Latest Breaking News
In reply to the discussion: Billionaire Koch Brothers Spending Millions To Deny Health Coverage To Low-Income Americans [View all]hedda_foil
(16,997 posts)The blog you referenced was a copy of the transcript of a 2010 Fresh Air program on NPR with Terry Gross interviewing the New Yorker's Jane Mayer, who had just written a long expose on the brothers' Koch and their anti government activities. The transcript was so interesting that I followed the blogger's link to Mayer's article at:
http://m.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/08/30/100830fa_fact_mayer?currentPage=all
I have a vague recollection of this piece from back then. I don't even know if I read beyond the DU clips. Probably not, as I was using a basic Kindle 2 to read DU then, and it was almost impossible to open a linked page with it. There is so much in that article that I can't recommend it highly enough. But the following except is where Mayer pins down Daddy Koch's Stalinist connections and, for me at least, puts her finger on the origins of the shared craziness of his baby boys.
Oddly enough, the fiercely capitalist Koch family owes part of its fortune to Joseph Stalin. Fred Koch was the son of a Dutch printer who settled in Texas and ran a weekly newspaper. Fred attended M.I.T., where he earned a degree in chemical engineering. In 1927, he invented a more efficient process for converting oil into gasoline, but, according to family lore, Americas major oil companies regarded him as a threat and shut him out of the industry. Unable to succeed at home, Koch found work in the Soviet Union. In the nineteen-thirties, his company trained Bolshevik engineers and helped Stalins regime set up fifteen modern oil refineries. Over time, however, Stalin brutally purged several of Kochs Soviet colleagues. Koch was deeply affected by the experience, and regretted his collaboration. He returned to the U.S. In the headquarters of his company, Rock Island Oil & Refining, in Wichita, he kept photographs aimed at proving that some of those Soviet refineries had been destroyed in the Second World War. Gus diZerega, a former friend of Charles Koch, recalled, As the Soviets became a stronger military power, Fred felt a certain amount of guilt at having helped build them up. I think it bothered him a lot.
In 1958, Fred Koch became one of the original members of the John Birch Society, the arch-conservative group known, in part, for a highly skeptical view of governance and for spreading fears of a Communist takeover. Members considered President Dwight D. Eisenhower to be a Communist agent. In a self-published broadside, Koch claimed that the Communists have infiltrated both the Democrat and Republican Parties. He wrote admiringly of Benito Mussolinis suppression of Communists in Italy, and disparagingly of the American civil-rights movement. The colored man looms large in the Communist plan to take over America, he warned. Welfare was a secret plot to attract rural blacks to cities, where they would foment a vicious race war. In a 1963 speech that prefigures the Tea Partys talk of a secret socialist plot, Koch predicted that Communists would infiltrate the highest offices of government in the U.S. until the President is a Communist, unknown to the rest of us.
Koch married Mary Robinson, the daughter of a Missouri physician, and they had four sons: Freddie, Charles, and twins, David and William. John Damgard, the president of the Futures Industry Association, was Davids schoolmate and friend. He recalled that Fred Koch was a real John Wayne type. Koch emphasized rugged pursuits, taking his sons big-game hunting in Africa, and requiring them to do farm labor at the family ranch. The Kochs lived in a stone mansion on a large compound across from Wichitas country club; in the summer, the boys could hear their friends splashing in the pool, but they were not allowed to join them. By instilling a work ethic in me at an early age, my father did me a big favor, although it didnt seem like a favor back then, Charles has written. By the time I was eight, he made sure work occupied most of my spare time. David Koch recalled that his father also indoctrinated the boys politically. He was constantly speaking to us children about what was wrong with government, he told Brian Doherty, an editor of the libertarian magazine Reason, and the author of Radicals for Capitalism, a 2007 history of the libertarian movement. Its something I grew up witha fundamental point of view that big government was bad, and imposition of government controls on our lives and economic fortunes was not good.