Cloward Piven Strategy

Posted by BlueNova 11 years ago to Politics
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Most of you have read this, but for those that haven't this explains what's going down. I try to spread the word but as I said in a previous post, to no avail. When I was given this article during the Hillary/Obama Primary, I then got it!!!!!!!
SOURCE URL: http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/Articles/theclowardpivenstrategypoe.html


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  • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
    Interesting article. Not heard of Cloward Piven Strategy until now. I get the idea though. I too think it would be wrong to aid the collapse of the welfare state, although perhaps for different reasons to OA.

    For one thing, there are many people who genuinely need help - disabled, orphans, the elderly etc. These people would be screwed without a 'system' to take care of them. Love it or hate it, the welfare system is what they have for now - thus for the Left to destroy the welfare system out of rabid hatred for Capitalism is completely thoughtless & utterly cruel.
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    • Posted by 11 years ago
      But make them uncomfortable in their poverty will end their poverty (paraphrasing Ben Franklin). Except for the truly needy such as invalids, mentally ill, etc. who can't fend for themselves why should we have to provide for others by dictum. If they had no "government teat" to suck on, what will they do? Work? Bubba Clinton proved this somewhat with his welfare reform act. Well maybe not his idea but he signed the bill; and, he who signs the bill, gets the credit.
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    • Posted by LionelHutz 11 years ago
      So - you care about them more than me?
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      • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
        Not what I'm saying at all. There's a difference between genuine need & looting.
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        • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
          I recall Rand speaking about this genuine 'need' & saying that under a Capitalist system, charities would be set up to deal with such need, which we the capable would donate to of our own free will. I don't believe such charities exist as yet, therefore destroying the only means of survival for those in need is thoughtless of the left.
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          • Posted by 11 years ago
            As I posted above, charities did exist before the socialists reared their heads. The church(s) mainly provided the charity.

            Separation of Church and State meant that the feds must keep their nose out of religion; not that the religion should keep their nose out of goverment. The founders encouraged the individual states to support a religion or religions. Public buildings were used for church meetings and churches were used for public meetings. Now the term "separation of church and state" has been perverted to religion being kicked out of government altogther. Maybe that's why charities have adversely affected. No church, no charity. And, then having created the void, Mr. Government steps in with a helping hand.
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            • Posted by Rozar 11 years ago
              The church has NO place in government. At all. Give me one good reason why they should? The governments role is to protect individual rights. At what point should a church get involved in that process?
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              • Posted by 11 years ago
                Did you just read what I posted? It's not my idea it's the founding father's idea. You know, the ones that created the Constiotution.
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                • Posted by khalling 11 years ago
                  Blue,
                  Did you take away Rozar's point? I thought it furthered the discussion.
                  Along with churches, many organizations such as Masons, Oddfellows, Lion's, YMCA, etc. were set up in part to have each of the member's family's backs. Like insurance clubs. There are many counter-intuitive premises between organized religion and a a limited govt with a sound Constitution. Let's start with witch trials, but I can give more examples, if you like
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                  • Posted by 11 years ago
                    I inadvertently took away razors point. I tried to put it back but it wouldn't let me. Sorry. Glad you brought it up. BTW, obviously it was put back. How?
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                    • Posted by khalling 11 years ago
                      I gave him one.
                      The whole point system is interesting in here. Which is why I asked. My goal (now) is to not remove a point unless the comment lacks a good question or keeps posing the same argument with no new information or completely lacks reason. I wouldn't say any of those reasons constitutes "Spam," but we do have trolls. It's kinda funny, because I do not necessarily follow that opposite to point a comment up. Even though it should be inverse, it does tend to trend to a "like" for me and others. I sometimes forget to give a point for something I completely disagree with in order to send the discussion to the "top" of the thread. We don't really talk about this anymore in here, and it's always nice to give some feedback when new people come in.
                      now you know WAY more than you cared to about it. lol
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                      • Posted by 11 years ago
                        I'm not that new. I just had to get to the point where I needed somewhere else to vent. The Disqus engine that runs my local newspaper's comments and the Washington Times comments now requires EX9 and EX8 and am not goinbg to chance upgrading.

                        I'm use to the thumbs up and down. On the Boston Herald, the thumbs up and down are also counted. Some of the post get so profainly vile and personal that they're funny and more interesting than the article. Sometimes I skip the article and go to the comments to get the news as they see it.

                        This site is odd to me. The thumbs and numbers seem so random. Some with both thumbs shaded, one of either thumb shaded and no thumbs shaded. I posted this article that got 80 comments (mostly not to my subject) but the post got a 3 with a white thumbs up and a blue thumbs down. What does that mean? Do I win a prize:-)
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                        • Posted by khalling 11 years ago
                          if you are not signed in all thumbs are shaded. If you are signed in and see a comment that you have not "liked" or "unliked" the thumbs are blue. If you like or unlike a comment that thumb will change to shaded. for example on this post, which is HOT, you should have way more points-but that aside, I had given it a point so now the thumbs up for me is shaded. on all of your own posts and comments the thumbs are shaded. I enjoy cynical, pithy comments on articles as well. But- if we did that all the time in here, it would be drive-by pointless, in my opinion. Different venues. I'm glad you're spending time in here.One is never quite sure where the conversation is going to head and a post can mushroom quickly. Honestly, I think the posts that get the most points overall tend to be ones that do not spark the best conversation. It's just someone has pointed out or said something all agree with or appreciate. no need to expand. the more provocative-well the conversation takes off and people forget to go back up and give the post a point. I always ask for the order when that happens to me. :)
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                          • Posted by 11 years ago
                            I'm getting a headache. I just read the FAQ's. I'll just read the comments and respond if I feel the need. But I don't have the patience nor interest to read the very long commentss, especially the ones without paragraphs, periodss, comas, etc. Sometimes "the devil makes me do it" and I post funny , I hope, non-sequitur.
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          • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
            Those types of charities used to exist before government got into the business of taxation and entitlements. They would reappear again if we weren't FORCED to donate to charities unknown (via taxes)...Americans are givers, but they don't like their money wasted so it would be a much more efficient process to privatize charities not just charge up a welfare debit card and let the moochers spend on unnecessary purchases. It would be to meet NEEDS only, not habits and bling. Joss, you sound a bit conditioned in your thinking that people wouldn't survive....instead of thinking if they don't survive it's of their own free will.
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            • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
              You're right I guess, I probably am still a bit conditioned. Give me time. :)

              I was more referring to those utterly incapable of looking after themselves though. I'd gladly donate money to them of my own free will.

              A looter without a dole cheque on the other hand, has to find another way. Necessity is the mother of invention after all.
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              • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
                I have a question for you.... at what point would you say no to a person in need? When you're own children are hungry? When you've given away your house payment? My point is this....no one should have to be forced to give to another and sacrifice their own well being. Just wonder where you would draw the line. (I've told many of my friends "don't let your lack of preparation be MY emergency...because I won't." If they don't listen to reason when it is spoken then they are making a choice, and THAT choice is THEIR OWN.)
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                • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
                  Okay. I have a lodger (J). He's a hard worker. He used to live in London but moved down south to be with his girlfriend (who used to spend quite a lot of time at our house). Both of them were out of work but looking. It took them four months of trying before they finally landed jobs at... MacDonalds.

                  J was working all hours available to him & was exhausted. He did all this to pay for a flat for him & his girlfriend.

                  She got sacked for being lazy & it was discovered that she was cheating on J with one of the managers at McD's. J gave up the flat & her new boyfriend moved in & took over the rent. J had nowhere to go so I took him in.

                  The manager guy got sacked from McD's for giving out free food to his mates. They lost the flat. He got her pregnant. They've got a house now, meanwhile J's still living with us. He walks 6 miles a day to get to & from work & often doesn't get home til gone midnight. Much of what he earns is paying off a debt which she ran up.

                  Of the two parties, who would you consider had the greatest need? J who's working hard & has a new girlfriend with a brain, or a poor jobless pregnant girl who's only got herself to blame for the mess she's created for herself & others?

                  I chose to take him in because he was worth it. He costs me nothing. She on the other hand... can go fish.

                  We don't go hungry. I would never put another's needs before those of my family.
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                  • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
                    Why was it a choice of either or? I wouldn't have taken either of them in....their decisions got them where they are. They are grown ups. Perhaps you're just nicer than I am. (Have we talked about the word "nice" yet? lol) If one decides to shack up with a lazy looser then there will be a price to pay...he had to know she was lazy before McD's "sacked" her. (I love that British term..."sacked"...) Anyway... grown ups need to act like grown ups. If you feel he's worth helping then that is your choice to do so. Let me ask you this... how long does he get to stay? Personally, iffin' I ever did let someone I thought was worthy live in my house to help them out of a tough spot I'd have a 12 week limit on it...unless they did something that earned them an earlier exit. :)
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                    • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
                      Simple answer, I like him. He was head over heels in love with the girl &... well you know the saying, love is blind. He's 19 & realised too late what she was. He learned from it.

                      I doubt he'll be with us much longer, he plans to get a flat soon with a friend. He wants to be an architect too. I gave him my copy of Fountainhead.
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                      • Posted by khalling 11 years ago
                        your choice, you made it. Where are his parents???
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                        • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
                          Parents in London I believe. I had the displeasure of seeing a message his mother sent him a while ago. Take it form me she's not a very nice person. He has three brothers, at least one of which is into drugs & crime in a big way. I believe he pretty much abandoned his family because of their behaviour.
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                          • Posted by khalling 11 years ago
                            I am curious as to how you two met, but you've already shared quite a bit. I'm glad you've been able to be a role model, and you've been clear you like the guy (at least better than the loser ex). But, the question is: what are you getting out of the relationship? There is a great deal of satisfaction one can get from mentoring.
                            "Walk in the woods where there is no path. Live in conflict with those that are superior to you. You will learn, hopefully not too late, that life's greatest fruits come to those who live a little dangerously. You'll also find that if you make batters work for a hit, they'll respect you more as a pitcher. If they get a home run off of you, it will mean more if they earn it."- Rich Hoffman, Symposium of Justice, (overmanwarrior)
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                            • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
                              Well as I explained, previously, his former girlfriend used to spend quite a bit of time at our house - more than she did at home in fact: her parents are pot smokers. I honestly thought she had her head screwed on. One day she arrived with J. I liked him. A few weeks later she showed her true colours. Shame really.

                              J recently told me I was more like a Dad than his own father. Which was nice but sad at the same time.
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                • Posted by 11 years ago
                  As Margaret Thatcher pointed out, "Socilaism fails when they run out of other people's money."

                  I've often said, as many here have thought too, that the fatal flaw of socialism is when there's no one left to pay the bill. The socialist states have all failed but the new wanna be's always think they, and their elitist crowd, can run the people better.
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          • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
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            • Posted by LionelHutz 11 years ago
              I have a right for my property not to be taken from me against my will - even if it would be used in the cause of the truly needy. I think we're on the same page there.

              Where we are NOT on the same page is you're willing to let my rights be violated until such time as a fairer system is setup.

              I argue you're wrong about this. If my human rights are being violated, it needs to stop NOW. Why should I wait? Am I guaranteed my rights to property or not? You appear to be saying others needs trumps my rights - and that's where the whole problem lies.

              I also believe the charities you're describing do exist. They are called "family" and "friends" and "church".

              I also do NOT believe if we removed the welfare state we would be destroying "the only means of survival" of a single individual.
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              • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
                Okay I see your point & I'm not disagreeing with you as such.

                Nor am I suggesting that others' needs trump your rights. Right now however, I doubt that many families would be able to survive let alone afford necessary treatments for those whom may be in their care, without the aid of welfare.

                The closest thing we have to Rand's idea of government in Great Britain is UKIP (UK Independence Party). If they win the next election (I doubt they will), they will begin to undo the Socialist agenda piece by piece. Two of UKIP's primary goals are to pull the UK out from the bureaucratic control of Europe, & reduce the size of government. It will likely take them years to effect these changes & restore individual rights. The UK & the US are completely tangled up with laws brought in under Socialist government & lobbying. It will take a long time to untangle that mess. It would be impossible to scrap the welfare system overnight as so many & so much relies upon it right now. To attempt to do so would be suicide. It must be thought out & dealt with rationally. Things are likely to get a lot worse before desparation begs for rationality to rule the day.

                Meanwhile, according to the Cloward Piven Strategy, it appears to me that the Left are willing to sacrifice the sick, disabled & elderly for the greater good.
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                • Posted by LionelHutz 11 years ago
                  Hey Joss -

                  Yes - I think the implementers of the CP strategy are willing to sacrifice everybody - for the sake of getting themselves into power. I don't think it's even about the greater good - I think it's just useful rhetoric to achieve the goal of dictatorial power. That's the end game. This isn't about a benevolent central authority seeing that all the needs are met. "If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face."

                  I heard about UKIP just in the last year - kind of the British version of the Tea Party here, I gather. Hopefully, it gathers momentum. The response to Thatcher's passing worries me and shows just what you're up against.

                  I really don't think it ought to take all that long of a time to untangle ourselves from this mess. The frustrating thing to me is we can erect new taxes and programs so quickly, but people think it will take decades or generations to unwind them. Obviously, nothing government does happens "overnight", but there is no reason in my mind that we couldn't be tearing down the welfare state by reductions in payments, working towards zero, over a two year time span.
                  Will it hurt? Of course it will - it will be TRAUMATIC. But it is a more right thing to do than what we are currently doing, and getting the job done in two years is much better than in four, or eight, or twenty. The longer your time horizon, the more chance it never gets done at all and people accept "socialism light".
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                  • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
                    Well I hope you're right, LOOK HOW LONG IT'S TAKEN THE SOCIALISTS TO RECOVER FROM THE DEVASTATION THATCHER WROUGHT. :) She stamped on union power & I've got to admit she did that pretty quickly so maybe there is hope. The unions have never regained such power: the left have crept back slowly, employing even more devious methods - as mentioned in an article I posted earlier.

                    I think the problem for us is legislation passed in Europe. Trying to pull out of the EU while being able to maintain trade with Europe could be a tricky business. I can't imagine they'll make it easy for us, seeing as Europe is run by Communists.
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                • Posted by 11 years ago
                  The C-P strategy is to use the system against itself. It's one of saul alinsky's rules (#4). C-P discovered that only about 50% of the people that qualified for welfare in NYC/NYS were using welfare. So they enrolled as many of them that they could, legally, to overload the system and crash NYC/NYS ecomomies which they did.

                  NYC/NYS asked the feds for a bail out and President Ford said NO! I guess they were'nt too big to fail.

                  My take when first reading this stategy was they were doing it from the bottom, up; and, obama is doing it from the top, down;i.e., overload and crash the economy.
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                  • Posted by JossAmbrose 11 years ago
                    Thanks for the info. I'll definitely be reading more about the CP Strategy, it sounds more convincing than other conspiracy theories out there. From what your saying, it sounds like Obama is doing exactly what Tony Blair & Gordon Brown did to us. They squandered all our money & introduced all the socialist key words like 'diversity' which were only ever designed to imprison a country's natives while granting rights to everyone else. 'Everyone else' lands up working in the UK (or claiming benefits) then sending money to their home countries. Nothing like getting people from impoverished nations to unwittingly take care of 'redistribution' eh? Of course if I said this to most people, I'd be dubbed a racist.
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  • Posted by ObjectiveAnalyst 11 years ago
    Hello BlueNova,

    You are correct. Most of us are very familiar with Cloward and Piven. Some on this board have even suggested that we should adopt some of the principles in order to facilitate/ accelerate the collapse. I am of the opinion this is so distasteful and contrary to objectivist principles that I cannot agree. The lessons learned would be counterproductive.
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    • Posted by 11 years ago
      I surprised that such an approach was even considered. How, I think, would facilitating the collapse help? The economic void would then be taken over by the socialists, progressives or whatever they are. This is what the aim of the C-P strategy is. Having said all this, I'm reading saul alinsky's rules to see if any would fit in with the Objectionist view. Not really; they're just 12 scary rules that obama and his crew adhere to very effectively. Rule # 12 got him re-elected. Read them and judge for yourself.
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      • Posted by ObjectiveAnalyst 11 years ago
        I quite agree. I can't recall the names of those who suggested such an approach, but I do recall them expressing the notion that going on strike was designed to bring the economy to collapse so this would aid in this endeavor. My concern was exactly the same as yours. The wrong ideology would be well positioned to take over.
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