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Sunday, April 15, 2018

It is difficult to free fools from the chains they revere ...
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In political jargon, a useful idiot is a derogatory term for a person perceived as a propagandist for a cause the goals of which they are not fully aware, and who is used cynically by the leaders of the cause. The term was originally used to describe non-Communists regarded as susceptible to Communist propaganda and manipulation. The term has often been attributed to Vladimir Lenin, but this attribution is controversial.


Video Useful idiot



Origin of the term

The phrase "useful idiot" has often been attributed to Vladimir Lenin, although he is not documented as having ever used the phrase. In a 1987 article for The New York Times, American journalist William Safire investigated the origin of the term, noting that a senior reference librarian at the Library of Congress had been unable to find the phrase in Lenin's works, and concluding that absent new evidence, the term could not be attributed to Lenin. Similarly, the Oxford English Dictionary, in defining "useful idiot," says that "The phrase does not seem to reflect any expression used within the Soviet Union."

In her book, Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got it Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First, conservative author Mona Charen comments that "Lenin is widely credited with the prediction that liberals and other weak-minded souls in the West could be relied upon to be 'useful idiots' as far as the Soviet Union was concerned," and argues that although Lenin may never have used the phrase, it would have been consistent with his "cynical style."

The term is first documented to have appeared in print in a June 1948 New York Times article on contemporary Italian politics ("Communist shift is seen in Europe"), citing the centrist social-democratic Italian paper L'Umanità. L'Umanità wrote that left-wing social democrats, who had entered into a popular front with the Italian Communist Party during the 1948 elections, would be given the option of either merging with the Communists or leaving the alliance. The term was later used in a 1955 article in the American Federation of Labor News-Reporter to refer to Italians who supported Communist causes. Time first employed the phrase in January 1958, writing that some Italian Christian Democrats considered social activist Danilo Dolci to be a "useful idiot" for Communist causes, and it has recurred thereafter in the periodical's articles.

A similar term, useful innocents, appears in Austrian-American economist Ludwig von Mises' 1947 book, Planned Chaos. Von Mises wrote that the term was used by communists for liberals, whom von Mises describes as "confused and misguided sympathizers". The term useful innocents also appears in a 1946 Reader's Digest article titled "Yugoslavia's Tragic Lesson to the World," written by Bogdan Raditsa, who had served the Yugoslav government-in-exile during WWII, supported Tito's partisans (though not a Communist himself) and briefly served in Tito's new Yugoslav government before leaving for New York. "In the Serbo-Croat language," says Raditsa, "the communists have a phrase for true democrats who consent to collaborate with them for [the sake of] 'democracy.' It is Korisne Budale, or Useful Innocents."


Maps Useful idiot



Use of the term

In 1959, U.S. Congressman Ed Derwinski of Illinois entered an editorial by the Chicago Daily Calumet into the Congressional record, referring to Americans who traveled to the Soviet Union to promote peace as "what Lenin calls useful idiots in the Communist game." In 1961, American journalist Frank Gibney wrote that Lenin had coined the phrase "useful idiot." Gibney wrote that the phrase was a good description of "Communist follower[s]" from Jean-Paul Sartre to left-wing socialists in Japan to members of the Chilean Popular Front. In a speech in 1965, Spruille Braden, an American diplomat stationed in a number of Latin American countries during the 1930s and '40s and later a lobbyist for the United Fruit Company, said the term was used by Joseph Stalin to refer to what Braden called "countless innocent although well-intentioned sentimentalists or idealists" who aided the Soviet agenda.

Writing in the New York Times in 1987, William Safire discussed the increasing use of the term "useful idiot" against "anybody insufficiently anti-Communist in the view of the phrase's user," including U.S. Congressmen who supported the Sandinistas against the Contras in Nicaragua, and Dutch socialists. After U.S. President Ronald Reagan concluded negotiations with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev over the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, conservative political leader Howard Phillips declared Reagan to be a "useful idiot for Soviet propaganda."

The label "useful idiot" was applied both to supporters and opponents of the Iraq War. Conservative political commentator Mona Charen applied the label to liberal U.S. Congressmen who had toured Iraq before the war, arguing that they had been manipulated by the Iraqi government. Tony Judt wrote that liberal supporters of the Iraq War and the War on Terror had made themselves "useful idiots" of George W. Bush's foreign policy. Judt argued that liberals saw these wars through an altruistic lens that Bush's neo-conservative allies did not share, and provided an "ethical fig-leaf" for "brutish policies."

In 2007, professor of political science Peter W. Sperlich labeled George Bernard Shaw and Lion Feuchtwanger "useful idiots" for their comments on the Soviet famine of 1932-33 and the Moscow Trials, respectively. In 2012, Guardian correspondent Luke Harding wrote that Walter Duranty, a New York Times correspondent in Moscow during the 1930s, allowed himself to be "duped" by Soviet authorities, and is depicted in a play by contemporary reporter Malcolm Muggeridge as a "quintessential 'useful idiot.'"

In the end of 2016, the former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and the Editorial Board of The New York Times applied the term to President-elect Donald Trump. Michael Morell, former acting CIA director, wrote: "In the intelligence business, we would say that Mr. Putin had recruited Mr. Trump as an unwitting agent of the Russian Federation." Michael Hayden, former director of both the US National Security Agency and the CIA, described Trump as a "useful fool, some naif, manipulated by Moscow, secretly held in contempt, but whose blind support is happily accepted and exploited."


It is difficult to free fools from the chains they revere. | The ...
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See also

  • Agent of influence
  • Anti-Communism
  • Fellow traveller
  • McCarthyism
  • Political warfare

Presenting
src: zerohedge.com


References


Snowflakes Are Useful Idiots #38: No, You Can't Fix Stupid â€
src: steemitimages.com


External links

  • Useful Idiots: The Documentary, BBC World Service, 2010

Source of article : Wikipedia