Misplaced Pages

Lyndon LaRouche: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively
← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 21:53, 20 January 2005 editWeed Harper (talk | contribs)440 editsm Biographical issues: fix broken link← Previous edit Revision as of 22:06, 20 January 2005 edit undoWeed Harper (talk | contribs)440 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
<div style="float:right;">
==Biographical issues==
{|
]
|-
||
]
|-
||
|}
</div>
{{NPOV}}
:''This article is a biographical article about LaRouche. For a discussion of LaRouche's political views, see ].''


'''Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche, Jr.''' (born ], ]) is an ] political activist who leads political organizations in the United States and other countries. He is a ] for ], having set a record for most consecutive attempts at the office by running eight times. However, he and his followers have never gained significant electoral support. Although he has no formal qualifications, he has written extensively on economic, scientific, political, and cultural topics, and is noted as a theorist of conspiracies.
In ], LaRouche organized the ''New Solidarity International Press Service'' as a wire service for his publications. In 1974, he founded the weekly ''Executive Intelligence Review'', of which he is Contributing Editor. Former Reagan advisor and ] senior analyst, Dr. Norman Bailey, has said that the LaRouche network was "one of the best private intelligence services in the world." In 1974, LaRouche co-founded the Fusion Energy Foundation and, in 1984, participated in the founding of the ] with his current wife, ].


He is frequently described as an extremist or a ] leader, and is accused of being a ] and ]. He denies these charges. He is regarded by his followers as a brilliant and unfairly persecuted individual.
He has written numerous articles, pamphlets, and books published mostly by his own press. These include his autobiography ''The Power of Reason'' (1980), ''There Are No Limits to Growth'' (1983), and a second autobiography, ''The Power of Reason 1988''. His 1984 textbook, ''So, 'You Wish To Learn All About Economics'', circulates internationally in several languages, as does his ] ''The Science of Christian Economy''.


In ] LaRouche was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment for conspiracy, ], and tax code violations. He continued his political activities from behind bars. He was released in ] on ] after having served five years.
Separating fact from fiction in LaRouche's biography is made difficult by the barrages of conflicting accounts generated by the LaRouche movement and its critics (see '']''.) LaRouche writes in his autobiography that he developed his ideas in the ] and has advocated them consistently ever since. <!--His followers claim he is a respected economist and commentator on world affairs. Provide source --> He claims to have pioneered such ideas as the International Development Bank, the ] or "Star Wars," and the so-called Eurasian Land-Bridge. It also claimed that he was used by the ] administration as a "back-channel" for negotiations with the ].


As of 2003, he acts as director and contributing editor of the ''Executive Intelligence Review'' News Service, which is controlled by the LaRouche movement.
According to a speech made by LaRouche science advisor Paul Gallagher, LaRouche and his representatives met with Reagan administration Energy Secretary ], Interior Secretary ], Science Adviser Dr. ], and State Department official ] in early ]. Gallagher also claims that later that year Lyndon and Helga Zepp-LaRouche met with ] Deputy Director ], and cites the following remarks, made in early ] at the National Press Club by former head of German Military Intelligence, Gen. Paul-Albert Scherer:
<!-- and member of the International Ecological Academy of ]. I have made this invisible until we learn what it means to be a "member" and whether being a member is a "formal position" as the sentence said. See Talk. -->
{{LaRouche}}
== Early life==
LaRouche, the son of Lyndon H. LaRouche, Sr. and Jessie Weir LaRouche, was born in ] and grew up in ], where his father, an immigrant from ], was a shoe salesman. He was raised as a ] and grew up speaking ] and ], as well as English. He enrolled at ] in ], but dropped out in ]. As a Quaker, he was at first a ] during ], but in ] he joined the ], serving in medical units in ] and ]. During this period, he read works by ] and became a ]. While travelling home from India on the troop ship '']'' in ], he met Don Merrill, a fellow soldier, who was also from Lynn. Merrill won LaRouche to ] on the journey home. Back in the United States, LaRouche attempted to resume his university education, but again dropped out of Northeastern.


==LaRouche and Trotskyism==
:"In the Spring of 1982 here in the Soviet Embassy there were very important secret talks that were held.... The question was: Did the United States and the Soviet Union wish jointly to develop an anti-ballistic missile defense that would have made nuclear war impossible? Then, in August, you had this very sharp Soviet rejection of the entire idea.... I have discussed this thoroughly with the developer, the originator of this idea, who is the scientific-technological strategic expert, Lyndon LaRouche. The rejection came in August, and at that point the American President Reagan decided to push this entire thing out into the public eye, so he made his speech of March 1983."


In ], LaRouche returned to Lynn after dropping out of college and began attending meetings of the ] (SWP)'s Lynn branch. He joined the party the next year, adopting the ] '''Lyn Marcus''' for his political work.
:::<small>Press Conference at the National Press Club, Washington, DC., May 6, 1992; video of Scherer's remarks was broadcast on the "LaRouche Connection" cable TV program throughout the U.S.</small>


LaRouche obtained work as a ] in ], which included advising companies on how to use computers to maximise efficiency and speed-up production. In ], he married fellow SWP member Janice Neuberger. By ], the LaRouches lived in a large apartment on Central Park West. His activity in the internal life of the SWP was minimal due to his preoccupation with his career.
In his book, Dennis King identifies Scherer as a long-time LaRouche supporter.<!--See index to King's book-->


LaRouche remained in the SWP until his expulsion in ]. He now maintains that he was soon disillusioned with Marxism, dropped out of the SWP in the mid-1950s, and only resumed his activism at the prompting of the ] citing national security concerns. In an interview on the ] network, LaRouche claims that he returned to the SWP because he believed that only the Left was likely to combat what he calls the "utopian" danger coming from the Right, typified by the ] and the ].
According to the Berlet/Bellman report for PRA, "New Right military specialist, retired General Daniel O. Graham, says LaRouche followers have significantly hampered his work. Graham, Director of Project High Frontier which supports and helped develop President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative plan for anti-missile defense, says the LaRouche groups have 'caused a lot of problems by adopting our issue in an effort to sieze credit for the idea.' 'They also mounted a furious attack on me personally,' says Graham. 'Even today I get mail asking if I'm in league with LaRouche,' he adds wearily." LaRouche countered, "President Reagan's initial version of SDI was consistent with what I had introduced into U.S.-Soviet back-channel discussions over the period beginning February 1982. However, immediately thereafter, the mice went to work. Daniel Graham, the leading opponent of SDI up to that time, now proclaimed himself the virtual author of the policy, and was used, thereafter, to remove all of the crucial elements from the original policy." There is no independent verification outside of LaRouche group media, however, of the claim that LaRouche originated or played a major role in the development of "Star Wars" missile defense.
His ex-wife and other SWP members from that time dispute this. During these years LaRouche developed his interests in economics, ], ], business management and other subjects. Janice left him in ] (they had one son, Daniel, born in ]) and, in the late ], she became a leader of the New York City branch of the ].


In ], while still in the SWP, LaRouche became a supporter of a faction called the Revolutionary Tendency, which had been expelled from the party and was under the influence of the ] Trotskyist leader ], leader of the British ]. Those familiar with the Left in this period believe that LaRouche was heavily influenced by Healy's ]. For six months, LaRouche worked closely with American Healyite leader ], who later wrote:
LaRouche has also had contact with some foreign leaders. On May 23, ], he met with ] President ], and advised him to suspend foreign debt payments (which was done in August 1982), and to declare exchange controls and nationalize Mexico's banks (done in September 1982). Years later, on December 1, ], while sharing the podium with Helga Zepp-LaRouche before a meeting of the Mexican Society of Geography and Statistics in Mexico City, former President Lopez Portillo said "It is now necessary for the world to listen to the wise words of Lyndon LaRouche."


:<small>LaRouche had a gargantuan ego. Convinced he was a genius, he combined his strong conviction in his own abilities with an arrogance expressed in the cadences of upper-class New England. He assumed that the comment in the ] that "a small section of the ruling class cuts itself adrift, and joins the revolutionary class ..." was written specifically for him. And he believed that the working class was lucky to obtain his services.</small>
In ], a former member of LaRouche's U.S. Labor Party, Gregory Rose, published an article in '']'' alleging that LaRouche had established contacts with ] organizations such as the ] (PFLP), and also with the ] mission to the ] in ]. These contacts culminated in LaRouche's visit to ] in ], during which he made a presentation to the ] conference on the topic of his "Oasis Plan," a proposal for Arab-Israeli peace based on the joint construction of massive water projects. During ], LaRouche's newspaper ''New Solidarity'' began running articles favourable to Iraq, and extensively quoting ], at that time Iraq's vice-president. Rose also alleged that LaRouche at this time was in contact with ] diplomats.


:<small>LaRouche possessed a marvelous ability to place any world happening in a larger context, which seemed to give the event additional meaning, but his thinking was schematic, lacking factual detail and depth. It was contradictory. His explanations were a bit too pat, and his mind worked so quickly that I always suspected his bravado covered over superficiality. He had an answer for everything. Sessions with him reminded me of a parlor game: present a problem, no matter how petty, and without so much as blinking his eye, LaRouche would dream up the solution. </small>
===Dennis King and Chip Berlet===
]


In ], LaRouche left Wohlforth's group and joined the ], which had split with Wohlforth. He left after a few months and wrote a letter to the SWP declaring that all factions and sections of the Trotskyist ] were dead, and announcing that he and his new common-law wife, Carol Larrabee (also known as Carol Schnitzer), were going to build the Fifth International.
Two writers who have written highly critical material on LaRouche are ] and ]. Their criticism is distinguished by their claim that they are exposing a "hidden agenda", and that LaRouche is essentially the opposite of what he professes to be.


In ], the couple joined the ] ''Committee for Independent Political Action'' and formed a branch in New York's ]. He began giving classes for the New York ] on ] and attracted around him a group of graduate students from ], many of whom were involved with the ] ] (PL) group, itself very prominent in the ] (SDS). In the 1988 version of his autobiography, LaRouche writes that he was not really a Marxist when he gave his lecture at the Free School, but that he merely used his familiarity with Marxism as a "passport" in order to win students away from the ] ] which, he claims, was financed for nefarious purposes by the ].
The only substantial biography of LaRouche is ''Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism'', by King (Doubleday, ]). King, an investigative journalist, charges LaRouche with developing an intellectualized version of fascism mixed with political cultism and anti-Semitism (see ].)


LaRouche's movement was heavily involved in the ] student strike and occupation of Columbia and was able to win control of the university's SDS and PL branches by putting forward a political program linking student struggles with those of ]s in ]. His growing following allowed him to create a third tendency within the SDS competing with the two dominant tendencies, the "Action Faction," led by ] (which soon became the ]) and the "Praxis Axis," which saw students as the vanguard of the revolution. LaRouche organized his faction as the "SDS Labor Committee". He criticized SDS, and the ] in general, for being too oriented toward the ] and not enough toward labor. He held meetings in the Columbia area. Wohlforth attended one and writes:
LaRouche polemicists have made much of the fact that King, who is considered a leftist, received funding from the conservative ] to write his book, but there has been no clear demonstration that this funding influenced the book's content. According to the book's acknowledgments (pp. 399-401), King also received funding and other help from liberal sources such as the Stern Fund. In fact, King's book is largely based on a lengthy series of articles in the Manhattan weekly ''Our Town'', written and published before he obtained funding from any foundation (See ''Our Town'' archives, 1979-1980; photocopies of this series available from ].) LaRouche publications claim that King received funding from Smith-Richardson subsequent to meetings at the home of ] (see ],) but acknowledge that this occurred several years after the publication of the ''Our Town'' series.


:<small>Twenty to 30 students would gather in a large apartment and sit on the floor surrounding LaRouche, who now sported a very shaggy beard. The meeting would sometimes go on as long as seven hours. It was difficult to tell where discussions of tactics left off and educational presentation began. Encouraging the students, LaRouche gave them esoteric assignments, such as searching through the writings of ] to discover Rudd's anarchistic origins, or studying ]'s ''The Accumulation of Capital''. Since SDS was strong on spirit and action but rather bereft of theory, the students appeared to thoroughly enjoy this work.</small>
The LaRouche movement alleges that ''Our Town'' was controlled by the controversial ] . The late Cohn did promise ''pro bono'' counsel for ''Our Town'' and King after LaRouche sued them, but King soon fired Cohn as a result of allegations from confidential sources that Cohn and LaRouche had made a secret deal. (LaRouche dropped the suit shortly after King obtained new counsel.) (See court papers in LaRouche v. Our Town, New York State Supreme Court, New York County, 1979.) King devoted chapter 26 of his book to the byzantine rivalry of LaRouche and Cohn, and is unsparing in his criticism of both. "No two antagonists ever deserved each other more," King wrote (p. 252).


== LaRouche and the NCLC ==
] wrote his first of several articles about LaRouche in ] for the ''Chicago Sun Times.'' LaRouche sued Berlet and King for defamation, along with ] News and the ], but LaRouche lost the case, and the same jury awarded damges to NBC.
]
After its expulsion from the SDS in ] the SDS Labor Committee became the ] (NCLC). Despite its name, it had no significant connection with the labor movement and viewed intellectuals as the revolutionary vanguard, rather than workers who were to led by the intellectuals.


According to ], NCLC's internal life became more regimented. Members gave up their jobs and private lives and became entirely devoted to the group and its leader. The LaRouche organization developed an internal discipline technique, called "ego stripping," which reinforced conformity and loyalty to LaRouche.
According to Chip Berlet and Matthew N. Lyons:


==The Move Away from Marxism==
:<small>"Though often dismissed as a bizarre political cult, the LaRouche organization and its various front groups are a fascist movement whose pronouncements echo elements of Nazi ideology. Beginning in the 1970s, the LaRouchites combined populist antielitism with attacks on leftists, environmentalists, feminists, gay men and lesbians, and organized labor. They advocated a dictatorship in which a 'humanist' elite would rule on behalf of industrial capitalists. They developed an idiosyncratic, coded variation on the Illuminati Freemason and Jewish banker conspiracy theories. Their views, though exotic, were internally consistent and rooted in right-wing populist traditions."</small>
<!-- FAIR USE of Larouche-Congress.jpg: see image description page at http://en.wikipedia.org/Image:Larouche-Congress.jpg for rationale -->
]'']]


===Conflicts with the Left===
:::<small>Chip Berlet & Matthew N. Lyons, ''Right-Wing Populism in America'', p. 273.</small>
According to articles in the '']'' and other publications, under LaRouche's direction, the NCLC adopted violent and disruptive tactics, physically attacking meetings of the ] and later of the SWP and other groups, who were classed by LaRouche as "left-protofascists." NCLC members allegedly engaged in a series of physical assaults on members of the Communist Party, called "Operation Mop-up." According to ], some ex-NCLC members who left the group at this time say that LaRouche was studying the career of ] and consciously adopting the tactics of the early ].


The NCLC claimed that they acted in self-defense, even though all other accounts say that it was the NCLC that initiated the violence. LaRouche writes that "the FBI was orchestrating its assets in the leadership of the Communist Party U.S.A., to bring about my personal 'elimination',", citing a document obtained through the ].
''See also ]''


Some of LaRouche's most outspoken opponents are to be found among those who remained in the Left, after LaRouche and his followers had departed it. According to ] and Dennis Tourish:
===LaRouche and the press===


:<small>The parallel between LaRouche's thinking and that of the classical fascist model is striking. LaRouche, like Mussolini and Hitler before him, borrowed from Marx yet changed his theories fundamentally. Most important, Marx's internationalist outlook was abandoned in favor of a narrow nation-state perspective. Marx's goal of abolishing capitalism was replaced by the model of a totalitarian state that directs an economy where ownership of the means of production is still largely in public hands. The corporations and their owners remain in place but have to take their orders from LaRouche. Hitler called the schema "national socialism". LaRouche h
LaRouche has had an antagonistic relationship with the American news media throughout his career. In a September 24, ] op-ed in the '']'', entitled "NCLC: A Domestic Political Menace," Stephen Rosenfeld wrote: "We of the press should be chary of offering them print or air time. There is no reason to be too delicate about it: Every day we decide whose voices to relay. A duplicitous violence prone group with fascistic proclivities should not be presented to the public unless there is reason to present it in those terms." During the 1980s, the print and electronic media rarely mentioned LaRouche's name without the prefix, "political extremist." The LaRouche campaign in 1988 attempted to poke fun at this practice by broadcasting a national TV spot which featured a montage of clips of different TV announcers, all saying "political extremist Lyndon LaRouche." During this period, the theories of Dennis King and Chip Berlet also received some coverage in the mainstream press.

In March of ], the '']'' printed a facsimile of the Democratic Presidential Primary Ballot with LaRouche's name airbrushed out. However, more recently these practices appear to have largely died out.

Revision as of 22:06, 20 January 2005

File:Lyndon LaRouche.gif
Lyndon LaRouche
The neutrality of this article is disputed. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met. (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This article is a biographical article about LaRouche. For a discussion of LaRouche's political views, see Political views of Lyndon LaRouche.

Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche, Jr. (born September 8, 1922) is an American political activist who leads political organizations in the United States and other countries. He is a perennial candidate for President of the United States, having set a record for most consecutive attempts at the office by running eight times. However, he and his followers have never gained significant electoral support. Although he has no formal qualifications, he has written extensively on economic, scientific, political, and cultural topics, and is noted as a theorist of conspiracies.

He is frequently described as an extremist or a cult leader, and is accused of being a fascist and anti-Semite. He denies these charges. He is regarded by his followers as a brilliant and unfairly persecuted individual.

In 1988 LaRouche was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment for conspiracy, mail fraud, and tax code violations. He continued his political activities from behind bars. He was released in 1994 on parole after having served five years.

As of 2003, he acts as director and contributing editor of the Executive Intelligence Review News Service, which is controlled by the LaRouche movement.

LaRouche movement
History
Active organizations
Defunct organizations
Members
Members who separated
from the movement
Critics
Related persons

Early life

LaRouche, the son of Lyndon H. LaRouche, Sr. and Jessie Weir LaRouche, was born in Rochester, New Hampshire and grew up in Lynn, Massachusetts, where his father, an immigrant from Quebec, was a shoe salesman. He was raised as a Quaker and grew up speaking French and German, as well as English. He enrolled at Northeastern University in Boston, but dropped out in 1942. As a Quaker, he was at first a conscientious objector during World War II, but in 1944 he joined the United States Army, serving in medical units in India and Burma. During this period, he read works by Karl Marx and became a Marxist. While travelling home from India on the troop ship SS General Bradley in 1946, he met Don Merrill, a fellow soldier, who was also from Lynn. Merrill won LaRouche to Trotskyism on the journey home. Back in the United States, LaRouche attempted to resume his university education, but again dropped out of Northeastern.

LaRouche and Trotskyism

In 1948, LaRouche returned to Lynn after dropping out of college and began attending meetings of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP)'s Lynn branch. He joined the party the next year, adopting the pseudonym Lyn Marcus for his political work.

LaRouche obtained work as a management consultant in New York City, which included advising companies on how to use computers to maximise efficiency and speed-up production. In 1954, he married fellow SWP member Janice Neuberger. By 1961, the LaRouches lived in a large apartment on Central Park West. His activity in the internal life of the SWP was minimal due to his preoccupation with his career.

LaRouche remained in the SWP until his expulsion in 1965. He now maintains that he was soon disillusioned with Marxism, dropped out of the SWP in the mid-1950s, and only resumed his activism at the prompting of the FBI citing national security concerns. In an interview on the Pacifica Radio network, LaRouche claims that he returned to the SWP because he believed that only the Left was likely to combat what he calls the "utopian" danger coming from the Right, typified by the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Vietnam War. His ex-wife and other SWP members from that time dispute this. During these years LaRouche developed his interests in economics, cybernetics, psychoanalysis, business management and other subjects. Janice left him in 1963 (they had one son, Daniel, born in 1956) and, in the late 1960s, she became a leader of the New York City branch of the National Organization of Women.

In 1964, while still in the SWP, LaRouche became a supporter of a faction called the Revolutionary Tendency, which had been expelled from the party and was under the influence of the British Trotskyist leader Gerry Healy, leader of the British Socialist Labour League. Those familiar with the Left in this period believe that LaRouche was heavily influenced by Healy's catastrophism. For six months, LaRouche worked closely with American Healyite leader Tim Wohlforth, who later wrote:

LaRouche had a gargantuan ego. Convinced he was a genius, he combined his strong conviction in his own abilities with an arrogance expressed in the cadences of upper-class New England. He assumed that the comment in the Communist Manifesto that "a small section of the ruling class cuts itself adrift, and joins the revolutionary class ..." was written specifically for him. And he believed that the working class was lucky to obtain his services.
LaRouche possessed a marvelous ability to place any world happening in a larger context, which seemed to give the event additional meaning, but his thinking was schematic, lacking factual detail and depth. It was contradictory. His explanations were a bit too pat, and his mind worked so quickly that I always suspected his bravado covered over superficiality. He had an answer for everything. Sessions with him reminded me of a parlor game: present a problem, no matter how petty, and without so much as blinking his eye, LaRouche would dream up the solution.

In 1965, LaRouche left Wohlforth's group and joined the Spartacist League, which had split with Wohlforth. He left after a few months and wrote a letter to the SWP declaring that all factions and sections of the Trotskyist Fourth International were dead, and announcing that he and his new common-law wife, Carol Larrabee (also known as Carol Schnitzer), were going to build the Fifth International.

In 1966, the couple joined the New Left Committee for Independent Political Action and formed a branch in New York's West Village. He began giving classes for the New York Free School on dialectical materialism and attracted around him a group of graduate students from Columbia University, many of whom were involved with the Maoist Progressive Labor (PL) group, itself very prominent in the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). In the 1988 version of his autobiography, LaRouche writes that he was not really a Marxist when he gave his lecture at the Free School, but that he merely used his familiarity with Marxism as a "passport" in order to win students away from the New Left counterculture which, he claims, was financed for nefarious purposes by the Ford Foundation.

LaRouche's movement was heavily involved in the 1968 student strike and occupation of Columbia and was able to win control of the university's SDS and PL branches by putting forward a political program linking student struggles with those of Blacks in Harlem. His growing following allowed him to create a third tendency within the SDS competing with the two dominant tendencies, the "Action Faction," led by Mark Rudd (which soon became the Weather Underground) and the "Praxis Axis," which saw students as the vanguard of the revolution. LaRouche organized his faction as the "SDS Labor Committee". He criticized SDS, and the New Left in general, for being too oriented toward the counterculture and not enough toward labor. He held meetings in the Columbia area. Wohlforth attended one and writes:

Twenty to 30 students would gather in a large apartment and sit on the floor surrounding LaRouche, who now sported a very shaggy beard. The meeting would sometimes go on as long as seven hours. It was difficult to tell where discussions of tactics left off and educational presentation began. Encouraging the students, LaRouche gave them esoteric assignments, such as searching through the writings of Georges Sorel to discover Rudd's anarchistic origins, or studying Rosa Luxemburg's The Accumulation of Capital. Since SDS was strong on spirit and action but rather bereft of theory, the students appeared to thoroughly enjoy this work.

LaRouche and the NCLC

File:Ac.larouche2.jpg
Lyndon LaRouche

After its expulsion from the SDS in 1969 the SDS Labor Committee became the National Caucus of Labor Committees (NCLC). Despite its name, it had no significant connection with the labor movement and viewed intellectuals as the revolutionary vanguard, rather than workers who were to led by the intellectuals.

According to Dennis King, NCLC's internal life became more regimented. Members gave up their jobs and private lives and became entirely devoted to the group and its leader. The LaRouche organization developed an internal discipline technique, called "ego stripping," which reinforced conformity and loyalty to LaRouche.

The Move Away from Marxism

File:Larouche-congress.jpg
The cover of a LaRouche campaign pamphlet, with a polemic against the Congress for Cultural Freedom

Conflicts with the Left

According to articles in the Village Voice and other publications, under LaRouche's direction, the NCLC adopted violent and disruptive tactics, physically attacking meetings of the Communist Party and later of the SWP and other groups, who were classed by LaRouche as "left-protofascists." NCLC members allegedly engaged in a series of physical assaults on members of the Communist Party, called "Operation Mop-up." According to Dennis King, some ex-NCLC members who left the group at this time say that LaRouche was studying the career of Adolf Hitler and consciously adopting the tactics of the early Nazi Party.

The NCLC claimed that they acted in self-defense, even though all other accounts say that it was the NCLC that initiated the violence. LaRouche writes that "the FBI was orchestrating its assets in the leadership of the Communist Party U.S.A., to bring about my personal 'elimination',", citing a document obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.

Some of LaRouche's most outspoken opponents are to be found among those who remained in the Left, after LaRouche and his followers had departed it. According to Tim Wohlforth and Dennis Tourish:

The parallel between LaRouche's thinking and that of the classical fascist model is striking. LaRouche, like Mussolini and Hitler before him, borrowed from Marx yet changed his theories fundamentally. Most important, Marx's internationalist outlook was abandoned in favor of a narrow nation-state perspective. Marx's goal of abolishing capitalism was replaced by the model of a totalitarian state that directs an economy where ownership of the means of production is still largely in public hands. The corporations and their owners remain in place but have to take their orders from LaRouche. Hitler called the schema "national socialism". LaRouche h