Guest guest Posted December 8, 1998 Report Share Posted December 8, 1998 In 1934, Wynyard Browne, writing in THE ENGLISH REVIEW (Vol 58, pp 503-505) reported his observations on the Oxford Groups. " The Oxford Groups claim to be inaugurating a world revival. They believe that, by their methods, all our wrongs can be set right. The movement therefore has political as well as specifically religious significance. . . . The members of the Groups are almost exclusively of the middle class. Their desire fot the 'dictatorship' of the Holy Spirit is similar to the desire of the middle classes in Germany for the dictatorship of Hitler. . . . They have very little theology and no respect for Christian tradition. " This was the general understanding of the Oxford Groups held by liberal, pro-labor union, and leftist politicians during the years of the Great Depression. The Oxford Groupers did not deny their attraction to the Hitlerite model of social change; indeed, Buchman himself claimed " God has sent Hitler to Germany " to be its protector and leader. One year AFTER Wynyard Browne made his observation about the Oxford Groups's pro-fascist inclination, down-on-his-luck stock speculator and con man, , joined the movement. was no fool. Buchman's movement was understood very well in New York City. enthusiastically and knowingly adopted the Oxford Group version of fascism. Later, as the world political climate changed with the onset of WWII, took his very small following out of the Oxford Groups because he was urged to do so by administrators working for the Rockefeller charitable institutions. set up a small splinter group, which was directly supervised and directed by the Rockefeller men. was hoping to get a cash advance from Rockefeller with which to establish a chain of " treatment centers " in which he planned to indoctrinate low-income Americans with an American version of fascism. D. Rockefeller, Jr., and other rich and powerful corporate leaders, were much interested in this idea, as they had been dismayed by labor union and left-wing unrest during the Great Depression. There was very, very little in the early AA " program " that was not borrowed whole cloth from the Oxford Groups. Even the bromides were taken out of the Oxford Groups; " Pass it On! " , for example, was Buchman's favorite saying. himself was forced to admit all this in later years. AA did have to adopt a lower profile during the war, and also during the liberal heyday of the 1950s and 1960s. Today,with the right wing on the rise, AA and the 12-Step movement have returned, and Buchman's vision of a world-wide revolution is now at the center of America's " conservative revolution. " Today's 12-Steppers are no mystery. They are Buchman's descendents, the changes in the " program " are mostly minor, and the link to fascism is direct. The goal remains exactly what it was. A fascist dictatorship of the higher powers in America. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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