Subject: Turn Off Your TV: part 2 Turn Off Your TV--Part II The Making of a Fascist Society by L. Wolfe So, how are you doing? I hope you still have that television set turned off. If you don't, you'd better get up and turn it off now, before we go any further: You'll need to be able to concentrate on what I am telling you. Most Americans think they have a pretty good idea of what fascism is all about. They've seen the pictures, in the movies and on television, of Nazi Germany in the 1930s. The marching jackbooted troops. The huge rallies, with all the flags. The speeches by Hitler, to the cheering approval of enormous crowds of people, who raise their arms in salute at the beckoning of their Fu@auhrer. Also the pictures of the Nazi thugs breaking windows, the Gestapo and SS troops beating someone, maybe a Jew. Then there are the other images: the scenes after the death camps were opened to Allied troops, the piles of bodies, the bones, the hair, the huge mounds of eyeglasses--and the ovens. A generation of Americans went to war to defeat that horror; many gave their lives so that such inhumanity might never walk this Earth again. We Americans would never tolerate what happened in Nazi Germany, you say; we'd never let Hitler get that far, and we'd never look the other way in indifference while millions of our fellow men were slaughtered. No sir, not us. Not us? Think back to a little more than a year ago. Think back to those great parades of troops and equipment celebrating the ``glorious'' victory of our troops in Operation Desert Storm. There were millions of people, throughout the nation, cheering raising their arms and voices in salute. And there were a hundred million more people watching the celebration on television sets throughout the land. In fact, if you think back, these celebrations, especially the huge ones in New York and Washington, were {organized} by television, with local and national newscasts providing ``advance'' advertising for the ``largest patriotic celebrations in history,'' as they were called. And it was the television set that told you {what} you were celebrating, or why Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf was as great a hero as George Washington or Ulysses S. Grant. This had been preceded by similar ``patriotic'' coverage on the war itself, before, during, and after the hostilities. You never questioned any of it, and you chose to participate in the celebration, either directly or indirectly. Only now do you find that you were celebrating the {slaughter} of more than 100,000 innocent civilians--women and children, in large part, and the maiming of tens of thousands more innocents. The approximate one month of hostilities was one of the most savage and intense slaughters of innocents in the history of warfare. And for whom did we fight? Our ``victory'' placed a despotic ruler, a brutal and fabulously rich ruling family, back on their feudal throne. This is what you celebrated. There were no Nazi thugs to terrorize you into going along with it all. You became part of a mob, a fascist mob organized by television. {You and your fellow citizens, brainwashed by television, already live in and tolerate a fascist society.} Let's state our point another way: {The advent and mass dissemination of television technology has rendered the Nazi model for a fascist society obsolete; it has provided a better, more subtle, and more powerful means of social control than the organized terror of the Nazi state.} To understand why this is so, we must take a look at that Nazi state, and the fascist society it organized. The Fascist Concept of Man The Nazi state was created by the same oligarchical financial and political interests who today control what we call the mass media and television. Forget about whatever stories you've seen on television about how Hitler came to power: his path to power was cleared by the same oligarchs who employ the the brainwashers that program you through television. Over a period of years, following the First World War, Germany was brutalized by the economic policy of this international elite. Hitler's Nazis were funded and promoted as a political option, and then steered into power in 1932-33. Once in power, the Nazis maintained their hold through the use of terror as part of mass brainwashing. In many ways it were proper to view the Nazi period as an {experiment} in methods of mass brainwashing and social control. At the root of this experiment was the desire to create a New World Order based on reversing a fundamental premise of Judeo-Christian civilization: that man is created as a higher and distinct species from animals, created in the image of the living God and by divine grace, imparted the divine spark of reason. This is what makes man human--his divinely given power of reason. This view of man, the view of the Renaissance, holds that all men are created {equal} in the eyes of the Creator. Society, organized according to such principles, must enable man to seek the Truth as his highest goal, and thereby {perfect} his existence and that of future generations, in accordance with Natural Law. Such a worldview cannot allow for the existence of an oligarchy who views itself, by birthright and worldly power, as more equal than other men. Such oligarchs, and creatures like their coterie of brainwashers, hold a contrary worldview: Man is an animal, a degraded beast, whose worst impulses must be repressed by the state. Laws are created to {control} these human animals and to allow for the continued existence of the social order. Men, in turn, make a {social contract} to allow themselves to be governed by such laws, which are mutable, since they are government by neither Natural Law nor truth. This is the view of the so-called Enlightenment, and in its extreme form, the fascist state. The question of the concept of man--as a creative, reasoning human being made in the image of the living God, or as a degraded beast, an animal--defines all other cultural questions. It is the moral--or immoral--underpinning of all societies. For mass brainwashing to work, it must attack the Renaissance view of man, for no person with such a self-conception can be brainwashed. Large numbers of people must be induced to give up beliefs that are the heritage of Judeo-Christian civilization; to do that, religious institutions, such as the Christian Churches, which defend the sanctity of human life, must be undermined and ultimately destroyed. This explains the peculiar fascination of all brainwashers with Gnostic heresy, Satanism, or what they call ``the varieties of religious experience.'' Such concepts as the sanctity and dignity of human life and the perfectability of man, and the principle of progress of human knowledge, the ideas of the Renaissance, have been transmitted from generation to generation. They are deeply imbedded in the human personality, and are the invariant axioms of our culture. To remove them, requires the equivalent of psychological shock therapy. When they are removed, we remove what makes man human, what separates him from the beast: {We have made man bestial.} Freudian Mass Brainwashing The Nazi experiment was aimed at doing that. How did it work? Well now we'll say something that might shock some people: Nazi Germany was an experiment in {Freudian mass psychology.} That is not to say that Sigmund Freud, the inventor of psychoanalysis, was himself a Nazi; he wasn't a practicing one. But he {shared} the belief of the Nazis and their sponsors that man was an animal, first and foremost. In several locations, Freud makes the case that it is the primitve, animal characteristics of man that are at the center of his emotional life. His life is a conflict between an animal seeking {pleasure} and gratification, and a reality that says that this cannot always be so; thought emerges as the individual tries to balance between the pleasure and reality principles. Freud saw his work as continuation of that of Charles Darwin, who had ``removed man from his throne at the center of the universe,'' and placed him squarely in the animal kingdom. Darwin saw nothing unique in man, nothing that gave him right to dominion over the Earth, other than sheer power to dominate other species. All that made man what he truly was, was not the work of a God, but of profane, clashing, and blind forces, claimed Darwin; Freud emphatically agreed with the work of ``the great Darwin.'' This belief that man is nothing more than a degraded beast is at the core of the Freudian system. It is fundamental to Freud's ordering of mental states that he must deny the perfectability of man, that there can be no absolute truths: man can never overcome his flaws. Psychoanalysis doesn't cure so much as it ``enlightens,'' makes an individual aware of his flaws and neuroses, to learn to live with them, and therefore cope with their debilitating symptomatic effects. For Freud, man is in a constant state of war with himself, with an infantile ``it'' (the id) at war with ``a little me'' or ``I'' (the ego); this ``I'' is only slightly less animalistic than the total animal, the ``it.'' Society exerts control over this degraded beast, this animal, through the ``over I,'' misreferred to in English as the ``superego.'' The ``over I,'' which Freud identifies as moral conscience, bids only that the ``it'' and the ``I'' control themselves in the form of a social contract with the rest of society. Freud states that the ``over I'' often gets in the way of the legitimate needs of the ``I'' and the ``it.'' It therefore becomes the source of neurosis, through repression of especially the sexual needs of the ``id'' and the ``I.'' What Freud calls the moral conscience of society is a source of pain, not pleasure, for the individual. The sources of human creativity, what distiguishes man from the animal, for Freud comes from {sublimated} sexual drives of the ``it'' and the ``I'': The most creative people are either practicing or latent homosexuals. This absurd theory Freud attempted to ``prove'' in his famous essay on Leonardo da Vinci, generalizing later to say that all people who follow what they perceive to be moral conscience, are driven toward neurosis. There is no paradise beyond an earthly paradise, Freud says, and all who believe otherwise suffer from a delusional fantasy. Freud's hatred of all religion, in particular the Roman Catholic Church, is central to his system. Religion is the great illusion that his psychology must strive to remove from man, since religion tells man that he is more than a beast and that he lives for higher purpose than the socially regulated seeking of pleasure. Man is not made in the image of the living God, says Freud; man has made God in {his} image, for the purpose of easing the pain of his existence. Deriding the great thinkers of the past, he says their defense of religious doctrine is infantile folly: ``We shall tell ourselves that it were very nice if there were a God who created the world and was a benevolent Providence, and if there were a moral order to the universe and an afterlife; but it is a striking fact that this is exactly as we are bound to wish it to be. And it were more remarkable still if our wretched, ignorant and downtrodden ancestors had succeeded in solving these difficult riddles of the universe.... ``...|[Yet] you defend the religious illusion with all your might. If it becomes discredited--and indeed the threat to it is great enough--then your world collapses. There is nothing left for you but despair of everything, of civilization, of the future of mankind. From that bondage, I am, we are free. Since we are prepared to renounce a good part of our infantile wishes, we can bear it if a few of our expectations turn out to be illusions'' {(The Future of an Illusion).} The Freudian system is thus a perfect tool for brainwashing, since it negates the moral underpinnings of our civilization, telling us that they are infantile illusion. Without that moral underpinning, man has no moorings and is susceptible to the brainwashers' ``suggestion.'' All Freudian psychology is a form of brainwashing to one extent or another, because to agree with its premises, one must agree that man is a beast who must deny the existence of universal law and God, the Creator. Freudian psychology, as preached by either Freud and his followers, or by neo-Freudians like Carl Jung, became the rage in the 1920s. It was promoted in the popular culture through the mass media of its day, newspaper and magazine articles. Its morally insane system of ``id,'' ``ego,'' and ``superego'' became part of the popular culture, as did its belief that creativity stems from sexual drives. Mass Psychology In 1921, before the Nazis had themselves been promoted into a mass phenomenon, Freud published one of the seminal works in his system, {Mass Psychology and the Analysis of the I.} Like the works of Fred Emery quoted earlier, and other brainwashers, this work is at once an analysis of a social phenomenon, and at the same time a ``cookbook'' on how, through mass psychology, to create such a phenomenon--in this case a mass fascist movement. Freud uses as a starting point the work of the French psychologist Gustav LeBon, his infamous {The Psychology of the Crowd.} It is LeBon's main thesis that as part of a mass or crowd, man regresses to a {primitive} mental state. A person who may be otherwise highly cultured and moral is capable of acting like a barbarian, is prone to acts of unspeakable violence and inhumanity, and loses his critical faculties in a large mass of people. People in a crowd lose their inhibitions and moral standards, and become highly emotional, says LeBon. This emotionalism, this irrationality, lends itself to the power of {suggestion,} through which the behavior of an individual can be determined by his perceptions and the actions of others around him. LeBon describes this as a return to man's primitive nature. Like Freud, at the center of his belief is the assertion that man is merely a higher animal, whose animal traits are controlled by social norms and the structure of society. Place this animal in a mass of similar animals, and his human identity is crushed: He ceases to think as a human and becomes caught up in instinctive animal-like activity. Man, says LeBon, has returned to his animal roots. But while he has become at once more primitive, more animal-like and infantile, mass man, the man in the crowd, also has a heightened sense of power, while his individual responsibility for action--a key factor in all moral judgment--diminishes. Sound familiar? LeBon is describing the behavior of all masses of people organized around emotionalism and infantile activities, such as the crowds at large spectator sporting events, at large rock concerts, at mass demonstrations. It is the psychology of the unthinking {mob.} The masters of people like LeBon, the people who control the brainwashers that program television, have for centuries known that masses in mobs are easily manipulated. From the days of ancient Rome, to the mobs of the French Revolution and the Terror, the oligarchs have used {agents provocateurs} and money to have such mobs do their bidding. LeBon says that individuals in a mass seem to behave as if they are in a state of hypnosis. But that is where his observations stop. Freud takes it a step further: The most effectively controlled masses are those which are led, by a leader. It is the leader who places the mass under an effective hypnotic spell. Masses of people, Freud says, can be deliberately induced to give up their moral conscience--the values that underpin all moral judgment. Deep within man's unconscious, is his animal nature. Those urges are repressed by his conscience, which is in turn molded by society. Freud calls this the ``I ideal'' (the ego ideal), which he later develops into the concept of the ``over I'' (the superego). The mass itself creates the preconditions for the silencing of the voice of individual conscience; that voice silenced, all that violates the standards of conscience, all the evil in man, can appear, without restraint. Freud is wrong that man is first and foremost an animal and that all that society does is to repress his instinctual animal behavior. He has laid the basis for a regressive, evil psychology, that can make man {more} of an animal--and hence more easily manipulated by a small ruling elite of oligarchs. ``In my innnermost depth, I am really convinced that my dear fellow human beings--with few exceptions--are rabble,'' Freud wrote to a colleague in 1929. If you deny, as Freud does, that man's true identity lies not in his individual mortal self, but in the moral acts of that individual, through his powers of creative reason, that live beyond his life on Earth, then you take away man's soul; then man is {reduced} to the animal-like, to be controlled by the power and repressive actions of an oligarchical-controlled state. ``It is just as impossible to do without control of the masses by a minority as it is to dispense with coercion in the work of civilization,'' Freud writes in his 1927 attack on religion, {The Future of an Illusion.} ``For the masses are lazy and unintelligent.'' Freud, before Hitler and his sponsors published {Mein Kampf,} described the concept of the ``Fu@auhrerprinzip,'' the leadership principle around which the Nazi state was organized. In his {Mass Psychology,} Freud argues that any mass, be it a nation, or a randomly created group, must have a leader, someone who gives it its {I ideal} or values. The leader {becomes} the individual member's common {I ideal} and takes over all his critical faculties, just as the hypnotized individual surrenders his self-determination to the hypnotizer. It is the leader, says Freud, who provides the common bond for a mass of people; their common attachment to the leader enables each member to identify with the other, giving form and direction to the mass. Freud says that the leader holds an attachment to his followers through what he calls the {aim inhibited libido}--a sexual attraction that is repressed or desexualized. For this to function, however, the leader must remain aloof, with no emotional attachments to anybody, so as create an almost god-like or mystical quality. The leader must appear to be above the mass, yet part of it; ``he loves no one but himself or other people in so far as they can serve his needs,'' writes Freud. In that way, the leader ``loves everyone.'' Man is most like an animal when he is young. The infantile mind, while still different from the animal in its creative capacities, thinks more instinctively, is more reactive, is more prone to suggestion. Freud's ``Fu@auhrer'' becomes a vehicle to make the masses more infantile; they are thus more easily controlled and manipulated. {They are rendered defenseless against mass brainwashing.} Think about what we have described about the leader. Now think about what you know about the Nazi state and its Fu@auhrer. Even the movie images have told you that Hitler organized his followers and the mass of Germans {almost exactly as Freud had described,} with results Freud ``predicted.'' Was the Fu@auhrer a Freudian? It is known that Hitler read LeBon; it cannot be established that he read Freud, especially {Mass Psychology.} But it is clear that those who put Hitler in power and those who steered his movement read Freud, as did most of the ruling elite of the day: It was they who were promoting the Freudian craze and its propagation throughout the world. {To be continued.} -- John Covici covici@ccs.covici.com