THE SCALES OVERTURNED: KENT STATE AND AMERICAN BUSINESS
Special Collections and Archives
THE SCALES OVERTURNED: KENT STATE AND AMERICAN BUSINESS
Special Collections and Archives
THE SCALES OVERTURNED: KENT STATE AND AMERICAN BUSINESS
Return to the Charles A. Thomas Papers (KSU May 4 Collection)
THE SCALES OVERTURNED: KENT STATE AND AMERICAN BUSINESS.
An e-book by Charles A. Thomas
CHAPTER ONE: The Money-Changers – In the Belly of the MIC.
Neither honor, nor patriotism, nor generous superstition could animate the
lifeless bodies of the slaves and strangers who had succeeded to the honors of the
legions… their vices were inherent, their victories were accidental, and their
costly maintenance exhausted the substance of a state which they were unable to
defend.
Edward Gibbon, describing the Byzantine military ca. 600 A.D[1].
Lord, we have based the development and prosperity of many of our giant
industries on the diabolical capacity to produce arms…
…there are many young people rebelling that justice may be advanced
and that concord may be the law of coming generations.
Pope Paul VI, January 1, 1970[2]
1969 had not been a good year for America – least of all for its financial markets
(which in some quarters is regarded as saying the same thing). A leading business magazine summed it up in its waning days with the title of a lead article: “Street hopes worst is over.”[3] The downturn had lasted since the inauguration of Richard Nixon as President, the first in a series of Republican accessions that would reverse the adage that GOP victories are good for business. And yet he had campaigned on his promise to end the ruinous war in Vietnam and the equally devastating inflation it had triggered. Such a promise had always seemed dubious coming from a candidate whose entire public life had been a crusade against communism. And his entire career had made any promise seem dubious if it came from “Tricky Dick”. But he had started withdrawing troops from that dark field and after the endless ordeal, Americans may have felt entitled to hope –
Nixon had been the vice-president of Dwight D. Eisenhower, the former supreme command of the allied forces in World War II – a five-star general, the highest rank to which any American soldier can ever aspire. At the end of his second term,
Eisenhower had delivered his Farewell Address to the Nation, which contained a warning so dire and appropriate that this speech is associated with this President as if he had never said anything else. He had warned of a “Frankenstein’s monster” that had been created as a result of the struggle with the Axis monster: the military-industrial complex (MIC).[4]
A number of giant corporations had arisen during the war that understood doing business only on wartime terms: with the War Department (now and with increasing inaccuracy renamed the Defense Department) as their close customer, with no real competition, with open-ended contracts providing for unlimited additional costs, and a complaisant work force expected to sacrifice its own interests to “the effort”. They were “able to combine all the comforts, including the classic inefficiencies, of socialism with all the rewards and immunities of private enterprises.”[5]
The armaments industry had become a parasite sucking its host dry at a rate of
$ 80 billion a year, tying up a tenth of its work force, consuming a tenth of its Gross National Product. “The whole economy is infiltrated,” Senator Gaylord Nelson complained, “We are a warfare state.” To Senator William Fulbright, the military infra-state had become “a direct threat to American democracy.”[6]
By 1969 it was impossible to tell whence the unholy fusion had commenced.
Another legendary hero of World War II charged that “[m]ilitary procedures – including the general staff system, briefings, estimates of the situation, and the organizational and operational techniques of the highly schooled, confident military professionals – spread through American culture.”[7] A disillusioned Army career officer claimed rather that business had infected the military: the officer corps had degenerated into a cadre of executives who each saw their service as “a business conglomerate, to be promoted and expanded in much the same way as General Motors or IBM.”[8] Critics of this school blamed Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara for the Vietnam debacle, because he had tried to manage the war the way he had his erstwhile fiefdom, the Ford Motor Company.
Or the fusion that created the mutant could have been simultaneous and bilateral.
It was without doubt irresistibly attractive to the fusibles. The “defense” executives wanted huge profits without having to face the risks of the marketplace. The career officers wanted lucrative industry jobs after they had put in their twenty or thirty years, instead of the traditional penury of military retirement. The result was “much closer to socialism than to capitalism” and fraught with peril for the future of the economy. “The danger is that this mode of doing business, however inefficient and wasteful, has become the dominant mode for American business. If it persists, our historic industrial superiority will be a hollow shell.”[9]
Under such circumstances the war in Vietnam proved equally irresistible to the MIC. The US economy, in serious recession in 1957, recovered neatly following the first massive infusion of aid to the besieged Diem regime in 1958. “[T]he financial leaders and the leaders of overdeveloped industry in the United States realized that, as the intervention of their country in Vietnam increased, their businesses expanded and their profits went up more sharply.”[10] With return to a global conflict impossible because of the existence of nuclear weapons, Vietnam provided the next best alternative: a war which could drag on indefinitely (because war aims didn’t have to be defined – after all, there had been no declaration of war), consuming vast amounts of munitions and conventional material. New weapons could be tested and unproductive manpower continuously drained off, diminishing the unemployment rolls.
No one could predict, at the outset, that the little brown men in black pajamas would fight elite American shock troops to a standstill, or that the country the United States had come to “rescue” would embrace the ethos of capitalism so passionately that it would become dysfunctionally corrupt. By the time a half million GIs were in the field, more bombs had been dropped on the phantom enemy than on the Axis in World War II, and the only reward had been the shock of the communists’ 1968 Tet offensive, the exuberance of expenditure on the war had unleashed murderous inflation at home.
By the beginning of 1970, American Big Business wanted out.
The harmful effects of extreme militarism on the US economy have become so
widely recognized that there has developed a significant congressional opposition
to the military-industrial complex and the stock market, contrary to some earlier
tendencies, is now bullish on peace news and bearish on war news.[11]
Except, of course, for the MIC industries. For them, the next step after the one out of Vietnam could be into oblivion. They knew nothing of competing in a true peacetime economy “and hence believe their futures are mortgaged unless the war, or some worthy surrogate*, continues… the selective profitabilities help to keep the war machine going.”[12] The inability of many of the war’s critics to perceive this divergence of interest between the war industries and other American business interests severely hampered its efforts during this entire period.
The MIC could hope by now that it had made itself indispensable to the economic health of the Nation. If “peace broke out” and it went under, would it drag the rest of the country with it? Those who explored the alternative, that it could retool to fill the needs of civilian consumption, were forced to abandon it. The process of corruption had resulted in a “trained incapacity in much of military industry for serving a civilian economy… Military industry has lost the traditional American industrial capacity for offsetting high wages with high productivity.”[13] “The economy is addicted to federal subsidy and to military subsidy in particular. It appears that we have to spend, because what a high-employment economy produces has to be vended.”[14] This much classical Marxism had anticipated: “monopoly capitalism… has to rely in the main on military spending for the preservation of the prosperity and high employment on which it depends both for profits and for popular support.”[15]
Nixon had campaigned on ending the war in Vietnam. Had he not at least once considered that this would also bring recession? Defense stocks dropped sharply during his first six months in office.[16] Speaking to the California Chamber of Commerce, Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird raised the specter of mass unemployment as peace clouds gathered on the horizon.[17] In addition to this, Nixon continued to be bound by the Republican dogma of wage and price controls as heresy, thus placing his administration in a terminal bind. “The task the Nixon administration set itself – to slow down the very advanced inflation that afflicted the US in 1969 without intervening at all in wage-price bargaining and without precipitating a recession – was an impossible one.”[18]
For most of his first year in office, Nixon outwardly appeared to adapt the human strategy for coping with an intractable problem: trying to ignore it. Actually, he had already made his decision. A month after his inauguration, he told intimates, “I don’t go along with the idea that sees us as heroes on inflation and villains on unemployment. That will take us to the point where no conservative will ever be elected again… we will never get in again.” In December, spurred by the specter of the off-year election in nine months, he reminded them, “The ‘need for a Republican Congress’… must be ‘superior’ to the goal of fighting inflation.”[19] An incumbent didn’t win elections by keeping people out of work. But how to keep them on the job while winding down the war? If they stayed on the job, would they care if he really wound down the war – or even if he wound it up again? The average American, as he read the animal, was far less concerned about “the amount of violence going on in Vietnam itself” than whether s/he got a paycheck.[20]
Early in 1970, the Central Intelligence Agency engineered a coup in Cambodia. It replaced its relentlessly neutral leader Prince Norodom Sihanouk with General Lon Nol. Those American business leaders outside the MIC, who had grown extremely nervous about the Indochina adventure, immediately suspected that “events in Southeast Asia today strongly tempt some officials here to creep a little deeper into that region’s spreading warfare.”[21] While Nixon still talked about withdrawing troops, the Pentagon let multi-million-dollar contracts for ammunition, naval aircraft, and tank engines.[22]
One week into April, the editors of the Wall Street Journal printed an unprecedented caution to a US President, warning Nixon against falling “like his predecessor, into the old delusions” about military victory in Southeast Asia. It was partially based on recent public opinion polls “which… have shown an ominous shift towards immediate withdrawal” and “the extraordinary move of the Massachusetts legislature to challenge the constitutionality of the war”. Any order sending US troops into new realms of that fated land would doom all concerned:
If that should happen again on a wider scale, the personal political price Mr.
Nixon himself will pay may only be exceeded by the agonies which will befall an
America already deeply troubled by a widespread sense of lost confidence in
Government.[23]
That aside, the leading figures on “the Street” – as the New York Stock Exchange was sometimes known, for its proximity to Manhattan’s Wall Street – felt they could break out of the economic swamp in which they were mired with just one “good piece of news”, because the market was “oversold and most of the downside factors have spent themselves”. Philip Clark, vice-president of Burham & Co., suggested he would welcome as “a sufficiently stimulating piece of news an announcement that the US planned to pull half its troops out of Vietnam by mid-1971.”[24]
On April 13th, the President held a cabinet meeting at three, one of the few that spring concerned with the economy. Budget Director Robert Mayo fed Nixon’s chronic impatience with him by asserting that the problem had been neglected far too long for much of anything to be done now. As chief of staff H.R. “Bob” Haldeman transcribed the proceedings on his ever-present legal pad,
Mayo’s interjections – i.e., balanced budget, monetary policy.
Fed did hang on too long
Shld have loosened in Sept
but now to loosen too much
wouldn’t help Nov. elections
but would inflate after elections.
fiscal side
have loosened up on some spending
pay raise & social security
but big push in defense contracts, etc.
wouldn’t help – need in 6 mos.[25]
That same day the Apollo XIII astronauts ran into deadly danger on their lunar
voyage. Whether their plight triggered a spasm of horror deep in his psyche, or whether it proved to be a ploy to divert attention from his current dilemmas, the President paid no attention to anything else for a week. He even postponed his scheduled address to the nation announcing further troop withdrawals from Vietnam. But the Cambodian government did not suspend its demands that the United States make good on the promise of the Nixon Doctrine: that if the Southeast Asian anticommunist powers supplied the manpower to defeat the communists, the Americans would be unstinting in their material support. The Journal’s editors noted these demands with dread.
Cambodia is trying to collect on the Nixon Doctrine… And Washington’s first
Seems to waver between shock and equivocation…
There are also fears that supplying arms can lead to sending military
instructors, maintenance men, advisors, and perhaps someday combat troops,
much as happened in South Vietnam years ago…
The bid for arms, which apparently arrived here Wednesday, may be one
Reason for Mr. Nixon’s decision to postpone his televised talk on the Vietnam
War, officially delayed because of Apollo 13 difficulties.[26]
In London, Paul McCracken, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, piqued rather than allayed these fears when he announced, “I am confident that we will find that the first quarter of this year has been the softest period for the US economy in 1970”[27] –
i.e., the economy would revive as the year passed. But what would revive it?
The President flew out to Hawaii to be present when the astronauts “splashed down” after their cosmic brush with death. During the attendant patriotic celebration, choreographed with all Haldeman’s twenty years of expertise as an advertising executive, no one noticed Nixon slip away for a daybreak briefing with Admiral John McCain, Sr., commander of all US forces in the half of the planet drained by the Pacific. McCain, known to a skeptical press as “the Big Red Arrow Man” for his scarifying map briefings depicting imminent communist conquest, told the President that the Cambodian capital of Phnom Pehn was about to fall to the “Reds”. Thus abruptly did the President’s festive mood end. He took McCain with him when he flew back to the Western White House so that the admiral could repeat his briefing for national security advisor Henry Kissinger. That evening Nixon went ahead with his scheduled national television address on troop
withdrawals from Vietnam. It was by all accounts a flat and perfunctory performance by a man who seemed preoccupied.
The next day was equally as flat on the stock exchange. The “bounce” expected from the announced withdrawals simply failed to materialize. It was almost as if the Street, in its ineffable wisdom, had sensed Nixon’s new obsession and was now waiting in dread to see where it would lead.[28] It was doubtless just as well for “the numbers” – the averages of stock prices which gauged the daily health of the Exchange – that Nixon would now proceed in deepest secrecy. He would not inform his own cabinet officers, let alone the Congress or the American people, that he was planning the invasion of Cambodia with American troops. (The South Vietnamese were also planning to invade Cambodia in support and as soon as they were briefed on the plan, the communist high command knew all about it.)
The US economy dragged to the end of another sere month. As the Times’ business pages summed it up,
The reasons range from the corrosive quality of inflation to the current bite on
corporate profits, from over-speculation in the bull market to fear as to the
economy’s future, from the impact of the war in Vietnam to misgivings about
Cambodia, and finally, from a cultural fallout, embracing the generation gap, the
credibility gap, and even integration.[29]
By the 28th, even as the plans for the invasion were filtering down to brigade level, Nixon was finally compelled to take notice of the crisis.
In recent weeks, several brokerage houses have ceased operations and the
securities industry’s profits have declined… executive salaries have been reduced
and staff layoffs have been instituted. Rumors of additional liquidations have
been rampant.[30]
Bernard “Bunny” Lasker – President of the Board of Directors of the New York Stock Exchange – flew into Washington with several colleagues to confer with the administration. He didn’t get to see the President, but talked to McCracken and Peter Flanigan (who firm had leased oil tankers to the President’s chief corporate sponsor, Union Oil).
Nixon rather met with Haldeman and his chief domestic advisor John Ehrlichman to discuss what the other parties had discussed. He dismissed the crisis with a typical response, ordering the firing of several visible scapegoats. “Said [Treasury Secretary David] Kennedy and Mayo have to go… Wants me to fire Mayo – can’t decide who’s to do Kennedy… Told E[hrlichman] to accelerate tax collections to lessen the ’70 deficit.”[31]
His public relations men released some optimistic rhetoric, and the President retreated to his hideout in the Executive Office Building, to re-immerse himself in writing his speech for television announcing the invasion.
Eileen Shanahan, ace financial reporter for the Times, related of the meeting that ”each side reassured the other that things were under control.” Those familiar with her dry wit understood the emphasis she placed on Lasker’s inane announcement: “I’m thrilled that my hero was right in his prediction that the market would turn back up.”[32]
Her verbal scalpel would be wielded at a later crisis point, to much greater effect (see below). Her colleagues shared her skepticism. The meeting was too little, too late, to soothe anyone’s fears. “Under other circumstances,” a leading business periodical noted, “both the threat of an expanding war and the possibility of continuing inflation might be bullish. Today, they are terrifying.”[33]
The terror was not long in coming. The next day, the 29th, the White House finally broke through the wall of silence and secrecy to announce that South Vietnamese troops had crossed the border into Cambodia, assisted by American “advisers, tactical aid, air coordinators, medical evacuation and some logistics assistance”. However a State Department official “with good political connections” reassured the Journal reporter that it would end there: “Richard Nixon is not – repeat not – going to commit American troops to Cambodia in an election year”. Even Mississippi’s arch-reactionary Senator John Stennis opposed committing US regular forces in combat there “even if Red battalions storm Phnom Penh”.[34]
Nonetheless the market staged a feeble rally, since Lasker and his associates had at least gotten in to see Nixon’s advisors. Surely, once those advisors explained the extremity the markets face, the President would reconsider any contemplated expansion of the war. The next day, April 30th, prices drifted lower, responding to announcements that the President would address the nation on television again that evening. On schedule, a visibly stressed Nixon told his people that he had ordered US combat ground forces to invade Cambodia. Anyone hoping he would add that he had asked for and gotten a declaration of war from the Congress, as required by the Constitution, was to be disappointed.
The country exploded, even before the television screens had faded to black.
Nixon’s moribund arch-enemy, the antiwar movement – which had closed its national headquarters on the 19th for lack of money and support – staged a fast-forward resurrection. Demonstrators took to the streets while he was still speaking; they huddled to plan a giant march on Washington long after he was finished. By midnight, many of the nation’s colleges and universities had voted to go on strike. Congressional reaction, even – or with an election coming, perhaps especially – from his own party was appalled. The opposition was discussing impeachment. America’s closest allies recoiled in horror.
Only the fact that the speech would be followed by a weekend lessened its horrific effect. Yet, with only Friday to make things worse, the President voiced his contempt for the “bums” demonstrating on the campus the first thing that morning.
Mr. Nixon, by characterizing far-out elements among his campus critics as
‘bums’, has already provided for fear that much of his sudden militancy stems
from a desire to divert attention from inflation, unemployment, and other
difficulties as the Congressional election moves into high gear.[35]
To which the Journal added, foretelling what would had at Monday’s opening bell,
“Government economists couldn’t muster much hope that Mr. Nixon gave even momentary attention to the impact on the U.S. economy” when he had made his decision.[36] But had he ignored the interests of the economy in favor of geopolitics? Or had he remained faithful to the sector of it that above all others was rooted in the geopolitical?
CHAPTER TWO: The Hidden Card.
Why did Richard Nixon order the invasion of Cambodia, a move so fraught with disaster for himself and his country? In his book on Operation PHOENIX, the campaign of mass kidnapping, torture, and murder conducted by the CIA in South Vietnam, Douglas Valentine observes almost casually,
The invasion defected attention from the CIA-engineered coup and bloodbath
in Phnom Penh, it enabled Lon Nol to install a pro-American government in
Cambodia, and it allowed Union Oil of California to secure concessions for all
onshore and much offshore Cambodian oil.[37]
(Valentine does not deal with the CIA’s interest in gaining control over the length of the Mekong River and the port of Phnom Penh to expedite the bulk transport of its heroin, which has been more than adequately detailed elsewhere.)[38]
But what did Richard Nixon have to do with Union Oil, or any other oil company? True, Kenneth Vaughan, Senior Vice President and Director of Union, was his classmate at Fullerton High School in California.[39] And Nixon appointed Claude Brinegar, another Fullerton alumnus and a vice president of Union, his Secretary of Transportation during a period of national energy crisis.[40] But these could have been coincidences. The answer lies in Nixon’s life a quarter of a century before the Cambodian invasion.
In 1944, the California Republican Party nominated oil man Roy McLaughlin to run against Jerald Voorhis for the US House of Representative. When the votes were counted, McLaughlin had become the fifth GOP knight to fall before Voorhis’ lance. But the demographics of total war were aligning to make this the populist Democrat’s last victory: his congressional district was being flooded by military careerists and armaments workers. And thus Big Oil saw its chance to get rid of its most detested foe.
The prize of battle was the Tidelands, the federally-controlled coastal oil basins which the petrocompanies perennially lobbied to get turned over to the control of the states (in whose legislatures their corrupting dollars went much further). Voorhis stood like a rock against them, casting his vote against the industry’s revenant Tidelands bill yet again in 1946. His son would later note “my father might very well have signed his political death warrant” with that vote.[41] Even as potential Republican candidates refused to run for the seat, convinced the incumbent was invincible, the oil industry made the final decision that any means to defeat Voorhis must be tried, and that any candidate, whatever his qualifications, would be backed with all their vast wealth if only he would come forward.[42]
Revisionist biography of Richard Nixon, which has been a major industry since 1974, has nurtured the myth that he was selected to run for Congress in 1946 by a group of local small businessmen in his home town of Whittier, California. But before his strange death in the early 1970s, Murray Chotiner – Nixon’s perennial campaign manager and original dirty tricks specialist – asserted that the Nixon name was not put forward by Whittier bank Herman Perry (as Ambrose and other credulous chroniclers have agreed), but by a “wealthy business friend” whom Chotiner would not name even twenty-five years later. And William Larsen, who carried the “political proxy” for Standard Oil, was present at the meeting that selected Nixon to run against Voorhis. The petrodollars that
funded his campaign would be funneled through local conduits Richfield and Signal Oil. Nixon made it clear he would need plenty of money; he could not live on a congressman’s salary. “The important thing was not to get caught.”[43]
Another California representative, Helen Gahagan Douglas, had voted against the industry bill. In 1950, she ran for the Senate. The industry picked Richard Nixon to run against her and again, Texas oil money flowed into California like a black river. But oil was never mentioned as the real issue; like Voorhis, Douglas was accused, by every innuendo that Chotiner could devise, of being a communist.[44] In the “red scare” climate accompanying the outbreak of the Korean “conflict”, she was defeated. Big Oil had found its candidate and he had settled on his invariable tactic. “The oilmen of Texas,
Louisiana, and California could not lose, and the American people could not win.”
Within two years, the petrobarons were already pointing Nixon toward the White House.
But at this point, and after he had already won his party’s nomination for the Vice Presidency, his road almost deadended. During the 1952, it came to light that the candidate was relying on a secret slush fund, “drawn heavily from oil men, including Herbert Hoover, Jr.”[45] (one of the directors of Union Oil). Rather than answer the charges, Nixon staged a brilliant diversion on national television, “laying his soul bare” as an average working American, just another struggling Everyman whose most prized campaign contribution was a Cocker Spaniel adored by his little girls. “Oil money was never mentioned, and soap opera was established as an integral part of the political scene.”[46]
The oil industry remained Richard Nixon’s scarcely-hidden partner throughout his political career, until its typically illegal contributions to his 1972 campaign helped end it in disgrace.[47] He reciprocated by advancing its interests – along with its inseparable companion, the armament industry’s – regardless of the effect on the national welfare, even the welfare of the nation’s other businesses. But where was the connection to Cambodia?
Certainly Southeast Asia was not too far afield to look. America was now faced with the fact that would define the rest of its national life: its addictive need for the black ooze could no longer be satisfied within its own borders. The Vietnam adventure had thrown the depth of the addiction into sharp relief. “The oil thirst of the American war had indeed been [as] spectacular… as the sudden appearance of a new medium-sized industrialized nation on the map, like a massive island rising out of the ocean by geological accident.”[48] Since 1949. the Pentagon’s consumption had tripled, from 330,000 to 1.2 million barrels a day – and yet this was only a small fraction (8.1%) of the amount that had to be poured into the bottomless maw of civilian consumption.[49]
The offshore shelf of the Southeast Asian peninsula comprised the least explored potential oil basin in the world. But the petrobarons had known about its promising geological configuration since the early 1960s. Their cupidity had been forced to wait on technology, particularly the development of undersea drilling hardware and digitial computers that could coordinate sea bottom readings. In April 1969, an obscure body
called the Economic Committee for Asia and the Far East released a report announcing that the use of “seismic refraction and shallow penetration sparker” exploration off the coast of South Vietnam had disclosed “one of the most spectacular petroleum deposits in the world. But the announcement was only made within industry circles; its representatives were “extremely reticent” about it beyond them and “questions are not welcomed”.[50] “None of the oil companies… nor the Ray Geophysical Division of Mandrel Industries, Inc., of Houston, which did the survey, would disclose the results.”[51]
“The results have never been made public.”[52]
Even with the link between the discovery and US policy in Southeast Asia thus masked from the American public[53], it seemed transparent to the more sophisticated observers in Europe. “[R]ecent military escalations in Cambodia and Laos coincided with the actual determination of petroleum deposits in Indochina.” According to the Agence France-Presse,
One cannot know precisely when the existence of the deposits became
known to the Americans, but according to the same sources, one cannot
discard the possibility that decisive information on this subject was obtained
before the unrolling of the events in Cambodia last spring.[54]
The most condign corporate secrecy could not hide “the richest oil pool between
the Persian Gulf and Alaska’s North Coast” forever. One “executive burbled, ‘There’s going to be an exploration boom around here like nobody has ever seen before.”[55] A European periodical described it as a “sea of oil of about 4000 by 800 miles… from the Gulf of Siam across Indonesia to the coast of northern Australia” (and the Swiss author asked the needless question, “Is the ideological conflict the only concern of the United States engagement in Indochina?”)[56]
Seeing a last chance to give foreigners any interest in saving their regime, the South Vietnamese leaders put the “largest continuous continental shelf in the world” up for auction in 18 blocks, most sold to American companies like Union, as “oil fever” gripped the embattled land.[57] At the last minute, when everyone outside of the MIC was sick of the Southeast Asian slaughter, the war gained a “politically and economically powerful constituency – the international oil firms”[58]. And so the war would drag on for another four years. According to one of the now virtually-vanished “oil trades”, “the Defense Department has offered ‘to help foot investment insurance to US companies for any future offshore South Vietnam oil exploration and development’.”[59] (Speculating on why the US Air Force kept disgorging tons of bombs over Southeast Asia “so long after our troops and POWs have been withdrawn from Indochina”, Senator George Aiken, one of the disappearing breed of Republican moderates, posed the logical answer: that the “investment of the American oil company might be a bit more secure.”[60]
But this time, propping up the corrupt Saigon and Phnom Penh governments, placing faith in their demoralized soldiers and venal generals, and creating moonscapes out jungle and paddy with carpet bombing worked no better than they ever had. The two capitals fell to the communists. Saigon, renamed Ho Chi Minh City, proved ready to discuss the development of oil resources – with the Soviet Union. The fanatic teenagers who took over in Cambodia were not prepared to accommodate capitalism in any way.
Nor could the industry get any further help from its President, who by then had other problems.
CHAPTER THREE: The Managers on Moriah.
The announcement of the invasion came on Thursday evening, April 30th. The New York Stock Exchange was quiet on Friday, whether stunned or still waiting and watching. As always, it was closed over the weekend, while the national student strike spread from coast to coast and police and National Guard battled protestors on a hundred campuses. It opened Monday under the dark pall of the same suspicion that lowered over the rest of the nation: that the invasion had opened the final rift between America’s generations and thus threatened her very existence.
Like the ordinary German who a generation ago slowly became aware that
something terrible was going on at the edge of town, so those in middle age are
having their conscience aroused by youth and feel that more than a few things
around them may not be well.[61]
[T]he Vietnam War gas taken a cruel toll in the destruction of the bonds of
consensus and authority that allow a society to operate both at home and abroad.
By now the danger of disintegration here is far more serious than any military
threat in Indochina.[62]
Now no one can be sure what the chances of further escalation or intervention
may be. This looming uncertainty, replete with menaces of inflation and
controls, is now the dominant influence upon the business prospect.
President Nixon has demonstrated that there are worse things than economic
recessions.[63]
As soon as the opening bell rang on the Exchange, prices began to decline. Traders nervously waited for news of Soviet premier Alexei Kosygin’s press conference, insofar as it conveyed his country’s reaction to the invasion. When the wire services carried this story late in the morning, the Russian response proved, as one broker put it, “more diplomatic and less threatening than had been expected.” Prices rallied. Then, shortly after noon, word of the Chinese Communist reaction came it – the invasion was a “provocation” to the Chinese people – and “prices started diving again”.[64] (But the reporter’s own editors assessed the Chinese statement as, “while bellicose… about what anyone would have expected”.)[65] Then the wires added the story that no one had expected (except perhaps in the White House and some corridors of the intelligence community) that the Ohio National Guard had fired on students on the campus of Kent State University, wounding eight and killing four. The bottom dropped out. The Dow-Jones Industrial Average, the leading indicator of stock prices, recorded its worst single day since the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963.
This seems astounding in terms of the clichés that nurtured both sides throughout the Cold War. The New York Stock Exchange, foundation of the plutocracy, shrine of the vested interest, shaken to the core by the killing of college students at an antiwar demonstration? The New York Times’ business editors, acknowledging the plunge, refused to believe it had anything to do with the incident – or to even mention Kent State.
But this probably reflected the rabid basis of managing editor A.M. Rosenthal, who conducted page-by-page censorship of each edition, against student demonstrators.[66] The Times acknowledged only “the uncertainty stemming from the intensified war in Indochina” as well as “lower corporate earnings”[67] But the Journal ascribed it to “China’s angry reaction to the Allied incursion and the accompanying explosive violence on US campuses.”[68] For most of the more sensitive and perceptive members of the business community had worried about the alienation of American youth for some time – and now wondered what catastrophe might await once the government had answered the questions and fears of the new generation with lethal gunfire.
That concern had alerted Fortune magazine, the most literate and eclectic of the business periodicals, four years earlier. It was raised during what may have begun as a human interest piece on “the private world of the class of ’66”; the reporter researching it discovered some unsettling things about the rising generation and its attitude toward the corporate culture.
[T]his rejection of business is strong now, and many of those with the highest
scholastic ranks will go on into teaching, passing on their moral and intellectual
disapproval… the anti-business sentiment is strongest in the schools that have the
highest academic standards, where business in the past has carried on its most
ardent solicitation of recruits.
Three years later, the month of Richard Nixon’s inauguration, Fortune devoted its entire issue to this theme: “the young are the nation just ahead.”[69] Citing its own 2/66 article as a point of departure, it added, “That cloud on the horizon spotted by FORTUNE (and others) nearly three years ago has become a hurricane.” (p. 57) “Educated youth have to be taken seriously in any society,” editor Hedley Donovan warned, “even when they condemn it bitterly, they are presumed to be its future leaders.” (p. 67)
In one of the articles, John Bell painted a starkly prophetic vision of the bleak world awaiting that year’s graduates. The US economy would lose its capacity to manufacture competitive goods, a task which would be taken over by sweatshop labor in the Third World. It would thereafter provide “services”, chiefly “information”. This information would not be enlightening, but promotional. And yet it would be technical,
“requiring that educated people (even those in the humanities) increase their knowledge of quantitative methods.” Not even those at the apex of this information society would hold secure jobs – not “in a world where status derives from intellectual attainments and where these in turn depend on comprehension of a theory that is always in flux.” (p. 174)[70] It was an uncannily precise prediction of the horrors of the computer age and its destruction of human values. (In another eerie prefiguring, the economic slump leading to the crisis of May 1970, like that leading to the recession of 2001, would be led by the collapse of computer companies.)[71]
Look magazine, in a remarkable series of articles on the MIC and how it was creating the generational fission of America, quoted a young politician named Walter Mondale as predicting, “If these young militants on campuses and in the political parties are going to be our national leaders – and someday they are – they are not going to be interested in keeping this kind of society together.”[72]
By the beginning of 1970, even the New York Times had been alerted to the crisis, most immediately by a Daniel Yankelovitch campus opinion survey (similar to the one Fortune had used): “94 per cent of all college students (not just the radical left) believe that business is overly occupied with profits and too little concerned with facing its public responsibilities.”[73] The corporate response to the crisis was “neither fast enough nor thorough enough”, an academic management journal reported, and the government’s response was misdirected “toward the few young men who are radical in violent action rather than the many other young (and not so young) men who have become radical in perception.”[74] “[T]he creative element is youth… we cannot do without them; and since they will eventually assume control, we had better do with them.”[75]
The prospect of the coming generation turned against business was bad enough. But there were also signs that the students were not turning away in a sense of withdrawal, but turning toward capitalism’s traditional enemy. Like Reverend King, they were discovering that the Vietnam War was not a temporary aberration by a fundamentally just society, but rather a typical crime by a fundamentally corrupt one.
Coming to terms with this was a visceral wrench for antiwar leaders like Sam Brown and came only through bitter experience.
I remember attending a march in 1965 at which both Norman Thomas and Carl
Oglesby spoke… Oglesby talked about US imperialism with language that set my
teeth on edge. Within a year, I read Oglesby’s speech in essay form and found
myself agreeing with it. Within two years, I found it hard to restrain myself from
using his language. I had come to believe it but feared it would be offensive to
potential supporters.[76]
Language begat action. In 1968, the Students for a Democratic Society targeted Stanford University and its research institute for performing war work. (They made it clear in the process that the university and the institute had been corrupted to this end by trustees like Arthur Stewart and Fred Hartley of Union Oil, and Richard McCurdy and Gardinier Symonds of Shell and Tenneco respectively. The latter two companies had been among those which had moved into Indonesia after the CIA-engineered bloodbath of 1965.) On April 13, 1969 the protestors called for an end to all war-related research at SRI. The trustees predictably rejected their demands. The students occupied the Applied Electronics Laboratory between the 9th and 18th, naturally drawing media attention. “Chemical and biological research was ended, and SRI, sold” as a result.[77]
It was a stunning – and awakening – blow to the previously invincible MIC.
Next to attack on this axis was the New Mobe [Mobilization Against the War in Vietnam], previously a single-issue movement only. It moved into the fray on the side of the 100-day-old strike by General Electric workers.
[T]he New Mobe called upon the Senate to investigate General Electric’s use
of profits made in the Vietnam War to break the strike. It pointed out that one-
fifth of GE’s total business was in war contracts and its profits from these
contracts and its cheap labor plants in Southeast Asia helped resist the demands
of the unions.[78]
Whether or not in response to these two sallies, the MIC held a closed meeting at New York City’s Commodore Hotel on June 23, 1969, under the auspices of the state’s Commerce and Industry Association, to “plan strategy against a Students for a Democratic Society project to form a worker-student alliance”. (It thus appears that the regime had no more realistic idea than the SDS itself how effectively their young radicals would be able to mingle with and influence the aspiring bourgeoisie on the production lines; the “work-in” program proved a grotesque failure. Three days after the Commerce and Industry war council, SDS met in its own national convention, where it proceeded to commit suicide by schism.) The meeting at the Commodore was addressed by William C. Sullivan, the FBI’s liaison with the CIA, and three other officials identified only as representatives of Defense, the academic community, and the trade unions. Its watchword, passed on from the US Chamber of Commerce, was “Look out for the workers.”[79]
But if the activists had chosen the wrong target in the “work-in” and the moribund SDS as the wrong standard-bearer, the objective was all too correct. As the new Mobe closed its offices in April 1970, an irreducible cadre of survivors formed the Coalition on National Priorities, making the MIC its single-issue agenda for the 1970 Congressional elections.[80] They failed because they had forgotten that newspapers and broadcast stations were themselves part of the corporate tribe:
[T]he media was [sic] critical in keeping antiwar, and anti-Nixon, protest from
becoming the basis for a more systematic critique of the political, social, and
economic system… [T]he media was as important in preventing this chaotic
situation from evolving into a larger questioning of the system as it was for
branding Nixon a deviant.[81]
Undirected and unsupported by any national organization or strategy, the anti-corporate revolt – like the unseen enemy in Vietnam – was the more harrowing for these reasons. Its spontaneous and unstructured eruption, the opposite of a Marxist revolution directed by a tightly-disciplined cadre, was the perfect foil to the anthill society monopoly capital was in the process of constructing. The inability of his colleagues to perceive, let alone understand it, let Wallace G. Taylor, president of Formica, Inc., to label them
deaf, dumb, and blind to a hydra-headed new American revolution that is
tearing this country asunder, value by value… [can] a country whose business
is business continue to be deaf to its own youth and blind to a war that is rapidly
turning this country into one of the poor nations?[82]
If the corporate world at large ignored the passion of its new challenger, Nixon and his cadre tried to domestic the new environmental movement, hoping that the first Earth Day (April 1, 1970) would divert the young from anti-war activities. The ploy backfired. “[T]he struggle for clean air and water is producing as many radicals as the war”, because the force that had created the war was the same one that was leaching and poisoning the planet: “the needless drive for growth and profit.”[83] Thus antiwar Resistance leader Staughton Lynd proclaimed the standing order for both movements: “Our inevitable enemy in the coming years is the corporation.”[84]
The new rebel army sprang into existence with a ready-made tactic, one for which the guardians of the regime had no defense. While their protestors gathered outside the shareholders’ annual meetings, they infiltrated the gates with demonstrators armed with voting proxies. Once such gained admittance to the United Aircraft annual meeting and used his proxy to call for the passage of a resolution condemning the board of directors as war criminals. Meanwhile, demonstrators outside chanted, “Peace now! Peace now!”, to the martial music of the Third World Inter-Galactic Marching Band and Cloud Society.[85] Fifteen hundred protestors in war paint, calling themselves Minnesota Proxies for Peace, marched on the headquarters of Honeywell, Inc., demanding that the company cease manufacturing cluster bombs. Company police with Mace needed a backup of sixty city cops in riot gear to scatter them. Inside the hall, chairman of the board James Binger ruled the dissidents with proxies out of order, gave the agenda a speed-reading,
and adjourned after ten minutes. Honeywell offices in Boston, London, and Copenhagen were simultaneously taken under siege.[86] In Seattle, Boeing Aircraft shareholders huddled in the cafeteria while pickets outside carried signs reading “Boeing Profits From Death and Oppression”, burned a 10-foot yellow papier mache effigy of a B-1 bomber, and danced around it chanting antiwar slogans.[87]
Slightly flaky around the edges or not, the revolution had arrived in the factory yard. Olin Matheson, the munitions giant, was spooked into an admitted “over-reaction” that left it apologizing to shareholders. Its security provisions for the annual meeting included twenty-eight Stamford, Conn. police, fifteen Olin guards, and any number of “undercover” executives, spying on and harassing its guests through a maze of I.D. checks.[88]
Three days after the Kent State killings, the protests invaded the previously-sacred halls of the Exchange itself, in the persons of demonstrators leafleting and proselytizing office workers. The violence was limited to the street outside, where construction workers rained soda bottles and beer cans on protestors in the streets “from several stories up”.[89] The “hard hats” came down into the streets the next day – “Bloody Friday”, May 8, 1970 – and roamed them wielding baseball bats and heavy tools, attacking anyone who looked like their idea of a “hippie” while the police looked on or even shouted encouragement. Their brutality and brown coveralls reminded many, particularly Jewish businessmen who had fled the Holocaust, of a scene from the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany.[90] John Winthrop, a prominent Gentile (of Wood, Struthers, & Winthrop) also “noted disconcerting similarities between the fury of the workers and the Nazis during the last days of the Weimar Republic.”[91]
The trepidation of the Street’s elders became total disorientation as the Exchange was then invested by fifteen hundred student demonstrators from the Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, New York University, and the University of Pennsylvania graduate schools of business. “[R]ecent events in Cambodia and at Kent State University stirred them to action almost overnight.”
“Heretofore business students were more concerned with their own futures than with the welfare of the world,” NYU’s Michael Dembo explained, “They’ve now become aware that they have no future if our country has no future.”[92] The revolt was reaffirmed at the scene of its first great victory, as students of the Stanford Graduate School of Business joined the national strike. The pickets were led by the dean, James Van Horn. The president of the MBA student association Roger Salquist sent letters to the presidents of the Fortune 500 companies urging them to “focus the immense power of the business community to achieve vitally needed changes in our national priorities.”[93]
Before the invasion of Cambodia, Louis B. Lundborg, chief executive officer of the Bank of America, had warned a Senate committee,
The war has divided, confused, and bewildered Americans… As a result of
this confusion and bewilderment, many people are losing trust in the institutions,
both public and private, through which we govern ourselves and run our
economy.[94]
In the wake of the Kent State murders, Thomas J. Watson, chairman of the board of International Business Machines, restated the same warning to the same committee:
[T]he longer the war continues, the more it broadens the gap between the elder
generation and the young men and women who will soon be responsible for the
leadership and destiny of this country. Indeed, prolongation of the war may well
set up a continuing revolution of our youth through which they become
demoralized so that the progress of our country will be appreciably slowed.[95]
Entrepreneur Peter Grace put it more baldly: “If I were Nixon, I would have pulled out on Jan. 15, 1969… it is unfair for everyone else to enjoy business as usual while 16-year-old kids are bearing the burden of worry about the war.”[96]
Some managers had already done more than warn, stunning their peers by joining the line of march during the October moratorium against the war. Fifteen thousand of them had staged a “walk for peace” up Wall Street; a hundred of these spent the day in front of Trinity Church reading the names of GIs killed in action.[97] “[T]he day after Kent State,” recalled Revlon vice president George Paris “ – the day after that picture ran in the papers – I couldn’t work. My son happens to be a college student, and I could have been looking at a picture of him.” He and another Revlon v.p., Paul Woolard, formed the Corporate Executives Committee for Peace. “The time has come for businessmen to draw up a profit-and-loss statement on the war,” Woolard declared,
“If we owned that venture, we would liquidate it before it bankrupted the rest of the corporation.”[98]
Their Committee was one of the ad hoc groups that was born of the shock on May 4th and then sputtered and died for lack of peer support. Harold Willens, would-be founder of the Businessmen’s Educational Fund, mailed 250,000 copies of Commandant Shoup’s article on article on the MIC to his fellow executives, requesting comment. Of the 1700 replies he received, 1100 agreed with agreed with Shoup “but desired anonymity”. They could not identify themselves for fear of ostracism and eventual oblivion within the corporate culture.[99]
But if most businessmen could not openly come out against the war, they were getting less shy about expressing themselves on the subject of the President. A Louis Harris poll in early May found that of the population sampled – 537 managers in the Fortune 500 top companies – 78% blamed the President’s policies for the stock market’s decline.[100] And Fortune itself commissioned another Yankelovitch survey of 250 chief executive officers in the same top echelon of American businesses. No new categories appeared under the heading of administration successes. Several new ones appeared as failures. “Most strikingly, the Administration’s lack of communication with the nation’s youth has come from nowhere to rank right up with Vietnam. The President’s failure to unite the country also was mentioned for the first time.”[101]
It was an unprecedented moment in American history. Big Business was turning against a Republican president. The question no one thought to raise was whether Richard Nixon even cared.
CHAPTER FOUR: The Twenty-Day, Eight-Year Slide.
The day after Kent State and the resultant Wall Street sell-off, May 5th, President Nixon was on the phone of chief of staff Haldeman first thing in the morning. There was nothing unusual about this. What was unusual was that he wanted to talk about the economy:
get on Fl[anigan] & econom guys
get people on stock market
get [Maurice] Stans, Mayo, Kennedy
max degree of confidence that they can –
P. feels strongly must balance ‘70
K. be sure we get figures in the right terms.
get Mayo and big guns
can’t whistle in dark – but have to speak
w/ some confidence
market wobble doesn’t mean go to hell in a hat
see what it does in next couple of days.
Shultz…
P. set mtg. for Burns tomorrow.[102]
Later,
P. had long meeting at noon with his top economic types – Kennedy, Shultz,
Mayo, McCracken & Flanigan – re what seems to be a budding financial crisis –
mainly because of major continuing drop in stock market. Got Fed to reduce
margin requirement – made decision not to hold to balanced budget in ’70 – or
’71 – will go ahead w/ deficit this year due to revenue shortfall instead of trying to
recoup by accelerated tax collections – etc. P. much more concerned w/ upgoing
economy in fall because he feels that’s the only chance to make major gains in the
elections & that in turn is the only way ultimately to get control of the economy.[103]
In his published Diaries, Haldeman appended this explanatory sidebar:
This line of reasoning is easily misinterpreted as crass political manipulation of
the economy for personal political benefit. It should instead by understood as a
valid recognition of the necessity to make political gains, in terms of gaining
favorably inclined congressmen and senators, so that there are enough votes to
take the necessary economic measures.[104]
Whether the reader agrees that it must be understood this way, s/he should be clear that, through coincidence or design, this is the same timing that has been used by every Republican administration since.
On the 6th, the President met with Arthur Burns, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, the nation’s prime lender.
Plan was to convince Arthur re yesterday’s decisions with economic re not try
to balance 70 & 71 budgets & not to raise taxes. E[hrlichman] says Arthur took
exactly opposite view & P. agreed with him – so now we’re on both sides of the
matter.[105]
But the Street had given up on waiting for good news. Now it would settle for a “selling climax”, a rock bottom from which it hoped to rebound and rise again. The irony was that panic had become unlikely now because so many had come to expect it. But perhaps “the US decision to send troops to Cambodia and the turmoil on college campuses are psychological factors that could trigger an ‘indiscriminate dumping of securities’ characteristic of a selling climax.”[106]
As noted, antiwar protestors invaded the Exchange on May 7th. “Even sedate brokers, watching the stock tape in the quiet of the board rooms, referred to the ‘tarnished image of the Nixon administration’.”[107] At that point, one analyst made a statement that may have sounded strange at the time: “It begins to look to a number of observers as if the Cambodian conflict will be solved in financial rather than military circles.”[108] The following day, the mass attack on the peace demonstrators by the “hard hats” in the streets just outside further “cut into trading volume… it also shows that the Nixon
administration has an awful lot of fence-mending to do now to cool things down.”[109]
Was the White House slowly getting the message? Treasury Secretary Kennedy was dispatched to Hot Springs, Va., to reassure the Business Council that the Federal Reserve would stop loosening the money supply. Secretary of State Melvin Rogers went along to “explain the implications of Cambodia.”[110] “A mood of unease pervaded the Business Council as it assembled in the wake of the Cambodian intervention and the student deaths at Kent State.”[111] (The Street had suspected for some time that the Fed was cutting margin requirements as a palliative to shore up the markets.”)[112] In the same Sunday issue, the Times finally recognized the issue it had been ducking for that most fevered of weeks: “the militant reaction of the nation’s youth to the war and social issues intensified the elements of uncertainty on the national scene and added another depressant in the realm of business and finance.”[113] It was a pallid admission, but remarkable in having been made at all. Certainly the televised spectacle of the march on Washington culminating in a hundred fifty thousand people massed across the street from the White House had done nothing to soothe the tycoons over their Sunday editions.
Monday morning opened under a pall of by-now typical gloom. The last remaining hope of a rally, news of some “smashing success” for American arms in Cambodia, was vanishing quickly. By now “COSVN’ – the acronym for the giant communist headquarters complex in Cambodia, the President’s nationally-announced objective – had quietly disappeared from Pentagon briefings. The taking of it, the decisive victory that might have been “crucial in reversing the tide of despair that is now feeding on itself and running beyond the limits of reason,”[114] would never come, because the prize had never existed. So the brokers arrived for work sullen, in the backwash of Friday’s bloody street violence – “I saw a lot of cops this morning – a lot more cops than customers”[115] – and settled in to wait hopelessly,
The Exchange opened down on Tuesday as well, due to the “stepped-up fighting in the Middle East and another day of student protest” in the streets outside. Shortly after one, the averages posted their “deepest loss on a half hourly basis”. Then news came that Laird had announced in testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee that no US ground forces would by left in Southeast Asia by June 30, 1971. The losses were wiped out and the averages in positive territory in an hour. But the rally ebbed – possibly as investors paused to recall the value of other administration promises – and the market closed at a six-and-a-half year low.[116]
The third week in May dragged on like the war itself, the market static but at a level which by itself boded ill for the future. Still the White House ignored the situation, until it was goaded into action from within its own inner circle. In a “highly unusual speech” given by Attorney General John Mitchell to the Delta Council, a southern business group, he conceded that “the stock market’s faith has been shaken by uncertainties over the President’s ability to create economic stability, contain the war in Indochina, and quiet student unrest.”[117] For reasons that will likely ever remain unexplained, Mitchell had broken ranks to the extent of admitting there was a crisis. Nixon convened a cabinet meeting the same day, the first on the economy he had held since the 6th. He told his minions to arrange another meeting with Bernard Lasker. Meanwhile, no one was to say anything about the economy unless it was cleared through McCracken.
The next morning, the President followed up with his real cabinet, Haldeman, Ehrlichman, and Chotiner. “Bunny Lasker set up group for K. briefing. ldrs. who really affect [sic] market opinion probly evening mtg. – 40 people.”[118] A public announcement that such a meeting would take place had no effect on the numbers this time; the capacity to hope had been exhausted. The Dow reached its lowest level since March 15, 1963. “Phillips Petroleum was the only active stock to finish with a gain.”[119]
Paper losses since December 1968 (the last month a Democrat had occupied the White House) had reached $ 250 billion. Quoting a White House statement that “present adjustments in the economy will give way to renewed expansion”, the Times the counter-quoted a broker to the effect that “actual deeds” by Nixon would have been more welcome than “words of cheer”.[120]
It might have been better had not the investors the weekend to brood over what was now plainly becoming a catastrophe. The Street’s slide since Nixon’s inauguration had become “the longest and most severe decline since the Depression,”[121] “the worst bear market since the 1930s.”[122] What had so long been dreaded arrived with Monday morning’s opening bell, as the Dow-Jones average accelerated its trip back through time, finishing the day at the lowest level since December 18, 1962. The panic picked up momentum with a “published report that Nixon’s economic aides were calm about the market drop”, which “served only to heighten the fears and tension.” As one broker raged, “Why don’t the Nixon people wake up? This is what capitalism is all about.”[123]
Now American business was forced to face up to and disown one of its founding clichés. Here was a Republican president who – aside from those sinews of international power, oil and armaments – did not care about the economy. Or, to the extent that he did, he cared more about keeping the votes of employees otherwise laid off to than about survival of their companies. Just when the nation’s managers were teetering on the edge of this conceptual abyss, they were given a shove by a bright, rooster-pecked financial writer for the Times, Eileen Shanahan. Even as the market was crashing, she explained on the paper’s front page that Nixon’s “top economic policy makers” were “not overly disturbed by the long market drop… they do feel that the importance of the stock market in the over-all economy is being greatly exaggerated.”[124]
Just as she called him on it, Nixon dropped this insouciant attitude. He called Haldeman that afternoon “all shook up re stock market drop of 21 pts. Said to be sure no one gets upset or overacts [sic] -- must act confident. Problem is, no one shows any sign of undue concern except him.” The President kept calling the chief of staff back, as did others, on the same subject. “Bunny Lasker called Pete [Flanigan] in quite a state – wanted to talk to P. He’s really shook up, but nothing P. can do.”[125]
The market decline continued the next day, further fueled by “a White House denial of a report that US troops may be withdrawn from Cambodia before the June 30 deadline.”[126] (Could the President be irritated with the markets for threatening his plans to expand the war?) He called in John Mitchell and “had him call Arthur [Burns] & tell him to shape up fast.” Flanigan became the newest scapegoat; the President now decided “that he’s not big enough or knowledgeable enough to be the key man on the economy.” (As if to bear out Shanahan’s diagnosis of White House “group think” on the economy, Haldeman confided to his journal that there was nothing wrong with the economy but the stock market – it just “keeps going down at a rapid rate.”
But Ehrlichman was pleading with the President to make a major address to the American people on the subject. Nixon refused. He would wait until his scheduled June 3rd speech on the victory in Cambodia. The people would regain confidence once they realized that the invasion had succeeded and the markets would rally behind the news.[127] Meanwhile the press office announced that the President and his top aides would meet with Lasker and selected leaders of the business and financial community the following evening. After a year and a half of neglect, the administration was going to hold an economic summit, although it was billed merely as a White House dinner.
The next day the Dow-Jones posted its biggest one-day gain in history. The markets recovered 30% of what they had lost since the invasion of Cambodia. There was immediate dissension over the reason for this remarkable reversal of fortune. “There’s no question but that it was technical,” Newton Zinder (E.F. Hutton) stated. “It was not at all technical,” sniffed Allan Brenits (Herzfeld and Stein), “It was partly hopes of what the President might say tonight.”[128]
Lasker and the business moguls flew into Washington for dinner at the White House. While they fortified themselves with cocktails at the Madison Hotel, Lasker announced that they were here on an historic mission:
We’ve got to make sure the Administration realizes how serious a further
prolonged slump in the market would be for the whole economy. We’re not
here representing just a few Wall Street firms and a few big investors.
“Faces grim”, the delegation headed up Pennsylvania Avenue for the State Dining Room of the White House, where the President regaled them with lobster cocktails and white wine, beef Wellington and Chateau Lafitte Rothschild – and a long, intermittently maudlin account of his lonely decision to invade Cambodia, the torrent of unjustified criticism it had unleashed upon him, and the brilliant military coup that had nonetheless resulted. “He said they’ve bought a year,” one invitee groused, referring to the speaker’s tally of captured rice bags and stands of small arms, “and he made it sound like a smashing success.” Another source hopefully suggested that “the President was attempting subtly to tell the group that undisclosed peace initiatives were underway”. Nixon soured the impact of reassuring all that the troops would be out of Cambodia by June 30th with a reaffirmation of the doctrine that had sent them in years before: “If the United States abandoned South Vietnam, he continued, Cambodia would fall, Laos would fall, and other countries would fall.” [129] Whoever fell, it appeared, the domino theory would stand forever.
The dinner guests had wanted to hear about Cambodia. But Nixon had left out something many of them considered more crucial:
[T]he dinner guests weren’t uniformly soothed about the domestic impact of
the Cambodia action. The President was ‘very eloquent’ in stressing his desire
to communicate with dissident students… But a New York businessman
confides that he came away convinced that Mr. Nixon ‘hasn’t properly diagnosed
the situation’, that the Chief Executive wrongly considers dissent to be the ‘ill-
conceived actions of a bunch of unruly kids’.[130]
The crisis on the morning of May Day had been about the war. The crisis of May 4th and thereafter was about a whole lot more. And although the President had agreed to pull out of Cambodia, he had not renounced the war on the new generation of his own countrymen.
“Yesterday’s giant rally won’t be sustained,” the Journal predicted, although prices continued to rise modestly the next day, “bolstered by a stream of statements from participants in Wednesday night’s dinner meeting.”[131] On Friday the 29th, the Dow-Jones broke 700 points, following a White House announcement that there would be no tax increases that year, regardless of the deficit.[132] But there it ended. Dinner at the White House regardless, the national confidence to sustain rising prices was gone.
“[Many] corporate executives have come to share the national mood of frustration and bewilderment that is fueled by uncertainty, dissension, and doubt about the efficacy of the Nixon administration’s policies.”[133] On June 3rd, the President made his long-heralded national television address on Cambodia. Essentially he showed visual aids of captured rice bags and weapons, and claimed victory. Neither he nor anyone at the White House or the Pentagon ever mentioned COSVN again.
The markets began to falter the next morning. They were not helped when, two days later, figures were released that showed unemployment at its worst level since 1965, the year that the American troop buildup in Southeast Asia had begun. Another CEO, Charles McCoy (E.I. duPont Nemours) told the Manufacturing Chemists Association, “The Vietnam War is tearing at the whole fabric of our social and political and economic life… Confidence in our economy, as well as the social stability of the United States, is being seriously strained.”[134]
The editors of Fortune, who had sounded the initial alarm four years earlier, now summed up the grim aftermath: Cambodia and Kent State had “plunged the nation to a level of bewilderment and fear that it had not reached in the depth of the great depression.” Citing the incident in which John Gardner, a moderate Republican, had been barred from speaking to the Illinois Constitutional Convention by the party’s right wing, they drew a chilling parallel: “By refusing to listen, the convention, which is not composed of excitable students or nervous guardsmen, demonstrated that the nation was indeed disintegrating.” And of its leader: “Neither his countrymen [n]or history would forgive the man who was in the White House when the ability of Americans to govern themselves came to an end.”[135]
This assessment would prove fifty per cent correct.
CHAPTER FIVE: The Death of Youth; the Rebirth of the MIC.
The rally of May 27th-29th would indeed prove ephemeral. The recession returned. The crisis of May 1970 had taught American a great, grim truth: “monopoly capitalism… has to rely in the main on military spending for the preservation of the prosperity and high employment on which it depends both for profits and for popular support.” Great and grim, but hardly a new truth – economist Paul Baran had penned those words in 1957, the last year before massive aid to South Vietnam began. Nixon had promised to end that war, but his deeds had proven he resolved rather to expand it. In the spring of 1970, he was rebuffed by none more decisively than the American businessman, who had come to realize (if s/he could never admit it) the other half of Baran’s hypothesis: “[Military spending] amounts to a continuous dissipation of the nation’s economic surplus and leads to no improvement in people’s real income,”[136]
which steadily eroded the purchasing power of the people, which promised inevitable long-term economic degradation.
For the rising generation, the Vietnam War had transformed the MIC from an issue in political and economic debate to a matter of personal extinction. But as such it had only been the final goad to a generation already alienated by “the meaninglessness of work in a technological civilization… the pointlessness of our patterns of production and consumption.”[137] Thus the ease with which the young made the transition from marching against the war to marching against capitalism. But at Kent State they had learned that this could also lead to their personal extinction. After May 4th, the only choice left was withdrawal. The archons of capital, however, were still left with the question of how to preserve the MIC without another Vietnam.
The answer was provided by the same blinding pace of technological advance that was making the workplace so inimical to human life. Since Nixon’s campaign promises to quit Vietnam in 1968, there had been a great debate about how to spend the “peace dividend” America would be awarded for pulling out. (A similarly chimerical bonanza would be glimpsed over the rubble of the Iron Curtain in 1989, only to vanish before the country was sure it had seen it.) By the beginning of 1970, the discussion of the peace dividend, which so many hoped would be used to provide for the human needs of the country, was cut off as if by a noose. “For while he [Nixon] is cutting US commitment overseas dramatically,” the nation’s leading political commentator mused, “he is still proposing a military budget of over $ 70 million.”[138] Obviously, Senator Ralph Yarborough (D, Texas) agreed, “the military contractors will wish to spend the money on other vast military contracts.”[139]
For even before Nixon had campaigned on bringing the boys home, the staggering cost of Vietnam had been the lesser evil. For all of the US generals’ misguided attempts to fight it with machines, it had boiled down to a slogging, bullet-for-bullet guerrilla conflict. “The Vietnam War, although its cumulative cost is now approaching $ 100 billion, has not cost as much as the several hundreds [of billions] spent so far on the stockpile of strategic weapons.”[140] The “high-tech out” – diverting the money to non-competitive contracts for intricate weapons systems, complete with fantastic cost overruns – would save the armaments industry from extinction as long as America’s money held out. There need be no troublesome formalities like declarations of war (or even pallid counterfeits like the Gulf of Tonkin resolution), no photo galleries of American boys killed that week in magazines like Life. There need only be a continuous, undefined threat of war with the Soviet Union. Once the political judgement of the American people, nourished by the mass media, had devolved sufficiently, the Soviet Union could disappear and the threat could still be asserted.
As of 1970, “[a] return to the prewar dollar ‘base of military spending no longer seems feasible.”[141] “Peace would now be far more expensive than war.”[142] Thus Nobel Prize winner George Wald ridiculed the idea that Nixon’s “withdrawal” from Vietnam would bring peace. The plan was rather to institutionalize and professionalize war. “Then the war can go on indefinitely and the Pentagon and its suppliers will stay in business likewise.”[143]
The point of professionalizing future such adventures was crucial. The “grunts” in Vietnam – the ordinary foot soldiers actually in combat – had proven capable of refusing to fight for a cause of questionable morality, especially after realizing it was unwinnable. By 1970, through various acts of military disobedience, they had brought the fighting to a halt. The citizen soldier turned out to be a citizen first. That rendered the traditional draft-based force structure inoperable. The American military of the future would consist of mercenaries, elite, heavily-equipped, and brutally trained shock troops, supported by massed and data-processed firepower. ( The euphemisms about objectives would also become less convincing. As the century progressed, they would narrow to the access to oil and – with a nod to the CIA’s needs – drug-producing regions.)
The society which this robot army would “defend” was eerily well-predicted by two SDS theorists in 1971, as they surveyed the wreckage of their own organization and the waxing power of the reaction that had crushed it. Greg Calvert and Carol Neiman argued that the revolution of the 1960s had failed because the people leading it hadn’t understood the changing nature of American and world society. The Old Left had been left behind by events because they had refused to surrender their dogma that the revolution must be led by the proletariat, the enlightened factory workers. Meanwhile the factory owners had moved their operations overseas, reaping immense profits through “the exploitation of the labor of people abroad… [through] the ruthless imposition of precapitalist wage levels and [the] oppression of labor”[144] by Third World governments. Thus the capitalists had made sweatshop fortunes and extinguished the American proletariat in the same coup de main.
According to Calvert and Neiman, the vanished factory workers were being replaced by a new proletariat, through a process of “cybernation”. The heir to the chains of the factory worker was the college student in the process of becoming the technocratic
worker-ant. “They are pre-workers, trainees created by advanced industrial technology…for anti-social and non-productive work.” They would work on the assembly line of the information “factory”, manufacturing informational devoid of intellectual content but solely promotional or (in the case of the entertainment sector) diversionary in nature. “[T]hey are being trained to sell more garbage to a society of people whose lives are increasingly defined in terms of their consumption of the garbage that is produced.”[145]
May 4, 1970 played a crucial role in preparing American college students to accept this new role. It provided a vivid example of where protest could lead. Also operating on this once-bold generation was another postulate of Baran’s, on the increasing scarcity of the warfare state. College would become the place to get the skills to survive, not to seek enlightenment. Universities would be “deliberately organized and subsidized to manufacture technical knowledge; the enduring effort of universities to develop a life and culture different from that society… is now a distinction without a difference.”[146]
The liberal arts departments had furnished many of the participants, if not the leaders – especially the young graduate assistants – in the antiwar demonstrations (as rightist academicians complained to the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest that summer). The point was not lost on Nixon, who already had explored cutting off federal grants to schools that had joined the national strike. Federal grants to educational institutions, except those engaged in military research, would dwindle rapidly from this point, the grantors preferring instead to take their money to military and private “think tanks” filling the void in the next quarter century. Their role of providing campus largesse would be usurped by private industry, such as the munitions giant Olin Matheson, who proceeded to endow professorships and curricula lavishly provided that their orientation was right-wing and pro-business.[147]
According to its prophets, enlistment in the “technetronic society” was not voluntary. Like Charlemagne’s “Christian” knights, they offered conversion or annihilation. University president Clark Kerr proclaimed that “The cry for community, for integration of thought and action, are cries that call backward to a smaller, simpler world.” Chronic national security advisor-to-be Zbigniew Brzezinsky was more blunt: the protests of the humanists were “the death rattle of historical irrelevants.”[148] Technology had rendered values like individual liberty and privacy, and warm personal bonds forged by commitment to common ideals, obsolete. “For two revolutions which have become closely linked – the organizational and the scientific revolution – and this success makes any others infinitely difficult to pull off.”[149]
Certainly the campus activist of the 1960s became extinct. The personal computer and the Internet castrated the new generation as an agent of change – catching it in the process of withdrawing from the process after the example of Kent State – by offering the young “an alternate reality”, “a vast phantom world”[150] of instant if autistic gratification and self-assertion in which they could forget their powerlessness in the real world. The Web encouraged withdrawal. Ranging the “information superhighway” encouraged youth in “keeping up with fewer friends, spending less time talking with their families, experiencing more daily life stressors, and feeling more lonely and depressed.”[151] Each succeeding generation became more numb, passive, and even dissociative. Many would put all their imagination, intelligence, and commitment into building their private computer world. Such students could be relied on to conduct no more national strikes.
But the stability of any such society must in the end prove itself an illusion. To necessarily belabor Baran’s point, a society whose economy is ultimately anchored in military expenditures must continually impoverish itself, just as a society steadily greedy for more energy to power its production of more and more expensive superfluity must try to extend its dominion over the dwindling sources of energy until it attempts world conquest. The power to create must accelerate as long as there is anything left to destroy, and until in the end it consumes those who direct the process.
The pitch of total war (whether declared or not) must inevitably drive the people committed to it into madness. The stress of World War II, generally acknowledged to be the last “good” war (endlessly celebrated in turn-of-the-century popular culture) and certainly the last American war that could be declared, permanently deformed the United States into a counterfeit of the fascist enemy. Sustaining that pitch over the intervening half-century of pseudo-war has made insanity the way of life.
To secure popular acceptance of the armaments program, the existence of
external danger has to be systematically hammered into the minds of the people;
an incessant campaign of official and semi-official propaganda… An elaborate
system of economic and social pressures is developed to silence independent
thought and to stifled all ‘undesirable’ scientific, artistic, or literary
expression.[152]
Or, as another unhonored prophet put it,
As the system weakens it will thrash about more and more dangerously, the
citizenry will often be divided by false consciousness, there will be violent hunts
for scapegoats, and there is an ever-present danger that as bourgeois life becomes
intolerable, racism, religious frenzy, chauvinism, and cultism will temporarily
hold sway over sections of the public.[153]
At this writing, the only words to question in the passage are “temporarily” and “sections”. And for prophecy, that’s not bad.
THE END.
[1] Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Volume IV, p. 588. (New York; Charles C. Bigelow & Co., Inc., 1845).
[2] Pope Paul VI, “World Peace Day Prayer” (text), New York Times, January 2, 1970, p. 2.
[3] “Street Hopes Worst Is Over,” Business Week, December 27, 1969, p. 68.
[4] The phrase “Frankenstein’s monster” is from Richard Kaufmann’s article, whose title, “We Must Guard Against Unwarranted Influence By the Military-Industrial Complex” is a paraphrase of the most quoted line from Eisenhower’s speech. (New York Times magazine, June 22, 1969, p. 10). Eisenhower’s speech has been quoted innumerable times and can be obtained in full from the Eisenhower Library website,
www.eisenhower.utexas.edu/farewell.htm.
[5] John Kenneth Galbraith, “The Big Defense Firms Are Really Public Firms and Ought to be Nationalized,” New York Times magazine, November 11, 1969, pp. 50 et. seq.
[6] “Business and Finance: The Military-Industrial Complex,” Newsweek, June 9, 1969, p. 74.
[7] General David Shoup, “The New American Militarism,” The Atlantic, April 1969, p. 51. Shoup was the ranking hero of the Tarawa invasion and later Commandant of the Marine Corps.
[8] “Cincinnatus” (aka, Lt. Col. Cecil Curry), Self-Destruction: The Disintegration and Decay of the United States Army During the Vietnam Era. (New York; W.W. Norton and Company, 1981), p. 131.
[9] Douglas B. Lee and John W. Duckman, “Economic Impacts of the War in Indochina: A Primer,” in Jonathan Grant (ed)., The Widening War in Indochina. (New York; Washington Square Press, 1971), p. 266. EMPHASIS ADDED. This suggests an interesting alternative explanation for the dwindling and disappearance of US basic industry (as opposed to the right’s assertion that it was due to the demands of labor unions).
[10] Juan Bosch, Pentagonism: A Substitute for Imperialism (tr. Helen Lane). Bosch was not only an economist, but the former President of the Dominican Republic when it had been occupied by US Marines on a corporate errand.
[11] The American Economic Review, “Papers and Proceedings of the 82nd Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association, December 28-30, 1969,” LX, No. 2, May 1970: Richard Perlo, “The Economics of Imperialism”, p. 245.
[12] Irving Louis Horowitz, The Struggle Is The Message: The Organization and Ideology of the Anti-War Movement. (Berkeley; Glendessary Press, 1970), p. 108. EMPHASIS ADDED. *The surrogate was found and will be discussed in Chapter Five.
[13] Seymour Melman, “US Industrial Economy Unprepared for Peace” New York Times/Business and Finance Section, June 7, 1970, p. 12. Because of its importance as a business periodical, this section of the Times will be referred to frequently and will be abbreviated below as NYT/BF.
[14] Carl Oglesby and Richard Schaull, Containment and Change. (New York; MacMillian and Company, 1967), p. 117.
[15] Paul Baran, The Political Economy of Growth. (New York; Prometheus Paperbacks, 1957), p. 129.
[16] Clem Morgello, “Wall Street: Arms and the Market”, Newsweek, June 9, 1969, p. 81.
[17] William Beecher, “Laird Says Defense Cuts Will Cost 1,250,000 Jobs”, New York Times, January 17, 1970, front page.
[18] Robert Warren Stevens, Vain Hopes, Grim Realities: The Economic Consequences of the Vietnam War.
(New York/London; New Viewpoints, 1976), p. 127.
[19] Allen J. Matusow, Nixon’s Economy: Booms, Busts, Dollars, and Votes. (University of Kansas Press, 1998), pp. 17 and 33.
[20] Milton Rosenberg, Sidney Verba, and Philip E. Converse, Vietnam and the Silent Majority. (New York; Harper & Row, 1970), p. 40.
[21] Robert Keatley, “Spreading War: Nixon Feels Pressure to Expand Role of US in Fighting in Asia,”
Wall Street Journal, April 3, 1970, front page. Because of its equal importance as a business periodical, this newspaper will be referred to at least as frequently as the Times’ business section. Accordingly, it will be abbreviated below as WSJ.
[22] “Boeing Gets Contract for Army Helicopters Valued at 46.2 Million,” WSJ, April 1, 1970, p. 2.
[23] Review and Outlook: Vietnam Suspicions” (lead editorial), WSJ, April 4, 1970, p. 22.
[24] Victor J. Hillery, “Abreast of the Market: A Stock Market Appraisal,” WSJ, April 13, 1970, p. 33.
[25] National Archives II/Nixon Presidential Materials (NPM); White House Special Files; Staff Member and Office Files; longhand notes of H.R. Haldeman; Box 41, Folder: April-May 5, 1970. Notes on cabinet meeting, April 13, 1970. (The pages in the notes are not numbered). Abbreviated below as H(N).
[26] Robert Keatley, “Cambodia Asks US for Military Supplies in First Key Test of Nixon’s Asian Policy,”
WSJ, April 15, 1970, p. 13. “Wednesday” was the 15th.
[27] “Worst of 1970’s Economic Slide Has Ended, McCracken Says,” WSJ, April 20, 1970, p. 5.
[28] Victor Hillery, “Abreast of the Market,” WSJ, April 23, 1970, p. 37.
[29] Vartanig G. Vartan, “Dow Hits 735.15, Lowest Since ‘63”, NYT/BF, April 28, 1970, p. 1. (Under BF, page one refers to the first page of the section, not the front page of the newspaper.
[30] Isadore Barmash, “Capital Parley on Stocks Set,” NYT/BF, April 29, 1970, p. 59.
[31] National Archives/NPM; Haldeman’s longhand journals, April 28, 1970, p. 23. Haldeman dictated or wrote out his journals from his notes at the end of the day. Same containers.
[32] Eileen Shanahan, “Stocks in Rally; Dow Adds 13.06; Capital Parley,” NYT/BF, April 30, 1970, p. 51. Nixon reportedly said that he would be buying stocks right now. He didn’t explain why he wasn’t.
[33] “Wall Street: Why the market took a nose dive,” Business Week, May 2, 1970, p. 15.
[34] Robert Keatley, “The War Widens: Some Worry US Help in Cambodia May Lead to Deep Involvement”, WSJ, April 30, 1970 (front page).
[35] “Compulsive Escalation”, New York Times (lead editorial), May 4, 1970, p. 36.
[36] Richard Janssen, “Setback in Anti-Inflation Drive May Result from Reaction to Nixon Policy on Cambodia,” WSJ, May 4, 1970, p. 2
[37] Douglas Valentine, The Phoenix Program. (New York; William Morrow, 1990), p. 330.
[38] Alfred McCoy with Kathleen Read and Leonard P. Adams II, The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia.
(New York; Harper and Row, 1972).
[39] https://help.aol.com/articles/aim-discontinued alumni/fushwall. htm. “Fullerton High School Wall of Fame”.
[40] http://isweb.tasc.dot.gov/Historian/bios.htm.
[41] Jerry Livingston Voorhis, An Idealist in Congress: The Early Life and Times of H. Jerry Voorhis, 1901-1946. (University Library; California Polytechnic at Pomona [http://csupomona,edu/-library]).
[42] Fawn Brodie, Richard Nixon: The Shaping of His Character. (New York; W.W. Norton, 1981), p. 173.
[43] Anthony Summers with Robbyn Swan, The Arrogance of Power: The Secret World of Richard Nixon.
(New York; Viking Books, 2000), p. 47.
[44] Greg Mitchell, Tricky Dick and the Pink Lady: Richard Nixon v. Helen Gahagan Douglas. (New York; Random House, 1998), p. 205.
[45] Leonard Lurie, The Running of Richard Nixon. (New York; Coward, McCann & Geogahan, Inc., 1972), p. 121.
[46] Robert Engler, The Politics of Oil: A Study of Private Power and Democratic Directions. (Chicago; Phoenix Books/University of Chicago, 1961), pp. 310, 358.
[47] Louis Wesselring, Fuelling the War: Revealing an Oil Company’s Role in Vietnam. (New York/London; I.B. Taurus, 2000), p. 75. Wesselring was Shell Oil’s chief executive in Vietnam.
[48] Robert Sherill, The Oil Follies of 1970-80. (New York; Anchor/Doubleday, 1983), pp. 75, 96.
[49] Wesselring, p. 102.
[50] Malcolm Caldwell, “Oil and Imperialism in East Asia”, in the short-lived Journal of Contemporary Asia,
1;3, 1971, pp. 11-25.
[51] “Offshore Oil,” New Republic, Vol. 164, No. 14, April 3, 1971, p. 8.
[52] “Those ‘Mysterious’ Oil Leases,” Nation, April 5, 1971, p. 421.
[53] Back copies of petroleum industry periodicals – the “oil trades” – have proven difficult to find , even in the libraries of technical colleges.
[54] Barry Weisburg, “Southeast Asia: Offshore Oil Boom”, Nation, March 8, 1971, p. 294.
[55] “World’s Newest Hunt for Oil Bonanza,” U.S. News and World Report, December 1, 1969, p. 66.
[56] Die Weltwoche, May 22, 1970, quoted in Friedrich Jaeger, “sea of oil” (letter to the editor), The Nation, July 6, 1970, p. 2.
[57] Sherrill, Oil Follies, p. 121.
[58] Gabriel Kolko, “Oiling the Escalator: An Economic Incentive for Winning the War?” New Republic, 164: 11, March 13, 1971, p. 230.
[59] Platt’s Oilgram News Service, March 10, 1971, quoted in John W. Bower, “Asia and the Nixon Doctrine: The New Face of Empire”, in Virginia Brodine and Mark Selden (eds.), Open Secret: The Kissinger-Nixon Doctrine in Asia. (New York; Harper & Row, 1972), pp. 204-205.
[60] George Aiken, Senate Diary: January 1972-January 1975. (Brattleboro, Vermont; the Stephen Greene Press, 1976), pp. 190-191. The company in this case was Exxon. (The historian must regret that the Senator did not start keeping his diary until 1/72.)
[61] Marvin E. Wolfgang (chairman, sociology department, University of Pennsylvania) lecturing at the Cambridge Institute of Criminology, quoted in “Notable and Quotable”, WSJ, May 4, 1970, p. 16.
[62] “Review and Outlook: The President’s Gamble,” (lead editorial), WSJ, May 4, 1970, p. 16.
[63] Robert Lekachman, “The Economy: Has Cambodia Changed the Outlook?” Dun’s Review, June 1970, p. 9.
[64] Victor J. Hillery, “Abreast of the Market: Industrial Average Plunges 19.07 Points to 714; Drop Worst Since President Kennedy’s Slaying,” WSJ, May 5, 1970, p. 39.
[65] “Review and Outlook: Memories of 1929” (lead editorial) WSJ, May 6, 1970, p. 18. The title of the piece referred to fears of some economists that the nation may have been facing another Crash and Great Depression.
[66] Joseph C. Goulden, Fit to Print: A.M. Rosenthal and His Times. (Secaucus, N.J.; Lyle Stuart, Inc., 1988), pp. 157-158.
[67] Vartanig G. Vartan, “Bear Market Hits August ’63 Level,” NYT/BF, May 6, 1970, p. 65.
[68] Victor J. Hillery, “Abreast of the Market: A Stock Market Appraisal,” WSJ, May 11, 1970, p. 29. EMPHASIS ADDED.
[69] Duncan Norton-Taylor, “The Private World of the Class of ’66,” Fortune, LXXIII: 2, February 1966, pp. 128-129.
[70] Bell quoted in Daniel Seligman, “A Special Kind of Rebellion,” in Fortune, special issue: American Youth: Its Outlook Is Changing the World, LXXIX: 1, January 1969. (Pages indicated in paratheses.)
[71] “Software suffers unprogrammed woes,” Business Week, June 20, 1970, p. 68; “Computer Software Companies: How Many Are Houses of Cards?” Forbes, February 15, 1970, p. 40.
[72] Quoted in Part III, “The Defense Establishment,” Look magazine, 33: 17, August 26, 1969, part of the series The Big Business of American Militarism: Who Profits, Who Pays, Who Dies? by Charles W. Bailey and Frank Wright (Washington Bureau of the Minneapolis Tribune).
[73] John S. Fielden, “Making Executives of Students Will Take More than Haircuts,” NYT, January 11, 1970, p. 27. Fielden was the dean of the business school at Boston College.
[74] Anthony G. Athos, “Is the corporation next to fall?” Harvard Business Review, 48: 1, January/February 1970, p. 49
[75] Samuel A. Colbert and James M. Elden, “An anatomy of activism for executives,” Harvard Business Review, 48: 6, November/December 1970, p. 131.
[76] Sam Brown, “The Defeat of the Antiwar Movement,” in Anthony Lake (ed.), The Vietnam Legacy: The War, the American Society, and the Future of American Foreign Policy. (New York University Press, 1976), p. 124.
[77] Michael Ferber and Staughton Lynd, The Resistance (Boston; Beacon Press, 1971), pp. 235-238.
[78] Philip Foner, American Labor and the Indochina War: The Growth of Union Opposition. (New York; International Press, 1971), p. 70.
[79] “Businessmen Meet Here to Weigh Threat by Student Radicals,” NYT, June 24, 1969.
[80] Charles DeBenedetti and Charles Chatfield (eds.), An American Ordeal: The Antiwar Movement of the Vietnam War. (Syracuse University Press, 1990), p. 242.
[81] Ibid., Michael X. DelliCarpini, “Vietnamand the Press,” pp. 142 and 152.
[82] “The Corporation Becomes a Target,” Time, May 11, 1970, p. 96.
[83] “Students Call It Dirty Business,” Newsweek, March 21, 1970, p. 29.
[84] “Activists lay plans for war on Gulf,” Business Week, April 11, 1970, p. 75.
[85] “Business and Finance: The Annual Meeting Under Fire,” Newsweek, April 27, 1970, p. 75.
[86] “It’s face-to-face with dissidents: What happened at Honeywell,” Business Week, May 2, 1970, p. 98.
[87] Alexander Hammer, “Disruptions at Meetings Aid One Business: Security Police,” NYT/BF, Sunday May 10, 1970, Section 3, p. 14.
[88] Gerd Wilcke, “Olin Foresees Drop in Earnings; Meeting Heavily Guard,” NYT/BF, May 1, 1970, p. 53.
[89] Stanford Sesser, “Opponents of the War Attempt an Invasion of Gallery at Big Board,” WSJ, May 8, 1970, p. 6.
[90] Philip S. Foner, “’Bloody Friday’ – May 8, 1970,”
[91] “Wall Street: Three Days That Shook the Establishment,” Business Week, May 16, 1970, p. 24.
[92] “Education: Business students catch the campus fever,” Business Week, May 16, 1970, p. 22.
[93] “War Gloom and Market Jitters,” Business Week, May 9, 1970, p. 20.
[94] 91st Congress, 2nd Session, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, “Impact of the War in Southeast Asia on the US Economy,” Part 1, hearings April 15 and 16, 1970, p. 1. (Washington, D.C.; US Government Printing Office, 1970).
[95] Ibid., Part II, June 2, 1970, p. 386.
[96] “Businessmen still like Nixon,” Business Week, April 18, 1970, p. 32.
[97] “Vietnam: What businessmen did on protest day,” Business Week, October 18, 1969, p. 40.
[98] “Concerned Businessmen,” New Yorker, June 27, 1970, pp. 26-27.
[99] Robin A. Wright, “Businessmen’s Commitment Found Lacking”, NYT/BF, May 30, 1970, p. 31.
[100] “Nixon Policy Found Tied to Stock Drop,” NYT, May 11, 1970.
[101] Robert S. Diam, “Q & A: The Fortune 500-Yankelovitch Survey: Shaken Faith in Nixon,” Fortune, June 1970, p. 60.
[102] National Archives/NPM, Haldeman’s longhand notes, May 5, 1970, “0820 – phone”.
[103] Ibid., Haldeman’s longhand journal, May 5, 1970, p. 37.
[104] H.R. Haldeman, The Haldeman Diaries: Inside the Nixon White House. (New York; G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1994), p. 160.
[105] Haldeman’s longhand journal, May 6, 1970.
[106] “Bang or Whimper?” WSJ, front page, May 8, 1970. (The title is from one of T.S. Eliot’s poems: “This is the way the world ends/ not with a bang but a whimper.”)
[107] Vartanig G. Vartan, “Market Up a Bit in Slow Session,” NYT/BF, May 8, 1970, p. 47.
[108] Sam Nakagama, chief economist of the Argus Weekly Staff Report, quoted in Robert Metz, “Market Place: Financial View of a Wider War,” NYT/BF, May 8, 1970, p. 48.
[109] Vartanig G. Vartan, “Market’s Volume Sags to 1970 Low,” NYT/BF, May 9, 1970, p. 35.
[110] “The Economy: The weight of Cambodia on a delicate policy,” Business Week, May 9, 1970, p. 18.
[111] Gerald R. Rosen, “Washington Desk,” Dun’s Review, June 1970. EMPHASIS IN ORIGINAL.
[112] Terry Robards, “Await Selling Climax to End Market Drop,” NYT/BF, May 10, Section 3, p. 1. In the same article, Howard Stein of the Dreyfus Fund was quoted as rating the pessimism index “at an all-time high.”
[113] Thomas E. Mullaney, “The Week in Finance: Pressure on Trading Lifts a Bit but Its Causes Remain,” NYT/BF, May 10, 1970, p. 1.
[114] Victor J. Hillery, “Abreast of the Market: A Stock Market Appraisal,” WSJ, May 11, 1970, p. 29.
[115] Vartanig G. Vartan, “Dow Cut by 7.66 As Trading Lags,” NYT/BF, May 12, 1970, p. 57.
[116] David McLean, “Abreast of the Market,” WSJ, May 13, 1970, p. 39.
[117] Louis Kohlmeier, “Mitchell Urges Investors to Have Faith in Nixon Ability to Resolve US Crises,” WSJ, May 20, 1970, p. 4.
[118] Haldeman’s longhand notes, May 19, 1970, -- “Cab mtg”.
[119] John J. Abele, “Dow Off 14.85, Hits Lowest Point Since ’63,” NYT/BF, May 21, 1970, p. 58.
[120] Vartanig G. Vartan, “Another Slump Batters Stocks,” NYT/BF, May 22, 1970, p. 58.
[121] “The Markets: Wall Street won’t be the same again,” Business Week, May 23, 1970, p. 19.
[122] Thomas Mullaney, “Wall Street Suffers Its Worst Loss in Years,” NYT/BF, Section 3, p. 1, Sunday May 24, 1970.
[123] Vartanig G. Vartan, “Big Board Sinks to a 7-Year Low,” NYT/BF, front page, May 26, 1970; continued in the BF section under the head, “Stocks Fall 20 to 7-Year Low,” pp. 53-56.
[124] Eileen Shanahan, “Nixon’s Economic Aides Calm About Market Drop,” NYT, front page, May 25, 1970.
[125] Haldeman’s longhand journal, May 25, 1970, p. 67.
[126] “What’s New – Business and Finance,” WSJ, May 27, 1970.
[127] Haldeman’s longhand journal, May 26, 1970, p. 69.
[128] Terry Robards and John J. Abele, “Stock Rise Sets a Record for a Single Day,” NYT/BF, May 28, 1970, p. 51.
[129] Terry Robards, “The Day Wall Street Met the President,” NYT/BF, May 31, 1970, pp. 1 & 21; “Burns Reassures Business Leaders,” NYT, May 28, 1970, pp. 1 & 24.
[130] “After-Coffee Ruminations: Nixon Dinner Leaves Businessmen Easier on War, Confused on Economy,” WSJ, May 29, 11970, p. 3.
[131] Richard Janssen, “Charting the Course”, WSJ, front page, May 29, 1970.
[132] John Abele, “Market Extends Rally for Second Day,” NYT/BF, May 29, 1970, p. 33.
[133] Leonard Sloan, “Dow Rises to 16.29 and Breaks 700,” NYT/BF, May 30, 1970, p. 26.
[134] Gerd Wilcke, “DuPont President Scores Asian War,” NYT/BF, June 5, 1970, pp. 45 and 47. EMPHASIS ADDED.
[135] “M.W.” (unidentified, possibly Murray Weidenbaum), “Editorial: The President Needs Our Help Because We Need His,” Fortune, June 1970, pp. 57-58.
[136] Paul Baran, The Political Economy of Growth. (New York; Prometheus Paperbacks, 1957), p. 129.
[137] Nathan Glazer, “The Good Society” (1963), in Remembering the Answers: Essays on the American Student Revolt. (New York; Basic Books, 1970), p. 53
[138] James Reston, “Washington: The President, the People, and the Budget,” NYT/BF, January 18, 1970, p. 14.
[139] Lee Karner, “After Vietnam, What? Industry Has Optimistic View,” NYT special edition, “National Economic Review,” January 11, 1970, p. 11.
[140] Archibald S. Alexander, “The Cost of World Armaments,” Scientific American, 224: 4, October 1969, p. 21.
[141] Murray Weidenbaum, “After Vietnam: Our Vietnamized Economy,” Saturday Review, May 24, 1969, p. 15 (part of the special issue, “After Vietnam: The Dollars and Cents of Peace.”)
[142] John Kenneth Galbraith, “How to Control the Military,” Harper’s, June 1969, p. 31. EMPHASIS IN ORIGINAL.
[143] “The Angry Old Man,” The Nation, April 27, 1970, p. 485.
[144] “The Economics of Imperialism”, panel discussion of papers by Stephen Hymer, Victor Perlo, and Arthur MacEwan; American Economic Review, “Papers and Proceedings of the 82nd Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association,” December 28-30, 1969, pp. 244-245.
[145] Greg Calvert and Carol Neiman, A Disrupted History: The New Left and the New Capitalism. (New York; Random House, 1971), pp. 56-57. The new proletarians reconciled themselves to their state with their delusions of “professionalism”. For what had become of the delusion by the end of the century, see Jill Andresky Fraser, White-Collar Sweatshop: The Deterioriation of Work and Its Rewards in Corporate America. (New York; W.W. Norton, 2001)
[146] Sheldon Wolin and John H. Scharr, The Berkeley Rebellion and Beyond. (New York; New York Review/Vintage/Random House, 1970), pp. 9-10.
[147] Lawrence Soley, “The New Corporate Yen for Scholarship,” in Christopher Simpson (ed.), Universities and Empires; Money and Politics in the Social Sciences During the Cold War. (New York; New Press, 1998), pp. 230-250.
[148] Edward Sampson,”Two Revolutions,” Chapter VII in Harold A. Korn and Associates, Student Activism and Protests. (San Francisco;Jossey-Bass,Inc., 1970), p. 196.
[149] Glazer, “The Good Society,” p. 54. EMPHASIS ADDED.
[150] Geoff Nunberg, “Its Own Reward”, “Commentary” segment on National Public Radio, February 18, 2000. http://www.parc.xerox.com/istl/members/nunberg/virtual.html.
[151] “Internet Paradox”, http://homenet.hcii.cs.cmu.edu/progress/research.html.
[152] Baran, p. 129.
[153] Robert Scheer, American After Nixon: The Age of the Multinationals. (New York; McGraw-Hill, 1974), p. 299.