Who
Rules America: Power Elite Analysis and American History
by Charles A. Burris
Previously
by Charles A. Burris: Coke,
Pepsi, and Dr. Pepper
Power
Elite Analysis
(also called Libertarian Class Analysis or Establishment
Studies) is a theme I have repeatedly stressed at LRC to understand
both present-day and past historical events. Knowledge is power.
Empower yourself by learning about Power Elite Analysis and how
it impacts specifically upon the welfare-warfare state and the parasitical
elites which benefit from this leviathan within our midst.
In July of
2010, Angelo Codevilla’s magnificent manifesto, "The Ruling
Class: How They Corrupted America and What We Can Do About It"
was published
initially online in The American Spectator (and later
in
book form). It immediately went viral on the Internet and started
a widespread
national conversation about America’s hubristic power elite
and the arrogant way they reign over the rest of us.
When Codevilla’s
article appeared I
stated that it was the most important essay I had ever read.
I still believe this because it is a superb synthesis of class analysis
with keen insights on contemporary power elite relationships regarding
today’s rulers and the ruled.
This class
division of present-day America into two factions, Court and Country,
has absolutely nothing to do with any Marxian view or analysis.
It is a reaffirmation of the seminal insights of Bernard Bailyn’s
Pulitzer Prize winning volume, The
Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, and
Murray N. Rothbard’s Conceived
in Liberty.
These books
demonstrate that the Founders’ world-view saw the crucial struggle
of the Revolution as a battle of liberty versus power. Codevilla
posits today’s battle in the same dramatic terms.
This is the
central theme this article will develop below.
An understanding
of power elite analysis is the "litmus test" separating
real libertarians from alternative lifestyle dilettantes dabbling
in free market theory. This examination of causal relationships
regarding the nature and scope of political power, who has it and
how it is exercised, is
crucial to understanding the State as organized crime.
The similarity
between this analysis and what researcher Peter Dale Scott calls
"Deep Politics," the critical examination of the sub-rosa
reality behind surface events, are both attempts to unmask the true
face of power, exposing the elite social, economic, and financial
groups and individuals who benefit from the exercise of State coercion.
In July of
1978 I had the honor of attending the Cato Institute’s First Summer
Seminar on Political Economy at Wake Forrest University. The distinguished
faculty of libertarian luminaries included Murray
N. Rothbard, Leonard
P. Liggio, Arthur
A. Ekirch, Walter
E. Grinder, and Roy
A. Childs. This was before the devastating Cato Institute split
detailed by David
Gordon in his excellent series of articles at LRC.
The curriculum
was hard-core Rothbardian – natural rights libertarianism from The
Ethics of Liberty, Austrian Economics, revisionist history,
and libertarian class analysis.
The Cato organizers
gave us each a ton of excellent books (including Rothbard’s Power
and Market) and photocopy reprints of classic articles including
Rothbard’s libertarian strategy memorandum which served as the guideline
for the Institute’s creation.
Rothbard later
admitted that these early Seminars were organized as "best
and brightest" talent searches for Cato.
But it was
the powerful lecture presentations by Walter E. Grinder, "Libertarian
Class Analysis" and "American Power Elites" which
had the most truly lasting impact upon me. Over the decades Walter
has remained my mentor and inspiration in these areas.
As homage to
him and his outstanding efforts in helping me and so many others
by his gracious and thoughtful guiding hand throughout these years,
I have consciously followed in his pioneering pathway blazed by
his initial research in drafting this bibliographic outline composition
and format.
WHO
RULES AMERICA: POWER ELITE ANALYSIS AND AMERICAN HISTORY
Part One
- Realization
of the General Aversion of Most Persons to Deal with Classes.
- General
Discussion of Individuals in Groups
-
Groups
and Group Interests
-
Why Power
Elite Analysis (Libertarian
Class Analysis) is Distinct
From
And
Superior to Marxist Analysis
- Libertarian
Class Theory Antedates Marxist Theory
- The English
Civil War (The Levelers)
- Jean-Baptiste
Say, Charles
Comte and Charles Dunoyer
- The
Industrial Society Versus the Statist Society
- The
Competitive Free Market Versus the Monopolistic Society
- The
Free Market Pitted Against Mercantilism and Feudalism
- Henri
de Saint-Simon and the Distortion of Class Theory
- From
Saint-Simon to Karl Marx
- Later 19th
Century Libertarian Class Analysis
- Herbert
Spencer: Military Society Versus the Industrial Society
- Sir
Henry Maine: From Status to Contract
- Richard
Cobden: War and the Interests
- American
Libertarian Class Theory
- From
the Beginning: Liberty Versus Power
1. The
Impact of John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon in America
2. Wilkes
Liberty in America
3. Thomas
Paine, Thomas
Jefferson, John
Taylor
B. John
C. Calhoun: Net Tax Consumers Versus Net Tax Payers
C. Lysander
Spooner: Taxes and the Highwayman
-
20th
Century Libertarian Class Analysis
- Vilfredo
Pareto and Ludwig von Mises
- The
Circulation of Elites
- The
State’s Role in Freezing Elites into Castes
- Franz
Oppenheimer
- The
Economic Means Versus the Political Means of Gaining Wealth
- The
State as the Organization of the Political Means
- Smoothing
and Legitimizing the Exploitive Transfer of Wealth From the
Productive
- Albert
Jay Nock and Frank
Chodorov
- The
State Versus Society
- The
History of the United States as a Rise of the State at the
Expense of Society (Constitution, Civil War, Progressive Era,
Wars, New Deal)
- Murray
N. Rothbard
- The
Anatomy of the State
- Legitimacy
and the Role of Court Intellectuals and National Security
Managers
-
21st
Century Libertarian Class Analysis
- David
M. Hart
- Sheldon
Richman
- Roderick
Long
- David
D’Amato
- Wendy
McElroy
- Implications
- Free
Entry and Competition in the Market Place: No Help or Hindrance
(No
Special Interest Regulation, Bailouts, or Underwriting)
- Cut
Back Drastically on State Power
- Recognize
Taxation as the Root of All Evil: Slash Drastically, Move
to Abolish Entirely
WHO
RULES AMERICA: POWER ELITE ANALYSIS AND AMERICAN HISTORY
Part Two
- Early
American Historical Overview
Theme
of Liberty Versus Power The
Country Party Versus Court Party: The Declaration of Independence
and the Revolution (Bernard Bailyn, The
Origins of American Politics, The
Ideological Origins of the American Revolution; Angelo
M. Codevilla, The
Ruling Class: How They Corrupted America and What We Can do about
it)
-
Counterrevolution
- U.
S. Constitution (John Taylor, New
Views of the Constitution of the United States;
Charles A. Beard, An
Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the
United States; Saul Cornell, The
Other Founders: Anti-Federalism & the Dissenting Tradition
in America, 1788-1828)
- Alexander
Hamilton and the Plutocratic Federalists: "The Funding
Fathers" (John McConaughy, Who
Rules America: A Century of Invisible Government;
Thomas J. DiLorenzo, Hamilton’s
Curse: How Jefferson’s Archenemy Betrayed the American
Revolution – and What It Means for America Today)
- The
Early Nationalist Period (Stanley Elkins & Eric McKitrick,
The
Age of Federalism: The Early American Republic, 1788-1800;
Gordon Wood, Empire
of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815;
Phillip H. Burch, Elites
in American History: The Federalist Years to the Civil War)
- Jeffersonian-Jacksonian
Drive to Roll Back the Federalist Program and Rid America of
its Powerful Ruling Elite (Lance Banning, The
Jeffersonian Persuasion: Evolution of a Party Ideology)
- Failure
of Jefferson/Madison Regimes and the Rise of the Old
Republican "Tertium
Quids" (Norman K. Risjord, The
Old Republicans: Southern Conservatism in the Age of Jefferson)
- John
Taylor of Caroline County, Virginia (John Taylor, Tyranny
Unmasked)
- John
Randolph of Roanoke, Virginia
- The
Panic of 1819, James Monroe, and the "Era of Good Feelings"
- Martin
Van Buren and the Founding of the Democratic Party (Robert V.
Remini, Martin
Van Buren and the Making of the Democratic Party)
-
After
Visiting his Hero Jefferson, Van Buren Prompted to Found the
Democratic Party to Reinvigorate the Two Party System
- The
Election of 1824 and "the
Corrupt Bargain:" After the Defeat of William
H. Crawford, Van Buren Puts his Organizing Skills to Winning
the Presidency for Andrew Jackson (Harry L. Watson, Liberty
and Power: The Politics of Jacksonian America)
- Ideological
Focus of the Democratic Party
- Anti-Central
Bank
- Hard
Money: "Gold is the People’s Money"
- Free
Trade and Anti-Monopoly
- The
Twenty Four Year Plan
- Eight
Years of Andrew
Jackson of Tennessee
- Eight
Years of Martin Van
Buren of New York
- Eight
Years of Thomas
Hart ("Old Bullion") Benton of Missouri
- The
Rise of the Whig Party: Rebirth of the Hamiltonian Consolidationists
- Pro-Central
Bank: Opposition to the Separation of Banking and State
Proposed by Jackson and Van Buren – the
Independent Sub-Treasury
- High
Protective Tariff: Anti-Free Trade
- Corporate
Welfare: The "Internal Improvements" System
- Civil
War: Reconsolidation of the Yankee Mercantile Elite (Thomas
DiLorenzo, The
Real Lincoln; Joseph R. Stromberg, "The
War for Southern Independence: A Radical Libertarian Perspective;"
Murray N. Rothbard, "The
Civil War and Its Legacy")
- High
Protective Tariffs
- Abraham
Lincoln’s "Pro-Slavery" 13th Amendment
- Income
Tax
- Conscription:
Led to Widespread Anti-Draft Riots and Protests
- Paper
Money: Greenbacks
- National
Banking Act of 1863: Eliminated Competing Currencies
- Suspension
of the Writ of Habeas Corpus
- Mass
Arrests of Opponents of Lincoln and the War in the North
-
Reconstruction:
Military Government and Occupation of the South
- Post-Civil
War Period
- The
Roots of America’s Modern Power Elite (Murray N. Rothbard,
"Wall
Street, Banks, and American Foreign Policy," Phillip
H. Burch, Jr., Elites
in American History: The Civil War to the New Deal;
Richard F. Pettigrew, Triumph
Plutocracy: The Story of American Public Life From 1870 to 1920)
- Quasi-Free
Trade Within the New Constraints
- Tariffs:
The Source of Republican Power
- Railroad
Land Grants and Subsidies (Murray N. Rothbard, "The
Railroading of the American People")
- The
Rise of Morgan Power
- Problems
of Free Market for the Post War Elite (Murray N. Rothbard, "The
Decline of Laissez Faire")
- Dynamic
Competition Keeps Eating at Economic and Political Power (Murray
N. Rothbard, "The
Rise and Fall of Monopolies)
- Pools,
Mergers, Holding Companies, Trusts and Voluntary Cartel Movement:
Unsuccessful From the View of the Power Elite (Murray N. Rothbard,
"Tariffs,
Inflation, Anti-Trust and Cartels")
- Political
Parties As Political Churches: Postmillennial Evangelical
Protestant Pietistic Republicans Versus Liturgical Democrats:
Roman Catholics, Lutherans, and Old Fashioned Calvinists (Murray
N. Rothbard, "Pietism
and the Power Brokers")
- Regulation
to the Rescue of Vested Interests
-
The
Progressive Era and the Foundation of the American Corporate
State (Gabriel Kolko, The
Triumph of Conservatism; Murray N. Rothbard, "Theodore
Roosevelt: Master Reformer," "Regulation
and Public Utilities," "The
Progressive Era?" "Progressivism
and the Family")
- The
Role of Increasingly Secular Postmillennial Protestants and
German Educated Ph.Ds.’ in Formulation of Progressivism
- The National
Civic Federation (James Weinstein,
The Corporate Ideal in the Liberal State 1900-1918)
- Partial
Solidification of Ruling Class Control
- Federal
Reserve as the Central Key of Control and Rationalization
(Murray N. Rothbard, The
Origins of the Federal Reserve, The
Case Against the Fed, "The
Fed and the Power Elite," "Cartelization
of Banking: The Fed," "The
Federal Reserve As A Cartelization Device: The Early Years,
1913-1930;" Ron Paul, End
the Fed)
- Struggle
Within the Power Elite (Ferdinand Lundberg, America’s
60 Families)
- Rockefeller
Versus Morgan (Republicans Versus Democrats)
- Uses of
Anti-Trust Measures by Both
- World War
Solidifies the Power Elite (Murray N. Rothbard, "Woodrow
Wilson and World War I")
- Morgan’s
Push for War (Morgan Ties with Rothschild and England)
-
America
Becomes partner With England and France in Control of the Western
Imperial Order (Role
of Oil in Foreign Policy)
- War
Industries Board: Culmination of Control (Murray N. Rothbard,
"The
Great Cooperation")
- Later
Model for the NRA under FDR: Bernard Baruch
- Food
Czar: Herbert Hoover
- Versailles,
"The Inquiry," and the League of Nations
- The
Birth of the Council on Foreign Relations (Carroll Quigley,
Tragedy
and Hope; Peter Grose, Continuing
the Inquiry: The Council on Foreign Relations From 1921 to
1996; Robert D. Schulzinger, The
Wise Men of Foreign Affairs: The History of the Council on
Foreign Relations; Laurence H. Shoup and William Minter,
Imperial
Brain Trust: The Council on Foreign Relations and Untied States
Foreign Policy; James Perloff, The
Shadows of Power: The Council on Foreign Relations and the
American Decline)
- "Colonel
Edward M. House, Elihu
Root, John
W. Davis, Raymond
B. Fosdick
- The
Rise of the Foundations (Rockefeller, Carnegie, Ford), Think
Tanks
- Relation
of Idea Centers and Public Policy
- American
Economic Association, Brookings Institution, 20th
Century Fund, etc.
- Indoctrination
and Control
-
The
Emergence of Banking Groups: Struggle Between Industrial Capital
and Finance Capital: DuPont, Morgan Versus Rockefeller, Harriman,
and Kuhn Loeb (Thomas Ferguson, Golden
Rule: The Investment Theory of Party Competition and the Logic
of Money-Driven Political Systems)
- The Oil
War: Rockefeller Standard Oil Versus British Royal Dutch Shell
(Ludwell Denny: We
Fight For Oil, America
Conquers Britain); William Engdahl, A
Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World
Order
- The Great
Depression: Caused by the Fed’s Monetary Policies (Murray N. Rothbard,
America’s
Great Depression)
- The
New Deal: The Rise of the Welfare-Warfare State (Phillip H.
Burch, Jr., Elites
in American History: The New Deal to the Carter Administration)
- The Fall
of the Morgan Bloc and the Triumph of the Rockefeller Bloc
- End
of the Gold Standard: Fiat Currency and the Fed
- Glass-Steagall
Act: Separation of Commercial and Investment Banking Aimed
Directly at Morgan Bloc
- Pecora
Congressional Hearings on Chase National Bank
- Morgan/DuPont
Bloc Seeks Revenge: The
Plot to Overthrow FDR (Jules Archer, The
Plot To Seize The White House)
- NRA:
Corporatism
- "Old
Right" Opposition to FDR’s New Deal Domestic Policies and
the Rush to War: H.
L. Mencken, Albert
Jay Nock, John
T. Flynn, Garet
Garrett, "Colonel"
Robert McCormick (Justin Raimondo, Reclaiming
the American Right: the Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement)
- British
Intelligence and the eastern seaboard American anglophile establishment’s
war against American non-intervention (Thomas E. Mahl, Desperate
Deception: British Covert Operations in the United States, 1939-44)
- World
War II
-
The
Coalition War: Morgan War in Europe, Rockefeller War in Asia
- CFR
Plans the Post-War World
- The
United Nations: Wilson’s Dream Now FDR’s Realization
- Bretton
Woods: Birth of the World Bank, the IMF, and the Dollar
as the World’s Reserve Currency: John
Maynard Keynes and Harry Dexter White
- The
Cold War and the Emergence of the National Security State
- Containment,
The
Central Intelligence Agency, and the
American Empire of Bases (Richard Harris Smith, OSS:
The Secret History of America's First Central Intelligence Agency;
Patrick K. O' Donnell, Operatives,
Spies, and Saboteurs: The
Unknown Story of the Men and Women of WWII's OSS;
Burton Hersh, The
Old Boys: The American Elite and the Origins of the CIA;
Tim Weiner, Legacy
of Ashes: The History of the CIA; Joseph J. Trento,
The
Secret History of the CIA; Richard J. Aldrich,
The
Hidden Hand: Britain,
America and Cold War Secret Intelligence; David
Wise and Thomas B. Ross, The
Invisible Government; Hugh Wilford, The
Mighty Wurlitzer: How the CIA Played America; L.
Fletcher Prouty, The
Secret Team: The CIA and Its Allies in Control of the World;
Victor Marchetti and John Marks, The
CIA and the Cult of Intelligence; John Marks,
The
Search For The Manchurian Candidate: The CIA and Mind Control:
The Secret History of the Behavioral Sciences; W.
H. Bowart, Operation
Mind Control: Our Secret Government's War Against Its Own People;
Ernest Volkman and Blaine Baggett, Secret
Intelligence: The Inside Story of America's Espionage Empire;
Frances Stonor Saunders, The
Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters;
Peter Coleman, The
Liberal Conspiracy; John Loftus and Mark Aarons, The
Secret War Against the Jews: How Western Intelligence Betrayed
the Jewish People; Bill Moyers, The
Secret Government: The Constitution In Crisis; Alfred
W. McCoy, The
Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade;
Peter Dale Scott, American
War Machine: Deep Politics, the CIA Global Drug Connection,
and the Road to Afghanistan; Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair, Whiteout:
The CIA, Drugs And The Press; Peter Grose, Gentleman
Spy: The Life of Allen Dulles; Evan Thomas, The
Very Best Men: The Daring Early Years of the CIA;
Evan Thomas and Walter Isaacson, The
Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made; Kai Bird,
The
Chairman: John J. McCloy and the Making of the American
Establishment; Kai Bird, The
Color of Truth: McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy: Brothers in
Arms; G. William Domhoff, The
Higher Circles: The Governing Class in America)
-
The
Korean War: UN Police Action (Thomas Paterson, ed., Cold
War Critics: Alternatives to American Foreign Policy in the
Truman Years; Murray N. Rothbard, "The
Foreign Policy of the Old Right," Justus Doenecke,
Not
to the Swift: The Old Isolationists in the Cold War Era;
Ronald Radosh: Prophets
on the Right: Profiles of Conservative Critics of American Globalism)
- "I
Like Ike" and the Covert Campaign Against Robert Taft (Phyllis
Schlafly, A
Choice Not An Echo)
- CIA
Covert Operations in Italy, Iran, Guatemala, South Vietnam,
Cuba, etc.
- William
F. Buckley, National Review, and the Death of the "Old
Right" (Murray N. Rothbard, The
Betrayal of the American Right)
- The Bilderberg
Group (Daniel Estulin, The
True Story of the Bilderberg Group; John Laughland,
The
Tainted Source: The Undemocratic Origins of the European
Idea)
- The
JFK Assassination and Coup d’Etat by the top tier of the National
Security Establishment (James W. Douglass, JFK
And The Unspeakable: Why He Died & Why It Matters;
James A. Dunlap III, "A
Rothbardian Power Elite Analysis of Modern American History")
- Vietnam
and the Rupture of the Establishment’s Foreign Policy Consensus
(David Halberstam’s The
Best and the Brightest)
- The
Neocon Contagion (Alan M. Wald, The
New York Intellectuals: The Rise and Decline of the Anti-Stalinist
Left From the 1930s to the 1980s; Len Colodny and Tom
Shachtman, The
Forty Years War: The Rise and Fall of the Neocons, from Nixon
to Obama)
- Richard
Nixon and Watergate (Len Colodny and Robert Gettlin, Silent
Coup: The Removal of a President)
- David
Rockefeller, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Jimmy Carter and the Trilateral
Commission (Thomas R. Dye, Who’s
Running America? The Carter Years; Holly Sklar,
Trilateralism:
The Trilateral Commission and Elite Planning for World Management;
Murray N. Rothbard, "The
Treaty That Wall Street Wrote")
-
The
Iranian Hostage Crisis and the 1980 October Surprise
- The
Reagan Revolution (Thomas R. Dye, Who’s
Running America? The Reagan Years; Jonathan Marshall,
Peter Dale Scott, and Jane Hunter, The
Iran Contra Connection: Secret Teams and Covert Operations in
the Reagan Era; Joel Bainerman, The
Crimes of a President: New Revelations on Conspiracy & Cover-Up
in the Bush and Reagan Administrations)
- The Fall
of the Soviet Empire and the End of the Cold War
- George
Bush, Global Governance, and The New World Order (Thomas R.
Dye, Who’s
Running America? The Bush Era; Kevin Phillips, American
Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune and the Politics of Deceit in the
House of Bush; "Global
Governance;" Peace
and World Order Studies: A Curriculum Guide)
- Lost
Decade: The Clinton Years (Thomas R. Dye, Who’s
Running America? The Clinton Years; Roger Morris, Partners
in Power: The Clintons and Their America; Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard, The
Secret Life of Bill Clinton: The Unreported Stories)
- George
W. Bush, the Neocons, and "Red
State Fascism" (Thomas R. Dye, Who’s
Running America? The Bush Restoration; Robert Parry, Secrecy
& Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate
to Iraq; Russ Baker, Family
of Secrets: the Bush Dynasty, the Powerful Forces That Put It
In The White House, And What Their Influence Means For America)
- Barack
Obama: The United States of Goldman, Sachs (Charles Gasparino,
Bought
and Paid For: The Unholy Alliance Between Barack Obama and Wall
Street)
RECOMMENDED
READING:
- Ron Paul,
End
the Fed
- Ron Paul,
The
Revolution: A Manifesto
- Ron Paul,
Liberty
Defined
- Murray N.
Rothbard, Wall
Street, Banks, and American Foreign Policy
- Murray N.
Rothbard, The
Anatomy of the State
- Murray N.
Rothbard, The
Ethics of Liberty
- Angelo M.
Codevilla, The
Ruling Class: How They Corrupted America and What We Can do about
it
- Albert Jay
Nock, Our
Enemy, the State
- Judge Andrew
P. Napolitano, It
Is Dangerous To Be Right When the Government Is Wrong
- Peter Dale
Scott, American
War Machine: Deep Politics, the CIA Global Drug Connection, and
the Road to Afghanistan
- Carroll
Quigley, Tragedy
& Hope
- James Burnham,
The
Machiavellians: Defenders of Freedom
January
18, 2012
Charles
A. Burris [send him mail]
a history instructor in an American high school. Before becoming
an educator he was involved in over thirty electoral and ballot
petition campaigns for third party/independent candidates throughout
the country. He served as national ballot drive coordinator in the
1984 Libertarian Party presidential campaign and as state coordinator
of the New Hampshire Libertarian Party in 1978.
Copyright
© 2012 Charles A. Burris
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