And the disinformation still
continues today, only packaged much differently!
Communist
disinformation, American-style
Shocking revolutionary roots not just of
Obama, but top advisers Jarrett and Axelrod too
Published: 19 hours ago
By Paul Kengor
Editor’s note: Who
could have imagined that one of the most audacious disinformation campaigns in
American history would turn out, according to a recently declassified FBI file,
to have a direct connection not only to today’s president of the United States,
Barack Obama, but to top advisers David Axelrod and Valerie Jarrett as well?
Here, Professor Paul Kengor, author of “The Communist,” the new bestseller about Obama mentor Frank
Marshall Davis, tells the incredible story of communist disinformation in
America and its multiple ties to those now “fundamentally transforming” this
country from the top.
If you want to see how
Soviet-style disinformation has spread in our own country, look no further than
the Communist Party USA. Sure, no one could spin a web of lies quite like the
Soviets and the Kremlin, but their American devotees are likewise excellent at
agitation, propaganda and deliberate deception. America’s communists have
produced some impressive homegrown disinformation. Here, I’ll consider an
especially productive example, which still bears bitter fruit today among the
wider American left: the campaign against the House Committee on Un-American
Activities.
In this skillful,
cynical disinformation campaign, American communists, working with duped
progressive/liberal accomplices, framed their accusers as “fascists,” “Nazis,”
“McCarthyites” and even “racists” who were (allegedly) unfairly hounding and
maligning them by investigating their ties to Moscow. In truth, the accused
were frequently guilty – and, at the least, merited attention. Nonetheless,
these leftist forces came together, under the leadership of the CPUSA, the
Daily Worker and other far-left forces, in coordinated campaigns such as
“Operation Abolition,” which sought to abolish the House Committee on
Un-American Activities, which they tagged as “HUAC” – the “House Un-American
Committee,” a label that sticks to this day.
Of special interest,
one of those who engaged in this campaign was Frank Marshall Davis, a closet
CPUSA member who in the 1970s would go on to mentor a young Hawaiian boy named
Barack Obama, our current president.
Communist campaigns
Before examining this
anti-”HUAC” campaign, consider a few words on the concept of communist
campaigns.
Communists excelled at
“campaigns” – that is, carefully concerted efforts where they exploited an
issue or cause to further their agenda. Such campaigns were a very significant,
still vastly unappreciated tactic vigorously employed by the communist movement
throughout the 20th century. They were done with great effect, so much so that
many of the outright untruths in these underhanded campaigns have slipped their
way into history books as quasi-official versions of 20th century history.
These campaigns took
on such a discernible, consistent pattern that they eventually prompted
full-scale investigations by the U.S. government, which deciphered a clear
tactic requiring constant surveillance. The FBI in the 1950s would produce a
100-plus-page report (classified) strictly on the subject of campaigns. The
bureau defined campaigns as “concentrated, continuous and concerted succession
of agitation and propaganda activities specifically devised and timed to sway
public opinion. All communist campaigns are intended to arouse, influence and
mobilize as many people as possible to further communist goals.” Those goals,
naturally, included the promotion of the “welfare of the Soviet Union.” For
American communists, the end-goal was always a “Soviet America,” or, as the
1930s CPUSA loyalty oath put it, “to insure the triumph of Soviet Power in the
United States.”
Of special relevance
to this article, communist campaigns, like communist fronts, thrived on deceit
and disinformation. And American communists were vigilant in concealing their
coordination. They needed to be ever ready to deny their participation.
The chief target
audience in these campaigns was gullible liberals/progressives that communists
believed could be duped. The dupes were indispensable to success. If the
campaigns marshaled only the support of communists, they would be transparent
and would collapse under public exposure. The presence of liberal/progressive
dupes helped diminish the presence of communists.
The FBI noted that,
“No other organization has ever engaged in so many diverse, intensive and
extensive campaigns conducted with so much perseverance, deftness and potency
as has the Communist Party USA.” CPUSA was “never without” a campaign of one
type or another, and had been responsible for “an inestimable number of campaigns.”
The anti-’HUAC’
campaign
This brings me back to
the anti-”HUAC” campaign.
One of the most
controversial domestic battles of the Cold War was the fight between Congress’s
House Committee on Un-American Activities (HCUAA) and those accused by the
committee of harboring private loyalties to the Soviet Union and international
communist movement. It was before this committee that certain citizens were
repeatedly asked the dramatic question, “Are you now, or have you ever been, a
member of the Communist Party?” Many of those asked pleaded the Fifth
Amendment.
There is much to this
drama that today is misunderstood or unappreciated. To cite just one example,
the actions of the House Committee are often identified with conservatives,
with the political right, with McCarthyism and the man Joe McCarthy. In truth, Senator
McCarthy was never a member of this House (of Representatives)
Committee. In fact, throughout its history, the committee was chaired primarily
by anti-communist Democrats. Its Democrat chieftains ranged from Rep. Martin
Dies, D-Texas, to Rep. Francis Walter, D-Pa., to Rep. Richard Ichord, D-Mo.,
among others.
But more than that,
and fundamental to the theme of this article, was the counter-campaign against
the House Committee. That counter-campaign is known today only by a narrow
group of Cold War researchers who have actually dug into the declassified
archives – ranging from Soviet archives in Russia to the Comintern Archives on
Communist Party USA (CPUSA), housed at the Library of Congress. A look at those
archives, and other material, illuminates an interesting counter-response to
the House Committee. That counter-response was a campaign called Operation
Abolition.
Operation Abolition
was a 1940s/1950s effort led by (among others) CPUSA, the Daily Worker, the
ACLU and a splinter group from the ACLU, the National Emergency Civil Liberties
Committee – headed by Corliss Lamont and I. F. Stone. The goal of this coalition
of left and far-left sources was to abolish the House Committee on Un-American
Activities, or at least to so question and demonize the committee in the
public’s mind as to discredit the committee.
It was incredibly
ironic, and utterly outrageous, that after two decades of being wrong and being
duped by Stalin, by Stalinists, and by secret supporters of Stalin, that
America’s liberals/progressives – led by the ACLU and National Emergency Civil
Liberties Committee – would come together to find their demon not in the duped
liberals/progressives or pro-communists who defended Stalin as he murdered tens
of millions, but in the anti-communists who tried to tell the truth to
Americans about Stalin, his murderous state and his secret supporters in
America. Can you imagine? Well, that is precisely what happened. Making it
worse, I. F. Stone, who we now believe was a paid Soviet agent from 1936-38,
helped lead the campaign.
So intense was this
campaign that Congress itself ultimately investigated the campaign. Congress
correctly perceived that the campaign was built upon a larger
“anti-anti-communist” campaign that liberals/progressives pushed for decades
and still advance to this day. That push had been so intense and problematic in
the 1950s that the Senate Judiciary Committee (run by anti-communist Democrats)
would hold hearings and publish a report titled, “The New Drive Against the
Anti-Communist Program.”
As noted during those
hearings, leading the charge in many of these anti-anti-communist thrusts was
the New York Times. As testified by the feature source in the hearings before
the Senate Judiciary Committee, the Times was one of the primary “organs of
anti-anti-communism,” doing so ad nauseum with “heavyweight, comatose
gibberish.”
Whether gibberish or
not, this work was extremely effective in stirring the emotions of
liberals/progressives, with the effect of inadvertently advancing the communist
cause.
‘HUAC’s’
‘Un-Americans’
Implicit to this
effectiveness, and a huge propaganda success, was the very use of the acronym
“HUAC.” Language became central to the debate.
Consider: America’s
communists, socialists and liberals/progressives happily inverted the phrase
“un-American,” charging the House Committee itself (and its chairs and members)
with being “un-American.” The political left has done this so effectively that
its historic term for the House Committee on Un-American Activities is not the
proper acronym, “HCUAA,” but the commonly known and widely accepted term
“HUAC,” which is actually a mis-ordered acronym that incorrectly reads: House Un-American
Committee. This acronym is itself a major statement. Note, too, that the term
“HUAC” shows that the political left in America is not shy about labeling
certain people “un-American” – a tactic that the left claims is the typical
domain of the right – so long as the left is doing the labeling.
Overall, the left has
done this so aggressively that it has succeeded in permanently labeling HCUAA
as “HUAC.” I have noticed the results when teaching college students. In my
courses, when I attempt to use the correct acronym, HCUAA, I get quizzical
looks as I scribble the letters on the chalkboard. To the contrary, the moment
I revert to “HUAC,” students nod, understanding what I’m referring to. The left
has won this battle over language. And most ironic, the greatest champions of
the term “HUAC” were American communists, who used the term incessantly in the
Daily Worker and all their publications. When non-communist
liberals/progressives today use that term, they are actually, whether they know
it or not, employing the propaganda language of CPUSA.
Particularly brazen
was the Daily Worker. In fact, it is almost laughable that the Daily Worker put
“communists” in quotes when reporting on actual communists identified by HCUAA,
while simultaneously not placing “HUAC” in quotes, as if the former were
fantasy and the latter reality. Oftentimes, communists and
liberals/progressives alike simply called HUAC “the Un-American Committee”
(leaving out “House”).
Even more brazen,
CPUSA, throughout the Cold War and even post-Cold War, maligned what it dubbed
“the racist, McCarthyite forces of evil” and the “fascist House Un-American
Activities Committee.”
Yes, fascist.
This was an obscene accusation against a generation that had faced the Nazis.
And yet, typical of the American left, opponents were transmogrified into
political monsters: “racists,” “fascists,” “Nazis.”
Liberals/progressives hurl around these vicious names still today, almost
reflexively. It isn’t anything new; they and their comrades have done this for
a long, long time.
Frank Marshall Davis
Interestingly, this
war over language was waged not only at CPUSA organs like the Daily Worker but
by a subject of remarkable modern political relevance: Frank Marshall Davis.
Davis did so in his writings and publications, beginning at the Chicago Star
(1946-48) and continuing with great frequency at the Honolulu Record (1949-57)
– two communist-controlled publications.
For the record, Frank
Marshall Davis was a card-carrying member of Communist Party USA – card no.
47544. He joined the Party in Chicago during World War II. He was founding
editor-in-chief and a weekly columnist for the Chicago Star, where he wrote
flawless pro-Soviet propaganda, blasting everything and everyone from the Marshall
Plan and Truman Doctrine to Harry Truman and Winston Churchill. His position
was always predictable: it was the Kremlin’s position. Davis continued that
work in Hawaii, where he moved in 1949, and where he would eventually meet and
mentor a young man named Barack Obama in the 1970s.
As to the theme of
this article, I counted 43 examples of Frank Marshall Davis using the word
“un-American” at the Honolulu Record in just 1949-50 alone. Some of these were
in defense (to defend himself), others on offense (to attack the committee).
Three times the words were typed into titles of his columns. Twice he used the
word “un-Americanism.” Davis was not reticent about excoriating “the aptly
named un-American committee.”
Some examples of
Davis’s use of this phrase are worth highlighting:
In a May 1950 piece for the Honolulu Record, Davis described what he referred to as a natural alliance sought by bigoted anti-communists on “the un-American committee.” “This alliance with a revived Nazi Germany,” wrote Davis, “may please such persons as John Rankin of Mississippi and John Wood of Georgia, two past and present chairmen of the un-American committee whose ideas on race parallel those of Adolf Hitler.” In fact, said Davis, congressmen Rankin and Wood were not merely run-of-the-mill, redneck Democratic Party racists, but were themselves “upholders of master race theory of the Nazis.”
In a May 1950 piece for the Honolulu Record, Davis described what he referred to as a natural alliance sought by bigoted anti-communists on “the un-American committee.” “This alliance with a revived Nazi Germany,” wrote Davis, “may please such persons as John Rankin of Mississippi and John Wood of Georgia, two past and present chairmen of the un-American committee whose ideas on race parallel those of Adolf Hitler.” In fact, said Davis, congressmen Rankin and Wood were not merely run-of-the-mill, redneck Democratic Party racists, but were themselves “upholders of master race theory of the Nazis.”
Frank Marshall Davis
did not mince words: If America, and especially anti-communists at “HUAC,”
wanted to see Nazis, they should look in the mirror.
Another “un-American”
piece by Davis that’s especially illuminating was a September 20, 1947, column
for the Chicago Star, titled, “I got radical thoughts.” Here, Davis candidly
stated that he wanted to flat-out nationalize the packing-house industry, as
well as impose national price controls and a federal tax on the rich and their
“excess profits.” “I’m so un-American right now,” wrote Obama’s mentor, “that I
want to see price controls clamped back on this minute, a new and stronger
excess profits tax put into operation, and the whole packing industry
nationalized.”
What’s fascinating
about this particular article is who Frank Marshall Davis worked with at the
communist-controlled packing house workers’ union – and how those comrades
eerily relate to today.
Working with Davis in
promoting the packing-house workers union was Vernon Jarrett. They collaborated
in a communist-controlled group called the Citizens’ Committee to Aid
Packing-House Workers. A surviving April 12, 1948, document printed on committee
letterhead, and found by researcher Trevor Loudon, lists Davis as both
committee member and among the small group of journalistically inclined
individuals who comprised the committee’s publicity committee. Joining Davis in
both capacities was Vernon Jarrett.
Vernon
Jarrett would become a major name in Chicago and known nationally. He would
also become father-in-law to a young woman named Valerie Jarrett, Barack
Obama’s single most important adviser.
And the links don’t
end there. Also working to advance the proletariat from the packing-house
workers union was the Canter family, specifically Harry and David Canter, who
in the 1930s lived in the Soviet Union while Harry worked for Stalin’s
government as an official translator of Lenin’s writings. Hailing originally
from Boston, where Harry was secretary of Boston’s Communist Party, the Canters
eventually ended up in Chicago in the 1940s, where they worked with Frank
Marshall Davis, Obama’s mentor. In the 1970s,
David Canter would, like Davis, become a mentor – of a young man named David
Axelrod, Obama’s chief strategist.
The links are amazing,
too extraordinary to try to make up. Nonetheless, they are as true as they are
shocking. And to bring this full circle to the theme of this article, the likes
of the Canters worked with Frank Marshall Davis in certain circles and fronts –
and the literal pages of the Chicago Star, which incessantly called for the
abolition of the House Committee on Un-American Activities.
In all, whether
“un-American” was hurled by Frank Marshall Davis or his liberal/progressive or
communist friends, think about their argument: The left was, in effect, arguing
that the true Americans were the card-carrying, closet American
communists – literally pledged to Stalin’s USSR and the Comintern – whereas the
un-Americans were the anti-communists, especially those elected to Congress and
fulfilling their duty of investigating possible secret Soviet agents or
collaborators. For these congressmen, their duties to the U.S. Constitution
mandated that they pursue potential indigenous security threats.
Frank Marshall Davis
and his comrades constantly tried to argue that they weren’t communists, but
were mere “progressives” being unfairly hounded by Neanderthal McCarthyites and
the evil “HUAC.” This was disinformation they fed to liberals, which, in turn,
fomented a wider anti-”HUAC” campaign. Liberals, naturally, swallowed the bait
hook, line and sinker. In truth, these guys were communists, and they were
rightly being pursued for their correctly suspected pro-Soviet activities.
And yet, still today,
the likes of Frank Marshall Davis himself continue to be protected by liberals
who portray him as an innocent civil-rights crusader hounded by McCarthyites.
Who does this? Pro-Obama liberal biographers and journalists. They do this, of
course, to protect Obama. Alas, then, the disinformation curiously continues.
The preceding
was excerpted from the September issue of WND’s acclaimed monthly Whistleblower
magazine, “DISINFORMATION
AGE: How America’s news media have become ‘useful idiots’ for Marxists, sociopaths
and tyrants.”
Dr. Paul Kengor is
professor of political science at Grove City College and author of the new
bestselling book “The Communist: Frank Marshall Davis, The Untold Story of Barack Obama’s
Mentor.” His other books include “Dupes: How America’s Adversaries
Have Manipulated Progressives for a Century.”
1 comment:
As a child I saw the HCUAA in action on TV when my mother watched it in fascination as it was televised. Joe McCarthy was a hero then. It is "funny" to see how history has been twisted and a hero has been demonized and vilified.
As a teacher of the gifted, one of my favorite programs to use was "Using Words as Weapons" by The Learning Seed Company (?). Dr. Kengor's article is a grim reminder of just how effective and destructive words can be. And our Creator reminds us, too, that one day soon we will be judged by every idle word.
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