Charles Paul Freund
"Conspiracy: How the Paranoid Style Flourishes and Where
It Comes from" by Daniel Pipes

Conspiracy
@ Amazon.com
When the news broke that Diana Spencer had been
killed in a car accident, one of the first reactions - before
any of the facts of the crash were known, and in advance of
the public convulsion of pop misery - was the enunciation of
a conspiracy theory. A man in Australia almost immediately established
"The First Diana Conspiracy Site." Note his assumption - quite
correct, as it quickly turned out - that he was in a breathless
race with other like-minded hosts for Internet conspiracy precedence.
This site instantly declared the accident to
be "too pat and too convenient, " and asked a series of purportedly
urgent questions. Among them: whether the American tourist-witnesses
on the scene were actually intelligence agents; whether CNN's
focus on the pursuing paparazzi wasn't an intentional misdirection
of our attention; and why the French emergency services hadn't
operated on Diana in the middle of the road instead of wasting
time getting her to a hospital. The site's prime suspect was
the British government, so concerned about Diana's anti-land-mine
campaign that it had no choice but to kill her.
But this was merely a conspiratorial hors
d'oeuvre. In succeeding days, I heard through one means
or another that Diana was really murdered because she was running
around with a Muslim, and the prospect of the future King William
having a Muslim half-brother was simply unthinkable to British
intelligence agencies. Indeed, I was soon to hear that Diana
was already pregnant at the time of her death. I also heard
that the fatal Mercedes had been stolen shortly before the fatal
crash and stripped; hence, the accident was self-evidently a
case of sabotage. I learned about mysterious other cars speeding
from the scene, about the driver's "controversial" physical
condition, and about the bodyguard's "suspicious" memory. I
"learned" much more that I've forgotten, which may be just as
well because I also learned that Diana was really still alive
and well. In any event, I have every anticipation of learning
more such things about the Diana case at intervals for the rest
of my life. Conspiracy theories frequently address death, but
they themselves are immortal.
Some of the sources for this material - newspapers,
talk shows, Web sites, acquaintances, etc. - believed that what
they were passing along was true. For others, however, these
reports seemed worth reporting because the content was so titillating,
rather like outrageously tasteless jokes, or obscene gossip,
or just as something to gawk at intellectually: ideas as a freak
show.
So when Daniel Pipes writes in his stimulating
new study of such ideas through history, Conspiracy: How
the Paranoid Style Flourishes and Where It Comes from, that
these ideas "constitute a quite literal form of pornography,
" his contention has to be taken seriously. "The two genres
became popular about the same time, in the 1740s," writes Pipes.
"Both are backstairs literatures that often have to be semi-clandestinely
distributed, then read with the shades drawn. Elders seek to
protect youth from their depredation. Librarians hold their
noses... Recreational conspiracism titillates sophisticates
much as does recreational sex. Artists explore conspiracist
fantasies in a spirit akin to sexual ones."
Much of what Pipes is saying here about "conspiracism"
- the belief in nonexistent grand conspiracies as the motive
force in history - is unquestionably true, and indeed one could
add to it. There is often a profane thrill to conspiracy talk:
people may dismiss these theories as the ravings of lunatics,
but frequently not until they've listened wide-eyed to a lengthy
narrative. Sometimes this material can be appalling, especially
when a history of evil criminality is attributed to members
of a religious group such as the Catholics or (of course) the
Jews. In these cases, one can come away from the material with
a sense of degradation, precisely as in the case of the most
debased kind of pornography.
And yet, Pipes's view of conspiracy thinking
as essentially profane obscures its historical scope and, I
believe, its actual heritage. When Pipes describes this material
as largely debased, he is certainly right. But is it pornography?
Pornography exerts no power (except, perhaps,
on the clinically addicted), whereas conspiracy ideas have been
a shaping factor in history. Indeed, the story of that power
is the heart of Pipes's own book. Pornography is remarkably
short-lived; there are only a handful of pornographic "classics"
that have retained any readership over the years. Conspiracy
ideas, once in circulation, seem never to go away. That is because,
while pornography "explains" nothing, but only titillates, conspiracy
stories titillate, but "explain" everything. They put the world
in a kind of order, however absurd it may be. What they most
"explain" is why bad things have really happened, why evil appears
powerful if not triumphant, and why the good have suffered.
That is not the province of pornography: It
is the work of theology (which is one reason that conspiracies
are so often alleged in the sudden deaths of people who have
been transformed by popular hagiography, including John F. Kennedy,
Marilyn Monroe, and now Diana). Conspiracy is history as demonology;
a secular occultism, the lunatic sublime.
Make no mistake, though: Pipes's is a valuable
and much-needed book. Scholars usually shy away from these kinds
of subjects despite their tremendous and continuing influence.
Even when scholars do write such studies, they are apt to be
embarrassed by their own interest and even to apologize for
it in their books' introductions. The result is that, after
200 years of raging conspiracism and its frequently ghastly
results, there are only a few serious, systematic studies of
the phenomenon by English-speaking authors who know what they're
talking about. Richard
Hofstadter, Norman Cohn, James
Billington, David Brion Davis, and Seymour Martin Lipset and
David Raab take up most of this short shelf, supplemented by
the investigative work of neutral journalists; now there's Pipes
as well.
In fact, this is Pipes's second book on the
subject. A Middle East scholar - he is the editor of the Middle
East Quarterly and the author of many books on the region's
politics - Pipes last year released The
Hidden Hand: Middle East Fears of Conspiracy, a long-overdue,
full-length study of paranoia in a region where conspiracy thinking
often overwhelms all other forms of thought. (For his troubles,
Pipes is described on one hostile Internet site not as being
mistaken in his views about the region's politics but as "a
leading crusader in the [Z]ionist army who masquerades as an
'expert' on terrorism," a typical example of the region's discourse.)
Pipes's new conspiracy book is an outgrowth
of the first one, and in places the two books overlap in text
as well as concept. He writes in his introduction that in researching
various extremist ideas circulating in the Middle East, he tracked
their origins to Europe and America, but that such material
didn't fit his first book. It "settled into quiet obscurity
on the hard drive" until The Free Press encouraged him
to publish the material as a freestanding interpretative essay.
To my surprise, I appear twice in the new book,
both times on the basis of a 1992 essay I wrote as a staffer
at The Washington Post. In the first instance, Pipes
quotes - neutrally - two paragraphs of mine that he regards
as successfully characterizing the conspiratorial cast of mind.
The second reference is polemical. Pipes cites me - fairly -
as one among several "pessimists" in my view of the current
state of conspiracism. (I had written that there seemed to be
hardly any continuing story in the paper that was not dogged
by a doppelganger conspiracy explanation, and expressed concern
about the apparently growing appeal of such a worldview.) Pipes
describes himself as an optimist on the matter, arguing that
the significance of such theorizing is largely in decline.
Pipes's thesis is that conspiracism can be traced
to the period of the Crusades, when the two major villains of
such thinking began to emerge as figures of evil and mystery.
The first of those villains was the Jews, who began to be widely
perceived not only as deicides but as activist enemies of temporal
Christendom. The second was the Knights Templar, Crusaders supposedly
turned heretic, who were destroyed as an order for their wealth
in the early 14th century, but who are believed by some to have
existed in secret for centuries until they eventually transmuted
into the Freemasons, alleged sworn enemies of Church, crown,
and God. (It is very common, in the enormous literature of conspiracy,
to see the Masons characterized as a front organization manipulated
by their "real" masters, the Jews.)
The actual work of modern conspiracism, writes
Pipes, began in reaction to the French Revolution. Secret societies,
including some Masonic lodges, actually had been active throughout
Europe in their opposition to the old order. But two authors
more or less simultaneously "discovered" that the overthrow
of the French monarchy and the course of the revolution was
entirely according to a secret agenda. John Robison, a Scot,
and Augustin de Barruel, a French cleric, both wrote such accounts.
In Barruel's dizzying case, the heritage of those societies
was traced to the dimmest antiquity, planting firmly the idea
of parallel histories: one history to which we, the gullible
masses, are allowed access, but which is largely a sham; and
another, secret history which reveals us as the pawns of unseen
powers.
According to Pipes's interpretation, such ideas
were to be a significant factor in shaping the next century
and a half, after which they began to recede. Pipes recounts
the major events of the period from 1815 until 1945 in a chapter
he appealingly calls "Florescence," addressing such familiar
developments as the composition of The Protocols of the Elders
of Zion, the fear and distrust of the Jesuits, and of "Perfidious
Albion" (the sobriquet Britain earned through real and imagined
backstage machinations), and the rise of Adolph Hitler on a
foundation of conspiracist paranoia.
But he also does something relatively unfamiliar
in the course of this discussion: He identifies Leninism as
a conspiracist conceit. "The Leninist corpus contains a conspiracy
theory at its heart," he writes. Financiers and manufacturers
group together not only to control the working class but to
control the government, too. That control extends to foreign
policy, because of this powerful group's need for cheap raw
materials, cheap labor, and monopolistic control of markets.
This case was laid out in a 1902 study by English economist
John Atkinson Hobson, notes Pipes, and was a major influence
on Lenin.
Of course, it may be argued that Hobson's thesis
is at least sometimes borne out by history, that the British
themselves regarded their empire as a byproduct of their mercantilism,
and that Pipes may seem to be whitewashing such things as America's
ugly record in Central America. But Pipes is not necessarily
denying - or even addressing - any of this. His point is that
Leninism regarded the needs of monopoly capitalism as the sole
motive force behind Western actions, a piece of political paranoia
that was to meld seamlessly with Stalinist insanity.
"The Left thus reinterprets some of
the oldest activities of governments as conspiracies," argues
Pipes. "Beginning with collusion among manufacturers, the Left
ended up by postulating that all the governments of Europe engaged
in conspiracies... Since about 1900, conspirators are thought
already to be in power."
By the 1930s, Europe's politics were dominated
by conspiracist obsessions, and Pipes introduces the quite useful
term of "operational conspiracism" to describe those states,
such as Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, and now Revolutionary Iran,
that are or have been governed by conspiracist beliefs.
In 1939, the conspiracisms of the "anti-imperialist"
left and anti-Semitic right challenged each other for world
control, but since 1945, writes Pipes, the power of the idea
has ebbed. Though still exerting influence in Eastern Europe
and the Middle East, and among the disaffected of all societies,
Pipes writes that no great state is any longer endangered by
the irrationalities such beliefs can let loose. Democracy and
affluence stifle their growth, he argues, maintaining that the
whole subject is receding into a historical, rather than a political,
matter.
Pipes winds down with a review of the remnants
of the tradition, including a chapter in which he argues that
contemporary left-wing conspiracism (JFK assassinologists, "October
Surprise" believers, Afrocentrism, etc.) has been getting off
easy in perceptual terms, because, among other reasons, "The
liberal orientation of most scholars and journalists means that
they treat comparable phenomena in different ways." His final
chapter addresses what Pipes tallies as "Conspiracism's Costs,"
including a poisoned public discourse and the encouragement
of national self-hatred. He also argues, interestingly, that
conspiracy fantasists, when in power, end up encouraging the
multiplication of real conspiracies.
This is an impressive performance, going beyond
historical narrative and attempting to get an interpretative
handle on a subject very much in need of discussion and understanding.
Pipes has certainly advanced that understanding, particularly
in his reconsideration of the left's own conspiratorial reflex,
something few of his predecessors have had much interest in
doing.
But by characterizing conspiracism in totally
mundane terms, as Pipes does throughout his book, he may be
understating its essential appeal. I earlier took issue with
his comparison of the phenomenon to pornography; there are some
related issues worth raising.
Pipes describes his book as "the opposite of
a study in intellectual history. I deal not with the cultural
elite but its rearguard, not with the finest mental creations,
but its dregs....So debased is the discourse ahead that even
the Russian secret police and Hitler play important intellectual
roles." As an intellectual history, it is indeed a debased discourse.
But considered as a history of a kind of occultist thought,
it is much more normal. Occultism, throughout its long history,
has been concerned with the seeking out of powers otherwise
beyond human awareness, and with exploiting or combating those
powers. Conspiracism does not equal occultism, of course, but
I would argue that the two are closely related. Indeed, they
appear to be intimately intertwined, and they intersect at numerous
points, from an obsession with the Templars to the ultimate
foundation of Nazism itself.
What the two have most in common is a dualist
outlook and an understanding of how power is exerted in the
world, which is to say that they share a belief in the vast
potential power of evil. Full-blown contemporary conspiracists
are beyond left and right (Pipes addresses this "fusion paranoia"),
positing a Power able to exert its will in virtually any manner.
This includes not only such common criminality
as murder and financial manipulation, but even such extraordinary
abilities as command of the weather and effective daily mind
control. What matters to such believers is not the obvious implausibility
of establishing and controlling the necessary organization to
achieve such limitless power. What matters is that bad things
keep happening, that all such events may be said to benefit
somebody, and that therefore somebody of great power must be
capable of performing evil acts at will. That somebody must
be studied and identified to be revealed and opposed. Otherwise,
the world and its injustices would threaten to make no sense.
Who is that somebody? At various times it has
been the Illuminati, the Masons, the Elders of Zion, the Bilderbergers,
the Insiders, the Trilateralists, the Jesuits, the Council on
Foreign Relations, the U.N., FEMA, the CIA, the World Bank,
Wall Street, the cultists of the All-Seeing Eye. These are secular
identifications, founded on an Enlightenment-derived awareness
of the world and darkly mirroring that epoch's belief in the
clockwork nature of the forces governing existence. But these
identifications have ancient antecedents. They have much the
same teleological role in the mentalities of modern conspiracists
as the Demiurge (the imperfect creator of this world) had for
the Gnostics of antiquity, and that the AntiChrist still has
for believing Christians.
Pipes's interpretation of conspiracism is not
mistaken, but it may be incomplete. He takes pains to argue
that conspiracism's history is a self-contained one, without
antecedents. And it is true that this particular set of conspiratorial
forms has a specific 18th-century origin, from which it proceeds
to the present day. The question is whether the frame of mind
from which conspiracism itself proceeds has a heritage. And
the answer to that question has a direct impact on another matter:
whether conspiracism has a future.
Pipes says the phenomenon is receding. In fact,
one could argue that conspiracism is a larger factor in the
American national discourse today than it has been at any time
since the end of World War II, or perhaps ever. No national
event of significance - from plane crashes to political suicides
to violent federal acts to murder trials to the spread of infectious
disease - occurs without broadly disseminated conspiracy theories
attaching themselves to it. But Pipes knows that; his case is
that it is receding as a political factor, thriving only among
slumming sophisticates and the disaffected poor and powerless.
Is even this so? The fear of conspiracy is arguably
a domestic political factor now. In Washington, D.C., for example,
the infamous Marion Barry is back in office thanks in part to
the belief in two conspiracies held by many of his constituents:
a national conspiracy theory that white prosecutors unfairly
targeted black officeholders like Barry (who spent time in jail
for drug use), and a local conviction that whites have been
conspiring to "take back" control of the city from its black
majority. This concentration on conspiratorial factors (regularly
validated by local newspaper columnists), rather than on the
real failings of the city's leadership, has contributed heavily
to the appalling condition in which Washington finds itself.
(Recently, the growing number of Spanish-speaking Washingtonians
has raised a new specter: a Latino Conspiracy to take over the
schools.)
Conspiracism is a marked feature in our national
politics as well, with national politicians regularly courting
conspiracy-minded constituencies. President Bill Clinton's shameless
exploitation of such issues as the burning of black churches
and Gulf War Syndrome, after both of these were determined to
be chimeras, is evidence of how democracy can accommodate conspiracy:
Believers in plots can simply become another voting bloc to
capture.
On an international level, Pipes acknowledges
that conspiracism retains its force in Eastern Europe and the
Middle East. There has been significant suffering in both regions
due to conflicts in which conspiracy thinking plays a large
role, and there is nothing encouraging in that. Pipes's suggestion
that rising affluence will eventually stifle the conspiracy
reflex in such places is not unreasonable in itself - a richer
populace will have fewer miseries to blame on others. But affluence
is hardly a safeguard against irrationality. It is in fact members
of the guilt-ridden middle class who have often conceived the
century's most destructive forces. Indeed, the same historical
event that has excited hopes of rising living standards throughout
the world - the end of the Cold War - has also intensified ethnic
identifications, and that is just the kind of emotional hothouse
in which conspiracism flourishes.
Of course, it will be a better world if Pipes
is right. But if conspiracism is indeed an Enlightenment offshoot
of the occult understanding of unfairness and injustice - that
if evil occurs, an evil power has willed it - then it isn't
going anywhere, because it has always been there. Indeed, secularized
occultism pervades the modern world in ways we rarely think
about, from psychoanalysis (which, as occult historian Peter
Washington notes, presents the analyst as a kind of "sensitive"
with a sixth sense) to the still-thriving Marxist communications
theory (which posits the mass media as powerful mesmerists with
their audience in thrall).
As for conspiracy proper, it is and probably
will remain the hidden link between mystery and solution, between
cause and effect. It offers a world with neither accidents nor
unintended consequences, but rather of plans executed by the
powerful few at the expense of the victimized multitude. Identify
with that multitude, and the central mystery of fate is unraveled.
Otherwise, you have to take your chances. No wonder conspiracy's
spell is so beguiling.
Reason Magazine, 12/01/1997