A couple of summers ago I read a lovely book called “The Metaphysical Club – A Story of Ideas in America“, a Pulitzer Prize winner, by Louis Menand. The book is about a group of philosophers: William James, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Charles Sanders Peirce, and John Dewey, thinkers who grew out of the yeast culture of Emerson and Thoreau’s Boston. The period in which these men worked, was the aftermath of the American Civil War, a time marked by an explosion of sordid robber barons and hucksters of every stripe whose patron saint might be P. T. Barnum, certainly not Saint Dismas, the “good thief”.
At that time two America’s coexisted, one dark and sleazy: the America of Jay Gould and Boss Tweed and another pure and bright: the America of James and Holmes. As different as they were, both of them, each in their way, were as real, as clearly drawn, as mordant and as “what you see is what you get” as the writings of Mark Twain and Herman Melville.
While I was reading the book I kept getting the feeling that the sense of reality that permeated that era of America’s past, has been almost entirely lost. I have experienced some of that reality myself in the person of my grandmother, who was born and raised in 19th century America, and the men and women she grew up with in the tiny Midwestern village, where I spent many of my summers as a small boy. I wondered, while reading “The Metaphysical Club” when and how America had become such a sinkhole of spin and mendacious euphemism, storytelling and bullshit. I had no answer, only the feeling of a better, nobler, America that had been lost. An America I am much proud of, hardly recognizable in the bloated, deluded, self-indulgent America of today. Who was responsible for wrecking it, when, how? I had no answer.
Then, the other day, a good friend sent me the link to the video that I have posted at the top of this piece and I suddenly was getting an idea when bullshit became America’s native dialect. When I saw it, I thought it might have been some historical fiction dreamed up by Doctorow.
BBC resume of “The Century of Self”:
The story of the relationship between Sigmund Freud and his American nephew, Edward Bernays. Bernays invented the public relations profession in the 1920s and was the first person to take Freud’s ideas to manipulate the masses. He showed American corporations how they could make people want things they didn’t need by systematically linking mass-produced goods to their unconscious desires.
Bernays was one of the main architects of the modern techniques of mass-consumer persuasion, using every trick in the book, from celebrity endorsement and outrageous PR stunts, to eroticising the motorcar.
His most notorious coup was breaking the taboo on women smoking by persuading them that cigarettes were a symbol of independence and freedom. But Bernays was convinced that this was more than just a way of selling consumer goods. It was a new political idea of how to control the masses. By satisfying the inner irrational desires that his uncle had identified, people could be made happy and thus docile.
It was the start of the all-consuming self which has come to dominate today’s world.
Another event of this time which made a lasting impression on me was a meeting with William James the philosopher. I shall never forget one little scene that occurred as we were on a walk together. He stopped suddenly, handed me a bag he was carrying and asked me to walk on, saying that he would catch me up as soon as he had got through an attack of angina pectoris which was just coming on. He died of that disease a year later; and I have always wished that I might be as fearless as he was in the face of approaching death.
The video shows that it was Bernays’ public relations skills that made a scientist like Freud and his very complex and esoteric theories a household word in middle class America on the order of Picasso and Charley Chaplin and led to today’s enervating psychobabble and of course led to the insidious and Orwellian monster of American marketing.
Where Freud saw knowledge for healing Bernays just saw money and he showed America’s corporations how to mine humanity’s dark side for profit. Pimping is an honest dollar compared to Bernays’ game.
One of the great ironies of this video is to learn that Eddy Bernays, the man who taught American women to smoke, was also a major influence on an admirer of his, Joseph Goebbels, who used “Uncle Siggy’s” insights into the levers and pulleys of human emotions to whip up a bestial frenzy in the highly civilized German people, a frenzy that ultimately killed and “smoked” six million European Jews. Sigmund Freud fortunately died in the first months of the war and so never really learned what use his ideas had finally been put to.
If you stop and think about it Bernays may be one of the most poisonous and evil men in history, certainly in America’s history, nobody, not even Ayn Rand, can touch him.
It is an hour long with three more to follow, but it is a true treasure. Please watch this video.



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Highly recommended, as are Adam Curtis’s other documentaries: The Power of Nightmares, and The Trap – What Happened to our Dream of Freedom. Definitely Must-See TV! Check him out on wikipedia.
When my husband was introducing me to the joys of horticulture, I had a hard time comprehending the danger of ‘invasive and accidental’ cultivars. Eventually, when I tried removing bermuda grass from the vegetable garden, and cardinal vine from my evergreens I began to understand. Once established, vigilance and industry become the watchwords. Short of a scorched-earth practice, they can never be eradicated.
As I learned about Bernays, I recognized that he lived long enough to educate and saturate a culture where his teachings could never be totally eradicated. His teachings, apparently, are here to stay; and even with vigilance and industry (like teaching others of his poisonous PR skills) the poison he spewed forth will continue just because the very nature of (most) human beings provide fertile ground for propagation.
Walter Lipmann played an important part in war propaganda too.
http://www.zpub.com/un/chomsky.html
……..In 1921, the famous American journalist Walter Lippmann said that the art of democracy requires what he called the “manufacture of consent.” This phrase is an Orwellian euphemism for thought control. The idea is that in a state such as the U.S. where the government can’t control the people by force, it had better control what they think.. The Soviet Union is at the opposite end of the spectrum from us in its domestic freedoms. It’s essentially a country run by the bludgeon. It’s very easy to determine what propaganda is in the USSR: what the state produces is propaganda.
That’s the kind of thing that Orwell described in 1984 (not a very good book in my opinion). 1984 is so popular because it’s trivial and it attacks our enemies. If Orwell had dealt with a different problem– ourselves–his book wouldn’t have been so popular. In fact, it probably wouldn’t have been published….
The Noam Chomsky book Manufacturing Consent is excellent.
> 1984 (not a very good book in my opinion). 1984 is so
> popular because it’s trivial and it attacks our enemies.
> If Orwell had dealt with a different problem– ourselves
Wow, ragging on “1984.” Impressive. Talk about not getting it…
Dameocrat is right. Orwell’s book, was a propaganda set piece for the Cold War, required reading at school in the ’50s. And no, it didn’t deal with “ourselves” and the dangers “we” represent for the planet and the species… and yes Chomsky’s book is wonderful.