> Chapter 3
"THE NAKED
CAPITALIST"
(By W. Cleon Skousen. Pub. 1970 by Mr. Skousen. Presently available from
Reviewer,
This short book (121 pages of text) was the first anti-establishment
review of Tragedy and Hope of which I
am aware, but certainly was not the last. Mr. Skousen's credentials stem from a
law degree at George Washington University, his service in the FBI from 1935 to
1951, and a career thereafter involving four years as Police Chief of Salt Lake
City, the editorship of the police magazine Law
and Order, a teaching position at Brigham Young University, and many years
on lecture circuits in the United States and abroad. His work in the FBI was
heavy into investigations of communism, and resulted in his earlier book The Naked Communist which reached the
best seller list in 1961.
Quigley's book, appearing in 1966, was a revelation for which Mr.
Skousen was already primed, and he took immediate advantage of it. He aimed for
the core of the matter on his page 1, on which he related a conversation he had
with Dr. Bella Dodd, "a former member of the National Committee of the
U.S. Communist Party," as saying: "I think the Communist conspiracy
is merely a branch of a much bigger conspiracy!" Skousen then explains:
"Dr. Dodd said she first became aware of some mysterious
super-leadership right after World War 2 when the U.S. Communist Party had
difficulty getting instructions from
Skousen relates the many similar puzzlements he has had during his years
of investigation, and how he had "waited for thirty years for somebody on
the inside of the modern political power structure to talk" as he had long
expected that someone ultimately would. When Quigley's book appeared, he sought
from it clues as to Quigley's motivation to publish. He quotes (p. 5) Quigley's
single disagreement with the elites concerning his feeling that their
historical impact has been so great that history should be permitted to
properly record that impact, but further notes that Quigley "feels that
the forces of total global control are now sufficiently entrenched so that they
can reveal their true identity without fear of being successfully
overturned." Quigley's sympathy with the secret goals of the elites is
demonstrated, says Skousen, in the title of the book, "Hope"
referring to the men composing the elite group, and "Tragedy" the men
opposing that group.
Skousen then goes directly to Quigley's description of the apex of the
secret control structure. Quigley, he says (p. 7), "points out that during
the past two centuries when the peoples of the world were gradually winning
their political freedom from the dynastic monarchies, the major banking
families of Europe and
Skousen then proceeds with a critique and elucidation of Quigley's
account of the development by these major dynastic banking families and their
minions of secret control over much of the political and economic life of
Europe, the
Skousen then quotes Quigley's description of the development in the
As to 'Who controls?' Skousen first explains (p. 15) who does not, namely, the government: "As we
have previously noted, the dynastic 'banker families' in England had
established their monopoly control over finance by setting up the Bank of England
as a privately controlled institution which had the appearance of an official government institution. Similar centers
of financial control had been set up in
And just what were these "revered" financial practices and
goals of the Fed and the other central banks? Skousen (p. 22) quotes Quigley as
saying that the international bankers intended to use the financial power of
And the goals of the dynastic banking families themselves? Mr. Skousen
concludes the following (p. 24): "There is a growing volume of evidence
that the highest centers of political and economic power have been forcing the
entire human race toward a global, socialist, dictatorial-oriented society. And
what has been most baffling about it has been the fact that this drift toward
dictatorship with its inevitable obliteration of a thousand years of struggle
toward human freedom, is being plotted, promoted, and implemented by the
leaders of free nations and the super-rich of those nations whose positions of
affluence would seem to make them the foremost beneficiaries of the
free-enterprise, property-oriented, open society in which so much progress has
been made. Certainly they, above all men, should know that in order for this
system to survive, freedom of action and the integrity of property rights must
be preserved. Then why are the super-capitalists trying to destroy them?
"Dr. Quigley provides an answer to this question but it is so
startling that at first it seems virtually inconceivable. It becomes rational
only as his scattered references to it are collected and digested point by
point. In a nutshell, Dr. Quigley has undertaken to expose what every insider
like himself has known all along - that the world hierarchy of the dynastic
super-rich is out to take over the entire planet, doing it with Socialistic
legislation where possible, but having no reluctance to use Communist
revolution where necessary.
Having thus derived an understanding of the underlying causality
pervading our recent political and economic lives, permitting many heretofore
inexplicable events to suddenly become rationally understandable, Mr. Skousen
proceeds forward with Dr. Quigley's wish to let history record who some of the
major actors really are, and what they did. He thus follows Quigley's
revelations concerning Ruskin, Cecil Rhodes, Milner's Round Table groups, the
formation of the RIIA, the CFR, and the IPR, and their invasion of the media
and the Ivy League colleges. Much of this was discussed in our own review of Tragedy and Hope.
But then Mr. Skousen arrives at and expresses what seems to us to be
another highly cogent insight. We, in our review, discussed at some length
Quigley's revelation concerning the insiders' buildup of Hitler during the
decade before World War 2. Mr. Skousen spends much of the latter part of his
book discussing the corresponding buildup by these same elites of Lenin and
Stalin in the
"Power from any source tends to create an appetite for additional
power. Power coming from wealth tends to create an appetite for political
power, and vice versa. It was almost inevitable that the super-rich would one
day aspire to control not only their own wealth, but the wealth of the whole
world. To achieve this, they were perfectly willing to feed the ambitions of
the power-hungry political conspirators who were committed to the overthrow of
all existing governments, and the establishment of a central world-wide
dictatorship along socialist lines.
"This, of course, was a risky
business for the Anglo-American secret society. The super-rich were gambling
on the expectation that when the violence and reconstruction had been completed
by the political conspirators, the super-rich would then take over ... to guide
mankind hopefully and compulsively into a whole new era of universal peace and
universal prosperity.
"To take such a risk, the cadre of the
super-rich had to ignore the most elementary aspects of the ferocity of the
left-wing conspiratorial mentality. Mao Tse-tung has articulated the basic
Communist conviction that political power comes from the barrel of a gun, and
once they seize control it is their expressed intention to use the gun to
prevent the super-rich or anyone else from taking that control away from them.
[Similarly, Hitler repeatedly told
"Nevertheless, the secret society of the
He then quotes Quigley's defense for the elites' support of such
ruthless psychopaths, claiming that their own altruistic ends justified such
means: "The chief aims of this elaborate, semi-secret organization were
largely commendable: to coordinate the international activities and outlooks of
the English-speaking world into one (which would largely, it is true, be that
of the London group); to work to maintain peace; to help backward, colonial,
and underdeveloped areas to advance toward stability, law and order, and
prosperity along lines somewhat similar
to those taught at Oxford and the University of London (especially the School
of Economics and the Schools of African and Oriental Studies)." (p. 954) Mr.
Skousen adds that his emphasis was inserted so that readers wouldn't miss the
intent of the elites that their remade world be organized along the socialist
lines taught by the listed British educational institutions.
Mr. Skousen then goes into Quigley's revelations concerning why the
elites ventured into supporting left-wing organizations. Having spent a good
part of his career in investigating domestic communist activities, he is in a
remarkable position to compare his knowledge of those activities to Quigley's
bland assertions. He quotes Quigley at length concerning the bankers' efforts,
mostly by Morgan men, to control political parties and movements, naming which
men infiltrated the Republicans, the Democrats, the extreme right, and the
extreme left. He further quotes Quigley concerning the communist front groups
set up by the Morgans, their efforts to block investigation by Congress, their
support of the Institute of Pacific Relations and its infiltration by communist
agents, and then a lengthy section concerning the Council on Foreign Relations,
complete with names of major actors up to the time of publishing his book
(e.g., Alger Hiss, Harry Dexter White, Owen Lattimore, Christian Herter, John
and Allen Dulles, Nelson Rockefeller, George Ball, Henry Kissinger, and many
others).
Skousen then gets to the matter of the tax-exempt foundations, and their
investigation by the Reece Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives, a
matter which Quigley himself had discussed in connection with congressional
probing into IPR policies and actions. Skousen goes a little beyond our own
review of Quigley's observations in that he also attempts to summarize the
findings of Rene Wormser's book, Foundations:
Their Power and Influence, which Quigley had noted and then dismissed as
perhaps shocking to Wormser but not to him. Wormser's summarization (reproduced
by Skousen, p. 60) of the efforts of the foundations to dominate
"7. Foundations use their funds to subvert and control American
education.
a. 'Conform or no grant!' (p. 140)
b. The birth of Educational Radicalism. (pp. 143-145)
c. Carnegie finances a socialist charter for education. (pp. 146-152)
d. The radical educators. (pp. 152-155)
e. The Progressive Education Association. (pp. 155-156)
f. Financing and promoting socialist textbooks. (pp. 156-167)
g. Financing Left-wing reference works. (pp. 167-171)
h. The National Education Association not designed to advance 'American'
education. (pp. 142, 145, 160, 164-165, 216-217)"
Noting next that Wormser's book then spends 79 pages exclusively on the
Ford Foundation, Skousen proceeds to combine his own and Wormser's knowledge
concerning the personnel and works of that organization. Following the death of
Henry Ford, Sr. in 1947, the scramble for control of the foundation was won by
Paul G. Hoffman, who, says Skousen (p. 62), "was not only a member of the
London-Wall Street nexus, but had been director of the principal propaganda arm
of the Council on Foreign Relations and also a trustee for the Institute of
Pacific Relations." Hoffman then brought in "the well-known global
collectivist, Robert Hutchins" as his associate director, and through their
joint efforts, "By 1956 the Ford Foundation had spent more than one
billion dollars in contributions to 'education' and had thereby become a
well-nigh all-encompassing influence over hundreds of colleges and
universities."
The directorship of the foundation was handed in 1966 to McGeorge Bundy,
shortly after he was hounded out of L. B. Johnson's administration by Congress
because of his apparent efforts to support a communist coup attempt in the
Mr. Skousen, after first noting the establishment's continually felt
fear of exposure frequently alluded to by Dr. Quigley, then describes in some
detail several attempts at such exposure following World War 2, some of which
he was personally involved with. Included are: (1) revelations by Major Racey
Jordan (From Major Jordan's Diaries,
N.Y., Harcourt, Brace Co., 1952) concerning shipments to Russia, ordered in
1943 by Harry Hopkins under the Russian lend-lease program, of refined uranium
and atomic bomb research documentation; (2) the U.S. involvement in disarming
Chiang Kai-shek and the resulting conquest of China by the Chinese communists,
to the anger and disgust of Americans when they began to find out about it; (3)
the exposure in 1948 of the State Department's Alger Hiss as a communist spy;
(4) the firing of General MacArthur during the Korean War for revealing to
Congress that he was now fighting Chinese communist "volunteers"
after essentially defeating the North Korean army; (5) the publication in July
1953 of the Senate Judiciary Committee's famous Jenner Report, entitled
"Interlocking Subversion in Government Departments"; (6) the public
stir raised by Senator Joe McCarthy in the early 1950's concerning communist
infiltration into the State Department and elsewhere, activities which evoked
paroxysms of rage and malevolence from Carroll Quigley (pp. 928 ff.); (7) the
flood of anti-communist literature from such as J. Edgar Hoover, W. Cleon
Skousen, Dean Manion, Dan Smoot, Robert Welch, Billy James Hargis and others,
and the beginning of televised mass meetings and radio broadcasts concerning
the communist menace, responded to by the establishment elites with the Reuther
Memorandum proposing government measures to curb these activities, one of which
was the FCC's "Fairness Doctrine," which required radio and TV
stations to give free rebuttal time to anyone criticized within another
purchased program; and (8) the rise of Senator Barry Goldwater as a
presidential candidate challenging the establishment, an effort which again evoked
a vitriolic diatribe from Quigley, and which the well-oiled establishment
handled with a fair degree of ease.
Mr. Skousen ends the development of his narrative with a description, as
of knowledge available to him in 1970, of the Bilderberg Group. Their conferences,
he says (p. 108), "are held each year as an international master planning
conclave. They are secret and attendance is restricted to invited 'guests.'
These turn out to be about 100 men from the top inner circle representing the
four major dimensions of power: the international banking dynasties, their
corporations involved in vast, international enterprises, the American
tax-exempt foundations, and the establishment representatives who have gained
high offices in government, especially the
Skousen identifies the first meeting as being held in May 1954 at the
Bilderberg Hotel in
Mr. Skousen summarizes that the elites who wish to set up their world
dictatorship recognize their main enemy to be the great middle class of the
Mr. Skousen finally thanks Dr. Quigley for gratuitously giving us a peek
behind the curtain, helping us to identify our real enemy and thus better aim
our arrows of reform. Our future task, he says (p. 117), is political in
nature, and should be aimed at "throwing the rascals out. Every Democrat,
Republican, or Independent from the top of the federal government right down to
the lowest official on the local level, who has been consistently supporting
the collectivist policies and tactics of the global network, should be
summarily replaced as fast as the electoral process will permit."
Truly a daunting job, but possible. Mr. Skousen then concludes, "It
is time we got on with the task."