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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: "Populist" party: Friendly Fascists
- Message-ID: <1992Sep12.010904.5830@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
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- Date: Sat, 12 Sep 1992 01:09:04 GMT
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-
- /** action.jewish: 32.0 **/
- ** Topic: Warning on "Populist" party **
- ** Written 9:41 pm Sep 10, 1992 by dyurman in cdp:action.jewish **
- Bo Gritz
- [Adapted from "Right Woos Left"]
-
- by: Chip Berlet
-
- Political Research Associates
- 678 Massachusetts Avenue
- Suite 205
- Cambridge, MA 02139
-
- (617) 661-9313
-
- The author wrote an article, "Friendly Fascists," in the June
- Progressive magazine where he discussed Gritz and his ties to the
- far-right. He is quoted in an article on Gritz in the September
- issue of Soldier of Fortune.
-
- [permission to excerpt or quote is granted]
-
- ==============================================================
-
- Summary:
-
- Bo Gritz is the point man in an effort to build a coalition of
- white supremacists, anti-Jewish bigots, neo-fascists, and
- paranoid gun nuts. He accepted the nomination for president of
- the Populist Party, which even Readers Digest called a haven for
- neo-Nazis and ex-klansmen which was founded by notorious
- anti-Semite and Hitler apologist Willis Carto who founded the
- Liberty Lobby.
-
-
- ==============================================================
-
-
- True Gritz
-
- One of the most visible far right movements involves the
- presidential candidacy of Bo Gritz. Gritz is running for
- president through a variety of local parties and groups, but his
- earliest candidacy this electoral round was under the banner of
- the fascist Populist Party. Gritz has attracted a large audience
- of with his anti-administration appeals.
-
- Gritz primarily seeks to build networks of support in reactionary
- and far-right circles. He made a presentation on "MIA/POW &
- Government Drug Dealers" at the Third Christian Heritage National
- Conference held in November of 1990 in Florida. Among other
- featured speakers were Bob Weems, Pete Peters, Col. Jack Mohr and
- other persons who promote Christian Identity, a white supremacist
- conspiracy theory that targets Jews as agents of Satan. Also
- speaking were Eustace Mullins, who provided the "Total Conspiracy
- Update," and A.J. Barker, national chairman of the Populist Party
- which ran former neo-Nazi and Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke for
- President in 1988 with Gritz as the original vice-presidential
- nominee. Gritz later dropped off the ticket to run for local
- office, and now makes excuses for his earlier affiliation with
- Duke. Gritz claims he opposes racism and is trying to clean up
- the Populist Party.
-
- But according to the Monitor newsletter from the Center for
- Democratic Renewal, "Gritz's standard stump speech is an amalgam
- of themes popular among white supremacists and others on the far
- right: the Federal Reserve System is unconstitutional and should
- be abolished and a vast conspiracy of "internationalists" are
- taking over the world. In his book Called to Serve, Gritz writes
- that "Eight jewish (sic) families virtually control the FED,"
- (the Federal Reserve System.)
-
- Pastor Pete Peters is a leading proponent of the Christian
- Identity religion. In a speech at Peter's Colorado headquarters,
- Gritz acknowledged that Peters had helped publish and distribute
- his book Called to Serve, which is used to promote the Gritz
- presidential campaign.
-
- Christian Identity is a religion that sees Jews as agents of
- Satan and considers African-Americans to be sub-human. Identity
- claims the United States is the real promised land and white
- Christians are the real children of Israel. Many proponents of
- Christian Identity seek to overthrow the "Zionist Occupational
- Government" in Washington, D.C. and establish an exclusively
- white Christian nation, or at least seize the states of the
- pacific northwest.
-
- Gritz defends author Eustace Mullins and distributes his book on
- the Federal Reserve. According to Gritz, Mullins is not
- anti-Jewish.
-
- In his pamphlet The Secret Holocaust, Mullins asserts:
-
- "The record shows that only Christians have been victims
- of the historic massacres. The Jews, when they did not do the
- killings themselves, as they always prefer to do, were always in
- the background as the only instigators of these crimes against
- humanity. We can and we must protect ourselves against the
- bloodthirsty bestiality of the Jew by every possible means, and
- we must be aware that the Christian creed of love and mercy can
- be overshadowed by the Jewish obsession that all non Jews are
- animals to be killed." (Eustace Mullins, The Secret Holocaust,
- Word of Christ Mission, no date.)
-
- Mullins' speaking tours are promoted in ads placed in Liberty
- Lobby's Spotlight newspaper, a publication that has praised the
- spirit of the Waffen SS and promotes the view that the accepted
- history of the Nazi Holocaust is a Jewish hoax.
-
- The Populist Party began promoting Gritz for President in the
- summer of 1991. The banner headline in the June, 1991 issue of
- The Populist Observer: Voice of the Populist Party was
- "Groundswell Building For Gritz Presidential Run." Gritz had
- addressed the Populist Party national convention in May 1991. The
- following month, The Populist Observer ran another banner
- headline proclaiming: "Gritz Populist Party Candidacy for
- President Official!" In a memo sent to Populist Party regulars by
- Chair Don Wassall, and signed by 11 Populist Party Executive
- Committee members, Wassall wrote that "We are reaching out to new
- people, and we have a tremendous presidential candidate in Bo
- Gritz." Campaign flyers mailed from the Populist Party
- headquarters are headlined "Bo Gritz for President...Vote
- Populist Party." In the June, 1991 issue of The Populist
- Observer, Gritz wrote, "I call upon you as Republican, Democrat,
- Libertarian, Independent, right, left, conservative, liberal,
- et.al., to UNITE AS POPULISTS [emphasis in original] until we
- have our nation firmly back on her feet." Gritz told the audience
- at a July, 1991 meeting in Palo Alto, California that they should
- reach out and attempt to recruit persons from the left.
-
- While leading fascist organizer Willis Carto was one of the key
- founders of the Populist Party, the Party is now under the
- control of Don Wassall who is feuding with Willis Carto and the
- Liberty Lobby over control of the movement. According to the May
- 1992 issue of The Monitor, "Wassall's Populist Party has been
- forced to take a back seat as Gritz has cobbled together his own
- organization, the America First! Coalition."
-
- Gritz was heavily promoted by the Carto forces as early as the
- summer of 1987 when Gritz was holding press conferences charging
- that key U.S. government officials were the "biggest customers"
- of the world's leading "drug lord," Gen. Khun Sa of Burma.
-
- In a January 3, 1992 letter to Willis Carto, Gritz urged the
- warring factions in the Populist Party to cease their bickering,
- and told Carto he was "seeking cooperation between you and your
- former allies." He also wrote "During my first meeting with Don
- and Phil as a Populist candidate, I expressed utmost concern over
- accountability of funds," thus clearly acknowledging that he
- considers himself the Populist Party candidate. Gritz
- continuously misrepresents the nature of the Populist Party.
-
- An article in the September 1992 Soldier of Fortune magazine
- notes:
-
- "Gritz also said he does not know Jerry Pope, chairman of
- Kentucky's Populist Party. Pope was once a prominent figure in
- the National States Rights Party founded by racist J.B. Stoner,
- who was imprisoned for the deaths of black children in the
- bombing of a Sunday school class in Birmingham, Alabama."
-
- Gritz and the Liberty Lobby Convention
-
- At the 35th Anniversary Liberty Lobby convention held in
- September, 1990 there was considerable antiwar sentiment
- expressed by speakers who tied the U.S. presence in Saudi Arabia
- to pressure from Israel and its intelligence agency, Mossad. No
- matter what actual political involvement, if any, forces that
- support Israel may have had in shaping the events that led to the
- Gulf War, the themes discussed at the Liberty Lobby conference
- tilted toward undocumented anti-Jewish propaganda rather than
- principled factual criticisms.
-
- At the Liberty Loby conference Fletcher Prouty released the new
- Institute for Historical Review's Noontide Press edition of his
- book on CIA intrigue, The Secret Team. Prouty also moderated a
- panel where Bo Gritz wove a conspiracy theory which explained the
- U.S. confrontation with Iraq as a product of the same "Secret
- Team" outlined by Prouty.
-
- Spotlight's coverage of the Gritz presentation featured a
- headline proclaiming "Gritz Warns...Get Ready to Fight or Lose
- Freedom: Links Drugs, CIA, Mossad; Slams U.S. Foreign Policy;
- Alerts Patriots to Martial Law Threat."
-
- The Liberty Lobby Populist Action Comittee
-
- In 1991 Liberty Lobby announced the creation of the advisory
- board of the Populist Action Committee. The Spotlight ran a major
- feature on the formation of the advisory board with photographs
- of the persons announced as appointed to launch the Committee.
- Both Bo Gritz and Fletcher Prouty were named to the advisory
- panel.
-
- According to the Spotlight, the other persons named to the
- advisory board were:
-
- Abe Austin, described as an Illinois businessman and expert on
- money;
-
- Mike Blair, Spotlight writer whose articles on government
- repression were highlighted by Project Censored;
-
- Ken Bohnsack, an Illinois resident called the founder of the
- Sovereignty movement;
-
- Howard Carson, a Spotlight distributor;
-
- William Gill, president of the protectionist American Coalition
- for Competitive Trade;
-
- Boyd Godlove Jr., chairman of the Populist Party of Maryland;
-
- Martin Larson, a contributor to The Journal of Historical Review
- which maintains the Holocaust was a Jewish hoax;
-
- Roger Lourie, president of Devin-Adair Publishing;
-
- Pauline Mackey, national treasurer for the 1988 David Duke
- Populist Party Presidential campaign;
-
- Tom McIntyre, national chairman of the Populist Party from
- 1987-1990;
-
- John Nugent, who ran for Congress from Tennessee as a Republican
- in 1990;
-
- Lawrence Patterson, publisher of the far-right
- ultra-conspiratorial Criminal Politics newsletter;
-
- Jerry Pope, chair of the Kentucky Populist Party, formerly active
- in J.B. Stoner's segregationist National States Rights Party;
-
- John Rakus, president of the National Justice Foundation;
-
- Hon. John R. Rarick, former Democratic House member now in
- Louisiana;
-
- Sherman Skolnick, a Chicagoan who has peddled bizarre conspiracy
- theories for over a decade;
-
- Major James H. Townsend, editor of the National Educator from
- California;
-
- Jim Tucker, Spotlight contributor who specializes on covering the
- Bilderberger banking group;
-
- Tom Valentine, Midwest bureau chief for Spotlight and host of
- Liberty Lobby's Radio Free America;
-
- Raymond Walk, an Illinois critic of free trade;
-
- Robert H. Weems, founding national chairman of the Populist
- Party, and former state leader of the Mississippi Ku Klux Klan.
-
- Prouty has been appearing at conferences and on radio programs
- sponsored by the Liberty Lobby, but claims "there was never a
- handshake" concerning his official appointment to the Populist
- Action Committee. Prouty nonetheless admits that he is aware his
- name is being publicized in that capacity and refuses to ask his
- name be dropped from the list.
-
- Skolnick also says he was never "officially" asked to be on the
- advisory board, but although he is aware he was named to the
- panel, he refuses to distance himself from the board or Liberty
- Lobby.
-
- Gritz's Attempt to Blur his Political Views
-
- Gritz's call for the left/right coalition apparently first
- surfaced publicly at his Freedom Call '90 conference held in
- July, 1990 in Las Vegas. Speakers at that conference included
- Gritz and anti-Semite Eustace Mullins, as well as Father Bill
- Davis of the Christic Institute, ex-CIA official (now critic)
- John Stockwell, and author Barbara Honegger. This fact of
- attendence is not meant to imply that all these persons share the
- same views. It is meant to demonstrate that Gritz is attempting
- to draw a broad range of government critics into a coalition.
- Stockwell, Honegger, and Davis have all said their appearance at
- the conference should not be interpreted as an endorsement of
- Gritz's research or political views. Gritz's Center for Action
- still sells a set of tapes from the conference, including
- speeches by Gritz and Mullins, along with Father Davis, Barbara
- Honegger, and John Stockwell.
-
- This set of tapes is advertised in the Prevailing Winds catalog
- which mixes material from mainstream, progressive, and far-right
- sources. Prevailing Winds promotes the Christic Institute and
- dozens of other left and liberal organizations and writers
- (including this author), as well as featuring a full page ad for
- Gritz's Center for Action. A West Coast affiliate of the Christic
- Institute sells The Guns and Drugs Reader, edited by Prevailing
- Winds. Prominently featured in the publication is material by Bo
- Gritz,
-
- John Stockwell has expressed concern over the the way Prevailing
- Winds has lumped his research together with research he finds
- problematic. In the past, Stockwell has been highly critical of
- Honegger as a reliable source of information, and has had
- criticisms of some aspects of Christic research as well.
- Stockwell says he "met Gritz there on stage" at the 1990
- conference and "came away greatly unimpressed," and he was quick
- to distance himself from the Populist Party.
-
- After the controversy broke in the left press, a spokesperson at
- Prevailing Winds (who asked to be identified simply as Patrick)
- said they were now considering at least including a warning in
- their catalog about Bo Gritz's ties to the Populist Party and
- other rightist and anti-Jewish groups and individuals. Patrick
- said their catalog came out before Gritz accepted the Populist
- Party presidential nomination, but defended the inclusion of the
- Gritz material, saying that "middle America needs this kind of
- information" because "Bush is basically a dope-peddling Nazi."
-
- Patrick said the appropriateness of carrying Gritz's material,
- given his ties to the anti-Jewish far right, has been discussed
- by the Prevailing Winds staff, and also discussed with Bo Gritz
- and with Father Davis of Christic.
-
- According to the Prevailing Winds representative:
-
- "Its an argument we've gone back and forth on, it's a
- tough question, whether or not to make it available and to
- preserve it for research. We are interested in getting the
- information to the people. The good thing about it is no one else
- is trying to build these bridges between groups. We need to reach
- a rainbow of people."
-
- Christic's Father Bill Davis walked out of the 1990 Gritz
- conference when Mullins gave his speech. Yet over a year after
- the event, Christic still had made no public statement distancing
- itself from Gritz or Mullins. In the meantime, Gritz was touring
- the country promoting Christic's Iran-Contra research and
- implying a friendly working relationship between himself and key
- Christic figures, especially Danny Sheehan. Sheehan is featured
- in a privately-distributed videotape program focusing on Gritz's
- research which takes a critical look at the Reagan and Bush
- Administrations' intelligence and drug policies. That videotape,
- circulated by Gritz and his allies, also uncritically shows a
- headline from the LaRouchian newspaper New Federalist to
- illustrate a point.
-
- Christic's national director, Sara Nelson, told In These Times
- that Christic apologizes for the appearance of Davis at the
- conference with Mullins, and no one is suggesting that Christic
- harbors any racist, anti-Jewish or fascist views. But Christic
- has not issued a clear and widely disseminated public statement
- alerting people who may have seen the Prevailing Winds catalog or
- the Gritz material and who now seem confused over who supports
- whom. This is not meant to be interpreted as a blanket criticism
- of the Christic Institute. Many Christic projects have been
- valuable. They circulated a tremendous amount of useful
- information about the issue of covert action and the Iran-Contra
- scandal. Especially notable in other areas are the work of Lewis
- Pitts at Christic South and the project by Andy Lang to
- illustrate problems with forging democracy in eastern Europe. Yet
- Christic's Sheehan, Davis, and Nelson have not taken seriously
- the problem of right-wing groups and individuals linking
- themselves to the Christic case and recruiting Christic
- supporters in a way that implies a shared agenda. While this is
- not just a problem with Christic, the role that Christic could,
- and should, be playing in providing leadership on this question
- would be extremely useful.
-
- Front Man for Fascism: Bo Gritz and the Racist Populist Party, a
- report by the California anti-fascist group People Against Racist
- Terror describes how Gritz has promoted himself on the left. The
- report urges Christic to be more vocal:
-
- "Christic should join the campaign to expose Bo's campaign for
- the fascist vehicle it is. Christic should take the lead in
- condemning the Gritz campaign, rather than demanding retractions
- from those who have raised criticisms and concerns. It should
- share frankly and self-critically with its followers the process
- of deception and rationalization by which it was hoodwinked, so
- that others can escape the same fate."
-
- END END END
-
- ** End of text from cdp:action.jewish **
-