The Frankfurt School:
Conspiracy to corrupt
By Timothy
Matthews
http://catholicinsight.com/online/features/article_882.shtml
“Western civilization at the present day is passing through
a crisis which is essentially different from anything that
has been previously experienced. Other societies in the past
have changed their social institutions or their religious
beliefs under the influence of external forces or the slow
development of internal growth. But none, like our own, has
ever consciously faced the prospect of a fundamental
alteration of the beliefs and institutions on which the
whole fabric of social life rests ... Civilization is being
uprooted from its foundations in nature and tradition and is
being reconstituted in a new organisation which is as
artificial and mechanical as a modern factory.”
Christopher Dawson. Enquiries into Religion and Culture,
p. 259.
Most of
Satan’s work in the world he takes care to keep hidden. But
two small shafts of light have been thrown onto his work for
me just recently. The first, a short article in the
Association of Catholic Women’s ACW Review; the second, a
remark (which at first surprised me) from a priest in Russia
who claimed that we now, in the West, live in a Communist
society. These shafts of light help, especially, to explain
the onslaught of officialdom which in many countries
worldwide has so successfully been removing the rights of
parents to be the primary educators and protectors of their
children.
The ACW Review
examined the corrosive work of the ‘Frankfurt School’ - a
group of German-American scholars who developed highly
provocative and original perspectives on contemporary
society and culture, drawing on Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche,
Freud, and Weber. Not that their idea of a ‘cultural
revolution’ was particularly new. ‘Until now’, wrote Joseph,
Comte de Maistre (1753-1821) who for fifteen years was a
Freemason, ‘nations were killed by conquest, that is by
invasion: But here an important question arises; can a
nation not die on its own soil, without resettlement or
invasion, by allowing the flies of decomposition to corrupt
to the very core those original and constituent principles
which make it what it is.'
What was the
Frankfurt School? Well, in the days following the Bolshevik
Revolution in Russia, it was believed that workers’
revolution would sweep into Europe and, eventually, into the
United States. But it did not do so. Towards the end of 1922
the Communist International (Comintern) began to consider
what were the reasons. On Lenin’s initiative a meeting was
organised at the Marx-Engels Institute in Moscow.
The aim of the
meeting was to clarify the concept of, and give concrete
effect to, a Marxist cultural revolution. Amongst those
present were Georg Lukacs (a Hungarian aristocrat, son of a
banker, who had become a Communist during World War I ; a
good Marxist theoretician he developed the idea of
‘Revolution and Eros’ - sexual instinct used as an
instrument of destruction) and Willi Munzenberg (whose
proposed solution was to ‘organise the intellectuals and use
them to make Western civilisation stink. Only then, after
they have corrupted all its values and made life impossible,
can we impose the dictatorship of the proletariat’) ‘It
was’, said Ralph de Toledano (1916-2007) the conservative
author and co-founder of the ‘National Review’, a meeting
‘perhaps more harmful to Western civilization than the
Bolshevik Revolution itself.'
Lenin died in
1924. By this time, however, Stalin was beginning to look on
Munzenberg, Lukacs and like-thinkers as ‘revisionists’. In
June 1940, Münzenberg fled to the south of France where, on
Stalin’s orders, a NKVD assassination squad caught up with
him and hanged him from a tree.
In the summer
of 1924, after being attacked for his writings by the 5th
Comintern Congress, Lukacs moved to Germany, where he
chaired the first meeting of a group of Communist-oriented
sociologists, a gathering that was to lead to the foundation
of the Frankfurt School.
This ‘School’
(designed to put flesh on their revolutionary programme) was
started at the University of Frankfurt in the Institut für
Sozialforschung. To begin with school and institute were
indistinguishable. In 1923 the Institute was officially
established, and funded by Felix Weil (1898-1975). Weil was
born in Argentina and at the age of nine was sent to attend
school in Germany. He attended the universities in Tübingen
and Frankfurt, where he graduated with a doctoral degree in
political science. While at these universities he became
increasingly interested in socialism and Marxism. According
to the intellectual historian Martin Jay, the topic of his
dissertation was ‘the practical problems of implementing
socialism.'
Carl Grünberg,
the Institute’s director from 1923-1929, was an avowed
Marxist, although the Institute did not have any official
party affiliations. But in 1930 Max Horkheimer assumed
control and he believed that Marx’s theory should be the
basis of the Institute’s research. When Hitler came to
power, the Institut was closed and its members, by various
routes, fled to the United States and migrated to major US
universities—Columbia, Princeton, Brandeis, and California
at Berkeley.
The School
included among its members the 1960s guru of the New Left
Herbert Marcuse (denounced by Pope Paul VI for his theory of
liberation which ‘opens the way for licence cloaked as
liberty’), Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, the popular
writer Erich Fromm, Leo Lowenthal, and Jurgen Habermas -
possibly the School’s most influential representative.
Basically, the
Frankfurt School believed that as long as an individual had
the belief - or even the hope of belief - that his divine
gift of reason could solve the problems facing society, then
that society would never reach the state of hopelessness and
alienation that they considered necessary to provoke
socialist revolution. Their task, therefore, was as swiftly
as possible to undermine the Judaeo-Christian legacy. To do
this they called for the most negative destructive criticism
possible of every sphere of life which would be designed to
de-stabilize society and bring down what they saw as the
‘oppressive’ order. Their policies, they hoped, would spread
like a virus—‘continuing the work of the Western Marxists by
other means’ as one of their members noted.
To further the
advance of their ‘quiet’ cultural revolution - but giving us
no ideas about their plans for the future - the School
recommended (among other things):
-
The
creation of racism offences
-
Continual
change to create confusion
-
The
teaching of sex and homosexuality to children
-
The
undermining of schools’ and teachers’ authority
-
Huge
immigration to destroy identity
-
The
promotion of excessive drinking
-
Emptying
of churches
-
An unreliable legal system
with bias against victims of crime
-
Dependency
on the state or state benefits
-
Control
and dumbing down of media
-
Encouraging the breakdown of the family
One of the
main ideas of the Frankfurt School was to exploit Freud’s
idea of ‘pansexualism’ - the search for pleasure, the
exploitation of the differences between the sexes, the
overthrowing of traditional relationships between men and
women. To further their aims they would:
-
attack the
authority of the father, deny the specific roles of
father and mother, and wrest away from families
-
their
rights as primary educators of their children
-
abolish
differences in the education of boys and girls
-
abolish
all forms of male dominance
-
declare
women to be an ‘oppressed class’ and men as ‘oppressors’
Munzenberg
summed up the Frankfurt School’s long-term operation thus:
”We will make the West so
corrupt that it stinks.”
The School
believed there were two types of revolution: (a) political
and (b) cultural. Cultural revolution demolishes from
within. ‘Modern forms of subjection are marked by mildness’.
They saw it as a long-term project and kept their sights
clearly focused on the family, education, media, sex and
popular culture.
The
Family
The
School’s ‘Critical Theory’ preached that the ‘authoritarian
personality’ is a product of the patriarchal family - an
idea directly linked to Engels’ Origins of the Family,
Private Property and the State, which promoted matriarchy.
Already Karl Marx had written, in the “Communist Manifesto”,
about the radical notion of a ‘community of women’ and in
The German Ideology of 1845, written disparagingly about the
idea of the family as the basic unit of society. This was
one of the basic tenets of the ‘Critical Theory’ : the
necessity of breaking down the contemporary family. The
Institute scholars preached that ‘Even a partial breakdown
of parental authority in the family might tend to increase
the readiness of a coming generation to accept social
change.’
Following
Karl Marx, the School stressed how the ‘authoritarian
personality’ is a product of the patriarchal family—it was
Marx who wrote so disparagingly about the idea of the family
being the basic unit of society. All this prepared the way
for the warfare against the masculine gender promoted by
Marcuse under the guise of ‘women’s liberation’ and by the
New Left movement in the 1960s.
They
proposed transforming our culture into a female-dominated
one. In 1933, Wilhelm Reich, one of their members, wrote in
The Mass Psychology of Fascism that matriarchy was the only
genuine family type of ‘natural society.’ Eric Fromm was
also an active advocate of matriarchal theory. Masculinity
and femininity, he claimed, were not reflections of
‘essential’ sexual differences, as the Romantics had thought
but were derived instead from differences in life functions,
which were in part socially determined.’ His dogma was the
precedent for the radical feminist pronouncements that,
today, appear in nearly every major newspaper and television
programme.
The
revolutionaries knew exactly what they wanted to do and how
to do it. They have succeeded.
Education
Lord
Bertrand Russell joined with the Frankfurt School in their
effort at mass social engineering and spilled the beans in
his 1951 book, The Impact of Science on Society. He wrote:
‘Physiology and psychology afford fields for scientific
technique which still await development.' The importance of
mass psychology ‘has been enormously increased by the growth
of modern methods of propaganda. Of these the most
influential is what is called ‘education. The social
psychologists of the future will have a number of classes of
school children on whom they will try different methods of
producing an unshakable conviction that snow is black.
Various results will soon be arrived at. First, that the
influence of home is obstructive. Second, that not much can
be done unless indoctrination begins before the age of ten.
Third, that verses set to music and repeatedly intoned are
very effective. Fourth, that the opinion that snow is white
must be held to show a morbid taste for eccentricity. But I
anticipate. It is for future scientists to make these maxims
precise and discover exactly how much it costs per head to
make children believe that snow is black, and how much less
it would cost to make them believe it is dark gray . When
the technique has been perfected, every government that has
been in charge of education for a generation will be able to
control its subjects securely without the need of armies or
policemen.”
Writing in
1992 in Fidelio Magazine, [The Frankfurt School and
Political Correctness] Michael Minnicino observed how the
heirs of Marcuse and Adorno now completely dominate the
universities, ‘teaching their own students to replace reason
with ‘Politically Correct’ ritual exercises. There are very
few theoretical books on arts, letters, or language
published today in the United States or Europe which do not
openly acknowledge their debt to the Frankfurt School. The
witchhunt on today’s campuses is merely the implementation
of Marcuse’s concept of ‘repressive toleration’-‘tolerance
for movements from the left, but intolerance for movements
from the right’-enforced by the students of the Frankfurt
School’.
Drugs
Dr. Timothy
Leary gave us another glimpse into the mind of the Frankfurt
School in his account of the work of the Harvard University
Psychedelic Drug Project, ‘Flashback.' He quoted a
conversation that he had with Aldous Huxley: “These brain
drugs, mass produced in the laboratories, will bring about
vast changes in society. This will happen with or without
you or me. All we can do is spread the word. The obstacle to
this evolution, Timothy, is the Bible’. Leary then went on:
“We had run up against the Judeo-Christian commitment to one
God, one religion, one reality, that has cursed Europe for
centuries and America since our founding days. Drugs that
open the mind to multiple realities inevitably lead to a
polytheistic view of the universe. We sensed that the time
for a new humanist religion based on intelligence,
good-natured pluralism and scientific paganism had arrived.”
One of the
directors of the Authoritarian Personality project, R.
Nevitt Sanford, played a pivotal role in the usage of
psychedelic drugs. In 1965, he wrote in a book issued by the
publishing arm of the UK’s Tavistock Institute:‘The nation,
seems to be fascinated by our 40,000 or so drug addicts who
are seen as alarmingly wayward people who must be curbed at
all costs by expensive police activity. Only an uneasy
Puritanism could support the practice of focusing on the
drug addicts (rather than our 5 million alcoholics) and
treating them as a police problem instead of a medical one,
while suppressing harmless drugs such as marijuana and
peyote along with the dangerous ones.” The leading
propagandists of today’s drug lobby base their argument for
legalization on the same scientific quackery spelled out all
those years ago by Dr. Sanford.
Such
propagandists include the multi-billionaire atheist George
Soros who chose, as one of his first domestic programs, to
fund efforts to challenge the efficacy of America’s
$37-billion-a-year war on drugs. The Soros-backed Lindesmith
Center serves as a leading voice for Americans who want to
decriminalize drug use. ‘Soros is the ‘Daddy Warbucks of
drug legalization,’ claimed Joseph Califano Jr. of Columbia
University’s National Center on Addiction and Substance
Abuse’ (The Nation, Sep 2, 1999).
Music,
Television and Popular Culture
Adorno was
to become head of a ‘music studies’ unit, where in his
Theory of Modern Music he promoted the prospect of
unleashing atonal and other popular music as a weapon to
destroy society, degenerate forms of music to promote mental
illness. He said the US could be brought to its knees by the
use of radio and television to promote a culture of
pessimism and despair - by the late 1930s he (together with
Horkheimer) had migrated to Hollywood.
The expansion of violent video-games also well supported the
School’s aims.
Sex
In his book
The Closing of the American Mind, Alan Bloom observed
how Marcuse appealed to university students in the sixties
with a combination of Marx and Freud. In Eros and
Civilization and One Dimensional Man Marcuse promised that
the overcoming of capitalism and its false consciousness
will result in a society where the greatest satisfactions
are sexual. Rock music touches the same chord in the young.
Free sexual expression, anarchism, mining of the irrational
unconscious and giving it free rein are what they have in
common.'
The
Media
The modern
media - not least Arthur ‘Punch’ Sulzberger Jnr., who took
charge of the New York Times in 1992 - drew greatly
on the Frankfurt School’s study The Authoritarian
Personality. (New York: Harper, 1950). In his book
Arrogance, (Warner Books, 1993) former CBS News reporter
Bernard Goldberg noted of Sulzberger that he ‘still believes
in all those old sixties notions about ‘liberation’ and
‘changing the world man’ . . . In fact, the Punch years have
been a steady march down PC Boulevard, with a newsroom
fiercely dedicated to every brand of diversity except the
intellectual kind.'
In 1953 the
Institute moved back to the University of Frankfurt. Adorno
died in 1955 and Horkheimer in 1973. The Institute of Social
Research continued, but what was known as the Frankfurt
School did not. The ‘cultural Marxism’ that has since taken
hold of our schools and universities - that ‘political
correctness’, which has been destroying our family bonds,
our religious tradition and our entire culture -sprang from
the Frankfurt School.
It was
these intellectual Marxists who, later, during the
anti-Vietnam demonstrations, coined the phrase, ‘make love,
not war’; it was these intellectuals who promoted the
dialectic of ‘negative’ criticism; it was these
theoreticians who dreamed of a utopia where their rules
governed. It was their concept that led to the current fad
for the rewriting of history, and to the vogue for
‘deconstruction’. Their mantras: ‘sexual differences are a
contract; if it feels good, do it; do your own thing.'
In an
address at the US Naval Academy in August 1999, Dr Gerald L.
Atkinson, CDR USN (Ret), gave a background briefing on the
Frankfurt School, reminding his audience that it was the
‘foot soldiers’ of the Frankfurt School who introduced the
‘sensitivity training’ techniques used in public schools
over the past 30 years (and now employed by the US military
to educate the troops about ‘sexual harassment’). During
‘sensitivity’ training teachers were told not to teach but
to ‘facilitate.’ Classrooms became centres of
self-examination where children talked about their own
subjective feelings. This technique was designed to convince
children they were the sole authority in their own lives.
Atkinson
continued: ‘The Authoritarian personality,’ studied by the
Frankfurt School in the 1940s and 1950s in America, prepared
the way for the subsequent warfare against the masculine
gender promoted by Herbert Marcuse and his band of social
revolutionaries under the guise of ‘women’s liberation’ and
the New Left movement in the 1960s. The evidence that
psychological techniques for changing personality is
intended to mean emasculation of the American male is
provided by Abraham Maslow, founder of Third Force Humanist
Psychology and a promoter of the psychotherapeutic
classroom, who wrote that, ‘... the next step in personal
evolution is a transcendence of both masculinity and
femininity to general humanness.’
On April
17th, 1962, Maslow gave a lecture to a group of nuns at
Sacred Heart, a Catholic women’s college in Massachusetts.
He noted in a diary entry how the talk had been very
‘successful,’ but he found that very fact troubling. ‘They
shouldn’t applaud me,’ he wrote, ‘they should attack. If
they were fully aware of what I was doing, they would
[attack]’ (Journals, p. 157).
The
Network
In her
booklet Sex & Social Engineering (Family Education Trust
1994) Valerie Riches observed how in the late 1960s and
early 1970s, there were intensive parliamentary campaigns
taking place emanating from a number of organisations in the
field of birth control (i.e., contraception, abortion,
sterilisation). ‘From an analysis of their annual reports,
it became apparent that a comparatively small number of
people were involved to a surprising degree in an array of
pressure groups. This network was not only linked by
personnel, but by funds, ideology and sometimes addresses:
it was also backed by vested interests and supported by
grants in some cases by government departments. At the heart
of the network was the Family Planning Association (FPA)
with its own collection of offshoots. What we unearthed was
a power structure with enormous influence.
‘Deeper
investigation revealed that the network, in fact extended
further afield, into eugenics, population control, birth
control, sexual and family law reforms, sex and health
education. Its tentacles reached out to publishing houses,
medical, educational and research establishments, women’s
organisations and marriage guidance—anywhere where influence
could be exerted. It appeared to have great influence over
the media, and over permanent officials in relevant
government departments, out of all proportion to the numbers
involved.
‘During our
investigations, a speaker at a Sex Education Symposium in
Liverpool outlined tactics of sex education saying: ‘if we
do not get into sex education, children will simply follow
the mores of their parents’. The fact that sex education was
to be the vehicle for peddlers of secular humanism soon
became apparent.
‘However,
at that time the power of the network and the full
implications of its activities were not fully understood. It
was thought that the situation was confined to Britain. The
international implications had not been grasped.
‘Soon
after, a little book was published with the intriguing title
The Men Behind Hitler—A German Warning to the World. Its
thesis was that the eugenics movement, which had gained
popularity early in the twentieth century, had gone
underground following the holocaust in Nazi Germany, but was
still active and functioning through organizations promoting
abortion, euthanasia, sterilization, mental health, etc. The
author urged the reader to look at his home country and
neighbouring countries, for he would surely find that
members and committees of these organizations would
cross-check to a remarkable extent.
‘Other
books and papers from independent sources later confirmed
this situation. . . . A remarkable book was also published
in America which documented the activities of the Sex
Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS).
It was entitled The SIECUS Circle A Humanist Revolution.
SIECUS was set up in 1964 and lost no time in engaging in a
programme of social engineering by means of sex education in
the schools. Its first executive director was Mary Calderone,
who was also closely linked to Planned Parenthood, the
American equivalent of the British FPA. According to The
SIECUS Circle, Calderone supported sentiments and theories
put forward by Rudolph Dreikus, a humanist, such as:
-
merging or reversing the sexes or sex roles;
-
liberating children from their families;
-
abolishing the family as we know it’
In their book
Mind Siege, (Thomas Nelson, 2000) Tim LaHaye and
David A. Noebel confirmed Riches’s findings of an
international network. ‘The leading authorities of Secular
Humanism may be pictured as the starting lineup of a
baseball team: pitching is John Dewey; catching is Isaac
Asimov; first base is Paul Kurtz; second base is Corliss
Lamont; third base is Bertrand Russell; shortstop is Julian
Huxley; left fielder is Richard Dawkins; center fielder is
Margaret Sanger; right fielder is Carl Rogers; manager is
‘Christianity is for losers’ Ted Turner; designated hitter
is Mary Calderone; utility players include the hundreds
listed in the back of Humanist Manifesto I and II, including
Eugenia C. Scott, Alfred Kinsey, Abraham Maslow, Erich
Fromm, Rollo May, and Betty Friedan.
‘In the
grandstands sit the sponsoring or sustaining organizations,
such as the . . . the Frankfurt School; the left wing of the
Democratic Party; the Democratic Socialists of America;
Harvard University; Yale University; University of
Minnesota; University of California (Berkeley); and two
thousand other colleges and universities.’
A practical
example of how the tidal wave of Maslow-think is engulfing
English schools was revealed in an article in the British
Nat assoc. of Catholic Families’ (NACF) Catholic Family
newspaper (August 2000), where James Caffrey warned about
the Citizenship (PSHE) programme which was shortly to be
drafted into the National Curriculum. ‘We need to look
carefully at the vocabulary used in this new subject’, he
wrote, ‘and, more importantly, discover the philosophical
basis on which it is founded. The clues to this can be found
in the word ‘choice’ which occurs frequently in the
Citizenship documentation and the great emphasis placed on
pupils’ discussing and ‘clarifying’ their own views, values
and choices about any given issue. This is nothing other
than the concept known as ‘Values Clarification’ - a concept
anathema to Catholicism, or indeed, to Judaism and Islam.
‘This concept
was pioneered in California in the 1960’s by psychologists
William Coulson, Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow. It was
based on ‘humanistic’ psychology, in which patients were
regarded as the sole judge of their actions and moral
behaviour. Having pioneered the technique of Values
Clarification the psychologists introduced it into schools
and other institutions such as convents and seminaries -
with disastrous results. Convents emptied, religious lost
their vocations and there was wholesale loss of belief in
God. Why? Because Catholic institutions are founded on
absolute beliefs in, for example, the Creed and the Ten
Commandments. Values Clarification supposes a moral
relativism in which there is no absolute right or wrong and
no dependence on God.
‘This same
system is to be introduced to the vulnerable minds of
infants, juniors and adolescents in the years 2000+. The
underlying philosophy of Values Clarification holds that for
teachers to promote virtues such as honesty, justice or
chastity constitutes indoctrination of children and
‘violates’ their moral freedom. It is urged that children
should be free to choose their own values; the teacher must
merely ‘facilitate’ and must avoid all moralising or
criticising. As a barrister commented recently on worrying
trends in Australian education, ‘The core theme of values
clarification is that there are no right or wrong values.
Values education does not seek to identify and transmit
‘right’ values, teaching of the Church, especially the papal
encyclical Evangelium Vitae.
‘In the
absence of clear moral guidance, children naturally make
choices based on feelings. Powerful peer pressure, freed
from the values which stem from a divine source, ensure that
‘shared values’ sink to the lowest common denominator.
References to environmental sustainability lead to a mindset
where anti-life arguments for population control are
presented as being both responsible and desirable.
Similarly, ‘informed choices’ about health and lifestyles
are euphemisms for attitudes antithetical to Christian views
on motherhood, fatherhood, the sacrament of marriage and
family life. Values Clarification is covert and dangerous.
It underpins the entire rationale of Citizenship (PSHE) and
is to be introduced by statute into the UK soon. It will
give young people secular values and imbue them with the
attitude that they alone hold ultimate authority and
judgement about their lives. No Catholic school can include
this new subject as formulated in the Curriculum 2000
document within its current curriculum provision. Dr.
William Coulson recognised the psychological damage Rogers’
technique inflicted on youngsters and rejected it, devoting
his life to exposing its dangers.
Should those
in authority in Catholic education not do likewise, as
‘Citizenship’ makes its deadly approach’? If we allow their
subversion of values and interests to continue, we will, in
future generations, lose all that our ancestors suffered and
died for. We are forewarned, says Atkinson. A reading of
history (it is all in mainstream historical accounts) tells
us that we are about to lose the most precious thing we
have—our individual freedoms.
‘What we are
at present experiencing,' writes Philip Trower in a letter
to the author, ‘is a blend of two schools of thought; the
Frankfurt School and the liberal tradition going back to the
18th century Enlightenment. The Frankfurt School has of
course its remote origins in the 18th century Enlightenment.
But like Lenin’s Marxism it is a breakaway movement. The
immediate aims of both classical liberalism and the
Frankfurt School have been in the main the same (vide your
eleven points above) but the final end is different. For
liberals they lead to ‘improving’ and ‘perfecting’ western
culture, for the Frankfurt School they bring about its
destruction.
‘Unlike
hard-line Marxists, the Frankfurt School do not make any
plans for the future. (But) the Frankfurt School seems to be
more far-sighted that our classical liberals and
secularists. At least they see the moral deviations they
promote will in the end make social life impossible or
intolerable. But this leaves a big question mark over what a
future conducted by them would be like.'
Meanwhile, the
Quiet Revolution rolls forward.
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