Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Ernst Junger: The Resolute Life of an Anarch
by Keith Preston
Perhaps the most interesting, poignant and, possibly, threatening type of writer and thinker is the one who not only defies conventional categorizations of thought but also offers a deeply penetrating critique of those illusions many hold to be the most sacred. Ernst Junger (1895-1998), who first came to literary prominence during Germany’s Weimar era as a diarist of the experiences of a front line stormtrooper during the Great War, is one such writer. Both the controversial nature of his writing and its staying power are demonstrated by the fact that he remains one of the most important yet widely disliked literary and cultural figures of twentieth century Germany. As recently as 1993, when Junger would have been ninety-eight years of age, he was the subject of an intensely hostile exchange in the “New York Review of Books” between an admirer and a detractor of his work.
On the occasion of his one hundreth birthday in 1995, Junger was the subject of a scathing, derisive musical performed in East Berlin. Yet Junger was also the recipient of Germany’s most prestigious literary awards, the Goethe Prize and the Schiller Memorial Prize. Junger, who converted to Catholicism at the age of 101, received a commendation from Pope John Paul II and was an honored guest of French President Francois Mitterand and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl at the Franco-German reconciliation ceremony at Verdun in 1984. Though he was an exceptional achiever during virtually every stage of his extraordinarily long life, it was his work during the Weimar period that not only secured for a Junger a presence in German cultural and political history, but also became the standard by which much of his later work was evaluated and by which his reputation was, and still is, debated.
Ernst Junger was born on March 29, 1895 in Heidelberg, but was raised in Hanover. His father, also named Ernst, was an academically trained chemist who became wealthy as the owner of a pharmaceutical manufacturing business, finding himself successful enough to essentially retire while he was still in his forties. Though raised as an evangelical Protestant, Junger’s father did not believe in any formal religion, nor did his mother, Karoline, an educated middle class German woman whose interests included Germany’s rich literary tradition and the cause of women’s emancipation. His parents’ politics seem to have been liberal, though not radical, in the manner not uncommon to the rising bourgeoise of Germany’s upper middle class during the pre-war period. It was in this affluent, secure bourgeoise environment that Ernst Junger grew up. Indeed, many of Junger’s later activities and professed beliefs are easily understood as a revolt against the comfort and safety of his upbringing. As a child, he was an avid reader of the tales of adventurers and soldiers, but a poor academic student who did not adjust well to the regimented Prussian educational system. Junger’s instructors consistently complained of his inattentiveness. As an adolescent, he became involved with the Wandervogel, roughly the German equivalent of the Boy Scouts.
It was while attending a boarding school near his parents’ home in 1913, at the age of seventeen, that Junger first demonstrated his first propensity for what might be called an “adventurist” way of life. With only six months left before graduation, Junger left school, leaving no word to his family as to his destination. Using money given to him for school-related fees and expenses to buy a firearm and a railroad ticket to Verdun, Junger subsequently enlisted in the French Foreign Legion, an elite military unit of the French armed forces that accepted enlistees of any nationality and had a reputation for attracting fugitives, criminals and career mercenaries. Junger had no intention of staying with the Legion. He only wanted to be posted to Africa, as he eventually was. Junger then deserted, only to be captured and sentenced to jail. Eventually his father found a capable lawyer for his wayward son and secured his release. Junger then returned to his studies and underwent a belated high school graduation. However, it was only a very short time later that Junger was back in uniform.
Ernst Junger immediately volunteered for military service when he heard the news that Germany was at war in the summer of 1914. After two months of training, Junger was assigned to a reserve unit stationed at Champagne. He was afraid the war would end before he had the opportunity to see any action. This attitude was not uncommon among many recruits or conscripts who fought in the war for their respective states. The question immediately arises at to why so many young people would wish to look into the face of death with such enthusiasm. Perhaps they really did not understand the horrors that awaited them. In Junger’s case, his rebellion against the security and luxury of his bourgeoise upbringing had already been ably demonstrated by his excursion with the French Foreign Legion. Because of his high school education, something that soldiers of more proletarian origins lacked, Junger was selected to train to become an officer. Shortly before beginning his officer’s training, Junger was exposed to combat for the first time. From the start, he carried pocket-sized notebooks with him and recorded his observations on the front lines. His writings while at the front exhibit a distinctive tone of detachment, as though he is simply an observer watching while the enemy fires at others. In the middle part of 1915, Junger suffered his first war wound, a bullet graze to the thigh that required only two weeks of recovery time. Afterwards, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant.
At age twenty-one, Junger was the leader of a reconnaissance team at the Somme whose purpose was to go out at night and search for British landmines. Early on, he acquired the reputation of a brave soldier who lacked the preoccupation with his own safety common to most of the fighting men. The introduction of steel artifacts into the war, tanks for the British side and steel helmets for the Germans, made a deep impression on Junger. Wounded three times at the Somme, Junger was awarded the Iron Medal First Class. Upon recovery, he returned to the front lines. A combat daredevil, he once held out against a much larger British force with only twenty men. After being transferred to fight the French at Flanders, he lost ten of his fourteen men and was wounded in the left hand by a blast from French shelling. After being harshly criticized by a superior officer for the number of men lost on that particular mission, Junger began to develop a contempt for the military hierarchy whom he regarded as having achieved their status as a result of their class position, frequently lacking combat experience of their own. In late 1917, having already experienced nearly three full years of combat, Junger was wounded for the fifth time during a surprise assault by the British. He was grazed in the head by a bullet, acquiring two holes in his helmet in the process. His performance in this battle won him the Knights Cross of the Hohenzollerns. In March 1918, Junger participated in another fierce battle with the British, losing 87 of his 150 men.
Nothing impressed Junger more than personal bravery and endurance on the part of soldiers. He once “fell to the ground in tears” at the sight of a young recruit who had only days earlier been unable to carry an ammunition case by himself suddenly being able to carry two cases of missles after surviving an attack of British shells. A recurring theme in Junger’s writings on his war experiences is the way in which war brings out the most savage human impulses. Essentially, human beings are given full license to engage in behavior that would be considered criminal during peacetime. He wrote casually about burning occupied towns during the course of retreat or a shift of position. However, Junger also demonstrated a capacity for merciful behavior during his combat efforts. He refrained from shooting a cornered British soldier after the foe displayed a portrait of his family to Junger. He was wounded yet again in August of 1918. Having been shot in the chest and directly through a lung, this was his most serious wound yet. After being hit, he still managed to shoot dead yet another British officer. As Junger was being carried off the battlefield on a stretcher, one of the stretcher carriers was killed by a British bullet. Another German soldier attempted to carry Junger on his back, but the soldier was shot dead himself and Junger fell to the ground. Finally, a medic recovered him and pulled him out of harm’s way. This episode would be the end of his battle experiences during the Great War.
Junger’s keeping of his wartime diaries paid off quite well in the long run. They were to become the basis of his first and most famous book, In Storms of Steel, published in 1920. The title was given to the book by Junger himself, having found the phrase in an old Icelandic saga. It was at the suggestion of his father that Junger first sought to have his wartime memoirs published. Initially, he found no takers, antiwar sentiment being extremely high in Germany at the time, until his father at last arranged to have the work published privately. In Storms of Steel differs considerably from similar works published by war veterans during the same era, such as Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front and John Dos Passos’ Three Soldiers. Junger’s book reflects none of the disillusionment with war by those experienced in its horrors of the kind found in these other works. Instead, Junger depicted warfare as an adventure in which the soldier faced the highest possible challenge, a battle to the death with a mortal enemy. Though Junger certainly considered himself to be a patriot and, under the influence of Maurice Barres (8), eventually became a strident German nationalist, his depiction of military combat as an idyllic setting where human wills face the supreme test rose far above ordinary nationalist sentiments. Junger’s warrior ideal was not merely the patriot fighting out of a profound sense of loyalty to his country nor the stereotype of the dutiful soldier whose sense of honor and obedience compels him to follow the orders of his superiors in a headlong march towards death. Nor was the warrior prototype exalted by Junger necessarily an idealist fighting for some alleged greater good such as a political ideal or religious devotion. Instead, war itself is the ideal for Junger. On this question, he was profoundly influenced by Nietzsche, whose dictum “a good war justifies any cause”, provides an apt characterization of Junger’s depiction of the life (and death) of the combat soldier.
This aspect of Junger’s outlook is illustrated quite well by the ending he chose to give to the first edition of In Storms of Steel. Although the second edition (published in 1926) ends with the nationalist rallying cry, “Germany lives and shall never go under!”, a sentiment that was deleted for the third edition published in 1934 at the onset of the Nazi era, the original edition ends simply with Junger in the hospital after being wounded for the final time and receiving word that he has received yet another commendation for his valor as a combat soldier. There is no mention of Germany’s defeat a few months later. Nationalism aside, the book is clearly about Junger, not about Germany, and Junger’s depiction of the war simultaneously displays an extraordinary level detachment for someone who lived in the face of death for four years and a highly personalized account of the war where battle is first and foremost about the assertion of one’s own “will to power” with cliched patriotic pieties being of secondary concern.
Indeed, Junger goes so far as to say there were winners and losers on both sides of the war. The true winners were not those who fought in a particular army or for a particular country, but who rose to the challenge placed before them and essentially achieved what Junger regarded as a higher state of enlightenment. He believed the war had revealed certain fundamental truths about the human condition. First, the illusions of the old bourgeoise order concerning peace, progress and prosperity had been inalterably shattered. This was not an uncommon sentiment during that time, but it is a revelation that Junger seems to revel in while others found it to be overwhelmingly devastating. Indeed, the lifelong champion of Enlightenment liberalism, Bertrand Russell, whose life was almost as long as Junger’s and who observed many of the same events from a much different philosophical perspective, once remarked that no one who had been born before 1914 knew what it was like to be truly happy.(10) A second observation advanced by Junger had to do with the role of technology in transforming the nature of war, not only in a purely mechanical sense, but on a much greater existential level. Before, man had commanded weaponry in the course of combat. Now weaponry of the kind made possible by modern technology and industrial civilization essentially commanded man. The machines did the fighting. Man simply resisted this external domination. Lastly, the supremacy of might and the ruthless nature of human existence had been demonstrated. Nietzsche was right. The tragic, Darwinian nature of the human condition had been revealed as an irrevocable law.
In Storms of Steel was only the first of several works based on his experiences as a combat officer that were produced by Junger during the 1920s. Copse 125 described a battle between two small groups of combatants. In this work, Junger continued to explore the philosophical themes present in his first work. The type of technologically driven warfare that emerged during the Great War is characterized as reducing men to automatons driven by airplanes, tanks and machine guns. Once again, jingoistic nationalism is downplayed as a contributing factor to the essence of combat soldier’s spirit. Another work of Junger’s from the early 1920s, Battle as Inner Experience, explored the psychology of war. Junger suggested that civilization itself was but a mere mask for the “primordial” nature of humanity that once again reveals itself during war. Indeed, war had the effect of elevating humanity to a higher level. The warrior becomes a kind of god-like animal, divine in his superhuman qualities, but animalistic in his bloodlust. The perpetual threat of imminent death is a kind of intoxicant. Life is at its finest when death is closest. Junger described war as a struggle for a cause that overshadows the respective political or cultural ideals of the combatants. This overarching cause is courage. The fighter is honor bound to respect the courage of his mortal enemy. Drawing on the philosophy of Nietzsche, Junger argued that the war had produced a “new race” that had replaced the old pieties, such as those drawn from religion, with a new recognition of the primacy of the “will to power”.
Junger’s writings about the war quickly earned him the status of a celebrity during the Weimar period. Battle as Inner Experience contained the prescient suggestion that the young men who had experienced the greatest war the world had yet to see at that point could never be successfully re-integrated into the old bougeoise order from which they came. For these fighters, the war had been a spiritual experience. Having endured so much only to see their side lose on such seemingly humiliating terms, the veterans of the war were aliens to the rationalistic, anti-militarist, liberal republic that emerged in 1918 at the close of the war. Junger was at his parents’ home recovering from war wounds during the time of the attempted coup by the leftist workers’ and soldiers’ councils and subsequent suppression of these by the Freikorps. He experimented with psychoactive drugs such as cocaine and opium during this time, something that he would continue to do much later in life. Upon recovery, he went back into active duty in the much diminished Germany army. Junger’s earliest works, such as In Storms of Steel, were published during this time and he also wrote for military journals on the more technical and specialized aspects of combat and military technology. Interestingly, Junger attributed Germany’s defeat in the war simply to poor leadership, both military and civilian, and rejected the “stab in the back” legend that consoled less keen veterans.
After leaving the army in 1923, Junger continued to write, producing a novella about a soldier during the war titled Sturm, and also began to study the philosophy of Oswald Spengler. His first work as a philosopher of nationalism appeared the Nazi paper Volkischer Beobachter in September, 1923.
Critiquing the failed Marxist revolution of 1918, Junger argued that the leftist coup failed because of its lacking of fresh ideas. It was simply a regurgitation of the egalitarian outllook of the French Revolution. The revolutionary left appealed only to the material wants of the Germany people in Junger’s views. A successful revolution would have to be much more than that. It would have to appeal to their spiritual or “folkish” instincts as well. Over the next few years Junger studied the natural sciences at the University of Leipzig and in 1925, at age thirty, he married nineteen-year-old Gretha von Jeinsen. Around this time, he also became a full-time political writer. Junger was hostile to Weimar democracy and its commercial bourgeiose society. His emerging political ideal was one of an elite warrior caste that stood above petty partisan politics and the middle class obsession with material acquisition. Junger became involved with the the Stahlhelm, a right-wing veterans group, and was a contributer to its paper, Die Standardite. He associated himself with the younger, more militant members of the organization who favored an uncompromised nationalist revolution and eschewed the parliamentary system. Junger’s weekly column in Die Standardite disseminated his nationalist ideology to his less educated readers. Junger’s views at this point were a mixture of Spengler, Social Darwinism, the traditionalist philosophy of the French rightist Maurice Barres, opposition to the internationalism of the left that had seemingly been discredited by the events of 1914, irrationalism and anti-parliamentarianism. He took a favorable view of the working class and praised the Nazis’ efforts to win proletarian sympathies. Junger also argued that a nationalist outlook need not be attached to one particular form of government, even suggesting that a liberal monarchy would be inferior to a nationalist republic.
In an essay for Die Standardite titled “The Machine”, Junger argued that the principal struggle was not between social classes or political parties but between man and technology. He was not anti-technological in a Luddite sense, but regarded the technological apparatus of modernity to have achieved a position of superiority over mankind which needed to be reversed. He was concerned that the mechanized efficiency of modern life produced a corrosive effect on the human spirit. Junger considered the Nazis’ glorification of peasant life to be antiquated. Ever the realist, he believed the world of the rural people to be in a state of irreversible decline. Instead, Junger espoused a “metropolitan nationalism” centered on the urban working class. Nationalism was the antidote to the anti-particularist materialism of the Marxists who, in Junger’s views, simply mirrored the liberals in their efforts to reduce the individual to a component of a mechanized mass society. The humanitarian rhetoric of the left Junger dismissed as the hypocritical cant of power-seekers feigning benevolence. He began to pin his hopes for a nationalist revolution on the younger veterans who comprised much of the urban working class.
In 1926, Junger became editor of Arminius, which also featured the writings of Nazi leaders like Alfred Rosenberg and Joseph Goebbels. In 1927, he contributed his final article to the Nazi paper, calling for a new definition of the “worker”, one not rooted in Marxist ideology but the idea of the worker as a civilian counterpart to the soldier who struggles fervently for the nationalist ideal. Junger and Hitler had exchanged copies of their respective writings and a scheduled meeting between the two was canceled due to a change in Hitler’s itinerary. Junger respected Hitler’s abilities as an orator, but came to feel he lacked the ability to become a true leader. He also found Nazi ideology to be intellectually shallow, many of the Nazi movement’s leaders to be talentless and was displeased by the vulgarity, crassly opportunistic and overly theatrical aspects of Nazi public rallies. Always an elitist, Junger considered the Nazis’ pandering the common people to be debased. As he became more skeptical of the Nazis, Junger began writing for a wider circle of readers beyond that of the militant nationalist right-wing. His works began to appear in the Jewish liberal Leopold Schwarzchild’s Das Tagebuch and the “national-bolshevik” Ernst Niekisch’s Widerstand.
Junger began to assemble around himself an elite corps of bohemian, eccentric intellectuals who would meet regularly on Friday evenings. This group included some of the most interesting personalities of the Weimar period. Among them were the Freikorps veteran Ernst von Salomon, Otto von Strasser, who with his brother Gregor led a leftist anti-Hitler faction of the Nazi movement, the national-bolshevik Niekisch, the Jewish anarchist Erich Muhsam who had figured prominently in the early phase of the failed leftist revolution of 1918, the American writer Thomas Wolfe and the expressionist writer Arnolt Bronnen. Many among this group espoused a type of revolutionary socialism based on nationalism rather than class, disdaining the Nazis’ opportunistic outreach efforts to the middle class. Some, like Niekisch, favored an alliance between Germany and Soviet Russia against the liberal-capitalist powers of the West. Occasionally, Joseph Goebbels would turn up at these meetings hoping to convert the group, particularly Junger himself, whose war writings he had admired, to the Nazi cause. These efforts by the Nazi propaganda master proved unsuccessful. Junger regarded Goebbels as a shallow ideologue who spoke in platitudes even in private conversation.
The final break between Ernst Junger and the NSDAP occurred in September 1929. Junger published an article in Schwarzchild’s Tagebuch attacking and ridiculing the Nazis as sell outs for having reinvented themselves as a parliamentary party. He also dismissed their racism and anti-Semitism as ridiculous, stating that according to the Nazis a nationalist is simply someone who “eats three Jews for breakfast.” He condemned the Nazis for pandering to the liberal middle class and reactionary traditional conservatives “with lengthy tirades against the decline in morals, against abortion, strikes, lockouts, and the reduction of police and military forces.” Goebbels responded by attacking Junger in the Nazi press, accusing him being motivated by personal literary ambition, and insisting this had caused him “to vilify the national socialist movement, probably so as to make himself popular in his new kosher surroundings” and dismissing Junger’s attacks by proclaiming the Nazis did not “debate with renegades who abuse us in the smutty press of Jewish traitors.”
Junger held complicated views on the question of German Jews. He considered anti-Semitism of the type espoused by Hitler to be crude and reactionary. Yet his own version of nationalism required a level of homogeneity that was difficult to reconcile with the subnational status of Germany Jewry. Junger suggested that Jews should assimilate and pledge their loyalty to Germany once and for all. Yet he expressed admiration for Orthodox Judaism and indifference to Zionism. Junger maintained personal friendships with Jews and wrote for a Jewish owned publication. During this time his Jewish publisher Schwarzchild published an article examining Junger’s views on the Jews of Germany. Schwarzchild insisted that Junger was nothing like his Nazi rivals on the far right. Junger’s nationalism was based on an aristocratic warrior ethos, while Hitler’s was more comparable to the criminal underworld. Hitler’s men were “plebian alley scum”. However, Schwarzchild also characterized Junger’s rendition of nationalism as motivated by little more than a fervent rejection of bourgeoise society and lacking in attention to political realities and serious economic questions.
Other than In Storms of Steel, Junger’s The Worker: Mastery and Form was his most influential work from the Weimar era. Junger would later distance himself from this work, published in 1932, and it was reprinted in the 1950s only after Junger was prompted to do so by Martin Heidegger.
In The Worker, Junger outlines his vision of a future state ordered as a technocracy based on workers and soldiers led by a warrior elite. Workers are no longer simply components of an industrial machine, whether capitalist or communist, but have become a kind of civilian-soldier operating as an economic warrior. Just as the soldier glories in his accomplishments in battle, so does the worker glory in the achievements expressed through his work. Junger predicted that continued technological advancements would render the worker/capitalist dichotomy obsolete. He also incorporated the political philosophy of his friend Carl Schmitt into his worldview. As Schmitt saw international relations as a Hobbesian battle between rival powers, Junger believed each state would eventually adopt a system not unlike what he described in The Worker. Each state would maintain its own technocratic order with the workers and soldiers of each country playing essentially the same role on behalf of their respective nations. International affairs would be a crucible where the will to power of the different nations would be tested.
Junger’s vision contains a certain amount prescience. The general trend in politics at the time was a movement towards the kind of technocratic state Junger described. These took on many varied forms including German National Socialism, Italian Fascism, Soviet Communism, the growing welfare states of Western Europe and America’s New Deal. Coming on the eve of World War Two, Junger’s prediction of a global Hobbesian struggle between national collectives possessing previously unimagined levels of technological sophistication also seems rather prophetic. Junger once again attacked the bourgeoise as anachronistic. Its values of material luxury and safety he regarded as unfit for the violent world of the future.
By the time Hitler took power in 1933, Junger’s war writings had become commonly used in high schools and universities as examples of wartime literature, and Junger enjoyed success within the context of German popular culture as well. Excerpts of Junger’s works were featured in military journals. The Nazis tried to coopt his semi-celebrity status, but he was uncooperative. Junger was appointed to the Nazified German Academcy of Poetry, but declined the position. When the Nazi Party’s paper published some of his work in 1934, Junger wrote a letter of protest. The Nazi regime, despite its best efforts to capitalize on his reputation, viewed Junger with suspicioun. His past association with the national-bolshevik Ersnt Niekisch, the Jewish anarchist Erich Muhsam and the anti-Hitler Nazi Otto von Strasser, all of whom were either eventually killed or exiled by the Third Reich, led the Nazis to regard Junger as a potential subversive. On several occasions, Junger received visits from the Gestapo in search of some of his former friends. During the early years of the Nazi regime, Junger was in the fortunate position of being able to economically afford travel outside of Germany. He journeyed to Norway, Brazil, Greece and Morocco during this time, and published several works based on his travels.
Junger’s most significant work from the Nazi period is the novel On the Marble Cliffs. The book is an allegorical attack on the Hitler regime. It was written in 1939, the same year that Junger reentered the German army. The book describes a mysterious villian that threatens a community, a sinister warlord called the “Head Ranger”. This character is never featured in the plot of the novel, but maintains a forboding presence that is universal (much like “Big Brother” in George Orwell’s 1984). Another character in the novel, “Braquemart”, is described as having physical characteristics remarkably similar to those of Goebbels. The book sold fourteen thousand copies during its first two weeks in publication. Swiss reviewers immediately recognized the allegorical references to the Nazi state in the novel. The Nazi Party’s organ, Volkische Beobachter, stated that Ernst Jünger was flirting with a bullet to the head. Goebbels urged Hitler to ban the book, but Hitler refused, probably not wanting to show his hand. Indeed, Hitler gave orders that Junger not be harmed.
Junger was stationed in France for most of the Second World War. Once again, he kept diaries of the experience. Once again, he expressed concern that he might not get to see any action before the war was over. While Junger did not have the opportunity to experience the level of danger and daredevil heroics he had during the Great War, he did receive yet another medal, the Iron Cross, for retrieving the body of a dead corporal while under heavy fire. Junger also published some of his war diaries during this time. However, the German government took a dim view of these, viewing them as too sympathetic to the occupied French. Junger’s duties included censorship of the mail coming into France from German civilians. He took a rather liberal approach to this responsibility and simply disposed of incriminating documents rather than turning them over for investigation. In doing so, he probably saved lives. He also encountered members of France’s literary and cultural elite, among them the actor Louis Ferdinand Celine, a raving anti-Semite and pro-Vichyite who suggested Hitler’s harsh measures against the Jews had not been heavy handed enough. As rumors of the Nazi extermination programs began to spread, Junger wrote in his diary that the mechanization of the human spirit of the type he had written about in the past had apparently generated a higher level of human depravity. When he saw three young French-Jewish girls wearing the yellow stars required by the Nazis, he wrote that he felt embarrassed to be in the Nazi army. In July of 1942, Junger observed the mass arrest of French Jews, the beginning of implementation of the “Final Solution”. He described the scene as follows:
“Parents were first separated from their children, so there was wailing to be heard in the streets. At no moment may I forget that I am surrounded by the unfortunate, by those suffering to the very depths, else what sort of person, what sort of officer would I be? The uniform obliges one to grant protection wherever it goes. Of course one has the impression that one must also, like Don Quixote, take on millions.”
An entry into Junger’s diary from October 16, 1943 suggests that an unnamed army officer had told Junger about the use of crematoria and poison gas to murder Jews en masse. Rumors of plots against Hitler circulated among the officers with whom Junger maintained contact. His son, Ernstl, was arrested after an informant claimed he had spoken critically of Hitler. Ernstl Junger was imprisoned for three months, then placed in a penal battalion where he was killed in action in Italy. On July 20, 1944 an unsuccessful assassination attempt was carried out against Hitler. It is still disputed as to whether or not Junger knew of the plot or had a role in its planning. Among those arrested for their role in the attemt on Hitler’s life were members of Junger’s immediate circle of associates and superior officers within the German army. Junger was dishonorably discharged shortly afterward.
Following the close of the Second World War, Junger came under suspicion from the Allied occupational authorities because of his far right-wing nationalist and militarist past. He refused to cooperate with the Allies De-Nazification programs and was barred from publishing for four years. He would go on to live another half century, producing many more literary works, becoming a close friend of Albert Hoffman, the inventor of the hallucinogen LSD, with which he experimented. In a 1977 novel, Eumeswil, he took his tendency towards viewing the world around him with detachment to a newer, more clearly articulated level with his invention of the concept of the “Anarch”. This idea, heavily influenced by the writings of the early nineteenth century German philosopher Max Stirner, championed the solitary individual who remains true to himself within the context of whatever external circumstances happen to be present. Some sample quotations from this work illustrate the philosophy and worldview of the elderly Junger quite well:
“For the anarch, if he remains free of being ruled, whether by sovereign or society, this does not mean he refuses to serve in any way. In general, he serves no worse than anyone else, and sometimes even better, if he likes the game. He only holds back from the pledge, the sacrifice, the ultimate devotion … I serve in the Casbah; if, while doing this, I die for the Condor, it would be an accident, perhaps even an obliging gesture, but nothing more.”
“The egalitarian mania of demagogues is even more dangerous than the brutality of men in gallooned coats. For the anarch, this remains theoretical, because he avoids both sides. Anyone who has been oppressed can get back on his feet if the oppression did not cost him his life. A man who has been equalized is physically and morally ruined. Anyone who is different is not equal; that is one of the reasons why the Jews are so often targeted.”
“The anarch, recognizing no government, but not indulging in paradisal dreams as the anarchist does, is, for that very reason, a neutral observer.”
“A basic theme for the anarch is how man, left to his own devices, can defy superior force - whether state, society or the elements - by making use of their rules without submitting to them.”
“… malcontents… prowl through the institutions eternally dissatisfied, always disappointed. Connected with this is their love of cellars and rooftops, exile and prisons, and also banishment, on which they actually pride themselves. When the structure finally caves in they are the first to be killed in the collapse. Why do they not know that the world remains inalterable in change? Because they never find their way down to its real depth, their own. That is the sole place of essence, safety. And so they do themselves in.”
“The anarch may not be spared prisons - as one fluke of existence among others. He will then find the fault in himself.”
“We are touching one a … distinction between anarch and anarchist; the relation to authority, to legislative power. The anarchist is their mortal enemy, while the anarch refuses to acknowledge them. He seeks neither to gain hold of them, nor to topple them, nor to alter them - their impact bypasses him. He must resign himself only to the whirlwinds they generate.”
“The anarch is no individualist, either. He wishes to present himself neither as a Great Man nor as a Free Spirit. His own measure is enough for him; freedom is not his goal; it is his property. He does not come on as foe or reformer: one can get along nicely with him in shacks or in palaces. Life is too short and too beautiful to sacrifice for ideas, although contamination is not always avoidable. But hats off to the martyrs.”
“We can expect as little from society as from the state. Salvation lies in the individual.”
Monday, May 25, 2009
The Logic of Capitalism and Race
According to Attorney-General Eric Holder, all Americans are cowards when it comes to race. The statement springs from Holder’s view -- and Obama’s -- that white Americans are unwilling to discuss race to their Black satisfaction. We should find such a statement ironic coming from the lips of the first black attorney general serving under the first (half) black president of a nation conceived of and hacked out of the wilderness by whites still running on the fumes of white ideas and genius. More ironic is the fact that, should Americans drop their cowardice and pretence and take up an open and truly honest discussion of race, Holder and his master might find it slapping back in their faces in truly a rude fashion.
For example, they may have to answer embarrassing questions about the decline of Detroit under black domination or questions of why blacks remain well below whites in terms of success. But don’t expect those questions ever to make it into any national debate over race because the real racial cowards are blacks themselves who don’t want the focus to shift to their duplicity. Moreover, neither does the white capitalist elite who benefit from not talking about race.
Capitalism, particularly global capitalism, has replaced the traditional concept of race as individuals belonging to a long historic almost familial chain of similar people with the idea of amassing wealth and living the good life. Under capitalism, egotism trumps race awareness. One may feel subconsciously that one's race is one's family but consciously one also realizes that families are expensive and in an atomized culture that celebrates acquisition as the prime motivation of the individual.
However, a race of people is not an accidental sum of individuals. It is not a chance accumulation. It is a reunion of inheritors of a specific fraction of human history, who, on the basis of the sense of common adherence, develop the will to pursue their own history and give themselves a common destiny.
But let’s face it, babies are expensive. They are also time-consuming and damn demanding. It’s better not to have them since they get in the way of playing video games or cheering on your favorite millionaire athlete or watching Oprah. In this way capitalist societies destroy races because the individuals that populate them do not sufficiently reproduce. Simply put, races die when their members want to make money more than they want to make and rear children. The fact is a race reproduces itself or it dies. Capitalism promotes abandonment of racial awareness by emphasizing the individual’s “need” and desires. It promotes the individual as a MERE individual with no bonds and no commitments. In capitalism, consuming goods is the highest goal, it is self-fulfillment.
Capitalism promotes abandonment of racial awareness because the people at the top of this atomistic heap benefit from cheap racially alien labor either by exporting jobs to Third World hovels or importing Third World people into the nation (thus the global aspect). This upper class or managerial class tends to be of the same race as the people at the bottom whom its members are screwing, but their actions (and attitudes) mark them as individuals apart. They are concerned exclusively with the needs of their own tiny class above the needs of the rest of their own people, nation and society. These attitudes have cascaded down to the bottom as well so that all stratas are primarily concerned with their own economic well-being. Like drowning rats they fight and claw one another for a spot on the ever shrinking raft of prosperity. Unless it liberates itself from the flawed effects of this global capitalist mentality whites are doomed to further decline and death.
Common markets, currency unions, and supra-national organizations like the European Parliament are symptoms of both the attack on race and the victory of pure economics. If local loyalties and racial loyalties no longer matter, only economic efficiency is left. The Deutsche Mark, the Pound Sterling, and the traditions and sovereignties they represent can all be brushed aside if a single European currency would be more efficient.
Real ‘organic’ society or nation can only exist where people have developed a firm sense of historical and spiritual commitment to their community. In such an organic polity, the law must not derive from some abstract preconceived principles, but rather from the genius of the people and its unique historical character. In such a democracy, the sense of community must invariably preside over individualistic and economic self-interests.
Strangely, whites hand out billions of dollars every year in social services to non-whites, and pass affirmative action legislation to help them compete against whites for jobs and education. Whites promote mass Third-World immigration, and white politicians try to make immigration easier and more attractive. Whites willingly surrender whole neighborhoods to immigrants. In short, whites consider it praiseworthy to work in the interests of other races, but disreputable to work in their own.
Put directly, a left-wing sensibility pervades the managerial elite. Leftists are an aberration of nature. They have not inherited basic defence and survival mechanisms that optimise the survival of their genes. Their basic survival mechanisms are lacking, and this could well explain why liberals and Leftists generally consider it a matter of individual ‘choice’ regarding such issues as abortion, and “gay marriage” e.g., rather than as a matter for the entire social organism, reflecting its chances of genetic continuity. The Leftist has an overly rationalised response to his environment that is detached from instinct. It might be said that the liberal is an aberration of nature, a revolt against his own self as an organism, an aberration bereft of the will to genetic perpetuity; that liberalism (and its variants of communism and feminism) literally means DEATH.
Friday, May 15, 2009
Obama a Fascist?
As many have pointed out, the frenzy Barack Obama produced in his followers during the 2008 presidential campaign is quite reminiscent of the reaction to men like Benito Mussolini, Adolph Hitler, Corneliu Codreanu, Leon Degrelle and Primo de Rivera. Interestingly, all of those men were fascists or National Socialists. His cult of personality is genuine and widespread, particularly among the media elites. With that in mind, can we see any ideological parallels between Obama and the ideas of those icons of the 1930s?
After more than 100 days in office there can be no question that Obama favors state control and management of the economy. Americans (foolishly) shy away from the term socialism, but any honest person who has studied the American president’s words and deeds would have to admit that Obama is a socialist. But there is a deeper quality to Obama’s socialism that comes in contact with the very ideas and work that characterized Mussolini, Hitler, Codreanu, Degrelle and Rivera. His approach in solving the economic crisis has been classically fascist in that he has sought to bring business, labor and the state together to work the solution out in triad. Though heavy on state power, the method is, nonetheless, Synarchistic corporativism in every way.
At this point, the Democratic Party stands alone as the master of the state. The Republicans have been vanquished and are not likely to rebound to challenge them for control. This could mean the establishment of a one-party state, particularly after eight years of Obama pulling more and more of the American economy under his umbrella. The more that happens the less likely those who run business will be to back Republicans particularly when they can be punished for doing so.
For almost a century, the Democrats have gradually been developing a large client base that is beholding to the state. A veteran of the rough and tumble world of Chicago politics, Obama knows how to fed the carrot and bash with the stick. This is the kind of raw fascism that Mussolini used to ascend and take power in Italy and he did it with fewer resources than Obama has within his grasp.
Moreover, Obama’s fascist soul is reflected in the words of his wife, Michelle:
“Obama will require you to work. He is going to demand that you shed your cynicism. That you put down your divisions. That you come out of your isolation, that you move out of your comfort zones. That you push yourselves to be better. And that you engage. Barack will never allow you to go back to your lives as usual, uninvolved, uninformed.”
Mussolini could not have crafted a better creed. More interestingly, during that fateful campaign, supporters decided that Obama needed his own “salute.”
“Our goal,” said Rick Husong, a key financial backer of Obama, “is to see a crowd of 75,000 people at Obama’s nomination speech holding their hands above their heads, fingers laced together in support of a new direction for this country, a renewed hope, and acceptance of responsibility for our future. We thought, 'Let's try and start a movement where even while walking down the street, people would hold up the O and you would know that they were for Obama.”
An ad agency came up with what the Obamaites hoped would serve as a symbol of hope and progress that also plays off Obama's name. The salute called for loyalists to interlace their hands in a circle, as a symbol of different types of people coming together. The circle would also serve as a symbol of unity. Husong urged people to download it and print it on posters and T-shirts. “We want to see it everywhere, but more importantly we want this sign to take the world by storm.”
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Italian Fascism and the Syndicalist connection
One of the key features in the development of Italian Fascism was the ideological inspiration it drew from Syndicalism. After World War I Fascism became the rightful heir to the movement that operated on the left wing of Italy’s Socialist Party. Many of Syndicalism’s ideological shapers and leaders became prominent fascists, deeply influencing Benito Mussolini. By mixing in other ideas – Synarchism, Technocracy, Futurism and militarism – modern fascism took form.
Georges Sorel was the most influential theoretician of Syndicalism in France at the time. His revision of Marx led Sorel towards a new conception of revolution that set him against the Marxist model. Direct action, violence and the social myth of mobilisation were all concepts that the Italian syndicalists borrowed from Sorel. It was around these concepts that a new brand of active, nationalist-oriented and elite Socialism was to be defined by Arturo Labriola, Enrico Leone and their intellectual followers. Sorel’s contribution to Italian Syndicalism is extremely important because the Italian theoreticians contributed to the revision of Marx by attempting to integrate economic marginalism with Marx’s theory of value. This revision brought an ideological change, which, coupled with Sorel’s influence, shifted Italian Syndicalism away from its Marxist origins producing, in the wake of World War I, a whole new concept of socialism, a national socialism with a nationalistic vision.
Deep doubts about Marx’s predictions of revolution flaming out of capitalism’s cyclical and deepening crises moved many socialists to shift their views. Organized labor was able to obtain direct benefits for the working class through negotiations. The political system adapted to this situation by legitimising the presence and activities of socialist parties, within the liberal democratic framework.
However, any idea of compromise with capitalism within the framework of a liberal parliamentary democracy was out of the question. Looking for a new way to the socialist uprising, these heretics found their way to Syndicalism, absorbing much of Sorel’s influence in the process. In Avenir socialiste des syndicats Sorel expressed the need to concentrate on the renovating forces of society in the syndicate, where a new elite should be educated morally and technically to be able to take over the production process from an already decadent bourgeoisie. In the next stage, in the Reflexions sur la violence, violence is seen as the renovating force in history and as the way to bring the masses into action.
Sorel centered his analysis on the concept of violence transformed into “direct action” exercised by a revolutionary elite. The recruitment of the forces of change should be made through the marshaling myth of the revolutionary general strike. With this in mind, the syndicalist intellectuals attacked the political attitudes of the Socialist Party and proposed to place revolutionary actions directly in the economic arena, in the field of production. Since the workers’ lives took place between the factory and the syndicate, socialist political theory had to be constructed around these two dimensions of proletarian reality. The factory represented actuality, the place where the production process took place. The syndicate represented the future, the place where the workers were to be morally and technically educated in order to be able to take over the direction of the production process from the capitalists. Syndicalism wanted to eliminate from the production process any kind of hierarchy that was not absolutely necessary for its technical improvement. The result would be a society organized solely on the basis of the fulfilment of economic needs, on consensual ties and on the technical discipline of production.
“The crisis of theoretic Socialism, as already stated, became unavoidable, due to the chasm between the old Marxist forms and the latest developments of economic science,” Arturo Labriola noted. “To fill this gap was the task of the actual movement of ideas directed to solve the crisis.” The Marxist economic analysis was seen by Labriola and Leone as obsolete. This line of economic thought had been preceded in Italy by the theories of Achille Loria. Benedetto Croce had also recognized the scientific value of syndicalism. From his point of view, Marxist economics completed the picture by providing an analysis of the sociological side of capital profit. Although both Labriola, Croce and other thinkers who worked on the revision of Marx provided a good opening, from the dominant socialist point of view, it was incomplete and unsatisfactory thus opening a (new) rift in the socialist bloc. The mainstream of the Italian Socialist Party was seen by the syndicalist wing as too willing to compromise with the state, on the basis of the acceptance of the principles of parliamentary liberal democracy by the socialist side, and the granting of all kinds of benefits to it by the liberal system. The benefits of such policies held up only as long as the economy flourished.
As a result, syndicalism became marginal within the socialist ranks, particularly within the ranks of the Italian Socialist Party. The second generation of syndicalist leaders and thinkers, men like Panunzio, Orano, Olivetti, Lanzillo, Bianchi and Rossoni, who started their political careers as revolutionary syndicalist socialists finished as fascists. Their political education, which included the revision of Marx along with Sorel’s doctrines, provided the grounds for their socialism. They became anti-Marxist, elitist and action-oriented. Their revolution was to be ethical, requiring higher moral values such as heroism and social altruism, and the will to fight and conquer. This new kind of socialism found a common language with Radical Nationalism that expanded greatly with Italy’s entry into World War I. for these Italian syndicalists, the nation had replaced the social class as the subject of history. It was National Syndicalism that gave fascism its first political program and a sound ideological underpinning.
Georges Sorel was the most influential theoretician of Syndicalism in France at the time. His revision of Marx led Sorel towards a new conception of revolution that set him against the Marxist model. Direct action, violence and the social myth of mobilisation were all concepts that the Italian syndicalists borrowed from Sorel. It was around these concepts that a new brand of active, nationalist-oriented and elite Socialism was to be defined by Arturo Labriola, Enrico Leone and their intellectual followers. Sorel’s contribution to Italian Syndicalism is extremely important because the Italian theoreticians contributed to the revision of Marx by attempting to integrate economic marginalism with Marx’s theory of value. This revision brought an ideological change, which, coupled with Sorel’s influence, shifted Italian Syndicalism away from its Marxist origins producing, in the wake of World War I, a whole new concept of socialism, a national socialism with a nationalistic vision.
Deep doubts about Marx’s predictions of revolution flaming out of capitalism’s cyclical and deepening crises moved many socialists to shift their views. Organized labor was able to obtain direct benefits for the working class through negotiations. The political system adapted to this situation by legitimising the presence and activities of socialist parties, within the liberal democratic framework.
However, any idea of compromise with capitalism within the framework of a liberal parliamentary democracy was out of the question. Looking for a new way to the socialist uprising, these heretics found their way to Syndicalism, absorbing much of Sorel’s influence in the process. In Avenir socialiste des syndicats Sorel expressed the need to concentrate on the renovating forces of society in the syndicate, where a new elite should be educated morally and technically to be able to take over the production process from an already decadent bourgeoisie. In the next stage, in the Reflexions sur la violence, violence is seen as the renovating force in history and as the way to bring the masses into action.
Sorel centered his analysis on the concept of violence transformed into “direct action” exercised by a revolutionary elite. The recruitment of the forces of change should be made through the marshaling myth of the revolutionary general strike. With this in mind, the syndicalist intellectuals attacked the political attitudes of the Socialist Party and proposed to place revolutionary actions directly in the economic arena, in the field of production. Since the workers’ lives took place between the factory and the syndicate, socialist political theory had to be constructed around these two dimensions of proletarian reality. The factory represented actuality, the place where the production process took place. The syndicate represented the future, the place where the workers were to be morally and technically educated in order to be able to take over the direction of the production process from the capitalists. Syndicalism wanted to eliminate from the production process any kind of hierarchy that was not absolutely necessary for its technical improvement. The result would be a society organized solely on the basis of the fulfilment of economic needs, on consensual ties and on the technical discipline of production.
“The crisis of theoretic Socialism, as already stated, became unavoidable, due to the chasm between the old Marxist forms and the latest developments of economic science,” Arturo Labriola noted. “To fill this gap was the task of the actual movement of ideas directed to solve the crisis.” The Marxist economic analysis was seen by Labriola and Leone as obsolete. This line of economic thought had been preceded in Italy by the theories of Achille Loria. Benedetto Croce had also recognized the scientific value of syndicalism. From his point of view, Marxist economics completed the picture by providing an analysis of the sociological side of capital profit. Although both Labriola, Croce and other thinkers who worked on the revision of Marx provided a good opening, from the dominant socialist point of view, it was incomplete and unsatisfactory thus opening a (new) rift in the socialist bloc. The mainstream of the Italian Socialist Party was seen by the syndicalist wing as too willing to compromise with the state, on the basis of the acceptance of the principles of parliamentary liberal democracy by the socialist side, and the granting of all kinds of benefits to it by the liberal system. The benefits of such policies held up only as long as the economy flourished.
As a result, syndicalism became marginal within the socialist ranks, particularly within the ranks of the Italian Socialist Party. The second generation of syndicalist leaders and thinkers, men like Panunzio, Orano, Olivetti, Lanzillo, Bianchi and Rossoni, who started their political careers as revolutionary syndicalist socialists finished as fascists. Their political education, which included the revision of Marx along with Sorel’s doctrines, provided the grounds for their socialism. They became anti-Marxist, elitist and action-oriented. Their revolution was to be ethical, requiring higher moral values such as heroism and social altruism, and the will to fight and conquer. This new kind of socialism found a common language with Radical Nationalism that expanded greatly with Italy’s entry into World War I. for these Italian syndicalists, the nation had replaced the social class as the subject of history. It was National Syndicalism that gave fascism its first political program and a sound ideological underpinning.
Friday, January 30, 2009
The New Deal
As the final vestiges of American Capitalism begin to fracture and fall, many recall the Great Depression and the crisis that it created. Into that crisis came Franklin Roosevelt and his New Deal which saved America. Though today’s liberals will never admit it, the New Deal was inspired by Italian Fascism, particularly the synarchist element within fascism, better known as “the Corporate State.”
Roosevelt admired Italy’s Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini a great deal. “'I don't mind telling you in confidence,” FDR remarked to a White House correspondent, “that I am keeping in fairly close touch with that admirable Italian gentleman.” Rexford Tugwell, a leading adviser to the president, also had difficulty containing his enthusiasm for Mussolini's program: "It's the cleanest … most efficiently operating piece of social machinery I've ever seen. It makes me envious,” Tugwell noted.
At the London Economic Conference of June 1933, Reichsbank President Hjalmar Schacht smugly told the official Nazi newspaper Völkischer Beobachter that FDR had adopted the economic philosophy of Hitler and Mussolini. Even Hitler had kind words at first for Roosevelt’s “dynamic” leadership, stating that “I have sympathy with President Roosevelt because he marches straight to his objective over Congress, over lobbies, over stubborn bureaucracies.”
It goes without saying that the New Deal was a much milder form of the fascism instituted by Il Duce, but both systems tilted the balance sharply towards the state and away from society. In all of them, government gained power over business and other private interests in the name of and for the people, with the leaders seeking to impose a philosophy of life that subordinated the individual to the needs of the community – as defined by the state.
Overall, the New Deal was designed to pull those parts of the American economy not already controlled by the federal government into its grasp for the purposes of central planning. FDR established an alphabet soup of new federal agencies with the power to regulate specific sections of the economy for the short term goal of to raising wages and prices to push consumer “purchasing power.” FDR made several stabs at establishing corporatism. The first was the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 which was a direct attempt to cartelize industries and unions just like the Italian model, but the courts shot the effort down. The National Recovery Administration later tried the same thing using a different vocabulary. The NRA sought to organize industry into a federally supervised trade association. The term “Code Authority” was substituted for corporation, but it was essentially the same thing. These code authorities had the power to regulate production, quantities, qualities, prices, distribution methods, and other aspects of production and trade. It eventually ran afoul of anti-trust laws and had to be disbanded.
“There seems to be no question that (Mussolini) is really interested in what we are doing,” the president said, “and I am much interested and deeply impressed by what he has accomplished and by his evidenced, honest purpose in restoring Italy.”
Roosevelt admired Italy’s Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini a great deal. “'I don't mind telling you in confidence,” FDR remarked to a White House correspondent, “that I am keeping in fairly close touch with that admirable Italian gentleman.” Rexford Tugwell, a leading adviser to the president, also had difficulty containing his enthusiasm for Mussolini's program: "It's the cleanest … most efficiently operating piece of social machinery I've ever seen. It makes me envious,” Tugwell noted.
At the London Economic Conference of June 1933, Reichsbank President Hjalmar Schacht smugly told the official Nazi newspaper Völkischer Beobachter that FDR had adopted the economic philosophy of Hitler and Mussolini. Even Hitler had kind words at first for Roosevelt’s “dynamic” leadership, stating that “I have sympathy with President Roosevelt because he marches straight to his objective over Congress, over lobbies, over stubborn bureaucracies.”
It goes without saying that the New Deal was a much milder form of the fascism instituted by Il Duce, but both systems tilted the balance sharply towards the state and away from society. In all of them, government gained power over business and other private interests in the name of and for the people, with the leaders seeking to impose a philosophy of life that subordinated the individual to the needs of the community – as defined by the state.
Overall, the New Deal was designed to pull those parts of the American economy not already controlled by the federal government into its grasp for the purposes of central planning. FDR established an alphabet soup of new federal agencies with the power to regulate specific sections of the economy for the short term goal of to raising wages and prices to push consumer “purchasing power.” FDR made several stabs at establishing corporatism. The first was the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 which was a direct attempt to cartelize industries and unions just like the Italian model, but the courts shot the effort down. The National Recovery Administration later tried the same thing using a different vocabulary. The NRA sought to organize industry into a federally supervised trade association. The term “Code Authority” was substituted for corporation, but it was essentially the same thing. These code authorities had the power to regulate production, quantities, qualities, prices, distribution methods, and other aspects of production and trade. It eventually ran afoul of anti-trust laws and had to be disbanded.
“There seems to be no question that (Mussolini) is really interested in what we are doing,” the president said, “and I am much interested and deeply impressed by what he has accomplished and by his evidenced, honest purpose in restoring Italy.”
Thursday, November 6, 2008
George Lyndow: Front Fighter
George Warner Lyndow (1900-1975) was an American fascist who despite being persecuted for his beliefs, bounced back and almost single handedly preserved and promoted fascism in America after World War II.
A native of Vermont, Lyndow was the son of a lumber company executive. When the U.S. entered World War I in 1917, he joined the army and fought in France. Like many future fascists, the war had a profound effect on Lyndow who conceived of the kind of man forged in the trenches of the Great War as a creative and dynamic warrior; a man who recognized violence as a creative force and who was willing to risk all and sacrifice all for a great, transforming cause. As a result, these new men – fascist men -- were the only ones worthy of positions of power and prestige, unlike their crafty and conniving liberal parliamentary predecessors who were adept at starting wars but let others fight them.
After graduating from Amherst, Lyndow moved to New York and pursued a writing career. His first book The Dead, the Dying and the Damned had originally been written as a true account of his experiences in the war. However, his publisher suggested he turn it into a novel to better reflect Lyndow’s talent for dramatic narration. It proved to be a boon for the young writer as the novel sold well. In addition to a raft of articles, Lyndow produced several other books in the1920s.
It was in the 1920s that Lyndow became enamored of fascism. Fearing Bolshevism would consume Western civilization; Lyndow was impressed with the Italian Fascists’ success against them. Noting that Mussolini shared his views on war only drew him closer. Lyndow was so keen on fascism that he studied Italian and made two trips to Italy to see fascism for himself and to gather material for articles. In 1931 he published an article in 20th Century magazine titled, “Fascism: What it is and What it is Not” which stirred so much reader comment that Lyndow turned it into a 1933 book: The Future is Fascism.
By the early 1930s, Lyndow’s writing career began to wane and, with a wife and two children to support, he took outside jobs to make ends meet in the hard days of the Depression. Times were also hard for men of his convictions. “The fascist has no sanctuary in the political wilderness of this America,” Lyndow wrote in 1936 and wander he did. At various times he supported Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal (which he believed did not go far enough), Sen. Huey Long’s “Share the Wealth” movement, Father Charles Coughlin’s National Union for Social Justice (Lyndow introduced Coughlin at a rally in Rochester, NY and was a staff member on his presidential campaign), William Dudley Pelley’s Silvershirts and Wyman Yates’ Blueshirts. In 1937 Lyndow began publishing a bi-weekly, six-page mini-tabloid called Spearhead which offered support for fascism at home and the Mussolini and Hitler regimes abroad. At its height in 1940, Spearhead had 40,000 subscribers nationwide.
When the U.S. joined World War II, Spearhead was shut down by the federal government and Lyndow was arrested on charges of sedition. He was convicted of those charges in 1942 and sent to an internment camp at Seagoville, Texas (also located in that camp were American fascist sympathizers Wyman Yates, Theodore Andricks and John Travers as well as British BUF member Anthony Trumpington). Ironically, Lyndow’s eldest son, Paul (born in 1924), was killed fighting the Japanese in the Pacific. His father’s request to attend the funeral was denied.
After the war, Lyndow looked to start life over at almost 50. His wife had divorced him after his sedition conviction and, with no family reconciliation possible; he moved to Los Angeles in 1946 and took a job with Ostrum Printing. In 1951, Lyndow started a newsletter he called Frontline which was primarily an anti-communist publication. By placing ads for Frontline in various right-wing publications, he soon found a large group of subscribers and churned out weekly editions. He received some financial backing from wealthy Southern California businessman and anti-communist John Tunnison. With this infusion of cash, Lyndow established Spearhead Press (a tribute to his old 1930s broadsheet).
Spearhead Press started by reprinting a range of books on a variety of topics whose copy writes had run out and were considered in the public domain. By the mid-1950s the venture had proved so successful that Lyndow began publishing books by political authors, many of whom were supporters or were sympathetic to fascism. The writers for whom Lyndow provided an outlet reads like a who’s who of post-war fascism: Lawrence Dennis, Theodore Andricks, John Travers, Anthony Trumpington, Harold Lomax, Robert Thorwyn, Charles Ciroan, Orazio Zumez, Ronan O’Gara and Rex Burchill (William Jenkins). It was also about this time that he began bending Frontline more toward the fascist/Third Positionist point of view and spiced its contents with the writings of Dennis, Travers, Ciroan, Oswald Mosely, Paul LeLonde and Olis Danis.
Lyndow also used Spearhead Press to publish his own books: Confessions of an Enemy of the State (the account of his trial and imprisonment), False Glory: America in World War II and How We Got Here, How We Can Get Out (revisionist look at the 20th century/Cold War). He also published a valuable compendium of fascist/synarchist essays in Between the Monoliths: An Anti-Communist, Anti-Capitalist Reader.
Throughout the 1950s and into the mid-1970s, Lyndow was often a guest on issues-oriented radio programs. He made several guest appearances on local television shows around the country as well. In 1967, Lyndow turned Frontline and Spearhead Press over to his close associate, Robert Throwyn and retired. He died at his home in Costa Rica in 1975.
George Lyndow almost single-handedly kept the flame of fascism burning in America at a time when it was considered dead and buried. He also helped foster two new aspects of fascism – Synarchism and Third Positionism – by giving them a voice. Many brave and intelligent fascists from America and beyond would have been forever silenced were it not for his efforts.
A native of Vermont, Lyndow was the son of a lumber company executive. When the U.S. entered World War I in 1917, he joined the army and fought in France. Like many future fascists, the war had a profound effect on Lyndow who conceived of the kind of man forged in the trenches of the Great War as a creative and dynamic warrior; a man who recognized violence as a creative force and who was willing to risk all and sacrifice all for a great, transforming cause. As a result, these new men – fascist men -- were the only ones worthy of positions of power and prestige, unlike their crafty and conniving liberal parliamentary predecessors who were adept at starting wars but let others fight them.
After graduating from Amherst, Lyndow moved to New York and pursued a writing career. His first book The Dead, the Dying and the Damned had originally been written as a true account of his experiences in the war. However, his publisher suggested he turn it into a novel to better reflect Lyndow’s talent for dramatic narration. It proved to be a boon for the young writer as the novel sold well. In addition to a raft of articles, Lyndow produced several other books in the1920s.
It was in the 1920s that Lyndow became enamored of fascism. Fearing Bolshevism would consume Western civilization; Lyndow was impressed with the Italian Fascists’ success against them. Noting that Mussolini shared his views on war only drew him closer. Lyndow was so keen on fascism that he studied Italian and made two trips to Italy to see fascism for himself and to gather material for articles. In 1931 he published an article in 20th Century magazine titled, “Fascism: What it is and What it is Not” which stirred so much reader comment that Lyndow turned it into a 1933 book: The Future is Fascism.
By the early 1930s, Lyndow’s writing career began to wane and, with a wife and two children to support, he took outside jobs to make ends meet in the hard days of the Depression. Times were also hard for men of his convictions. “The fascist has no sanctuary in the political wilderness of this America,” Lyndow wrote in 1936 and wander he did. At various times he supported Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal (which he believed did not go far enough), Sen. Huey Long’s “Share the Wealth” movement, Father Charles Coughlin’s National Union for Social Justice (Lyndow introduced Coughlin at a rally in Rochester, NY and was a staff member on his presidential campaign), William Dudley Pelley’s Silvershirts and Wyman Yates’ Blueshirts. In 1937 Lyndow began publishing a bi-weekly, six-page mini-tabloid called Spearhead which offered support for fascism at home and the Mussolini and Hitler regimes abroad. At its height in 1940, Spearhead had 40,000 subscribers nationwide.
When the U.S. joined World War II, Spearhead was shut down by the federal government and Lyndow was arrested on charges of sedition. He was convicted of those charges in 1942 and sent to an internment camp at Seagoville, Texas (also located in that camp were American fascist sympathizers Wyman Yates, Theodore Andricks and John Travers as well as British BUF member Anthony Trumpington). Ironically, Lyndow’s eldest son, Paul (born in 1924), was killed fighting the Japanese in the Pacific. His father’s request to attend the funeral was denied.
After the war, Lyndow looked to start life over at almost 50. His wife had divorced him after his sedition conviction and, with no family reconciliation possible; he moved to Los Angeles in 1946 and took a job with Ostrum Printing. In 1951, Lyndow started a newsletter he called Frontline which was primarily an anti-communist publication. By placing ads for Frontline in various right-wing publications, he soon found a large group of subscribers and churned out weekly editions. He received some financial backing from wealthy Southern California businessman and anti-communist John Tunnison. With this infusion of cash, Lyndow established Spearhead Press (a tribute to his old 1930s broadsheet).
Spearhead Press started by reprinting a range of books on a variety of topics whose copy writes had run out and were considered in the public domain. By the mid-1950s the venture had proved so successful that Lyndow began publishing books by political authors, many of whom were supporters or were sympathetic to fascism. The writers for whom Lyndow provided an outlet reads like a who’s who of post-war fascism: Lawrence Dennis, Theodore Andricks, John Travers, Anthony Trumpington, Harold Lomax, Robert Thorwyn, Charles Ciroan, Orazio Zumez, Ronan O’Gara and Rex Burchill (William Jenkins). It was also about this time that he began bending Frontline more toward the fascist/Third Positionist point of view and spiced its contents with the writings of Dennis, Travers, Ciroan, Oswald Mosely, Paul LeLonde and Olis Danis.
Lyndow also used Spearhead Press to publish his own books: Confessions of an Enemy of the State (the account of his trial and imprisonment), False Glory: America in World War II and How We Got Here, How We Can Get Out (revisionist look at the 20th century/Cold War). He also published a valuable compendium of fascist/synarchist essays in Between the Monoliths: An Anti-Communist, Anti-Capitalist Reader.
Throughout the 1950s and into the mid-1970s, Lyndow was often a guest on issues-oriented radio programs. He made several guest appearances on local television shows around the country as well. In 1967, Lyndow turned Frontline and Spearhead Press over to his close associate, Robert Throwyn and retired. He died at his home in Costa Rica in 1975.
George Lyndow almost single-handedly kept the flame of fascism burning in America at a time when it was considered dead and buried. He also helped foster two new aspects of fascism – Synarchism and Third Positionism – by giving them a voice. Many brave and intelligent fascists from America and beyond would have been forever silenced were it not for his efforts.
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Synarchism
Synarchism (from Greek meaning “to rule together”) is a form of corporatism that has changed forms over the years and nearly faded out after World War II except for a handful of proponents who managed to breathe life back into the concept. The key problem with turning synarchism into a viable political option is its very name.
The earliest recorded use of the term “synarchy” comes from Thomas Stackhouse an English clergyman who used the word in his New History of the Holy Bible from the Beginning of the World to the Establishment of Christianity published in two folio volumes in 1737 to describe the system of Heaven. Harvard historian and sinologist John K. Fairbank also used the word synarchism in his 1953 book Trade and Diplomacy on the China Coast: The Opening of the Treaty Ports, 1842-1854 and in later writings, to describe the mechanisms of government under the late Qing dynasty in China. Fairbank defined synarchy as a form of rule that co-opts existing elites and powers, bringing them into the system and legitimizing them through a schedule of rituals and tributes that gave them a stake in the Chinese regime and neutralized any risk that they might rebel against the monarchy.
The most substantive early use of synarchy comes from the writings of Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre (1842-1909), who used the term in his 1882 book La France Vraie. St Yves considered the medieval Knights Templars to be ultimate synarchists of their time and consequently drew on Templar ideals when formulating his ideas. Alarmed by the emergence of anarchist movements, Saint-Yves, an occultist, elaborated a political-theological formula which he believed would lead to a harmonious society by viewing it as an organic unity. He advocated overcoming social differentiation and hierarchy through co-operation between social classes which would transcend conflict: Synarchy, as opposed to anarchy. Specifically, Saint-Yves envisioned a European society with a government composed of three councils, representing economic power, judicial power, and the scientific sector. The structure would be bound together by a metaphysical chamber. In this form of synarchy, political power effectively rested with secret or, esoteric societies composed of oracles. An elite of enlightened initiates would rule from behind the scenes and insure synarchy no matter which political party held power in a state or even what political system that state has. Saint-Yves believed spiritually superior earthly elite would use the oracles to communicate with an ethereal elite. He himself claimed that he was in touch with these beings, and that they actually gave him the principles of synarchy.
Saint-Yves' successor, Gerard Vincent Encausse “Papus,” founded the Saint-Yves School of Occult Sciences, and began a recruiting drive for a secret society, which he called the Synarchy Government. In his 1894 book Anarchie, Indolence and Synarchie, Papus spelled out an ambitious scheme to recruit all of the leaders of industry, commerce, finance, the military, and academia, to a single force, aimed at destroying the anarchist movement. Both Saint-Yves and Papus envisioned a global Synarchist empire, divided into five geographic areas: 1. the British Empire; 2. Euro-Africa; 3. Eurasia; 4. Pan-America; 5. Asia.
Lyndon LaRouche, leader of a controversial movement on the fringe of American politics, has conjured up a conspiracy theory of synarchy based upon the ideas of Saint-Yves/Papus. He claims that synarchism is an international movement born after the Versailles Treaty, which was financed and directed by financial groups belonging to the top international banking community. Its aim is essentially to overthrow the parliamentary regimes which are considered insufficiently devoted to the interests of the synarchists and substitute them with authoritarian regimes that are more easily controlled. This group installed fascist regimes throughout Europe during the Great Depression in an effort to maintain world order and prevent the repudiation of international debts. LaRouche claims U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney as a modern “synarchist", and claims that “synarchists” have “a scheme for replacing regular military forces of nations, by private armies in the footsteps of a privately financed international Waffen-SS-like scheme, a force deployed by leading financier institutions, such as the multi-billions funding by the U.S. Treasury, of Cheney's Halliburton gang.”
However, there is another, far less mystical version of synarchy as well. Impressed with Saint-Yves' political concept but not buying the esoteric feature, French Catholic philosopher and military strategist Dupont D’Ivry (1839-1915) looked to rescue synarchy from the occultists and turn it into a practical political force. D'Ivry, a veteran of the Franco-Prussian War viewed with trepidation France’s unraveling as a result of the conflict and feared a future armed clash would bring about a repeat of the Paris Commune on a larger scale. His 1878 book, War and Uprising explored these themes. To more closely knit French society together, D’Ivry advocated Saint-Yves’ ideas of a congruous, organic society which overcomes its class differences through co-operation. However, D’Ivry’s synarchy would accomplish this through a re-organized state and economic structure. Borrowing a pinch from Otto von Bismarck’s Welfare State, a sample of Pope Leo XIII papal encyclical Rerum Novarum, a taste of American Henry George’s Single Tax theory and a helping of syndicalism, some ideas from Hegel, the American Revolution, mercantilism and the Medieval Guild system, D'Ivry brewed a heady new stew of synarchy that gave every strata of society a stake in the synarchist republic. Using the human body as a metaphor for the organic society of synarchism, D'Ivry noted that members of a society are like organs of a living body. They cannot live outside society and within it, each performs its own function or the body dies. “A peasant is as different from a priest as the stomach is different from the liver but each is important to the overall whole,” he wrote in his 1901 manifesto for synarchism, Synarchy; The New Social Contract. At the center of the syrarchic body is the biological family which functions as a micro of the macro and the state, which functions as the brain.
Surprisingly, Dupont D’Ivry and his version of synarchy is largely forgotten even though it influenced fascist and non-fascist movements around the world including Mussolini and the Italian fascists and Futurists, the National Fedayeen in Egypt, Distributism, National Socialism, Elciran Pamil’s Ergenekon movement in Turkey, Dualism, Nadir Pasdaran in Iran, The Canadian Synarchist Party, Chandra Bose, Salizar in Portugal, Oswald Mosely, Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, Ali Lettelli in Lebanon, Arthur Thatcham in Australia, Syria’s Muhammar Faravahar, Charles Ciroan and many others.
Among those who took D’Ivry’s concepts up were the members of Mexico’s National Synarchist Union. The party was founded in May 1937 by a group of Catholic political activists led by Jose Antonio Urquiza. Borrowing heavily from Synarchy; The New Social Contract, the group published the Sinarquista Manifesto, which listed their opposition to the policies of the government of PRI and President Lazaro Cardenas. “It is absolutely necessary that an organization composed of true patriots exists,” the Manifesto declared, “an organization which works for the restoration of the fundamental rights of each citizen and the salvation of the Motherland. As opposed to the utopians who dream of a society without governors and laws, Synarchism supports a society governed by a legitimate authority, emanating from the free democratic activity of the people, that truly guarantees the social order within all find true happiness.” In addition to D’Ivry’s ideas, the ideology of the Mexican Sinarquistas was rooted in conservative Catholic social thinking of the 1920s and ‘30s and based heavily on the synarchism articulated by D’Ivry. It stressed social co-operation as opposed to the class conflict of socialism, and hierarchy and respect for authority as opposed to liberalism. In the context of Mexican politics, this meant opposition to the centralist, semi-socialist and anti-clerical policies of the PRI regime.
The Mexican Sinarquistas stirred fears of fascism on the American doorstep and U.S. Intelligence analysts kept a watchful eye on the movement during World War II. In a declassified U.S. report dated April 22, 1942, Raleigh A. Gibson, First Secretary of the U.S. Embassy in Mexico, sent the U.S. Secretary of State an English translation of an editorial from El Popular, the newspaper of the Confederation of Mexican Workers, published on April 21, 1942. It reads in part as follows:
The French sinarquistas rushed into furious strife against French and European democracy; those of Mexico organized to combat Mexican and continental democracy. The French sinarquistas were adopted by Abetz, the Ambassador of Hitler in France; the Mexican sinarquistas were recruited, were given a name, were educated and directed by Nazi agents in Mexico and by Falange directors who are working illegally among us. And this is so apparent, so conclusive, that it eliminates the need of concrete proofs of the organic connection between them. The fundamental proof is that sinarquism is not a unique and exclusive Mexican product, as its leaders untruthfully argue. That Sinarquism, even bearing the identical name, does exist in other parts of the world and is an international movement formed by those who are under the supreme orders of Hitler.
In 1946 the movement regrouped as the Popular Force Party. In 1951, however, when it was clear that the more moderate National Action Party (PAN) had become the main party of opposition to the PRI government, the Synarchist leader Juan Ignacio Padilla converted the movement to an “apolitical” one promoting conservative Catholic social doctrine, promoted through co-operatives, credit unions and Catholic trade unions. Synarchism revived as a political movement in the 1970s through the Mexican Democratic Party. The party then suffered a split in 1988, and in 1992 lost its registration as a political party. It was dissolved in 1996. There are now two organizations, both calling themselves the Uniacional Sinarquista. One has an apparently right-wing orientation, the other is apparently left-wing, but they both have the same philosophical roots.
Because of Saint-Yves and D’Ivry, synarchism has a long history in France and has been at the heart of several conspiracy theories in the years after World War II. According to former OSS officer William Langer’s 1947 book Our Vichy Gamble, French industrial and banking interests had, “even before the war turned to Nazi Germany and looked to Hitler as the savior of Europe from Communism ...These people were as good fascists as any in Europe... Many of them had extensive and intimate business relations with German interests and were still dreaming of a new system of ‘synarchy,’ which meant government of Europe on fascist principles by an international brotherhood of financiers and industrialists.” This view was originally based on the discovery of a document called Pacte Synarchique following the death of Jean Coutrot, former member of the Groupe X-Crise group, in May 15, 1941. According to this confused document, a Mouvement Synarchique d'Empire had been founded in 1922, with the aim of abolishing parliamentary government and replacing it with synarchy. This has lead to the belief that La Cagoule (from cagoulards, the “hooded ones”) was the armed branch of French synarchism, and that some important members of the Vichy Regime such as Pierre Pucheu, Jacques Barnaud, Gabriel Le Roy Ladurie, Jacques Benoist-Méchin, Yves Bouthillier, François Lehideux or Henry Du Moulin de Labarthète were synarchists. An investigation was in fact ordered by the Vichy government, leading to the Rapport Chavin but no evidence for the existence of the Mouvement Synarchiste d'Empire was found. Most of the presumed synarchists were either associated with the Banque Worms or with Groupe X-Crise and were close to Admiral François Darlan. This also led to the belief that synarchists had engineered the military defeat of France for the profit of Banque Worms. Historian Annie Lacroiz-Riz wrote a 2006 book on this subject, titled Le choix de la défaite : Les élites françaises dans les années 1930 (The Choice of Defeat: the French elites in the 1930s). These theories have been dismissed as a “work of a paranoid imagination which wove together the histories of three disparate groups of activists, creating a conspiracy among them where none existed.” In fact, some historians suspect that the Pacte Synarchique was a hoax created by some members of La Cagoule to weaken Darlan and his technocrats and that the Movement Synarchique d’Empire never existed. According to this view, the Vichy regime would have found the conspiracy theories about synarchy convenient to justify the repression of secret societies such as freemasonry, and thus did not bother to dispel the rumors concerning synarchy.
Even though a U.S. military intelligence report, dated July 27, 1944, from the military attaché in Algiers, warned of synarchist penetration of the upper echelons of the Free French government of Gen. Charles de Gaulle, headquartered in Algeria, synarchy never emerged in France. In fact, after World War II, fascism lay in ruins both physically and philosophically as the world narrowed down to a battle of two opposing ideologies: Communism and Capitalism.
However, in the 1950s, a synarchist remnant slowly emerged from the ashes from the surprising locale of the United States. Spenglarian American philosopher Francis Parker Yockey (1917 –1960) sparked the re-emergence with his classic 1948 book Imperium. South African-born American philosopher Charles Ciroan (1930-2002) proved a direct descendent of Dupont D'Ivry with his inspiring and strongly synarchist tomes The Origins of Destiny (1958) and Heed the Thunder (1962). Other American synarchists included journalist/publisher Robert Thorwyn and soldier/activist Theodore Andricks. Argentina produced writer Orazio Zumez, from Ireland came guerilla leader Ronan O’Gara and Norway had Steinar Arneesen. Several synarchist political parties have been established and at least one glossy magazine, New Zeland’s Outlook, has a synarchist point of view.
The idea endures.
The earliest recorded use of the term “synarchy” comes from Thomas Stackhouse an English clergyman who used the word in his New History of the Holy Bible from the Beginning of the World to the Establishment of Christianity published in two folio volumes in 1737 to describe the system of Heaven. Harvard historian and sinologist John K. Fairbank also used the word synarchism in his 1953 book Trade and Diplomacy on the China Coast: The Opening of the Treaty Ports, 1842-1854 and in later writings, to describe the mechanisms of government under the late Qing dynasty in China. Fairbank defined synarchy as a form of rule that co-opts existing elites and powers, bringing them into the system and legitimizing them through a schedule of rituals and tributes that gave them a stake in the Chinese regime and neutralized any risk that they might rebel against the monarchy.
The most substantive early use of synarchy comes from the writings of Alexandre Saint-Yves d'Alveydre (1842-1909), who used the term in his 1882 book La France Vraie. St Yves considered the medieval Knights Templars to be ultimate synarchists of their time and consequently drew on Templar ideals when formulating his ideas. Alarmed by the emergence of anarchist movements, Saint-Yves, an occultist, elaborated a political-theological formula which he believed would lead to a harmonious society by viewing it as an organic unity. He advocated overcoming social differentiation and hierarchy through co-operation between social classes which would transcend conflict: Synarchy, as opposed to anarchy. Specifically, Saint-Yves envisioned a European society with a government composed of three councils, representing economic power, judicial power, and the scientific sector. The structure would be bound together by a metaphysical chamber. In this form of synarchy, political power effectively rested with secret or, esoteric societies composed of oracles. An elite of enlightened initiates would rule from behind the scenes and insure synarchy no matter which political party held power in a state or even what political system that state has. Saint-Yves believed spiritually superior earthly elite would use the oracles to communicate with an ethereal elite. He himself claimed that he was in touch with these beings, and that they actually gave him the principles of synarchy.
Saint-Yves' successor, Gerard Vincent Encausse “Papus,” founded the Saint-Yves School of Occult Sciences, and began a recruiting drive for a secret society, which he called the Synarchy Government. In his 1894 book Anarchie, Indolence and Synarchie, Papus spelled out an ambitious scheme to recruit all of the leaders of industry, commerce, finance, the military, and academia, to a single force, aimed at destroying the anarchist movement. Both Saint-Yves and Papus envisioned a global Synarchist empire, divided into five geographic areas: 1. the British Empire; 2. Euro-Africa; 3. Eurasia; 4. Pan-America; 5. Asia.
Lyndon LaRouche, leader of a controversial movement on the fringe of American politics, has conjured up a conspiracy theory of synarchy based upon the ideas of Saint-Yves/Papus. He claims that synarchism is an international movement born after the Versailles Treaty, which was financed and directed by financial groups belonging to the top international banking community. Its aim is essentially to overthrow the parliamentary regimes which are considered insufficiently devoted to the interests of the synarchists and substitute them with authoritarian regimes that are more easily controlled. This group installed fascist regimes throughout Europe during the Great Depression in an effort to maintain world order and prevent the repudiation of international debts. LaRouche claims U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney as a modern “synarchist", and claims that “synarchists” have “a scheme for replacing regular military forces of nations, by private armies in the footsteps of a privately financed international Waffen-SS-like scheme, a force deployed by leading financier institutions, such as the multi-billions funding by the U.S. Treasury, of Cheney's Halliburton gang.”
However, there is another, far less mystical version of synarchy as well. Impressed with Saint-Yves' political concept but not buying the esoteric feature, French Catholic philosopher and military strategist Dupont D’Ivry (1839-1915) looked to rescue synarchy from the occultists and turn it into a practical political force. D'Ivry, a veteran of the Franco-Prussian War viewed with trepidation France’s unraveling as a result of the conflict and feared a future armed clash would bring about a repeat of the Paris Commune on a larger scale. His 1878 book, War and Uprising explored these themes. To more closely knit French society together, D’Ivry advocated Saint-Yves’ ideas of a congruous, organic society which overcomes its class differences through co-operation. However, D’Ivry’s synarchy would accomplish this through a re-organized state and economic structure. Borrowing a pinch from Otto von Bismarck’s Welfare State, a sample of Pope Leo XIII papal encyclical Rerum Novarum, a taste of American Henry George’s Single Tax theory and a helping of syndicalism, some ideas from Hegel, the American Revolution, mercantilism and the Medieval Guild system, D'Ivry brewed a heady new stew of synarchy that gave every strata of society a stake in the synarchist republic. Using the human body as a metaphor for the organic society of synarchism, D'Ivry noted that members of a society are like organs of a living body. They cannot live outside society and within it, each performs its own function or the body dies. “A peasant is as different from a priest as the stomach is different from the liver but each is important to the overall whole,” he wrote in his 1901 manifesto for synarchism, Synarchy; The New Social Contract. At the center of the syrarchic body is the biological family which functions as a micro of the macro and the state, which functions as the brain.
Surprisingly, Dupont D’Ivry and his version of synarchy is largely forgotten even though it influenced fascist and non-fascist movements around the world including Mussolini and the Italian fascists and Futurists, the National Fedayeen in Egypt, Distributism, National Socialism, Elciran Pamil’s Ergenekon movement in Turkey, Dualism, Nadir Pasdaran in Iran, The Canadian Synarchist Party, Chandra Bose, Salizar in Portugal, Oswald Mosely, Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, Ali Lettelli in Lebanon, Arthur Thatcham in Australia, Syria’s Muhammar Faravahar, Charles Ciroan and many others.
Among those who took D’Ivry’s concepts up were the members of Mexico’s National Synarchist Union. The party was founded in May 1937 by a group of Catholic political activists led by Jose Antonio Urquiza. Borrowing heavily from Synarchy; The New Social Contract, the group published the Sinarquista Manifesto, which listed their opposition to the policies of the government of PRI and President Lazaro Cardenas. “It is absolutely necessary that an organization composed of true patriots exists,” the Manifesto declared, “an organization which works for the restoration of the fundamental rights of each citizen and the salvation of the Motherland. As opposed to the utopians who dream of a society without governors and laws, Synarchism supports a society governed by a legitimate authority, emanating from the free democratic activity of the people, that truly guarantees the social order within all find true happiness.” In addition to D’Ivry’s ideas, the ideology of the Mexican Sinarquistas was rooted in conservative Catholic social thinking of the 1920s and ‘30s and based heavily on the synarchism articulated by D’Ivry. It stressed social co-operation as opposed to the class conflict of socialism, and hierarchy and respect for authority as opposed to liberalism. In the context of Mexican politics, this meant opposition to the centralist, semi-socialist and anti-clerical policies of the PRI regime.
The Mexican Sinarquistas stirred fears of fascism on the American doorstep and U.S. Intelligence analysts kept a watchful eye on the movement during World War II. In a declassified U.S. report dated April 22, 1942, Raleigh A. Gibson, First Secretary of the U.S. Embassy in Mexico, sent the U.S. Secretary of State an English translation of an editorial from El Popular, the newspaper of the Confederation of Mexican Workers, published on April 21, 1942. It reads in part as follows:
The French sinarquistas rushed into furious strife against French and European democracy; those of Mexico organized to combat Mexican and continental democracy. The French sinarquistas were adopted by Abetz, the Ambassador of Hitler in France; the Mexican sinarquistas were recruited, were given a name, were educated and directed by Nazi agents in Mexico and by Falange directors who are working illegally among us. And this is so apparent, so conclusive, that it eliminates the need of concrete proofs of the organic connection between them. The fundamental proof is that sinarquism is not a unique and exclusive Mexican product, as its leaders untruthfully argue. That Sinarquism, even bearing the identical name, does exist in other parts of the world and is an international movement formed by those who are under the supreme orders of Hitler.
In 1946 the movement regrouped as the Popular Force Party. In 1951, however, when it was clear that the more moderate National Action Party (PAN) had become the main party of opposition to the PRI government, the Synarchist leader Juan Ignacio Padilla converted the movement to an “apolitical” one promoting conservative Catholic social doctrine, promoted through co-operatives, credit unions and Catholic trade unions. Synarchism revived as a political movement in the 1970s through the Mexican Democratic Party. The party then suffered a split in 1988, and in 1992 lost its registration as a political party. It was dissolved in 1996. There are now two organizations, both calling themselves the Uniacional Sinarquista. One has an apparently right-wing orientation, the other is apparently left-wing, but they both have the same philosophical roots.
Because of Saint-Yves and D’Ivry, synarchism has a long history in France and has been at the heart of several conspiracy theories in the years after World War II. According to former OSS officer William Langer’s 1947 book Our Vichy Gamble, French industrial and banking interests had, “even before the war turned to Nazi Germany and looked to Hitler as the savior of Europe from Communism ...These people were as good fascists as any in Europe... Many of them had extensive and intimate business relations with German interests and were still dreaming of a new system of ‘synarchy,’ which meant government of Europe on fascist principles by an international brotherhood of financiers and industrialists.” This view was originally based on the discovery of a document called Pacte Synarchique following the death of Jean Coutrot, former member of the Groupe X-Crise group, in May 15, 1941. According to this confused document, a Mouvement Synarchique d'Empire had been founded in 1922, with the aim of abolishing parliamentary government and replacing it with synarchy. This has lead to the belief that La Cagoule (from cagoulards, the “hooded ones”) was the armed branch of French synarchism, and that some important members of the Vichy Regime such as Pierre Pucheu, Jacques Barnaud, Gabriel Le Roy Ladurie, Jacques Benoist-Méchin, Yves Bouthillier, François Lehideux or Henry Du Moulin de Labarthète were synarchists. An investigation was in fact ordered by the Vichy government, leading to the Rapport Chavin but no evidence for the existence of the Mouvement Synarchiste d'Empire was found. Most of the presumed synarchists were either associated with the Banque Worms or with Groupe X-Crise and were close to Admiral François Darlan. This also led to the belief that synarchists had engineered the military defeat of France for the profit of Banque Worms. Historian Annie Lacroiz-Riz wrote a 2006 book on this subject, titled Le choix de la défaite : Les élites françaises dans les années 1930 (The Choice of Defeat: the French elites in the 1930s). These theories have been dismissed as a “work of a paranoid imagination which wove together the histories of three disparate groups of activists, creating a conspiracy among them where none existed.” In fact, some historians suspect that the Pacte Synarchique was a hoax created by some members of La Cagoule to weaken Darlan and his technocrats and that the Movement Synarchique d’Empire never existed. According to this view, the Vichy regime would have found the conspiracy theories about synarchy convenient to justify the repression of secret societies such as freemasonry, and thus did not bother to dispel the rumors concerning synarchy.
Even though a U.S. military intelligence report, dated July 27, 1944, from the military attaché in Algiers, warned of synarchist penetration of the upper echelons of the Free French government of Gen. Charles de Gaulle, headquartered in Algeria, synarchy never emerged in France. In fact, after World War II, fascism lay in ruins both physically and philosophically as the world narrowed down to a battle of two opposing ideologies: Communism and Capitalism.
However, in the 1950s, a synarchist remnant slowly emerged from the ashes from the surprising locale of the United States. Spenglarian American philosopher Francis Parker Yockey (1917 –1960) sparked the re-emergence with his classic 1948 book Imperium. South African-born American philosopher Charles Ciroan (1930-2002) proved a direct descendent of Dupont D'Ivry with his inspiring and strongly synarchist tomes The Origins of Destiny (1958) and Heed the Thunder (1962). Other American synarchists included journalist/publisher Robert Thorwyn and soldier/activist Theodore Andricks. Argentina produced writer Orazio Zumez, from Ireland came guerilla leader Ronan O’Gara and Norway had Steinar Arneesen. Several synarchist political parties have been established and at least one glossy magazine, New Zeland’s Outlook, has a synarchist point of view.
The idea endures.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)