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Subject: War of the classes by David Horowitz.


War of the classes
Or, why the left should thank Newt Gingrich for being the true friend of the
poor.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By David Horowitz

Jan. 24, 2000 | A few years after the fall of the Marxist utopias, I found
myself on a sofa in Beverly Hills, Calif., sitting next to a man who was
worth half a billion dollars. His name was Stanley Gold and he was chairman
of a holding company that was the largest shareholder in the then largest
media corporation in the world, Disney.

Since I was working on a conservative project in the entertainment community
and the occasion was a cocktail reception for a Republican senator, I
quickly
moved the conversation into a pitch for support. But I was only able to run
through a few bars of my routine before Gold put a fatherly hand on my arm
and said, "Save your breath, David. I'm a socialist."

I remember this story every time a leftist critic assaults me and deploys
the
Marxist clich� that I have "sold out" my ideals, or suggests that an opinion
I've expressed can be explained by the "fact" that somewhere a wealthy
puppet-master is pulling my strings. I am not alone, of course, in being the
target of such attacks, which are familiar to every conservative who has
ever
engaged in a political debate.

 Of course, those who traffic in socially conscious abuse have a ready
answer
for anecdotes like mine, namely that it is an isolated and aberrant case.
Even if it's true, therefore, it's false. Because there is a larger Marxist
"truth" that trumps little facts like this. This truth is that conservative
views express the views of corporate America, serve the status quo, defend
the rich and powerful and legitimize the oppression of the poor.

Whereas leftist views, however well paid for, are inherently noble because
they oppose all the injustice that corporate America, the status quo and the
rich represent. The "truth" is that conservative views must be paid for
because they could not possibly be the genuine views of any decent human
being with a grain of integrity, an ounce of compassion or even half a human
heart.

In the fantasy world of the left, the figure of Stanley Gold can only be
understood as a human oxymoron: a uniquely good-hearted capitalist who is a
friend to humanity and a traitor to his class. But, then, so are such famous
left-wing billionaire (and centi-millionaire) moguls as Ted Turner, David
Geffen, Oprah Winfrey, Steven Spielberg, Michael Eisner and a hundred others
less famous but equally wealthy.

In fact, the only exceptional thing about Stanley Gold's politics is that he
is also a witty and candid fellow. For, unlike the publicly self-identified
progressives named above, the CEOs of most major corporations studiously
avoid ideological politics whether left or right, because such politics are
not at all in the corporate interest. To become identified with a hard
political position is to become a sitting target for opponents who may
control the machinery of regulation and taxation and exert life-and-death
power over their enterprises.

Besides, from a business point of view, most politicians are fungible. For
the kind of favors businesses require, one can be had as easily as another.
It is safer to stay above the fray and buy them when necessary, Republicans
as well as Democrats, conservatives and liberals. Money, not ideological
passion, is the currency of corporate interest. Power rather than ideas is
its political agenda. Therefore, politicians rather than intellectuals are
the usual objects of its attention.

 The left's 10-to-1 advantage

  There is an exception to money's rule of political neutrality, as when an
administration, whatever the reason, chooses to declare war on a wealthy
individual or a corporate entity, or even an entire industry. An attack like
this simplifies political choices and may make embracing the political
opposition seem the best available option in an already bad situation. Big
Tobacco, Microsoft and Michael Milken were all assaulted by government, for
example, and adopted a defensive strategy by embracing the political
opposition (Tobacco and Microsoft went strongly Republican, Milken became a
Democrat).

Another exception can result from the shakedown of large corporations by
political activists, an opportunity that is almost exclusively a province of
the left. Under attack from radical Greens, for example, major companies
like
ARCO have become large subsidizers of the environmental movement. Through
similar extortionist efforts, Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/Push coalition has
received more corporate underwriting than any dozen conservative groups put
together.

But the norm for corporate interests remains the removal of themselves and
their assets from any ideological politics, which can only damage them in
the
long run. The same applies to free-wheeling individuals who are serious
financial players. I have had very conservative billionaires tell me that
whatever their personal views, they cannot afford to be political (in my
sense) at all.

 A consequence of this stand-off is that most of the contributions available
to ideological activists of the left or right are either small individual
donations solicited through direct mail campaigns or large institutional
donations from tax-exempt foundations. In this area, too, the fevered
imaginations of the left have created a wildly distorted picture in which
well-funded goliaths of the right, the Olin, Scaife and Bradley foundations,
overwhelm the penurious Davids of the left.

Edward Said, for example, used the platform of the once-distinguished Reith
lectures to attack Peter Collier and me over the "Second Thoughts" movement
we had launched as a critique of the left: "In a matter of months during the
late 1980s, Second Thoughts aspired to become a movement, alarmingly well
funded by right-wing Maecenases like the Bradley and Olin Foundations."

Some years later, a liberal report appeared on "The Strategic Philanthropy
of
Conservative Foundations," documenting the annual disbursements of what it
deemed to be the key conservative grant-giving institutions. The annual sum
of the subsidies from 12 foundations was calculated at $70 million. This may
seem a large sum until one looks at the Ford Foundation, which dispenses
more
than $900 million per year, or more than 10 times as much, mainly to liberal
and left-wing causes.

Ford is the principal funder, for example, of the hard left Mexican American
Legal Defense Fund (MALDEF), which lacks any visible root in the
Mexican-American community but has been the principal promoter of illegal
immigration and the driving force behind the failed multibillion-dollar
bilingual education programs. Ford created MALDEF and has provided it with
more than $25 million over the years. Ford has also been the leading funder
of left-wing feminism and black separatism on American campuses, and of the
radical effort to balkanize the national identity through multicultural
curricula throughout the university system.

In these agendas, Ford is typical rather than exceptional. In fact, the
biggest and most prestigious foundations, bearing the most venerable names
of
the captains of American capitalism -- Ford, Rockefeller, Mellon, Carnegie
and Pew -- all skew left, as do many newer but also well-endowed
institutions
like the MacArthur, Markle and Schumann foundations. MacArthur alone is
three
times the size of all "big three" conservative foundations -- Olin, Bradley
and Scaife -- combined.

Moreover, these foundations do not even represent the most important support
the corporate "ruling class" and its social elites provide to the left. That
laurel goes to the private and public universities that have traditionally
been the preserve of the American aristocracy and now -- as Richard Rorty
has
happily pointed out -- are the "political base of the left."

| Harvard: 29 Democrats for every Republican

With its multibillion-dollar endowment and unmatched intellectual prestige,
Harvard provides the exemplary case, its relevant faculties and curricula
reflecting the absolute hegemony of left-wing ideas. The Kennedy School of
Government at Harvard -- to take one emblematic case -- is arguably the most
prestigious and important reservoir of intellectual talent and policy advice
available to the political establishment. Cabinet officials are regularly
drawn from its ranks. Yet of its 150-plus faculty members only 5 are
identifiable Republicans, a ratio that is extraordinary, given the spectrum
of political opinion in the nation at large, though it is typical of the
university system.

The institutional and financial support for the left -- through its
dominance
in the universities, the book publishing industry, the press, television
news
and the arts -- is so overwhelming it is hardly contested. There are no
prestigious universities where the faculty ratio in the liberal arts and
social sciences is 150 Republicans to 5 Democrats. There is not a single
major American newspaper whose features and news sections are written by
conservatives rather than liberals -- and this includes such
conservative-owned institutions as the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles
Times, the Orange County Register and the San Diego Union.

Some reading this will object to the definition of what is "left" in this
analysis, as a way of avoiding the unpalatable and irrefutable reality it
reflects. They will argue that because Noam Chomsky, for example, is
regarded
as a fringe intellectual by segments of the media, the media cannot be
dominated by the ideas of the left. But this supposes that Chomsky's
exclusion is ideological rather than idiosyncratic and not just because he
is
an insufferably arrogant and difficult individual. After all, Peter Jennings
is a fan of Cornel West, who is a fan of Chomsky. Christopher Hitchens is a
fan of Chomsky and a ubiquitous presence on the tube and in print. But
assume
that it is true anyway. The fact still remains that an America-loathing
crank
like Chomsky is an incomparably more influential intellectual figure in the
left-wing culture of American universities than any conservative one could
name.

The left, it can hardly be disputed, is funded and supported by the very
"ruling class" it whines is the sugar daddy of the right and the oppressor
of
minorities, the working class and the poor. Moreover, institutional support
and funds provided to the intellectual left by the greedy and powerful
rulers
of society far exceeds any sums they provide to the intellectual right, as
anyone with a pocket calculator can compute. How is this possible? Could it
be that the Marxist model itself is a crock? Oh, perish that thought. We're
all postmodernists anyway now.

Even when the argument is advanced by postmodernists, however, it is hardly
apparent that the interest of the corporate rich lies in preserving the
status quo. If the Clinton years did nothing else, they should certainly
have
served to put this canard to rest.

Thus, the Clinton administration's most important left-wing projects were
the
comprehensive government-controlled health care plan that failed and the
effort to preserve racial preferences that succeeded. Both agendas received
the enthusiastic support of corporate America -- the health care plan by the
nation's largest health insurance companies and racial preferences by
Fortune
500 corporations across the board.

Or try another measure: In this year's presidential primary campaign, Bill
Bradley is the Democratic candidate running from the left. The chief points
of Bradley's platform are a plan to revive the comprehensive Clinton health
care scheme that was rejected, and to press left-wing racial grievances.
Bradley's most recently acquired African-American friend is the anti-Semitic
racist Al Sharpton, who has become a black leader of choice for Democratic
Party candidates. But despite these radical agendas, "Dollar Bill's" $30
million-plus campaign war chest was largely supplied by Wall Street, where
he
himself had made millions as a stockbroker over the years.

The explanation for these paradoxes is this: Unless one is addicted to the
discredited poppycock of postmodernist radicals, there is no reason that the
rich should be adversaries of the poor or oppose their interests. Not in a
dynamic market society like ours. Only if the market is a zero-sum game as
Marxists and their clones believe -- "exploited labor" for the worker,
"surplus value" for the capitalist -- would leftist clich�s make any sense.
But they don't. The real-world relation between labor and capital is quite
the opposite of what the left proposes. Entrepreneurs generally want a
better-educated, better-paid, more diverse working force, if only because
that means better employees, better marketers and better consumers of the
company product.

That is why, historically, everywhere capitalism has been embraced, labor
conditions have improved and inequalities have diminished, whether there has
been a strong trade union presence or not. That is why the capitalist
helmsmen of the World Trade Organization are better friends of the world's
poor than any of the Luddite demonstrators in Seattle who claimed to be
protesting on their behalf.

The 21st century political argument is not about whether to help the poor or
not, or whether to include all Americans in the social contract. Republicans
embrace these objectives as firmly as Democrats, conservatives as well as
liberals. The issue is how best to help the poor, and how best to integrate
the many cultures of the American mosaic into a common culture that works.

Twenty years after the welfare system was already a proven disaster for
America's inner-city poor, Democrats and leftists were still demanding more
welfare and opposing significant reforms. Clinton himself vetoed the
Republican reform bill twice and only signed it when he was told he could
not
be reelected if he didn't. Welfare reform has liberated hundreds of
thousands
of poor people from dead-end dependency and given them a taste of the
self-esteem that comes from earning one's keep.

If the left were serious about its interest in the poor, it would pay homage
to the man who made welfare reform possible, the despised former Speaker
Newt
Gingrich. If hypocrisy weren't their stock-in-trade, self-styled champions
of
the downtrodden like Cornel West and Marian Wright Edelman would be writing
testimonials to Gingrich as a hero to America's poor. But that won't happen.
Instead, the left will go on tarring Gingrich and his political allies as
the
Grinches who stole Christmas, "enemies of the poor" and lackeys of the rich.
Such witch-hunting is indispensable to the left's intellectual class war.
The
dehumanization of its opponents is the next best option to developing an
argument to refute the opposition.

There is no conservative party in America, certainly not Republicans, who
are
responsible for the major reforms of the Clinton years. The mantle of
reaction is better worn by the left, given its resistance to change and its
rear-guard battles against the market and free trade. But the left controls
the culture, and with it the political language. Therefore, in America,
reactionaries will continue to be called "progressives," and reformers
conservative.


About the writer
David Horowitz's odyssey from '60s radical to cultural conservative is
described in his autobiography, "Radical Son." He is the president of the
conservative Center for the Study of Popular Culture in Los Angeles and the
editor of FrontPage Magazine. For more columns by Horowitz, visit his column
archive.










With its multibillion-dollar endowment and unmatched intellectual prestige,
Harvard provides the exemplary case, its relevant faculties and curricula
reflecting the absolute hegemony of left-wing ideas. The Kennedy School of
Government at Harvard -- to take one emblematic case -- is arguably the most
prestigious and important reservoir of intellectual talent and policy advice
available to the political establishment. Cabinet officials are regularly
drawn from its ranks. Yet of its 150-plus faculty members only 5 are
identifiable Republicans, a ratio that is extraordinary, given the spectrum
of political opinion in the nation at large, though it is typical of the
university system.

The institutional and financial support for the left -- through its
dominance
in the universities, the book publishing industry, the press, television
news
and the arts -- is so overwhelming it is hardly contested. There are no
prestigious universities where the faculty ratio in the liberal arts and
social sciences is 150 Republicans to 5 Democrats. There is not a single
major American newspaper whose features and news sections are written by
conservatives rather than liberals -- and this includes such
conservative-owned institutions as the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles
Times, the Orange County Register and the San Diego Union.

Some reading this will object to the definition of what is "left" in this
analysis, as a way of avoiding the unpalatable and irrefutable reality it
reflects. They will argue that because Noam Chomsky, for example, is
regarded
as a fringe intellectual by segments of the media, the media cannot be
dominated by the ideas of the left. But this supposes that Chomsky's
exclusion is ideological rather than idiosyncratic and not just because he
is
an insufferably arrogant and difficult individual. After all, Peter Jennings
is a fan of Cornel West, who is a fan of Chomsky. Christopher Hitchens is a
fan of Chomsky and a ubiquitous presence on the tube and in print. But
assume
that it is true anyway. The fact still remains that an America-loathing
crank
like Chomsky is an incomparably more influential intellectual figure in the
left-wing culture of American universities than any conservative one could
name.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
--


David Horowitz

David Horowitz's column appears on the News site every other Monday.

+ Biography
+ Archives





----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
--



The left, it can hardly be disputed, is funded and supported by the very
"ruling class" it whines is the sugar daddy of the right and the oppressor
of
minorities, the working class and the poor. Moreover, institutional support
and funds provided to the intellectual left by the greedy and powerful
rulers
of society far exceeds any sums they provide to the intellectual right, as
anyone with a pocket calculator can compute. How is this possible? Could it
be that the Marxist model itself is a crock? Oh, perish that thought. We're
all postmodernists anyway now.

Even when the argument is advanced by postmodernists, however, it is hardly
apparent that the interest of the corporate rich lies in preserving the
status quo. If the Clinton years did nothing else, they should certainly
have
served to put this canard to rest.

Thus, the Clinton administration's most important left-wing projects were
the
comprehensive government-controlled health care plan that failed and the
effort to preserve racial preferences that succeeded. Both agendas received
the enthusiastic support of corporate America -- the health care plan by the
nation's largest health insurance companies and racial preferences by
Fortune
500 corporations across the board.

Or try another measure: In this year's presidential primary campaign, Bill
Bradley is the Democratic candidate running from the left. The chief points
of Bradley's platform are a plan to revive the comprehensive Clinton health
care scheme that was rejected, and to press left-wing racial grievances.
Bradley's most recently acquired African-American friend is the anti-Semitic
racist Al Sharpton, who has become a black leader of choice for Democratic
Party candidates. But despite these radical agendas, "Dollar Bill's" $30
million-plus campaign war chest was largely supplied by Wall Street, where
he
himself had made millions as a stockbroker over the years.

The explanation for these paradoxes is this: Unless one is addicted to the
discredited poppycock of postmodernist radicals, there is no reason that the
rich should be adversaries of the poor or oppose their interests. Not in a
dynamic market society like ours. Only if the market is a zero-sum game as
Marxists and their clones believe -- "exploited labor" for the worker,
"surplus value" for the capitalist -- would leftist clich�s make any sense.
But they don't. The real-world relation between labor and capital is quite
the opposite of what the left proposes. Entrepreneurs generally want a
better-educated, better-paid, more diverse working force, if only because
that means better employees, better marketers and better consumers of the
company product.

That is why, historically, everywhere capitalism has been embraced, labor
conditions have improved and inequalities have diminished, whether there has
been a strong trade union presence or not. That is why the capitalist
helmsmen of the World Trade Organization are better friends of the world's
poor than any of the Luddite demonstrators in Seattle who claimed to be
protesting on their behalf.

The 21st century political argument is not about whether to help the poor or
not, or whether to include all Americans in the social contract. Republicans
embrace these objectives as firmly as Democrats, conservatives as well as
liberals. The issue is how best to help the poor, and how best to integrate
the many cultures of the American mosaic into a common culture that works.

Twenty years after the welfare system was already a proven disaster for
America's inner-city poor, Democrats and leftists were still demanding more
welfare and opposing significant reforms. Clinton himself vetoed the
Republican reform bill twice and only signed it when he was told he could
not
be reelected if he didn't. Welfare reform has liberated hundreds of
thousands
of poor people from dead-end dependency and given them a taste of the
self-esteem that comes from earning one's keep.

If the left were serious about its interest in the poor, it would pay homage
to the man who made welfare reform possible, the despised former Speaker
Newt
Gingrich. If hypocrisy weren't their stock-in-trade, self-styled champions
of
the downtrodden like Cornel West and Marian Wright Edelman would be writing
testimonials to Gingrich as a hero to America's poor. But that won't happen.
Instead, the left will go on tarring Gingrich and his political allies as
the
Grinches who stole Christmas, "enemies of the poor" and lackeys of the rich.
Such witch-hunting is indispensable to the left's intellectual class war.
The
dehumanization of its opponents is the next best option to developing an
argument to refute the opposition.

There is no conservative party in America, certainly not Republicans, who
are
responsible for the major reforms of the Clinton years. The mantle of
reaction is better worn by the left, given its resistance to change and its
rear-guard battles against the market and free trade. But the left controls
the culture, and with it the political language. Therefore, in America,
reactionaries will continue to be called "progressives," and reformers
conservative.
salon.com | Jan. 24, 2000



- - - - - - - - - - - -


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