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While browsing through the magazine section at Barnes and Noble recently, for fun, I picked up the September issue of the John Birch Society’s publication The New American. Named after an OSS veteran who was killed by the communists during the Chinese Civil War, the John Birch Society has a history going back to the 1950s of warning about alleged communist infiltration of the U.S. government and society and railing against the UN.[1]
John Birch Society Tries to Bring Back Cold War Culture By Jeremy Kuzmarov Though alleging to expose “deep-state” machinations against Donald Trump, their publication accuses James Comey and John Brennan of being communist agents and venerates Cold War-Era KGB defectors who advanced CIA disinformation
True to form, the editor’s note from the September New American issue, written by Alex Newman, warned about a treasonous conspiracy against President Donald Trump mounted by communist “deep-state” operatives whose broader ambition is to create a “one-world political, economic, and even religious regime based not on American or Christian ideals, but on principles of slavery.”
READ MORE: https://covertactionmagazine.com/2025/12/26/john-birch-society-tries-to-bring-back-cold-war-culture/
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Why William F. Buckley Pushed the John Birchers from the Conservative Movement Mises Wire David Brady, Jr.
When mainstream conservatism looks back at the legacy of William F. Buckley Jr., they often cite his making conservatism into something “respectable” and his excommunication of what are deemed “kooks” and “conspiracists.” Their most proud moment is Buckley’s purging of the John Birch Society, which is supposed to have made National Review and the conservative movement respectable. Further, the average apologist of the purge cites it as the moment that the conspiracy theorists were supposedly removed. This story permeates the mainstream historiography of American history. It goes as follows: In 1962, Buckley and the fusionists of National Review prepared to launch the Goldwater campaign. Goldwater had emerged as the candidate of the magazine—a man who cited F.A. Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom and Russell Kirk’s The Conservative Mind as defining his personal canon and occupied a US Senate seat from Arizona. While Buckley had founded Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) in 1960, it was rivaled in size by another organization founded in 1958 by a retired candy salesman. The John Birch Society (JBS) was an alliance of small businessmen and manufacturers organized by Robert Welch. Welch believed a communist conspiracy had overtaken the nation and even infiltrated the highest levels of government. While communist infiltration had indeed occurred (one might look at the cases of Alger Hiss or Harry Dexter White), Welch’s most famous claim that President Eisenhower was a conscious communist agent was a stretch to say the least. Eisenhower was a liberal Republican, which libertarians may equate with socialism, but he was not a communist. The Goldwater campaign knew it needed vital support from the John Birch Society, whose numbers in Western states would be vital to campaigning and fundraising for the presidential campaign. Buckley and the fusionists worried that the more absurd statements of Welch’s, featured in an unpublished book Welch had written titled The Politician, would give the left a vital weapon to smear the Goldwater campaign as extremists. Goldwater met with Buckley, Russell Kirk, and William Baroody—founder of AEI—and spoke about current events. But eventually the Birchers were brought up. Kirk pushed that Robert Welch was disconnected from reality, to which Goldwater retorted that every other man in Phoenix was a Bircher, even the most influential powerbrokers. They decided to try and drive a wedge between Welch and the Society. Buckley penned an article in the February 13, 1962 edition of National Review positing that the Birchers should distance themselves from their leader who had lost touch with reality. Kirk and Goldwater followed up in the next issue with letters to the magazine where they agreed with Buckley’s analysis––thus writing Robert Welch out of the movement. Goldwater ultimately did not win. By the time 1964 had come around, Goldwater lost his enthusiasm for the presidential race. Kennedy had been assassinated the year before and Baroody had cornered Buckley and Brent Bozzell—who had ghost-written Goldwater’s Conscience of a Conservative—out of the campaign. The media labeled Goldwater an extremist anyways, Lyndon Johnson playing into Goldwater’s hawkishness with the famed “Daisy” ad. But this was not the end of National Review’s fight with the John Birch Society. Without a presidential campaign in sight, Buckley went to war with the JBS. Sam Tanenhaus—the authorized biographer of Buckley—posits that he went to war as a jealous attempt to combat the popularity of the society. He argues that Buckley saw the JBS as a competitor to YAF and thus excommunicated the group to seize further control over the organizing of the right. More mainstream histories state that it was a final attempt to make conservatism respectable. In truth, the reality is something far more Rothbardian. In 1965, the John Birch Society was already well known for its “Get US out!” billboards that demanded the United States exit the United Nations. Soon those became synonymous with a call to exit Vietnam. Beginning that year, Welch began to believe that the Vietnam War was a communist plot to destroy the United States in a quagmire, while ignoring the domestic communist plot. Welch began to voice these theories in the society’s chief organ American Opinion (a publication on which Ludwig von Mises served on the editorial committee). It was this that provoked Buckley to dedicate the October 19, 1965 edition of National Review to the issue of excommunicating the Birchers once and for all. The shift in the stance of the Birchers towards Vietnam seems to have finally interested Senior Editor James Burnham to pen his own column on the issue. Burnham was an ex-CIA employee—the extent to which one can be an ex- member of the agency, one will never know—whose primary concern at National Review was confrontation with the Soviet Union being the party line of the conservative movement. Frank S. Meyer—the most libertarian of the fusionists—would remark to his disciple and eventual ex-patriot from NR, Gary Wills, that the control Burnham exerted over the magazine gave it the appearance of being run by the CIA. Burnham did not care much for Goldwater during the 1964 campaign, always having been more of a Rockefeller Republican, and thus didn’t care for the issue of the John Birch Society. But once this group turned its gaze toward the Vietnam War rather than Earl Warren, Burnham struck. Buckley began the excommunication, penning that, among the many issues that made it necessary to revisit the Bircher question, …the President of the United States is engaged in anti-Communist action in Southeast Asia, and for that reason is under great pressure from the American Left. But he is also, astoundingly, under pressure from a segment of the American Right-which has been taught by Mr. Robert Welch that apparently anti-Communist action undertaken by the government of the United States cannot really be anti-Communist for the reason that our Government is controlled by Communists. Such reasoning, depriving us as it does of the benefit of public support by conservatives for anti-Communist action when it does occur, needs to be analyzed, and resisted. Frank Meyer’s own column Principles & Heresies, argued that the conspiratorial mind of Welch was inhibitive to anti-Communist action, “the culmination of this. . .when the slogan, ‘Get US Out,’ was transformed from an anti-UN slogan to a Get US Out of Vietnam slogan, placing the Birch Society alongside of SNCC, Staughton Lynd, the sit-iners and the draft-card burners.” Burnham himself laid the killing blow, writing in his aptly titled column Third World War: “Its stand on Vietnam confirms, not for the first time, that any American who seriously wants to contribute to his country’s security and well-being and to oppose Communism will have to stay clear of the JBS.” According to the words of the excommunicators, it appears that the final straw for the JBS’s conspiracies was not the nature of them. Rather, the problem was when it concluded that the Vietnam War was worth opposing. The issue was the society’s stance on foreign policy––the most important issue to National Review. Buckley did not excommunicate the “cranks and conspiracists,” he excommunicated those opposed to the reckless and dangerous Vietnam War. The Birchers may not have been quite right in their causal understanding, but the Vietnam War was indeed a quagmire. The actions of the Vietnam War would lead to a further spread of communism throughout Southeast Asia. It would spread leftism in the United States by agitating war protestors. The war machine and the economic policy needed to sustain it, would, in effect, bring about the socialism that Welch warned of. He may have been wrong that policymakers in the United States intended it, but it was what they wrought. Maybe National Review should have heeded the warnings of American Opinion. https://mises.org/mises-wire/why-william-f-buckley-pushed-john-birchers-conservative-movement
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Far-left Scrooges Claim “Far-right” Christians “Stole,” “Weaponized” Christmas by R. Cort Kirkwood
For those who think Christmas celebrates the Nativity of Jesus Christ, Politico Europe has news for you: They think wrong. In fact, the website claims “the far right stole Christmas” and “seasonal traditions and good cheer are being repurposed to serve political ends.” From whom the “far right” stole Christmas isn’t clear, although far-left Politico Europe warns that the very real War on Christmas is a figment of the far-right’s febrile nightmares. Thus did far-left John Pavlovitz, a pro-homosexual apostate Catholic, claim that Christians have “weaponized” Christmas.
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ONE WOULD WANT TO GET US OUT OF AMERICACA'S INFLUENCE AND ITS VARIOUS RIGHT WING CONSPIRACIES DESIGNED TO PROLONG WARS AND ELIMINATE SOCIAL WELFARE....
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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The John Birch Society is still influencing American politics, 60 years after its founding
BY Christopher Towler
The retired candy entrepreneur Robert Welch founded the John Birch Society 60 years ago to push back against what he perceived as a growing American welfare state modeled on communism and the federal government’s push to desegregate America.
Although Welch’s group has never amassed more than 100,000 dues-paying members, it had garnered an estimated 4 to 6 million sympathizers within four years of its 1958 formation.
As a scholar of political history and social movements, I find many parallels between today’s far right and its predecessors. Just as the John Birch Society emerged in the midst of the civil rights movement, today’s far-right movements formed as a reaction to the election of Barack Obama – a milestone for racial equality.
https://theconversation.com/the-john-birch-society-is-still-influencing-american-politics-60-years-after-its-founding-107925
WE ALL (SHOULD) KNOW THAT ON THE FOOTSTEPS OF BILL CLINTON AND GEORGE W BUSH, OBAMA CONTINUED THE AMERICAN DREAM OF THE "DEEP STATE" WHICH IS TO CONQUER AND OWN THE ENTIRE PLANET, BY WHATEVER MEANS — INCLUDING "PEACE" BY BOMBING THE SHIT OUT OF OTHER COUNTRIES.... TRUMP IS ALSO ON THE SAME PAGE, WHILE USING DIFFERENT TOOLS [TOMFOOLERY AND DECEITFUL DITHERINGS]...
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.