Friday, September 15, 2017

The Right Corrupts Everything, Even Think Tanks.




It wasn't supposed to be this way.

When America's great think tanks were born, they were specifically intended to advance the public interest, the public welfare. That was before they were perverted to become a marketing/lobbying tool of the far right. From The New Republic.

The term “think tank” didn’t appear until the Kennedy administration, which relied heavily on Rand Corporation research, but these policy groups and research institutes date from 1916, when philanthropist Robert Brookings established the Institute for Government Research, which later became known as the Brookings Institution. Robert Brookings was one of a group of very wealthy businessmen who had become convinced that through the application of social science, government policies could be devised that would stem the rising conflict between the classes and parties and also achieve world peace. They were Theodore Roosevelt or Woodrow Wilson progressives in the broadest sense of the term.

Brookings wanted a research institute that was “free from any political or pecuniary interest.” The scholars didn’t raise their own money, but were employed like university faculty. In founding the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Andrew Carnegie went farther: In 1910, he endowed the new institution with bonds that he hoped would allow it to forego fundraising entirely. Other groups that began during those first decades included the Council on Foreign Relations, the Twentieth Century Fund (now the Century Foundation), the National Bureau of Economic Research, and the Committee for Economic Development.

The groups attained a reputation for intellectual independence. When coal company officials complained in 1933 to Brookings’ first president, classical economist Robert Moulton, about a study recommending their nationalization, Moulton responded, “We are concerned only in finding out what will promote the general welfare.” That reputation lasted into the 1960s, when, under John F. Kennedy, think tanks were conspicuously welcomed in the policy debate. But Robert Brookings’s early model of political disinterestedness and scientific objectivity began to erode soon afterward.

Three developments contributed to this change: Beginning in the 1940s, and in earnest in the early 1970s, conservative Republicans and business groups established think tanks and policy groups that had a specific economic and/or factional purpose. Businessmen dissatisfied with the New Deal created the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) in 1943. In 1964, it served as the policy arm of Barry Goldwater’s right-wing campaign for president, and in the ‘70s became the preferred think tank of the Fortune 500 and of center-right Republicans, even when, for appearance’s sake, AEI kept around a few liberal researchers.

The Heritage Institution was founded in 1973 as a sophisticated business lobby (its first president came from the National Association of Manufacturers) that, unlike the more scholarly AEI, actively worked on Capitol Hill to develop legislation. It became a key player in the growth of Republican conservatism. Other groups included the American Council for Capital Formation, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, and later “action tanks” like Citizens for a Sound Economy and its successors FreedomWorks and Americans for Prosperity.

Together, these business and conservative Republican groups attempted to take advantage of the reputation created by the older think tanks: They demanded attention for their “experts” in the media—on op-ed pages and, later, TV news shows—but they were in fact the kind of political organization or business lobbies that Robert Brookings and Andrew Carnegie had wanted to avoid at all costs. These groups’ scholarly output, particularly from a group like Heritage, was nugatory. They debased the coinage of the older thinking. And their model of partisan intervention and policy briefs spread leftward to groups like the Center for American Progress, which is something of a Democratic version of the Heritage Foundation.

Then there's the Canadian experience, the Fraser Institute. No matter how biased or outrageous the messaging of the Boys of Fraser, our media regularly pay them homage. For what? Because they exist on the payroll of some fairly narrow interests as their marketing/lobbying tool?

It's hardly any better in Britain where, save for Chatham House, the majority of think tanks are very much aligned, left or right.

The currency of think tanks, their credibility, has been severely debased. The majority are now mouthpieces for their patrons and ready to bend fact and truth to their supporters' service. And, for that, we're all worse off.

6 comments:

Toby said...

One that irritates me is the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. It seems to make sense until you realize that it never criticizes government subsidies and tax breaks for the the oil and gas industries.

John B. said...

If you've got extra time on your hands, or just to browse for the familiar and discover more that connects to what you already know:

http://sciencecorruption.com/

https://issuu.com/edwardbernays/docs/a_century_of_spin_how_public_relati

The Mound of Sound said...

Toby, do you think anyone would consider the CTF a think tank? Maybe it's just me but I've never thought of them except as an ideological lobby group.

The Mound of Sound said...

John, excellent links. I've bookmarked both for future reading. Many thanks.

Toby said...

Mound, I don't think of the so-called think tanks as think tanks. I think of them as ideological lobby groups. As you point out, the original idea is long gone.

Tal Hartsfeld said...

...and they have to be masters of sophistry to be able to pull it off while still maintaining a semblance of "logic" and "reason".
Aptitude is everything in any endeavor, you know.