By Steve Sailer
04/18/2009
Speaking of interesting but overconfident Internet pundits, a few years ago, a reader pointed out to me that "Spengler" was very likely David P. Goldman, a former high-ranking member of the Lyndon LaRouche cult.I posted on October 27, 2006:
I won’t explain the persuasive evidence for his long-ago Lyndon LaRouche connection, since that would necessitate revealing his real name, which might hurt him in his day job. But I’m 95% persuaded of a reader’s suggestion that many years ago the individual who is now the extremely self-confident columnist "Spengler" of the Asia Times was a close colleague of the crackpot perennial Presidential candidate.LaRouche and Goldman had cowritten a book together in 1980, The Ugly Truth about Milton Friedman.That reminds me that adventuring in the Middle East seems to appeal most to two sets of people:
- The not very bright sorts who get Iraq and Iran and Saddam and Osama confused.
- And the extremely bright but not quite stable sorts who can convince themselves of anything.
Now, Spengler/Goldman, who is now an editor at First Things, has come out with a column in Asia Times doing the opposite of what I did: revealing his name, but not his old Larouche connection.
Now, just because somebody belonged to a cult doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t take them seriously. For example, Alan Greenspan was part of the inner circle of Ayn Rand’s cult well into his forties (going so far as to sign the notoriously loony Stalin-like manifesto denouncing Rand’s ex-boyfriend Nathaniel Branden when he was 42). And then Greenspan became the most powerful unelected official in the world, and look how swell that worked out.
Oh, wait … never mind. I guess I need to find a new example of an ex-cultist making good. Let me get back to you on this one …
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