined, as a senior partner,
the law firm of Mudge, Stern, Baldwin and Todd.

Though he had not entirely abandoned his dreams and schemes of being
president, Nixon realized that the menace of communism on which he built his
early reputation no longer was an effective focus for organizing the fears of
the American public. Since the Cold War had waned as a national concern,
domestic issues received increasingly more attention in the national press.
The former vice-president had no claim to any special knowledge or competence
in these domestic fields; he was rarely called upon for public comment.
Indeed, after his 1962 defeat in the California gubernatorial election, ABC
News presented Nixon's "political obituary." If he was again to become a
center of political attention, Nixon foresaw that he would have to identify
himself with the control of a new menace. Thus he turned to the growing
unease that was being reported out of the major cities in America-riots had
erupted in Los Angeles, New York, and other major cities in the mid-1960s
(and though not a new phenomenon in themselves, they were for the first time
nationally televised); crime rates, as reported by the FBI, had practically
doubled between 1960 and 1967; and polls were indicating that personal safety
from crimes was rapidly becoming the dominant concern of the electorate.
Until then, the law-and-order battle cry had been used mainly by local
politicians for local problems and as a shibboleth for the race problem and
crime control; Nixon found he could now use it to organize fears on a wider
scale. In 1967 Nixon, using much the same rhetoric as that employed against
the threat of international communism, attempted in an article in Readers
Digest-entitled "What Has Happened to America?"-to elevate local crime to the
status of a national menace jeopardizing the very survival of the nation.
Successfully capturing law and order as a political issue, he argued that "in
a few short years ... America has become among the most lawless and violent
[nations] in the history of free people" because liberal decisions in the
courts were "weakening the peace forces against the criminal forces." As in
his earlier war, against the Communist menace, Nixon suggested that
government officials and judges were soft on crime and were subverting the
efforts of police to prevent criminals from preying on an innocent society.

 After he received the Republican nomination for president in 1968, he
immediately ordered his chief speech writers to develop law and order into a
major theme of his campaign. Nixon, of course, did not invent the issue of
law and order. Until 1968, however, the law and order issue in American
politics was confined mainly to the state and local levels, as noted in the
case of Nelson Rockefeller, and scant, if any, mention of this motif can be
found in prior presidential campaigns. To be sure, politicians had earlier
urged "wars" or "crusades" against alleged criminal conspiracies-notably, the
Mafia as a means of achieving a national reputation. (Estes Kefauver and
Robert F. Kennedy had both waged highly publicized wars against conspiracies
of organized crime and had gained national prominence for their efforts,
though there were few indictments.*) For the most part, however, these
earlier efforts were intended only to produce the sort of publicity which
would allay the fears of the public by exposing a few symbolic "chiefs" of
the underworld (who usually turned out to be bookies). Nixon played on the
law-and-order theme in a very different way: the target be directed his
audience's attention to was unorganized crime that directly threatened the
life and safety of all - muggings, murder, robbery, rape, and burglary. The
threat to the public safety that he depicted was not a handful of Mafia
chiefs but the subversion of the legal system by those who were more
sympathetic to the rights of criminals than to the protection of the
innocent. Nixon shrewdly perceived that law and order could be effectively
transposed into an issue of the Democrats' undermining of public authority.
* Victor S. Navasky has given an excellent account in Kennedy Justice of how
Attorney General Kennedy presented Joseph Valachi, who claimed to be a member
of the criminal conspiracy while in prison, to the national media in order to
mobilize support for legislation expanding wiretap and other authorities
being proposed by the Kennedy administration-clearly an adumbration of the
future.

Even at this early stage, Nixon realized that unless he could preempt the
crime issue for himself by generalizing it, Governor George Wallace, who was
making an independent bid for the presidency in 1968, could be expected to
exploit it to attract votes among Nixon's natural constituency.

Though Nixon successfully developed law and order into a principal issue of
the 1968 campaign, he intentionally avoided defining the problem in anything
more than a vague way. Patrick J. Buchanan, a thirty-one-year-old journalist
from St. Louis who was then working as Nixon's chief speech writer on the
law-and-order issue, recalls the polls' suggesting that the public believed
that lawlessness could be dealt with by a more determined effort of the
federal government. However, at that stage, Nixon's speech writers had little
specific knowledge about the characteristics or causes of crime and disorder.
Although Governor Nelson Rockefeller had brilliantly pioneered the heroin
menace in New York State, and Nixon himself realized the political potential
of a drug-abuse menace, the candidate's strategists were not yet fully
conversant with the vocabulary of dread that was used by Rockefeller to
exploit the drug issue. As late as September 12, 1968, Buchanan teletyped
Martin Pollner, a member of Nixon's law firm and campaign staff who had been
a former prosecutor in New York City, that it was "vital that we get some
background on the narcotics problem in this country." Pollner immediately
consulted with John W. Dean, 111, another lawyer-working in the Nixon
campaign, and then wrote a four-page memorandum to Buchanan-"Potential
Materials and Recommendations for R.N.'s Position on Narcotics and Drug
Abuse." Then, with the help of Peter Velde, another lawyer on the campaign
staff, Pollner sent another memorandum on the "narcotics problem in southern
California." These analyses detailing the problems of law enforcement and
rehabilitation, however, were far too specific for Nixon. The speech he gave
on the subject of narcotics in September, 1968, in Anaheim, California, for
which Buchanan requested this research, began with Nixon's describing a
letter that he had supposedly received from a nineteen-year-old drug addict.
Then, using the Hobsonian imagery of heroin's corrupting innocents, he
asserted, "Narcotics are a modern curse of American youth.... I will take the
executive steps necessary to make our borders more secure against the
pestilence of narcotics." But narcotics remained only a subsidiary issue in
the 1968 campaign. The strategists instead played upon the more general fear
of personal violence, saturating television across the nation with
commercials that showed an obviously nervous middle aged woman walking down
the street on a dark, wet night while an announcer stated, "Crimes of
violence in the United States have almost doubled in recent years ... today a
violent crime is committed every sixty seconds ... a robbery every two and a
half minutes... a mugging every six minutes ... a murder every forty-three
minutes... and it will get worse unless we take the offensive. . . ." The
commercials ended with the message, "This time vote like your whole world
depended on it." After winning the election by a narrow margin, Nixon was
expected to deal effectively with the menace to law and order that he himself
had helped to popularize. But for him it was an opportunity, not a problem.


------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End



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