Yah gotta love this one…

 

M

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sid 
Shniad
Sent: Sunday, September 30, 2012 11:12 AM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: (On the principles of right wing ideologues) Charles Koch to Friedrich 
Hayek: Use Social Security!

 

http://www.thenation.com/article/163672/charles-koch-friedrich-hayek-use-social-security#
 
<http://www.thenation.com/article/163672/charles-koch-friedrich-hayek-use-social-security>
 

The Nation  September 27, 2011

Charles Koch to Friedrich Hayek: Use Social Security!

Publicly, in academia and in politics, in the media and in propaganda, these 
two major figures—one the sponsor, the other the mandarin—have been pushing 
Americans to do away with Social Security and Medicare. 

Yasha Levine and Mark Ames

There’s right-wing hypocrisy, and then there’s this: Charles Koch, billionaire 
patron of free-market libertarianism, privately championed the benefits of 
Social Security to Friedrich Hayek, the leading laissez-faire economist of the 
twentieth century. Koch even sent Hayek a government pamphlet to help him take 
advantage of America’s federal retirement insurance and healthcare programs.

This extraordinary correspondence regarding Social Security began in early June 
1973, weeks after Koch was appointed president of the Institute for Humane 
Studies. Along with his brothers, Koch inherited his father’s privately held 
oil company in 1967, becoming one of the richest men in America. He used this 
fortune to help turn the IHS, then based in Menlo Park, California, into one of 
the world’s foremost libertarian think tanks. Soon after taking over as 
president, Koch invited Hayek to serve as the institute’s “distinguished senior 
scholar” in preparation for its first conference on Austrian economics, to be 
held in June 1974.

Hayek initially declined Koch’s offer. In a letter to IHS secretary Kenneth 
Templeton Jr., dated June 16, 1973, Hayek explains that he underwent gall 
bladder surgery in Austria earlier that year, which only heightened his fear of 
“the problems (and costs) of falling ill away from home.” (Thanks to waves of 
progressive reforms, postwar Austria had near universal healthcare and robust 
social insurance plans that Hayek would have been eligible for.)

IHS vice president George Pearson (who later became a top Koch Industries 
executive) responded three weeks later, conceding that it was all but 
impossible to arrange affordable private medical insurance for Hayek in the 
United States. However, thanks to research by Yale Brozen, a libertarian 
economist at the University of Chicago, Pearson happily reported that “social 
security was passed at the University of Chicago while you [Hayek] were there 
in 1951. You had an option of being in the program. If you so elected at that 
time, you may be entitled to coverage now.”

A few weeks later, the institute reported the good news: Professor Hayek had 
indeed opted into Social Security while he was teaching at Chicago and had paid 
into the program for ten years. He was eligible for benefits. On August 10, 
1973, Koch wrote a letter appealing to Hayek to accept a shorter stay at the 
IHS, hard-selling Hayek on Social Security’s retirement benefits, which Koch 
encouraged Hayek to draw on even outside America. He also assured Hayek that 
Medicare, which had been created in 1965 by the Social Security amendments as 
part of Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society programs, would cover his medical needs.

Koch writes: “You may be interested in the information that we uncovered on the 
insurance and other benefits that would be available to you in this country. 
Since you have paid into the United States Social Security Program for a full 
forty quarters, you are entitled to Social Security payments while living 
anywhere in the Free World. Also, at any time you are in the United States, you 
are automatically entitled to hospital coverage.”

Then, taking on the unlikely role of Social Security Administration customer 
service rep, Koch adds, “In order to be eligible for medical coverage you must 
apply during the registration period which is anytime from January 1 to March 
31. For your further information, I am enclosing a pamphlet on Social Security.”

* * *

The private correspondence between two of the most important figures shaping 
the Republican Party’s economic policies—billionaire libertarian Charles Koch 
and Nobel Prize–winning economist Friedrich Hayek, godfather of today’s 
free-market movement—were obtained by Yasha Levine from the Hayek archives at 
the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. This is the first time the 
content of these letters has been reported on.

The documents offer a rare glimpse into how these two major free-market 
apostles privately felt about government assistance programs—revealing a 
shocking degree of cynicism and an unimaginable betrayal of the ideas they sold 
to the American public and the rest of the world.

Charles Koch and his brother, David, have waged a three-decade campaign to 
dismantle the American social safety net. At the center of their most recent 
push is the Koch-funded Americans for Prosperity, which has co-sponsored Tea 
Party events, spearheaded the war against healthcare reform and supported 
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker’s attack on public sector unions. FreedomWorks, 
another conservative group central to the rise of the Tea Party and the 
right-wing attempt to dismantle Social Security and Medicare, emerged from an 
advocacy outfit founded by the Koch brothers called Citizens for a Sound 
Economy. FreedomWorks now exists as a separate entity that champions the 
“Austrian school” of economics.

Hayek, a founder of that school of thought, is primarily known for two major 
works. The first, The Road to Serfdom (1944), grudgingly accepts the 
possibility that some “free” countries might find it necessary to set up a 
bare-minimum catastrophic social insurance program limited to the very 
neediest, so long as the benefits do not incentivize productive members of 
society to abandon free-market retirement savings or medical insurance.

Hayek’s comparatively liberal attitude toward social insurance hardened 
considerably by the time he published his 1960 opus, The Constitution of 
Liberty. Despite privately spending the intervening years paying into Social 
Security, Hayek devoted an entire chapter—titled “Social Security”—to 
denouncing the modern welfare state as a gateway to tyranny and moral decay. 
Ironically, one of Hayek’s main objections to government programs like Social 
Security was the “fundamental absurdity” of using tax dollars to promote their 
benefits. In other words, Hayek publicly objected to the kind of brochure that 
Charles Koch sent him. In their private correspondence, however, we could find 
no objection to this “fundamental absurdity.”

By the mid-1970s, Hayek had fully distanced himself from the modest benefits 
he’d originally conceded to in The Road to Serfdom. In his preface to the 1976 
edition, he explained his “error”: “I had not wholly freed myself from all the 
current interventionist superstitions, and in consequence still made various 
concessions which I now think unwarranted.”

Publicly, in academia and in politics, in the media and in propaganda, these 
two major figures—one the sponsor, the other the mandarin—have been pushing 
Americans to do away with Social Security and Medicare for our own good: we 
will become freer, richer, healthier and better people.

But the exchange between Koch and Hayek exposes the bad-faith nature of their 
public arguments. In private, Koch expresses confidence in Social Security’s 
ability to care for a clearly worried Hayek. He and his fellow IHS libertarians 
repeatedly assure Hayek that his government-funded coverage in the United 
States would be adequate for his medical needs.None of them—not Koch, Hayek or 
the other libertarians at the IHS—express anything remotely resembling shame or 
unease at such a betrayal of their public ideals and writings. Nowhere do they 
worry that by opting into and taking advantage of Social Security programs they 
might be hastening a socialist takeover of America. It’s simply a given that 
Social Security and Medicare work, and therefore should be used.

* * *

Shortly after this exchange, in 1974, Hayek won the Nobel Prize in economics. 
The next year he went on something of a victory tour of the United States, 
which ended at the IHS, where he spent the summer as a resident scholar. Hayek 
returned to Menlo Park again in the summer of 1977. The Nation has filed a 
Freedom of Information Request with the Social Security Administration to 
discover if, in fact, Hayek received Social Security payments or used Medicare 
during his residencies at the institute or at any other time. At press time, 
these requests have not been answered.

Meanwhile, in 1974, Charles Koch founded the Cato Institute (called the Charles 
Koch Foundation until 1977). This think tank has done more than any other to 
push for an end to Social Security. In 1983 the Cato Journal published a 
blueprint of how to destroy Social Security, “Achieving a ‘Leninist Strategy,’” 
by Stuart Butler and Peter Germanis. The authors acknowledged that a strong 
coalition of Americans backed Social Security and thus saw the need for 
“guerrilla warfare against both the current Social Security system and the 
coalition that supports it.” Victory could be far in the future, “but then, as 
Lenin well knew, to be a successful revolutionary, one must also be patient and 
consistently plan for real reform,” they write.

As part of Cato’s campaign, the institute has launched various groups and 
projects, including the Project on Social Security Choice, whose co-chair is 
José Piñera, architect of Augusto Pinochet’s controversial pension 
privatization scheme in Chile. Cato Institute members and alumni also dominated 
President George W. Bush’s commission on Social Security in his first term and 
spearheaded Bush’s failed attempt to privatize the program in the early months 
of his second term.

Thanks in part to Hayek’s writings and to the Koch brothers’ decades-long war 
on the social safety net, Americans are among the Western world’s few citizens 
without universal healthcare. Not surprisingly, life expectancy here has fallen 
to forty-ninth place in the world, while medical costs are double those of 
other Western nations. By contrast, Hayek’s native Austria, which has a public 
health plan that covers 99 percent of the population, boasts a healthcare 
system ranked ninth in the world by the World Health Organization.

* * *

When Texas Governor Rick Perry, a front-runner in the Republican primary for 
president, derides Social Security as a “Ponzi scheme” or a “monstrous lie,” 
that rhetoric can be traced back to the work of Hayek and Koch. And yet we now 
know that in private practice, Hayek was perfectly content to pay into Social 
Security and that Koch encouraged him to draw upon both Social Security and 
Medicare. Did they really believe what they wrote? Or were these attacks just 
scare-talk meant for the rubes, for you and us, “the public”?

Calling this mere hypocrisy downplays the seriousness of their fraud. Koch and 
Hayek are no more hypocritical than the used-car salesman who knowingly sells a 
lemon to a gullible buyer, or the financial agency that rates “AAA” instruments 
it knows are crap. This is a grand swindle played on a trusting, gullible 
public, a scam whose goal is to con America’s dying middle class into handing 
over their retirement money to the richest 0.1 percent, convincing them that in 
doing so, they’re “empowering” themselves and protecting their “individual 
liberty.”

Another question hangs over all this: Why didn’t Charles Koch offer to put up 
some of his enormous wealth to pay for Hayek’s temporary medical insurance? One 
obvious answer: because the state had already offered a better and freer 
program. But perhaps Koch’s stinginess also reveals the social ethic behind 
libertarian values: every man for himself; selfishness is a virtue.

________________________________
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