Worldwide LaRouche Youth Movement

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The Worldwide LaRouche Youth Movement (WLYM or LYM) is a political body linked to controversial American political figure Lyndon LaRouche. Founded in 1999, the organization has revitalized the LaRouche movement with more new members inducted than ever before.[citation needed] Critics have called the LaRouche movement a political cult, among other things.[1]

The LaRouche Youth Movement has a "war room" in Leesburg, Virginia.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

LaRouche movement
Helga Zepp-LaRouche
Lyndon LaRouche
Views of Lyndon LaRouche
United States v. LaRouche
U.S. Presidential campaigns
Political organizations
Bürgerrechtsbewegung
Solidarität (BüSo)
Citizens Electoral Council
European Workers Party
LaRouche movement
LaRouche Youth Movement
National Caucus of
Labor Committees
Schiller Institute
People
Amelia Boynton Robinson
Anton Chaitkin
Jacques Cheminade
Janice Hart
Jeremiah Duggan
Kenneth Kronberg
Michael Billington
Defunct
California Proposition 64
North American Labour Party
Party for the
Commonwealth of Canada
U.S. Labor Party
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Begun in 1999, it is perhaps the most significant change in the LaRouche movement since its founder's 1994 release from prison. The recruitment of young people in the 18–25 year old age bracket has reportedly brought more members into the LaRouche organization than at any time in the past,[citation needed] and as a result of the Internet, there are active chapters in nations like Japan where LaRouche has no official organization. Most recently the LYM has expanded its activity into the African nations of South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique.[2]

LaRouche explicitly created his youth movement to address what he calls the "baby-boomer problem" among his membership and more generally among the US population. LaRouche writes of "a new quality of youth movement in the U.S.A., a new youth ferment whose existence reflected a certain special quality of opposition to the cultural legacy and life-style of their "Baby Boomer" parents' generation."[3] Avi Klein of the Washington Monthly describes this as an element of a campaign LaRouche created to blame the "first generation" of his own movement for fundraising failures, and to appeal to young members by channelling "the rage new acolytes felt toward their parents at a nearby, internal enemy".[4]

LYM members have been active in the Democratic Party at the state and local levels. In 2006, LaRouche Youth Movement activist and Los Angeles County Democratic Central Committee member Cody Jones was honored as "Democrat of the Year" for the 43rd Assembly District of California, by the Los Angeles County Democratic Party.[5] At the April 2007, California State Democratic Convention, LYM activist Quincy O'Neal was elected vice-chairman of the California State Democratic Black Caucus,[6] and Wynneal Inocentes was elected corresponding secretary of the Filipino Caucus.[7] The group received $462,850 in 2006 from the LaRouche Political Action Committee.[8]

In an article in the University of California, Berkeley independent student newspaper, The Daily Californian on February 11, 2004, reporter David Cohn described the local chapter of the LYM as "30 college-aged youths" who spent several hours each day undergoing instruction provided by the LaRouche organization. One member, 23-year-old Jason Ross, told Cohn that he had dropped out of Stanford University in his junior year to join the movement. "We are in a complete breakdown of the financial system and we know that. We can use our time in a more appropriate manner than going to school,” he said. Cohn also talked to three other members who had all quit school to join the movement. The Daily Californian reported the movement's numbers as "about 100 young people from Los Angeles to Oakland" who "travel to dozens of college campuses aggressively recruiting members and not hesitating to ask newcomers to quit school."

[edit] Campaigns and pedagogy

The LaRouche youth state that they are fighting for an "intellectual Renaissance," and in addition to conventional political activity such as distributing literature in the streets, they spend time in what are called "Monge brigades," described as leaderless discussion groups where the members work to master important discoveries in classical science and art.[9] Among the topics frequently pursued are the ideas of Plato, Johannes Kepler, Friedrich Schiller, and Carl Friedrich Gauss.[10][11] There are also performance workshops on the dramas of William Shakespeare and choral compositions of J.S. Bach and other classical composers, as well as African-American Spirituals.[12][13] Regular "cadre schools" are held in the United States and Europe, where Lyndon LaRouche and other senior members of LaRouche organizations give lectures and take questions from LYM youth.[14]

From 2006 to 2007 members of the "Basement Team"[15] produced an extensive set of computer animations described as a pedagogical tour through Johannes Kepler's New Astronomy[5] and "Harmony of the World",[6] plus another set on the discovery of the orbit of Ceres entitled "The Mind of Gauss."[7] After an anonymous website appeared with similar material and animations, team members asserted that it was a plagiarized and inferior copy of their own work.[16]

Beginning in early 2008, the Basement Team began to produce videos, including an 80-minute documentary on the clash between the American System of economics and the Free Trade system. It is entitled "Firewall -- in Defense of the Nation State."[8]

LYM members frequently combine political activity with choral music performance.[17] They sang outside the Democratic Party Convention in Boston in 2004, and in 2007 they performed choral music with lyrics about impeaching Dick Cheney in classrooms at Harvard and Boston University.[18][19]

On October 23, 2006, a group of LaRouche Youth Movement members twice disrupted a Connecticut U.S. Senate debate between Alan Schlesinger, Ned Lamont, and Joseph Lieberman. According to The Day, as Joe Lieberman spoke, the hecklers "sang a harmonized ode targeting Vice President Dick Cheney, which, according to the group's website, is unofficially titled 'The Fat-Ass Nazi Song'." [20]

During the election campaign of 2006, the LaRouche Youth Movement came into conflict with organizations including the Ayn Rand Institute, which the LYM accused of promoting genocide in speeches by its representatives at various campuses. LYM members confronted Institute executive director Yaron Brook at various universities across the US, disrupting his speeches. The LaRouche activists frequently employed Guerilla theater tactics. In one case, at the University of California, Irvine, 15 LYM members were arrested.[21]

During 2007, LYM members have been seen in on the streets, campuses and conferences emphasizing two issues in particular: a call by LaRouche for the impeachment of Dick Cheney, and the assertion that the theory of human-caused Global warming is a fraud motivated by Malthusianism. On this latter issue, LYM have confronted Al Gore on several occasions at his public events. In Argentina, LYM leader Betiana Gonzalez disrupted Gore's speech after he recommended that Argentina reduce its population.[22] A similar incident took place earlier in the year in Montreal, Canada.[23] In the Philippines, LYM members debated a variety of spokespersons for the Global Warming theory.[24]

The LYM has criticized Campus Watch and the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, claiming that they act as "thought police" to stifle opposition to the Iraq war and the Bush administration.[25]

On November 27, 2007, the LYM launched a campaign against social networking websites such as MySpace and FaceBook, with the mass distribution of a pamphlet entitled "The Noosphere vs. The Blogosphere: Is the Devil in Your Laptop?".[26] The pamphlet says that Rupert Murdoch, owner of MySpace, and Microsoft, owner of Facebook (Microsoft only owns 2.5% of Facebook), are involved in social engineering to destroy the cognitive powers and potential for political leadership among young people. It also attacks Wikipedia in similar terms.[27]

[edit] Criticism and accusations

According to Scott McLemee: "The emergence of the group is all the more surprising, given that LaRouche himself has long since become the walking punchline to a very strange joke. He is known for some of the most baroque conspiracy theories ever put into circulation. Members of the LYM now deny that he ever accused the Queen of England of drug trafficking – though in fact, he did exactly that throughout the 1980s. At the time, he won admirers on the extreme right wing by denouncing Henry Kissinger as an agent of the KGB and calling for AIDS patients to be quarantined."[28] LaRouche and his organization, in fact, dispute all three of McLemee's characterizations of LaRouche's ideas (see LaRouche vs. the media.)

After spending six days at a Schiller Institute conference and LYM cadre school in Germany, 22-year-old Jeremiah Duggan, a Jewish student from London who was studying in Paris, was believed to have run onto a busy road in what the British coroner called a "state of terror," and was killed. The German police investigation concluded that it was a suicide, and the London Metropolitan police concurred. A private forensic consultant said that he had found evidence of serious assault with a blunt instrument, but no public authorities have given credence to this claim.[29]. A LaRouche spokesman has said the young man killed himself because he was disturbed. In October 2004, a British inquest into Duggan's death heard allegations from his mother that LYM and the Schiller Institute may have used brain washing techniques on her son to persuade him to join the movement.[30]

An ex-member of the LaRouche youth movement has asserted that the LaRouche Youth Movement calls parents "brainwashed baby boomers".[31] Ex-member Michael Winsted says that although members are convinced that they are involved in important political work, the job of most members is only to collect money and recruit more members.[32] He says that group leaders "were constantly asking us if we would die for these ideas" and that members that become critical or disillusioned by the movement often become the focus of brutal psychological attacks by the other members, including accusations of having "mother issues", of homosexuality, sexual deviance, and allegiance to anti-LaRouche conspiracies.[33] They are often encouraged and even led by the group's managers. Winsted recounts:

I'm caught off-guard, like, what the hell just happened?...The yelling goes on for maybe five or 10 minutes while I'm furiously backpedaling...They call it making somebody a self-conscious organizer...It is about getting somebody to break down and cry, just to have an emotional collapse. Once you do that, then people are malleable.[34]

Jeffrey Steinberg of the LaRouche Movement responded by portraying Michael Winsted as an agent of the Washington Post, who "briefly infiltrated the Baltimore chapter of the LYM."[35]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Avi Klein, "Publish and Perish: The mysterious death of Lyndon LaRouche's printer," New Republic, online here
  2. ^ a b LaRouche Youth Movement in Africa: Reconstruct the World Economy!
  3. ^ Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., "The New Cultural-Paradigm Shift", Lyndon LaRouche PAC, May 31, 2005 (accessed 3 February 2007).
  4. ^ "Publish and Perish: The mysterious death of Lyndon LaRouche's printer" By Avi Klein, The Washington Monthly, November 2007
  5. ^ LYM Member Cody Jones Honored at L.A. County Democratic Party Awards Dinner | LaRouche Political Action Committee
  6. ^ LaRouche Youth Movement Wins a California Democratic Leadership Post | LaRouche Political Action Committee
  7. ^ Older Generation Steps Aside to Allow the Youth to Take Political Leadership | LaRouche Political Action Committee
  8. ^ "The LaRouche Youth Movement", Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed July 11, 2007 [1]
  9. ^ http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:JasPGTg9CrsJ:larouchein2004.net/pages/youth/2004/040204eccs.htm+LYM+%22monge+brigade%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=opera
  10. ^ http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:JasPGTg9CrsJ:larouchein2004.net/pages/youth/2004/040204eccs.htm+LYM+%22monge+brigade%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=opera
  11. ^ LYM Announces Advance in Kepler Studies
  12. ^ LYM Unleashes Renaissance in the Athens of America | LaRouche Political Action Committee
  13. ^ Counterpoint As Political Strategy Classical Organizing in Boston | LaRouche Political Action Committee
  14. ^ http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:JasPGTg9CrsJ:larouchein2004.net/pages/youth/2004/040204eccs.htm+LYM+cadre+schools&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=opera
  15. ^ Contact Us
  16. ^ Kepler's Discovery, or the Hoofprint of Incompetence?
  17. ^ Counterpoint As Political Strategy Classical Organizing in Boston | LaRouche Political Action Committee
  18. ^ Noah S. Bloom, "Singing LaRouchians Interrupt Class", The Harvard Crimson, 2 February 2007 (accessed 3 February 2007).
  19. ^ Christa Majoras, "Activist group trespasses on BU property", The Daily Free Press, 31 January 2007 (accessed 3 February 2007).
  20. ^ Selected Item
  21. ^ Paul Backus, "Fifteen Arrested at Ayn Rand Club Event", New University, 13 November 2006 (accessed 3 February 2007).
  22. ^ "LYM Delivers One-Two Punch to Al Gordo in Argentina" - LaRouche PAC
  23. ^ Penev, Pavel, "The Gore Dossier" - EIR, March 30, 2007
  24. ^ "Philippines LaRouche Society Flanks Gore's Minions on IPCC Slide Show" - LaRouche PAC
  25. ^ "John Train's Press Sewer: Is Goebbels on Your Campus?", Executive Intelligence Review, 13 October 2006 (accessed 3 February 2007).
  26. ^ http://www.larouchepac.com/files/pdfs/071127-lpac_myspace.pdf
  27. ^ The Noosphere vs. The Blogosphere: Is the Devil in Your Laptop? | LaRouche Political Action Committee
  28. ^ Scott McLemee, ["The LaRouche Youth Movement," http://insidehighered.com/views/2007/07/11/mclemee] Inside Higher Ed., July 11, 2007.
  29. ^ New evidence shows 'suicide' student was beaten to death
  30. ^ Witt, "No Joke".
  31. ^ "No Joke"., April Witt, The Washington Post, October 24, 2004; Page W12. [2]
  32. ^ "No Joke"., April Witt, The Washington Post, October 24, 2004; Page W12. [3]
  33. ^ "No Joke"., April Witt, The Washington Post, October 24, 2004; Page W12. [4]
  34. ^ April Witt, "No Joke", The Washington Post, 24 October 2004 (accessed 3 February 2007).
  35. ^ "A Concise Timeline of the Symons-Duggan Affair," Executive Intelligence Review, June 25, 2004

[edit] External links

[edit] Youtube videos

[edit] Critical