"Equally important is CFR's influence in the mass media .... They control or own major newspapers, magazines, radio and television networks ..." -Admiral Chester Ward (CFR and USN, Retired)
By Gary Allen
http://educate-yourself.org/ga/RF6chap1976.shtml
Published 1976
The Rockefellers, as we have seen, have never been ones to leave public opinion to chance. That is why
they have invested their charitable monies so judiciously in education and religion. It would be naive to
think that the family would not exert every possible subtle and unsubtle influence over the nation's mass
media.
In Chapter One we described how the Rockefellers use leverage to maximize the power of their
investments in industry and finance. They follow the same principle when they buy influence over
education. They do not pour money into local school board races; they put their bucks into the schools
that train the teachers and they finance the writing of textbooks. Now that every public school is at the
mercy of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (which Nelson Rockefeller created and ran
under Eisenhower), the family couldn't care less who controls the local school board. In the field of
religion, the money goes to key seminaries where ministers are trained and to the National Council of
Churches which claims to represent forty million Protestants.
The Rockefellers grab, with all the gusto they've got, at the apex of whatever instrumentality they wish
to control. The influence of the Council on Foreign Relations in the federal government is concentrated
in the Executive Branch. That is where the action is-at the top. And so it is with Rockefeller control of
the media. They are not interested in controlling the Burnt Mattress Weekly Blat; they go for the leaders
in the field. In the old days, John D. sent his agents out to bribe editors and to buy up small papers, but
that is very inefficient and antiquated in the electronic age. Now, the local papers are dependent on wire
services and syndicated columnists to fill their news and editorial pages.
The Rockefellers have made sure that the real movers and shakers in the field of mass communications
have been initiated into their CFR lodge. Admiral Ward informs us:
Equally important is CFR's influence in the mass media. Out of its 1,551 members, 60 were listed in
official CFR reports as engaged in "journalism." An additional 61 were listed in "communications
management," a highly descriptive title, because CFR members do indeed "manage" mass
communications media, especially the influential segments. They control or own major newspapers,
magazines, radio and television networks, and they control the most powerful companies in the book
publishing business.
Few would argue the fact that the New York Times is the most influential newspaper in the U.S. "A
significance of the Times," Times man James Reston has written, " is its multiplier effect. What appears
in the Times automatically appears later in other places. "
Concerning this multiplier effect, Alice Widener, columnist for Barron's notes:
"It is a fact that most editors and newsmen on the staffs of Life, Look, Time, Newsweek, etc., and most
editors, reporters, and commentators at NBC, CBS, and ABC take their news and editorial cues from the
New York Times. . Technically, it is a great newspaper; but it reports much of the news in conformity
with its editorial policies."
The late Arthur Hays Sulzberger, chairman of the board of the New York Times, was a member of the
CFR, and today there are at least 11 people in high positions with the Times who are CFR members.
Sulzberger's son-in-law Orvil E. Dryfoos (CFR) succeeded him as publisher. The current publisher is
Arthur Ochs " Punch" Sulzberger (CFR).
Other CFR members at the Times are: Harding Bancroft, Executive Vice President. James Reston, Vice
President and columnist; A. M. Rosenthal, managing editor; Seymour Topping, assistant managing
editor; Max Frankel, Sunday editor; Harrison Salisbury, associate editor; C. L. Sulzberger, columnist;
and David Halberstam, columnist.
The Times is infamous for it's anti-anti-Communism and its support of socialist-fascist legislation. Its
treatment of Stalin as a kindly liberal running a Russian branch of the ACLU should have made it a
laughing stock, but didn't. Neither did the TimesHerbert L. Matthews (CFR) treatment of "Dr. Castro"
as the George Washington of Cuba. Matthews swore repeatedly that Castro was anything but a
Communist. Later, jokers commented that Castro could honestly say, "I got my job through the New
York Times."
Needless to say, the support Nelson Rockefeller has received in his political career from the normally
Democrat Times has been nearly total.
Running a close second to the New York Times in the prestige race is the Washington Post. Every
Senator and Congressman, regardless of his party or political persuasion, has the Post on his desk each
morning. Like the Times, the Post is read by the people who count when it comes to running the country.
The Post's owner and publisher Katharine Graham is a member of the CFR, as are other top editors and
management personnel. For years the Post has been referred to as "the uptown Daily Worker." The only
time the Post has ever opposed "big government" is when it has been used to investigate Communism.
When this has happened, the people at the Post frantically start waving the Constitution and babbling
about "freedom of speech " - something they regularly suppress when it involves opposition to fascismsocialism
or the Rockefellers.
One of the most influential members of the Post's staff is the incredibly talented truth-twister, cartoonist
Herbert L. Block. Herblock's cartoons are syndicated daily in hundreds of papers. (And for every person,
who reads the editorial page, there are probably a hundred who look at the lead cartoon.)
The Los Angeles Times is the West Coast's most important newspaper. Formerly staunchly conservative,
the paper made a sharp Left turn fifteen years ago and while it still retains its GOP standing for protective coloring, it has become an organ for Establishment socialism. The L.A. Times is connected to the
Rockefellers' CFR through board chairman Franklin Murphy and the fact that it owns a wire service in
conjunction with the ultra-Liberal Washington Post. In addition, the Los Angeles Times owns the
important Newsday on Long Island.
Other major newspapers with CFR interlocks are: the Arkansas Gazette, Des Moines Register &
Tribune, Gannett Co.(publisher of newspapers in 40 cities from New York to Hawaii), The Houston
Post, Minneapolis Star & Tribune, The Denver Post and Louisville Courier.*
Equally important has been CFR influence within the wire services. For many years Arthur Sulzberger
was a director of the Associated Press while today Katharine Graham and John Cowles, Jr. are on the
board. In addition, the New York Times has its own news service as does the Washington Post-Los
Angeles Times. Every daily newspaper in the country uses one or more of these wire services for news
and editorials.
Today it might be argued that television has superseded the newspaper as the primary creator of public
opinion. Naturally, the Rockefellers have reached for control of the tube. William S. Paley, chairman of
the board of CBS, is a CFR member as well as a trustee of the Ford Foundation. CBS has over 200 TV
and 255 radio affiliates nationwide. CBS's president, Arthur Taylor, and Michael O'Neill of CBS
publications are both members of the CFR. The former president of CBS was Dr. Frank Stanton (CFR),
who is also a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation and Carnegie Institution. CBS directors who are
CFR members include Roswell Gilpatrick, Courtney Brown, Henry Schacht, and William Burden. CBS
(sometimes referred to as the Conspiracy Brainwashing System) newsmen who are CFR members
include Charles C. Collingwood , Richard C. Hottelet, Marvin Kalb, Larry LeSueur, and Daniel Schorr.*
[* There are more than thirty Committees on Foreign Relations in major US cities which the CFR says
are "affiliated" with the Council. Members of these local CFR Committees staff scores of other
newspapers and radio television stations.
]
The National Broadcasting Company [NBC] is a subsidiary of the Radio Corporation of America [RCA]. Until his
recent retirement, the head of RCA-NBC was long-time CFR member David Sarnoff. Like CBS's Paley,
Sarnoff was born in Russia. Under him, RCA was a major financial contributor to the CFR. Sarnoff
spent much of his time promoting -foreign aid." Succeeding David Sarnoff at RCA is son Robert, a
director of the Advertising Council, a spinoff of the CFR.
NBC newsmen John Chancellor and Irving R. Levine are CFR members, as are directors Thornton
Bradshaw and John Petty.
The American Broadcasting Company [ABC] is the Tag-Along Tooloo of the Big Three networks. It has 153
TV stations and specializes in escapist entertainment. It generally leaves the "documentary" propaganda
to the Big Two. Its news audience amounts to only 7 million, while the other networks divide up the
remaining 35 million news watchers. It does not have the CFR ties that CBS and NBC do, but Chase
Manhattan Bank controls 6.7 % of its stock-enough to give it a controlling interest. Chase, through its
trust department, controls 14 % of CBS and 4.5 % of RCA. Instead of three competing television
networks called NBC, CBS, and ABC, what we really have is the Rockefeller Broadcasting Company,
the Rockefeller Broadcasting System, and the Rockefeller Broadcasting Consortium.
* Certainly no one was very surprised that CBS carried an almost unprecedented 2-hour propaganda
show on "The Rockefellers" during prime viewing time on Friday, December 28, 1973. CBS used its
star, Walter Cronkite, to narrate this spectacle, which was so sugary it must have sent thousands of
diabetics scrambling for their insulin. Cronkite closed by saying that if any family had to have as much
money and power as the Rockefellers, it was a good thing it was the Rockefellers! For a political
candidate to buy that kind of television time would cost an astronomical sum. But Rocky has-friends. It
didn't cost him a nickel.
Although the advent of television has somewhat diminished the influence of the slick magazines upon
mass opinion, their importance is still significant. Until its demise (caused by advertisers switching to
television), the nation's second-leading magazine in circulation was Look, with 7,750,000 copies
distributed per issue. Look was owned by Cowles Communications, headed by Gardner Cowles and John
Cowles. Both Cowles brothers are members of the Council on Foreign Relations.
The Cowles publishing empire encompasses Harper's, a list of trade journals, a string of newspapers and
television stations, and Harper & Row. Managing the operation for the Cowles family is Cass Canfield
of the CFR and World Federalists. John Cowles is married to Canfield's daughter.
John Cowles runs the Minneapolis Tribune and Des Moines Register. He is a trustee of the Rockefeller interlocked
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and of the Ford Foundation, and he is a
member of the National Policy Board of American Assembly - a front created by Averell Harriman, the
Ford and Rockefeller Foundations, and the CFR to run propaganda seminars for leaders in American
business, labor, communications, and the academy. He is on the Advisory Council of the US Committee for the US and the ultra-Leftist National Committee for an Effective Congress, which operates a "be
kind to the Communists- lobby in Washington.
According to the American Legion's Firing Line of August 15, 1954, John Cowles joined twenty-three
others signing telegrams to US Senators "asking support of measures which would stifle all
Congressional investigations of Communism." Little wonder, Brother John is very serious about merging America into a World Government with the Communists. The following is from a U.P.I. dispatch of
June 7, 1959:
"John Cowles, publisher of The Minneapolis Star and Tribune said today that the traditional American
concept of national sovereignty is obsolete...
Gardner Cowles, chairman of the board of Cowles Communications, works hard to keep up with the
Leftist activities of his brother. Besides being a member of the CFR, he is also a member of the Atlantic
Union Committee.
"
Running Look magazine for the Cowles boys was William Atwood (CFR), who once wrote that we
could "thank our lucky stars that Castro is not a Communist."
What Americans can thank their lucky stars about is that Look, which published more smears against
anti-Communists than any other publication outside the official Communist Press, went broke.
After nearly four decades as a leading opinion maker in America, Life bit the same dust as Look and for
the same reason, despite a whopping circulation of 8.5 million. Life's corporate brother, Time, the
leading news weekly, with a circulation of 4.2 million (as compared to Newsweek's 2.5 million and U. S.
News & World Report's 1.8) is healthy, as are Time Inc.'s Sports Illustrated and Fortune.
The Time corporation recently bought its first newspaper, the Newark Evening News, for $34 million,
and later purchased thirty-two more in the Chicago suburbs. It also owns Little, Brown & Company, an
Establishment book publisher; 300,000 shares of Metro-Goldwyn Mayer; 600,000 acres of timberland;
and, is part owner of media in South America, West Germany, Hong Kong, and Australia. In addition to
all this, Time Inc. owns some thirty television stations in America, giving this mammoth conglomerate a
voice in every form of mass media newspapers, magazines, movies, television, book publishing, and
even teaching machines.
The builder of this empire was the late Henry Luce (CFR), whose impact on American thinking has been
enormous. As Theodore White (CFR) has noted, "He revolutionized the thinking of American readers."
Luce started his rise to publishing glory with loans from CFR Establishmentarians Thomas Lamont and
Dwight Morrow (like Lamont, a J. P. Morgan partner), Harvey Firestone, E. Roland Harriman, and
various members of the Harkness family (Standard Oil fortune). Their influence became especially
apparent when he started his business magazine, Fortune, in the middle of the depression. As John
Kobler writes in The First Tycoon:
"It is a bemusing paradox that Fortune, the magazine of business, questioned the efficiency of the freeenterprise
system and even took on a faint socialist tinge. Some of its editors and contributors stood far
to the left...."
Apparently that is what Luce's Rockefeller-connected financial angels wanted. And, although he later
seemed to oppose F.D.R., Henry Luce cheered his accomplishments: "I didn't vote for F.D.R. but it was
all right with me that he won. He accomplished a lot of necessary social reform."
Jeanne Harmon, a former Life staff writer, tells in Such Is Life how tolerant Luce was of the Communist
cell openly working at Time-Life. Mrs. Harmon relates how headlines were suddenly altered to convey
meanings never intended, and how she and her fellow reporters were subjected to pressures to ignore
some stories and push others. She also reveals that Whittaker Chambers was not welcomed back to
Time-Life after he had testified against Alger Hiss (CFR) [Soviet communist spy in the State Dept.].
Henry Luce was at one time actually considered an anti-Communist. Yet he always bitterly opposed
anyone like Robert Taft , General Douglas MacArthur, or Barry Goldwater, whom he thought might
actually do something about Communist subversion in the United States. Luce's bogus anti-Communism
was used to promote his World Government crusades. He was a member of the CFR and the Atlantic
Union. Henry Luce was also a strong supporter of the United Nations, even after Alger Hiss's role in its
establishment was revealed.
The Rockefeller Mediacracy
In the late Fifties, Henry Luce switched from the "World Government to oppose Communism" line to
the "peaceful co-existence and World Government with Communism" line, and Life went back to
glorifying the Soviet Union as it had done during World War II. In 1966 , Luce took a group of 43 US
businessmen behind the Iron Curtain to promote aid and trade with the enemy.
The chairman at Time Inc.is Andrew Heiskell (CFR), who is married to a New York Times heiress.
Editor-in-chief of all Time Inc. publications is Hedley
Donovan, a Rhodes Scholar, former reporter for the Limousine Leftist Washington Post, and a member
of the CFR. Other CFR - Establishmentarians in the Time Inc. hierarchy are vice chairman Roy Larsen
and directors John Gardner and Sol Linowitz.
The CFR members of Time Inc. also include James Linen, chairman of Time's executive committee;
vice presidents Otto Fuerbringer and Barry Zorthian and directors Frank Pace, Jr. and Rawleigh Warner.
So closely is Time Inc. now linked with the Rockefellers that the two jointly own a helicopter.
Rapidly closing the circulation gap with Time is News week.
Newsweek is owned by the Washington Post.
Chairman of the board Frederick Beebe is a member of the CFR as was the late owner, Katharine
Graham's son Phillip. Retired editor Malcolm Muir is a CFR member, as are current editors Osborn
Elliot and Robert Christopher, and vice president Nicholas Katzenbach. Other CFR men at Newsweek
are editorial page editor Philip Geyelin, columnist Stewart Alsop, contributing editor Carl Spaatz,
Atlanta Bureau chief William Anderson, and directors Katharine Graham and Kermit Lansner.
Other magazines in the CFR orbit are Business Week, Atlantic Monthly, McCalls, World Review
(formerly Saturday Review of Literature) and Scientific American
* One of the most curious publications to join the list of CFR interlocked journals is the ostensibly
conservative magazine National Review. Although National Review has in the past claimed to be an
opponent of the Eastern Liberal Establishment, it has never called attention to the conspiratorial
activities of the Rockefeller Dynasty - and, in fact, has bitterly ridiculed anyone who suggested that
there were any conspiratorial wolves mixed in with the Liberal sheep. Many well-informed
conservatives were puzzled by National Review's refusal to consider the possibility that most of the
liberal "mistakes" the magazine decried were actually carefully planned and deliberate acts; their
bewilderment is bound to increase when they learn that editor-in-chief William F. Buckley, Jr., who has
boasted of his personal friendship and warm admiration for such important Insiders as Henry Kissinger,
and who enthusiastically endorsed Nelson Rockefeller for Secretary of Defense, is himself a member of
the Council on Foreign Relations.
Book publishers with representatives on the CFR include:
MacMillan, Random House, Simon & Schuster, McCraw-Hill, Harper Brothers, IBM Publishing and
Printing, Xerox Corp., Yale University Press and Harper & Row. Many of these specialize in publishing
textbooks.
The Book of the Month Club's chairman Axel Rosin is a member of the CFR.
Given this kind of power over the media, it is hardly surprising that the Rockefeller family generally
gets the powder puff treatment from the media. The interlocking CFR web woven by the Rockefellers
explains why Nelson received such unanimous hosannas from the media during his hearings for the Vice
Presidency. Though a few individual reporters were mildly critical of some facets of Nelson's career, the
managers of the major papers and magazines positively drooled over themselves at the prospect of Sir
Nelson the Fair being a heartbeat away from the Presidency. This is not exactly the tone used on Barry
Goldwater in 1964. The one-eyed press is a Rockefeller-con trolled Cyclops.
There is yet another power the Dynasty has over the mass media. The average newspaper depends on
advertising for from two-thirds to three-fourths of its revenues. Ike Mc Anally, for four decades a
reporter with the New York Daily News, comments in Counter attack:
" The most persistent influence upon the editorial policies of metropolitan newspapers today is the large
advertiser. In many instances these advertisers are department stores. Some of these make open and
contemptuous demands upon the front offices of newspapers to support the left wing. Others relay '
suggestions.'
... Newspapers have surrendered unconditionally to left wing front office pressures, real and
imaginary....
... They realize that if they write a story which might draw unfavorable reaction from, for instance, a
department store, the city editor is apt to throw their copy back at them.... It is inevitable that with front
offices swinging over, individual newsmen have more elastic principles.
"
Here's how it works. Every one of the major department store chains: R. H. Macy & Company, Federated Department Stores, Gimbel Brothers, Sears, Roebuck & Company,
J. C. Penney Company, The May Department Stores Company, Interstate Department Stores, and Allied
Stores Corporation- has on its board of directors at least one officer who is a member of the Council on
Foreign Relations and/or a partner in the CFR interlocked international banking firms such as Kuhn,
Loeb; Lazard Freres; Lehman Brothers; Dillon, Read & Company; or Goldman Sachs.
Department stores, of course, are not the only buyers of advertising space. Oil companies are also
biggies. So are banks. As are the myriad of corporations listed in the early part of this book as under
Rockefeller family domination. Establishment adventurers will, of course, permit a paper to take a
moderately conservative stand, but it is taboo to discuss the Rockefeller Establishment and its links with
the International Communist Conspiracy.
With all of this membership in America's key mass media, it can hardly be an accident that few people
know about the Council on Foreign Relations [note: written in 1975]. If the Rockefellers wanted publicity for the CFR you can
bet there would be feature spreads in Time and Newsweek plus a " 60 Minute- CBS Special narrated by
Walter Cronkite. If you check The Readers Guide to Periodical
Literature at your local library, you will find but a single listing on the CFR in over 50 years. And that in
the relatively obscure Atlantic Monthly. A check of newspaper files shows that only two feature articles
on this incredibly powerful organization have appeared, one in the Christian Science Monitor and one in
the New York Times. As we said before, such anonymity can hardly be accidental.
The involvement of the Rockefellers with the media has multi-multi implications. One is that the
Rockefeller gang's plans for monopolistic World Government are never, but never, discussed in the
machines of mass misinformation. The media decides what the issues will be in the country. They can
turn on the poverty issue or turn it off. The same holds true for population explosion, pollution, peace,
détente,or whatever. We have in this country what columnist Kevin Phillips has termed a mediacracy.
The mediacracy can take a man like Ralph Nader and make him an instant folk hero. Or they can take an
enemy of the Rockefellers and create the image that he is a cretin, a buffoon, a bigot, or a dangerous
paranoid.
The use of psychology and propaganda, or if you will, brainwashing, is not a Communist invention. lt
was developed in the West in such places as the Rockefeller financed Tavistock Institute in England.
While the Communists have used these tools for mindbending, so have the Rockefellers. The hidden
persuaders from Madison Avenue, the Rand Corp. think-tank or Hudson Institute, can and do
manipulate public opinion. The Establishment elitists refer to it as" the engineering of consent." That
means we are made to think the manacles they are slipping on our wrists are love bracelets. The
techniques developed by the Rockefeller "Thought Trust " have just been adopted and used more
brutally by the Communists.
With money the Rockefellers gained control of the media. With the media the family gained control
over public opinion. With control over public opinion they gained control of politics. And with control
of politics, they are taking control of the nation.
All information posted on this web site is
the opinion of the author and is provided for educational purposes only.
It is not to be construed as medical advice. Only a licensed medical doctor
can legally offer medical advice in the United States. Consult the healer
of your choice for medical care and advice.