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Study of the Hegemony of Parasitism - michaeljgoodnight.com

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Stanley Fischer, liberal from MIT<br />

Joseph Pechman, <strong>the</strong> Hoover Institution resident tax expert--he had been tax<br />

expert at Brookings Institution Washington for many years before <strong>com</strong>ing to<br />

Hoover<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r resident liberals are Dennis J. Dollin, Theodore Draper and Peter<br />

Duignan.<br />

Lipset was quoted in an interview in <strong>the</strong> New York Times<br />

as follows: "Over half <strong>the</strong> senior fellows here are not<br />

rightwingers, not even conservatives; <strong>the</strong>y are leftwing<br />

Democrats and Socialists."<br />

These are <strong>the</strong> architects <strong>of</strong> Reagan's "rightwing"<br />

administration, <strong>the</strong> usual flimflam in which <strong>the</strong> same tired<br />

old Marxists are trotted out as <strong>the</strong> inspired libertarians <strong>of</strong><br />

a world run by <strong>the</strong> "Hard Right"! The head <strong>of</strong> Reagan's<br />

Presidential Transition Team on cabinet appointments in<br />

1980 was W. Glenn Campbell, Harvard graduate and<br />

head <strong>of</strong> Hoover Institution; Reagan's adviser on social<br />

security was his wife, Rita Ricardo Campbell. More than<br />

half <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Hoover staff went to Washington with Reagan.<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Richard Starr and Peter Duignan were his advisers on foreign policy;<br />

Duignan had received fellowships from Ford, Rockefeller, & Guggenheim<br />

Thomas Gale Moore was Reagan's expert on energy policy<br />

Paul Craig Roberts became asst. Sec. Treasury<br />

Richard V. Allen, who had been on <strong>the</strong> staff <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Hoover Institution since<br />

1966, served on National Security Council 1969, dep. asst, to <strong>the</strong> President<br />

1969-70, now became Reagan's asst. for national security affairs<br />

Martin Anderson, senior fellow at Hoover Institution 1971-81, became<br />

Reagan's asst for policy development; he thought up <strong>the</strong> ridiculous<br />

boondoggle <strong>of</strong> "Urban Enterprise Zones".<br />

One <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> "Hoover Hotshots" on Reagan's team was<br />

described in Omni March 1984, Continuum:

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