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Default Resurrecting Woodstock?

Resurrecting Woodstock?

Elizabeth Whitcombe

September 10, 2009

"Sex, drugs and rock 'n’ roll. A time-proven recipe for poor choices. Forty years ago this summer a group of young promoters organized what is regarded as a milestone in popular music history. The result was a celebration of free love and tuning out.


The Woodstock Music Festival's original producer Michael Lang had
planned a revival for its 40th anniversary. The festival was canceled
at the last minute due to lack of interest from sponsors.

If the festival was simply a money-making scheme, it was spectacularly
ill-advised. The last minute rollback was unprofessional and
unexpected considering Lang's seasoned career. Could it be that the
revival was aiming at something more?

The hippie generation was the death knell of what remained of
traditional America. Woodstock was an advertisement glorifying that
betrayal. So why do we need to relive it? Because the Obama-rose is
fading.

What was Lang Selling?

The counterculture of the 1960s celebrated self-destructive behavior.
Young people were told not to trust their parents, but to trust their
university professors and pop culture figures instead. It was the
flowering of Saul Alinsky and his anti-Western propaganda campaign.
But behind the mask of flowers there was a warped and twisted face.

The 1960s drug culture has its roots in the US government's truth-drug
experiments for the MK-ULTRA program. The CIA contracted professors to
test out various drugs, often on student volunteers. These programs
were carried out at almost every elite US university.[1]

John Marks, a former officer of the United States Department of State,
argues that the 1960s LSD craze was at least in part started by drugs
leaked from University laboratories. The coordinators of these student-
guinea-pig projects were Sidney Gottleib and Harold Abramson.[2]

It is ironic that the generation which claimed to be rejecting 'the
man' was actually "the man's" most abject stooge.

The Piper Gets Paid

In Anger in White America — Again, Prof. Kevin MacDonald points out a
political trend that isn't going away soon: disenfranchised Whites
getting mad and hitting the streets. The situation has come to the
point where the powers that be can no longer ignore it — see
Lexington's recent Economist editorial, Still Crazy After All These
Years. Yes Micklethwait, we do want our country back.

Trick question: if your tax base is angry enough to make The Economist
nervous, what do you do? More of the same, of course. Enter Mr. Lang
and his magical mystery bus.

Mr. Lang promotes events — he is a professional crowd-manipulator. He
made his name advertising the same lifestyle choices as Theodor Adorno
and Ahmet Ertegun. Atlantic Records was keen to help the Woodstock
project: The firm issued the original “live” festival album. Ertegun
had money coming out of his ears — and so did Lang!

In fact, the creators of Woodstock had the money before they had the
vision. On March 22, 1967, two of the festival's four founders, John
Roberts and Joel Rosenman, put the following advertisement in the New
York Times and The Wall Street Journal: “Young Men with Unlimited
Capital looking for interesting, legitimate investment opportunities
and business propositions.”

Lo and behold, an investment opportunity found them — by way of Ray
Charles' lawyer Miles Lourie. (Charles was Atlantic Records' star
performer.) Lourie sent Artie Kornfeld and Michael Lang to meet the
pair. In February 1969 the quartet embarked on the project that would
become The Woodstock Music and Art Fair. Incidentally, Artie Kornfeld
was a friend of Alan Livingston, president of Capitol Records.

Despite limited festival experience, the boys signed up a roster of A-
list performers. 300,000 people turned up to get baked and express
their collective individuality. It was an orgy of expressive
individualism.

Woodstock Attendees Expressing Themselves

In the candid words of Woodstock MC Wavy Gravy, “The whole world was
watching us, and we had a chance to show the world how it could be if
we ran things.”

Let's take a closer look at what Messieurs Lang, Kornfeld, Roberts and
Rosenman were promoting: Jimi Hendrix, Ravi Shankar, Arlo Guthrie, The
Who — a little something for everyone. But whatever the flavor, the
message is the same: sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll.

Turn on, Tune in, Drop out

I am not being facetious when I say that sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll
create the perfect cocktail for poor decisions. Political philosophers
have recognized this for millennia. In Homer's Odyssey, the Sirens and
the Lotus Eaters were not mere literary fancy. They were an open
warning to Greeks about the dangers of opting out of life in a
competitive world. Ulysses lost his reason to the Sirens' seductive
songs; the Lotus Eaters lost all thoughts of their home. “Having lost
all thoughts of their home, tradition and identity” is an apt
description of the Hippie generation and their progeny.

Most people don't want to think. Jean Cocteau, a French philosopher
and the originator of many of Theodor Adorno's ideas on music and
culture, had this to say about what the masses want from music:

The crowd likes works which impose their melody, which hypnotise,
which hypertrophy its sensibility to the point of putting the critical
sense to sleep. The crowd is feminine; it likes to obey or bite.
(Opium: The Illustrated Diary of His Cure, Cocteau, 1930.)

We live in the age of crowds; and the crowd must be told what to
believe. Their instruction is not an exercise in reason or logic. Alex
Kurtagic hit the nail on the head in What Will It Take?:

In previous articles I have argued (see here and here) that
superiority of argument is a necessary but insufficient condition for
inspiring a change in the status quo, and that mastery of style trumps
superiority of argument every time.

Every day Messieurs Lang, Kornfield, Roberts and Rosenman thank G*d
for the above fact. It has made them rich men.

Mr. Lang is hyper-aware that crowds must be engaged on an emotional
level. The naive students from the Summer of Love were putty in his
hands. If he didn't sell them Herbert Marcuse’s “return of the
repressed” through their libidos, he would do it through frying their
limbic system or through the persuasive power of music.

It is almost comic how the popular music industry took on the slogan
“sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll.” It might as well be “We'll make sure
they don't think!”

But why is this cocktail so effective?

Sex is a revolutionary tool in the democratic age. De Sade wrote
repeatedly about how the perfect revolutionary agents are sex-sated:
They will be too distracted, and yes, too tired to identify and pursue
their political interests. If you can convince a young person that
free love is the way to go, you could very well set them on an
emotionally unstable track for the rest of their lives. Not a bad plan
when you've a democracy to manage.

Sex is only one prong of a three-pronged attack.

Anthony Damasio has done fantastic work looking at how the “emotional
brain,” more properly the limbic system, helps us reason efficiently.
Our limbic system is delineated by a higher concentration of dopamine,
serotonin, and other chemical receptors which are very susceptible to
the influence of illegal drugs like LSD. Taking these drugs alters the
chemical balance in the part of your brain that is responsible for
effective decision-making. As everyone knows, upsetting this balance
will impair one's judgment, sometimes permanently. If we can't sate
the voters, let's fry 'em.

The final ingredient is persuasive sound.

I have written a lot about the emotional power of music and its
usefulness in propaganda. Suffice it to say that beautiful music is an
unusually powerful advertising tool. The music presented at Woodstock
was beautiful — and often easy to listen to. It did a great job at
making the ideas of Lang and his friends look good.

Jean Cocteau had remarkable insight about manipulating people. In his
1918 essay Cock and Harlequin, he makes the following suggestion to
men who wish to lead the crowd through music:

CONCERNING A CERTAIN FRIVOLOUS ATTITUDE. If you feel you have a
missionary's vocation, don't hide your head like an ostrich; go
amongst the negroes and fill your pockets with worthless bric-a-brac.

NEGROES. It is only by distributing lots of bric-a-brac and by much
imitation of the phonograph that you will succeed in taming the
negroes and making yourself understood.

Then substitute gradually your own voice for the phonograph and raw
metal for the trinkets. (Cock and Harlequin, Cocteau, 1918; emphasis
in text)

The reader should not assume that by “NEGROES” Cocteau means just the
Blacks. Rather, his advice on how to control people through music
applies to anyone without musical education. Free men take
responsibility for their choices and actions. Cocteau was not in the
business of flattering slaves.

Woodstock was a smorgasbord of the popular music that Adorno credited
to the “culture industry.” Adorno knew all about It — see The
Mysterious German Professor.

Mr. Lang's glaring error was assuming that the 'flower power' would
still work today.

In 1960s America, kids could play on the streets and college grads
could get jobs. Things are different now — it is much harder to be
naive. No matter how many movies are made, no matter how many Rolling
Stones articles are printed, and no matter how many Twitter plugs are
sent, 'hippie' is now synonymous with ''loser'. Turning on and
dropping out is not likely to appeal to today's young people in a
society where the elites are busy importing a new people. Hence the
lack of interest in Woodstock II.

Some few of the hippies did go on to achieve something, but their
record is not pretty. Bill Clinton and his fratricidal war in
Yugoslavia (not to mention his sex addiction). Mrs. Clinton and her
myriad of scandals. Or the out-of-touch Tom Hayden , still "hating the
man" while Los Angeles sinks into the abyss. The list is long and
uninspiring.

Bill and Hillary Being Hip in the 60s

But before Mr. Lang embarks on his next venture, he may want to
consider what Cocteau had to say to the music-manipulators:

Take care to conceal your capacity to work miracles, for “if they knew
you were a missionary they would tear out your tongue and
nails.” (Cock and Harlequin, Cocteau, 1918.)

And Lang's fans should consider what Cocteau had to say about the
slavish crowd:

What are the thoughts of the canvas on which a masterpiece is being
painted? “I am being soiled, brutally treated and concealed from
view.” Thus men grumble at their destiny, however fair. (Cock and
Harlequin, Cocteau, 1918.)

So what do I predict? The New York Times will rave over Woodstock-
inspired flotsam, festival or no. Burnt-out sixty-somethings will try
to recapture their youth. And there will be many, many more sleepless
nights at The Economist. "

Elizabeth Whitcombe (email her) is a graduate of MIT in Economics with
a concentration in International Economics. She is a financial analyst
and free-lance writer living in New York City. Visit her website.

[1] National Security Archives, John Marks Collection. Accessed
October, 2008. [Return to article.]

[2] The CIA is often portrayed as a WASPish, right-wing organization.
A careful reading of John Mark's book shows that the truth is quite
different. Sidney Gottlieb and Harold Abramson were both Jews;
Gottlieb had unmatched and consistent control over the LSD projects
as head of the Technical Services Staff. He and Abramson had no
scruples about using the flower of 1950s American youth for drug
testing.

Mark's book lists many left-wing notables who collaborated with the
research (although sometimes claiming ignorance of where the money
came from), including the notorious Boasian fellow traveler Margaret
Mead, Jay Schulman (Rutgers, sociology), Adolf A Berle (high
government official in the FDR Administration and New York Liberal
Party Chairman). The same goes for Francis Stonor Saunders in her book
The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters. She
mentions Jean Cocteau, Nicolas Nabokov, Arthur Koestler, Arthur
Schlesinger, and Bertrand Russell In fact, WASPish right-wingers in
influential positions at the CIA look quite thin on the ground.
[Return to article.]

Permanent URL: http://www.theoccidentalobserver.net...Woodstock.html
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