GLENN BECK, THE JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY, AND THE CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT.
At Salon's War Room, Alex Koppelman runs down David Frum's objection to Fox News host Glenn Beck's affection for the John Birch Society (JBS), exemplified by his peddling a book by anti-communist activist Cleon Skousen, who had ties to the JBS.
Frum objects that Skousen was one of the "legendary cranks of the conservative world, a John Bircher, a grand fantasist of theories about secret conspiracies between capitalists and communists to impose a one-world government under the control of David Rockefeller." But that's not an unusual view for a hardcore conservative movement player like Skousen, as much as it embarrasses conservatives like Frum.
According to a 1985 article published in the Review of Religious Research, "Mormonism and the New Christian Right: An Emerging Coalition?" by Anson Shupe and John Heinerman, Skousen had ties to the JBS and the relatively new religious-right political apparatus, which was at that time nestling itself within the broader conservative movement. Skousen, a Mormon who founded what is now the National Center for Constitutional Studies while affiliated with Brigham Young University, was described in the article as the "lynchpin" in an emerging effort to form a coalition between the LDS church and groups like the late Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority.
Shupe and Heinerman described Skousen's institute as "a right-wing ideological think tank opposing (among other things) the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Federal Communication Commission's fairness doctrine in editorial broadcasting, the federal government's change of the gold standard in currency, all subsidies to farmers, all federal aid to education, all federal social welfare, foreign aid, social security, elimination of public school prayer and Bible reading, and (that familiar right-wing nemesis) the United Nations.”
That litany sounds strikingly familiar to rhetoric at last month's Conservative Political Action Conference. A crank, or representative of conservative-movement thinking?
--Sarah Posner
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COMMENTS (7)
As a leader in the Dual Loyalties Neocon crowd Frum's actions seem odd. I knew Cleon Skousen and he was a solid dependable guy. For the record he was #3 at the FBI and then Chief of Police in Salt Lake City.
Best wishes,
Barry O'Connell
Posted by: Barry OConnell | March 19, 2009 9:26 AM
One of the more lunatic highlights of Cleon Skousen's career was the anti-LSD record, Instant Insanity Drugs:
http://members.tripod.com/lysergia_2/LamaReviews/lamaInstantInsanity.htm
The commies weren't fluoridating the water; they were psychedelicizing it!
Posted by: jonp72 | March 19, 2009 10:07 AM
As a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints I'd just like to say that Cleon Skousen in no way represents the teachings of the Church, and is his own man.
Posted by: BHodges | March 19, 2009 12:28 PM
i know his extended family. they are a little weird in a libertarian sort of way, but nice. they should've listened to him 30 years ago
Posted by: matt | March 26, 2009 2:31 AM
I've been ordered by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints because I'm a member to watch the Glenn Beck show and do whatever he says. You can't go against the church hierarchy or your done. I can't stand it though because I disagree with everything he says.
Posted by: Chet | March 31, 2009 8:24 PM
David Frum is a kapo.
Posted by: Ian | April 18, 2009 7:20 AM
The first comment here by Barry O'Connell makes the following false assertion about Cleon Skousen:
"For the record he was #3 at the FBI and then Chief of Police in Salt Lake City."
Skousen was never #3 at the FBI -- which would mean he was an Assistant Director. He never was anything other than a Special Agent.
Furthermore, both Skousen and his admirers misrepresented his FBI career. See details here:
http://ernie1241.googlepages.com/skousen
Posted by: ernie1241 | September 21, 2009 7:14 PM