The Daily 202: Fear of authoritarianism pervades Koch network seminar, as billionaire donors grapple
The Daily 202: Fear of authoritarianism pervades Koch network seminar, as billionaire donors grapple with Trump
By James Hohmann January 30 at 11:02 AM
With Breanne Deppisch
THE BIG IDEA:
INDIAN WELLS, Calif.Charles Murray, the political scientist best known for his book The Bell Curve, spoke Sunday afternoon to 550 donors who have each agreed to give at least $100,000 a year to finance the conservative Koch network. He painted a pessimistic picture of decaying institutions, growing dependency on government assistance and the increasing isolation of the rich from the rest of society.
Completely apart from the individual person of the president,
I think we see an environment that is fertile for authoritarianism in the United States now, he told some of the countrys most affluent business leaders, as they sipped lemonade and ate salad at a desert resort outside Palm Springs.
As recently as 1960, both the left and the right were united in general support for what was called the American creed. The American creed was the basics of individualism and freedom and opportunity, Murray explained. And what we discovered last year was that
the proportion of the American electorate on the right that is still devoted to those American creedal principles is way smaller than I thought it was. Im not talking about how many doctrinaire libertarians there are. Im talking about the degree to which people buy into what weve always considered, This is what America is all about.
During a panel discussion later in the afternoon, billionaire industrialist Charles Koch who has been convening these twice-annual seminars since 2003 reiterated Murrays point. We have a tremendous danger because we can go the authoritarian route, he said, or we can move toward a free and open society.