Where Did The Tea Party's Anti-Government Ideas Come From?
How were they able to get Tea Party candidates on so many ballots? Why do even the incumbent Republicans feel that they must conform to the extreme views of people like Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, and Rush Limbaugh? The answer is that a massive communications infrastructure has been built to reward those who conform (and punish all the rest).
Investing in the long haul pays off.” ~ Cognitive Policy Works
Note from BFIA: This article is a must-read that outlines the history of the conservative agenda and makes the case that progressives have failed to adopt a long-term strategy to counter it. Timely, as the GOP is about to take control of Congress, in this article the case is made that each campaign season, particularly 2008, organizations and individuals on the left diverted our money and resources into electoral campaigns and abandoned support of organizations that are working on the long-term strategies. If we continue to ignore the long term building of a media and idea infrastructure, the author argues, it will be at our peril. In short, we can't just elect a Democratic president and assume the world will somehow change. We have to win the idea war and that means investing in its infrastructure of progressive policy organizations and media.
Written by Joe Brewer of the re-configured Rockridge Institute, now Cognitive Policy Works, we are posting the whole thing here, but we encourage you to check out their website for more articles and the BFIA archives using key words “media reform.” Oh, and we can't recommend strongly enough that you take some time to read the 1971 Powell Memo (aka Powell Manifesto).
by Joe Brewer
An article came out [in October] in the New York Times about a strategy meeting hosted by the Koch brothers, two billionaires who have funded a staunchly anti-government agenda for years. This event highlights a deeper current of money that has been invested in an anti-government policy agenda that goes back decades.
In the midst of this election season, candidates across the country are engaging in an ideological battle with one side claiming that government is the problem and the other side claiming that we cannot solve our problems without effective government. This battle is taking place on a dramatically uneven playing field. It has been stacked against the public good for decades by deep pockets of corporate wealth.
Policy Agendas More Important Than Election Cycles
David Calahan, a researcher who studies the ideological basis of philanthropy, published a major report in 1999 titled $1 Billion for Ideas: Conservative Think Tanks in the 1990′s that describes the web of money that flowed through the top 20 Conservative think tanks in the United States. He identified the strategies that allow a well funded minority to dominate public discourse and set the agenda for the country. One of his major assertions was this:
Consider the impacts of the Tea Party Movement that arose after President Obama took office. A non-election agenda was initiated to frame the debate around anti-government sentiments. It’s veneer of grassroots populism conceals a vast network of media outlets, high-profile spokespeople, training centers, and deep pocketed funders who made the Tea Party possible. And yes, the Koch brothers are major donors of the effort.
How were they able to get Tea Party candidates on so many ballots? Why do even the incumbent Republicans feel that they must conform to the extreme views of people like Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, and Rush Limbaugh? The answer is that a massive communications infrastructure has been built to reward those who conform (and punish all the rest).
Investing in the long haul pays off.
After building a vast infrastructure it was pretty straightforward to rile millions of people up, especially since these very people experience the brunt of economic collapse. The ironies run deep in that those who have been hurt the most by deregulation and privatization are the foot soldiers rallied to the call of freedom by this effective system for mass manipulation of public opinion.
How Far Back Does This Go?
The first major effort to build an anti-government communications system can be traced back to 1971 and the Powell Memo, written by Lewis F. Powell. It laid out the ideas that influenced wealthy conservative businessmen to build a web of think tanks, media outlets, and recruitment centers that would go on the offensive and destroy public good will toward government. For nearly 40 years now, this system has been growing in size and sophistication. And it is surgical in its precision and effectiveness.
The impacts on the US economy and political system have been devastating.… rising international debt, increasing concentrations of wealth, lost savings of working people, explosive individual debt. The list goes on and on. All corresponding with the advance of an anti-government agenda throughout the 80′s, 90′s, and 2000′s.
A toxic attitude was spread like a virus and the harmful policies followed. We are now living in a country where the top 10% control nearly all of the wealth alongside a working poor living in third world conditions. The uneven playing field has given obvious advantage to those who had the wealth to begin with.
Where Is The Progressive Response?
All hope is not lost. A number of progressive donors finally got the wake-up call in 2005 and created the Democracy Alliance. They began pooling their money to invest in think tanks and media outlets of their own. Organizations like Campaign for America’s Future, Commonweal Institute, and Center for American Progress have come into being and are attempting to catch up. But the opposition has a 35 year advantage.
Unfortunately, the progressive movement suffered a major casualty in April of 2008. The Rockridge Institute closed its doors due to inadequate funding support from donors. Rockridge was a unique think tank founded by George Lakoff to analyze political frames in public discourse in order to help progressives navigate the toxic culture wars of American politics. One of the major causes for this loss was the massive flux of money into the 2008 election cycle. Short-term gains were given myopic focus and the long-term was sacrificed.
I worked at the Rockridge Institute during this period. On the last day of the institute, Evan Frisch and I made a plea to the progressive community that we must invest in cognitive infrastructure. Here’s a snippet of what we said:
This plea is more timely than ever today. The progressive response remains inadequate because we don’t share a common vision, nor do we invest in the long-haul. So we see an election in our midst where Democrats are blamed for the harms caused by anti-government Republicans (and a spattering of Conservative Democrats who have infiltrated the other party). The instigators of harm are smearing the real heroes. And it’s working!
If we are to turn the tide on this culture war and reclaim the Spirit of America, we’re going to need to arm ourselves with knowledge about the origins of anti-government sentiments. And we’re going to need to invest in pro-government, pro-community ideas of our own.
Cognitive Policy Works is composed of a growing community of experts in psychology, linguistics, media studies, education, strategic planning, entrepreneurship, frame analysis, and political consulting. It was founded by former fellows of George Lakoff’s Rockridge Institute and continues to serve its core mission, which is to bring powerful insights from the cognitive and behavioral sciences to practitioners working to deliver progressive social change.
Together we offer a powerful range of perspectives on the political process and the skills necessary to impact positive change in the world.