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Generation '68: The Elite Revolution and Its Legacy by
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 176 of 474
The book Where do we go from here? Chaos or Community, supposedly authored by King, was ghostwritten by Levison. Levison was cited as stating to Clarence Jones (King’s other primary aide, legal counsel, and liaison with New York oligarchs) that King was such a “slow thinker” he should not be permitted to say anything without clearing it with them. In 1961, Levison became a treasurer of the SCLC.
— Jul 13, 2025 02:38AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 175 of 474
Stanley Levison was Martin Luther King chief aide and speech writer Levison combined his career as a realtor lawyer and financial coordinator of the Communist Party USA and the Manhattan branch of the American Jewish Congres Levison saw the Selma to Montgomery march as epochal writing to King For the first time, white and Negro from all over the nation physically joined the struggle in a pilgrimage to the deep south
— Jul 13, 2025 02:35AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 152 of 474
Ultimately, the Peace Corps served the purpose of the establishment in contributing toward what is euphemistically called “civil society,” the vast globalist network of interlinked governmental agencies, NGOs, corporations, and foundations that topple states in the name of “the people” and declare wars against “rogue states” in the name of “peace.”
— Jul 13, 2025 02:01AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 129 of 474
The year that he testified before the Senate committee he remarked to author and journalist Gary Allen, an expert on the New Left: The radicals think they are fighting the forces of the superrich, like Rockefeller and Ford, and don’t realize that it is precisely such forces which are behind their own revolution, financing it, and using it for their own purposes.
— Jul 12, 2025 11:54AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 128 of 474
The New Left was nurtured by academia, romanticized by the news media and entertainment industry, marketed by the major publishers, subsidized by the CIA and tax-exempt foundations, and employed by federal agencies such as USAID and the Peace Corps and by government-funded “community projects.”
— Jul 12, 2025 11:51AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 120 of 474
The same process operates today relatively openly in the color revolutions orchestrated by a combination of nondefense bureaucracies and global corporations, such as the US State Department, USAID, the National Endowment for Democracy, and Open Society, while on the ground there are the same types of befuddled, rioting dupes that comprised the New Left of the 1960s and 1970s.
— Jul 12, 2025 11:39AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 117 of 474
IPS was also on the cutting edge of the anti-apartheid movement. In 1977, it began a South Africa project that produced a series of studies and books on the subject. In 1985, Fellow Roger Wilkins helped found the Free South Africa Movement, which organized a year-long series of demonstrations that led to the imposition of U.S. sanctions.
— Jul 12, 2025 11:33AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 116 of 474
Present funders of IPS include the Ford Foundation, the Open Society Foundations, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Moriah Fund Inc., the NoVo Fund (Warren Buffett), the Samuel Rubin Foundation, and the Stewart R. Mott Foundation.350 IPS’s total income in 2018 (the latest available figures) was $4,556,000, of which 59 percent was raised from foundations, and 36 percent from individuals.
— Jul 12, 2025 11:30AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 112 of 474
After the Chicago riots of October 8th through October 11th, 1969, iconic in New Left history as the so-called Days of Rage, IPS director Arthur Waskow sent $500 to Neil Burnbaum, SDS coordinator of funds, for bail bonds and legal fees to assist 248 persons arrested during the riots.
— Jul 12, 2025 11:17AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 107 of 474
Despite the extremism of the NCNP, like many New Left organizations, it enjoyed tax-exempt status, while moderate conservative organizations such as Christian Crusade and the Committee of Christian Laymen, Inc., were rejected for tax exemption. The NCNP was integrally connected with the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, which had assumed the role of its parent body, the Fund for the Republic.
— Jul 12, 2025 11:05AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 107 of 474
The importance of the NCNP can be gauged by its central role in organizing the iconic New Left riots at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in 1968. A congressional investigation into the riots determined that the New Left mobilization had been organized at a meeting of the NCNP held at Columbia University on October 17th, 1967.
— Jul 12, 2025 11:04AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 106 of 474
The immediate task of the NCNP was to support “liberal” candidates for public office, by “building a skilled cadre of campaign workers to move in where they are needed,” according to national cochairman Simon Casady. Such a cadre could quickly be converted into street rioters. The “Community for New Politics” was organized for this purpose.
— Jul 12, 2025 11:02AM
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Notice_the_nose
is on page 97 of 474
“Democratization” of the campuses and curricula was a key demand of the New Left. It was also on the agenda of the Ford Foundation. In supporting the turmoil on the campuses, the oligarchy aimed to deconstruct what remained of the traditional basis of Western education. The Ford Foundation financed the New Left revolt on campus.
— Jul 12, 2025 10:47AM
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