Fortgang wrote his rant for the Princeton Tory, an independent campus publication that's just one of about 80 bankrolled by the Collegiate Network and its parent group, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. According to its website, ISI was founded in the McCarthy era as a "fifty-year plan" to advance conservative political causes "by implanting the idea in the minds of the coming generations."
Today, ISI is a "nonpartisan" non-profit with a $10 million annual budget that astroturfs scores of conservative campus publications across the country, funding them and grooming their staffs to become TV pundits, politicians, and political moneymen. Praised by the likes of Ronald Reagan and Antonin Scalia, it started humbly in 1953 with nothing but an idea and a president: a recent graduate of Yale named William F. Buckley.
The ISI and Collegiate Network have raked in millions of dollars from major conservative financiers over the years, most of it from the coffers of Richard Mellon Scaife, a banking tycoon (yes, those Mellons) who's most famous for bankrolling the conservative witch-hunt against Bill Clinton that led to Whitewater and Monicagate. Scaife's money also helps keep the lights on at the Heritage Foundation, American Enterprise Institute, Cato Institute, ALEC, and just about every other conservative money-and-opinion laundromat you can name.
And the ISI/Collegiate Network is also responsible for some of the most infamous names in wingnut welfare: the ghoulish Ann Coulter, indicted propagandist Dinesh D'Souza, National Review editor Rich Lowry, and Washington Free Beacon editor Matthew Continetti. It seems Tal here will fit right in to this crowd when he graduates.
Let's be honest here: Fortgang produced a product for consumption, and that product is outrage. Unless you believe in America that white men are the aggrieved party, his theories are so much whining of a petulant child, the Princeton freshman version of Veruca Salt screaming how she wants everything now. There's a market for that product, and ISI and the Collegiate Network produces and nurtures those producers the way a baseball team's farm system brings up major league talent.
This was an audition for the big leagues of faux outrage, and Fortgang passed with flying colors. It's all that "conservative intellectualism" has these days.
1 comment:
I hear you, brother.
The Wall Street Journal arrives by mail in these woods so I am generally a day behind in monitoring the outrage. For me this morning's hairball was a Free Speech absolutist who is oh-so-upset that rich corporate executives, rich slumlords, and fossil fuel sponsored global warming denialist hacks are no longer free to use their positions of wealth and power to advance noxious ideas without mobs, MOBS I TELL YOU, complaining about them and doing other horrible stuff no doubt.
It would be funny, were it not for the fact that these goobers do in actuality run the country.
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