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Karl Hess

Karl Hess (born Carl Hess III; May 25, 1923 – April 22, 1994) was an American speechwriter and author. He was also a political philosopher, editor, welder, motorcycle racer, tax resister, and libertarian activist. His career included stints on the Republican right and the New Left before embracing a mix of left-libertarianism and laissez-faire anarcho-capitalism.[1] Later in life, he summed up his role in the economy by remarking "I am by occupation a free marketer (crafts and ideas, woodworking, welding, and writing)."[2]

Karl Hess
Born
Carl Hess III

May 25, 1923
DiedApril 22, 1994(1994-04-22) (aged 70)
NationalityAmerican
Occupations
  • Speechwriter
  • author
  • welder
Years active1940–1994
Employer(s)Mutual Broadcasting System, The Washington Daily News, Newsweek, American Enterprise Institute, The Libertarian Forum
Political partyLibertarian Party
SpouseTherese (second wife)
ChildrenKarl Hess, IV

Early life

Hess was born Carl Hess III[3] in Washington, D.C. and moved to the Philippines as a child. His parents were of German and Spanish ancestry. When his mother discovered his father's marital infidelity, she divorced her wealthy husband and returned (with Karl) to Washington. She refused alimony or child support and took a job as a telephone operator, raising her son in very modest circumstances.[2]

Karl's mother encouraged curiosity and direct learning. She often insisted that Karl figure things out for himself, or increase his knowledge through reading. Karl, believing (as his mother did) that public education was a waste of time, rarely attended school; to evade truancy officers, he registered at every elementary school in town and gradually withdrew from each one, making it impossible for the authorities to know exactly where he was supposed to be. He had developed great reverence for libraries; this became very basic to his personal philosophy, and in his autobiography he wrote: "Literacy is the basic tool in the workshop of the entire world."[2]

As a young person, Karl played tennis, learned marksmanship, and pursued fencing. Later on he learned gunsmithing. He officially dropped out at 15 and went to work for the Mutual Broadcasting System as a newswriter at the invitation of Walter Compton, a Mutual news commentator who resided in the building where Mrs. Hess operated the switchboard. Hess continued to work in the news media, and by age 18 was assistant city editor of The Washington Daily News[2]

Early during the Second World War, Hess enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1942, but was discharged when they discovered he had contracted malaria in the Philippines.[2]

He was later an editor for Newsweek and The Fisherman. He worked as a staff writer, and sometimes as a freelancer, for a number of anti-Communist periodicals. In the 1950s he worked for the Champion Papers and Fibre Company. He was dismayed that people in the management portion of the corporate world seemed more interested in personal advancement than in doing good work. At Champion his bosses encouraged him to get involved in conservative politics for the company's benefit. In doing so he met Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater and many other prominent Republicans, thus beginning the GOP epoch of his life.[2]

In his book Dear America, Hess wrote that he became an atheist because his temporary job as a coroner's assistant when he was 15 left him convinced that people were simply flesh-and-blood beings with no afterlife. Consequently, he stopped attending church (he had been a devout Roman Catholic). Years later, while on leave from Champion and working for the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), he resumed attending church because virtually all of his AEI colleagues did so. His return merely reinforced his atheism; on one Sunday morning, while enduring a service as his young son sat on his lap, Hess became disgusted with himself for exposing his child to an institution he himself had rejected.

Political activities

Hess was the primary author of the Republican Party's 1960 and 1964 platforms. In the lead-up to the 1964 presidential election, Hess worked closely with Barry Goldwater. He came to view Goldwater as a man of sterling character, a conservative holding a number of significant libertarian convictions. Hess worked as a speechwriter, and explored ideology and politics. He was widely considered to be the author of the renowned Goldwater line, "Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice; moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue," but revealed that he had encountered it in a letter from Lincoln historian Harry Jaffa and later learned it was a paraphrase of a passage from Cicero.[4] He later called this his "Cold Warrior" phase.

Following the 1964 presidential campaign in which Lyndon Johnson trounced Goldwater, Hess became disillusioned with traditional politics and became more radical. Hess and others on the losing team had found themselves outsiders within the national Republican party because of their support of the controversial Goldwater. Hess felt that he had been purged by the Republicans and he departed from involvement with grand-scale politics altogether.

In 1965 Hess took up motorcycle riding. His need to occasionally repair his motorcycles led to his interest in welding (which he learned at Bell Vocational School). Welding skills gave him something he could trade upon. Initially, he set up a commercial partnership, with a fellow Bell graduate, doing on-site industrial welding. Eventually, his skill led to an involvement with welded-metal sculpture.

All of this unfolded around the same time as his divorce from his first wife. Hess hereafter publicly criticized big business, suburban American hypocrisy and the military-industrial complex. Though well beyond college age, Hess joined Students for a Democratic Society, worked with the Black Panther Party and protested the Vietnam War.[2]

After his work on the Goldwater campaign, Hess was audited by the Internal Revenue Service, which he believed was in retaliation for his support of the losing candidate. In response, he sent the IRS a copy of the Declaration of Independence with a letter saying that he would never again pay taxes. Hess claimed that the IRS then threatened to put a lien on all of his property and 100% of his future earnings. He was supported financially thereafter by his wife and used barter to keep himself afloat.[5][unreliable source?]

In 1968, Richard Nixon was elected president and Barry Goldwater returned to the Senate as Arizona's junior senator. Hess, despite now being a member of the New Left, had recently written some speeches for Goldwater and resumed their close personal relationship; he had concluded that American men should not be forced into military service and urged Goldwater to submit legislation abolishing conscription. Goldwater replied, "Well, let's wait and see what Dick Nixon wants to do about that one." Hess despised Nixon almost as much as he admired Goldwater and could not tolerate the notion that Goldwater would defer to Nixon. Thus ended one of Hess's closest professional associations, and the situation significantly compromised one of his deepest friendships. (Nixon abolished conscription during his presidency, with Goldwater's support.)

Hess began reading American anarchists largely because of the recommendations of his friend Murray Rothbard. Hess said that upon reading the works of Emma Goldman he discovered that anarchists believed everything he had hoped the Republican Party would represent, and that Goldman was the source for the best and most essential theories of Ayn Rand without any of the "crazy solipsism that Rand was so fond of."[6]

From 1969 to 1971, Hess edited The Libertarian Forum with Rothbard.

Hess had come to put his focus on the small scale, on community. He said, "Society is: people together making culture." He deemed two of his cardinal social principles to be "opposition to central political authority" and "concern for people as individuals." His rejection of standard American party politics was reflected in a lecture he gave during which he said, "The Democrats or liberals think that everybody is stupid and therefore they need somebody... to tell them how to behave themselves. The Republicans think everybody is lazy..."[7]

In 1969 and 1970, Hess joined with others, including Murray Rothbard, Robert LeFevre, Dana Rohrabacher, Samuel Edward Konkin III, and former Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) leader Carl Oglesby to speak at two "left-right" conferences which brought together activists from both the Old Right and the New Left in what was emerging as a nascent libertarian movement.[8][unreliable source?]

As part of his effort to unite right and left-libertarianism, Hess would join the SDS as well as the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), of which he explained, "We used to have a labor movement in this country, until I.W.W. leaders were killed or imprisoned. You could tell labor unions had become captive when business and government began to praise them. They're destroying the militant black leaders the same way now. If the slaughter continues, before long liberals will be asking, 'What happened to the blacks? Why aren't they militant anymore?'"[9]

In the 1980s, Hess joined the Libertarian Party, which was founded in 1971 and served as editor of its newspaper from 1986 to 1990.

Adams-Morgan experiment and back-to-the-land

Hess was an early proponent of the "back to the land" movement, and his focus on self-reliance and small communities happened in part by government mandate. According to a Libertarian Party News obituary, "When the Internal Revenue Service confiscated all his property and put a 100 percent lien on all of his future earnings, Hess (who had taught himself welding) existed on bartering his work for food and goods."[10][unreliable source?]

Hess's life as a welder put him in rapport with a very large segment of the American population who are manual laborers. He eventually came to the conviction that virtually no one in national politics identified with these people anymore. Hess's revolt against public giantism reflected a distrust toward large-corporate business as well as big government. After Hess had made friends within the New Left and related circles, he began to encounter the young, new-breed appropriate technology enthusiasts[11] (exemplified, by the early 1970s, in the editors and readerships of the Whole Earth Catalog and Mother Earth News).

In the early 1970s, Hess became involved in an experiment with several friends and colleagues to bring self-built and -managed technology into the direct service of the economic and social life of the (at the time) poor, largely African American neighborhood of Adams-Morgan in Washington, D.C. It was the neighborhood in which Hess had spent his childhood. Afterward, Hess wrote a book entitled Community Technology which told the story of this experiment and its results. According to Hess, the residents had a vigorous go at participatory democracy, and the neighborhood seemed for a time like a fertile ground for the growth of community identity and capability.

Much of the technological experimentation Hess and others engaged in there was successful in technical terms (apparatus was built, food raised, solar energy captured, etc.). For instance, Hess wrote: "In one experiment undertaken by the author and associates, an inner-city basement space, roughly thirty by fifty feet, was sufficient to house plywood tanks in which rainbow trout were produced at a cost of less than a dollar per pound. In a regular production run the total number of fish that can be raised in such a basement area was projected to be five tons per year."[12] He taught courses and lectured on Appropriate Technology and Social Change in this period at the Institute for Social Ecology in Vermont. Nonetheless, the Adams-Morgan neighborhood, continuing on what he felt was a path of social deterioration and real-estate gentrification, declined to devote itself to expanding on the technology. Hence, in his view, a needy community got little value from the application of viable technology.

Subsequently, Hess and his wife, Therese, moved to rural Opequon Creek between Martinsburg and Kearneysville, West Virginia, where he set up a welding shop as partial support for his household. He became deeply involved with local affairs there. Hess built an affordable house that relied largely on passive-solar heating, and took an interest in wind power and all forms of solar energy. The house they built was a 2000 sq. ft. sun-warmed, earth-sheltered structure – constructed mostly using their own labor, and at cost of just $10,000 (mid-1970s dollars). They acquired most of the tools needed for the construction, and the appliances needed for a comfortable modern life, second-hand.[2] By the late 1970s, Hess saw solar energy as emblematic of decentralization and nuclear energy as emblematic of central organization.[11]

Hess wrote for a survivalist newsletter titled Personal Survival ("P.S.") Letter, which was published from 1977 to 1982. It was first published and edited by Mel Tappan. In the same time period, Hess authored the book A Common Sense Strategy for Survivalists.

Hess ran a symbolic campaign for Governor of West Virginia in 1992. When asked by a reporter what his first act would be if elected, he quipped, "I will demand an immediate recount."

Legacy

In a Reuters op-ed piece, in 2012, New Yorker Maureen Tkacik asserted that Karl Hess was the ideological grandfather of the anti-1% movement – making Hess the direct antecedent of thinkers like Ron Paul and both the Tea Party movement and the Occupy movement. She cites the detailed argument Hess, in his libertarian phase, put forward in his book Dear America to delineate and decry the extreme concentration of power in the hands of a tiny financial and stock-holding elite. Tkacik quotes passages from Hess's book to offer proof that Hess developed the language of the 1% versus the 99% (the former being those whose role, according to Hess, is demonstrably detrimental to the vast majority of Americans).[13]

Bibliography

Articles

  • “The Lawless State: A Libertarian View of the Status of Liberty”. National Issues Series of Politics. Constitutional Alliance. Vol. 4, No. 4 (1969)
  • “Desperate Character” (1976)

Books

  • In a Cause That Will Triumph: The Goldwater Campaign and the Future of Conservatism (1967) OCLC 639505
  • The End of the Draft: The Feasibility of Freedom (with Thomas Reeves) (1970) ISBN 0394708709
  • Dear America (1975) (autobiography/anarchist manifesto) ISBN 0688028985
  • Neighborhood Power: The New Localism (with David Morris) (1975) ISBN 0807008753
  • Community Technology (1979) ISBN 1559501340
  • A Common Sense Strategy for Survivalists (1981) OCLC 9625419
  • Three Interviews (1981) OCLC 9663274
  • Capitalism for Kids (1986) ISBN 0942103068
  • Mostly on the Edge: An Autobiography (edited by Karl Hess, Jr.) (1999) ISBN 1573926876

Book reviews

  • “Review of The Fabulous Insects, edited by Charles Neider”. The Freeman, May 17, 1954. (p. 607)

Films

Karl Hess: Toward Liberty is a documentary film which won the Academy Award for best short documentary in 1981, after having previously won a Student Academy Award. Another documentary prominently featuring Hess is the 1983 film Anarchism in America.[14]

References

  1. ^ Hess, Karl. The Death of Politics, Interview in Playboy, July 1976 2019-08-02 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Hess 1999.
  3. ^ Riggenbach, Jeff (May 23, 2010). "Karl Hess and the Death of Politics". mises.org. Retrieved February 11, 2015.
  4. ^ Hess 1999, pp. 168–70.
  5. ^ Gross, David (ed.) We Won't Pay!: A Tax Resistance Reader ISBN 1434898253 pp. 437–441
  6. ^ "Karl Hess compares Emma Goldman and Ayn Rand". YouTube.
  7. ^ Halle, Roland; and Ladue, Peter (1980) Karl Hess: Toward Liberty. Direct Cinema, Ltd. [M16 2824 K]
  8. ^
  9. ^ From Far Right to Far Left– and Farther– With Karl Hess by James Boyd: 1970 The New York Times
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on November 15, 2005. Retrieved 2003-09-29.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  11. ^ a b Halle, Roland; and Ladue, Peter (1980)
  12. ^ Hess, Karl (1979) Community Technology. New York: Harper & Row, p. 31
  13. ^
  14. ^ "Anarchism in America". Alexpeak.com. January 15, 1983. Retrieved November 24, 2022.

Further reading

External links

  • The Karl Hess Club
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived November 15, 2005)
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Karl Hess – Freedom Circle
  • The Plowboy Interview Karl Hess
  • The Death of Politics: 1969 Playboy article by Hess
  • Riggenbach, Jeff (May 13, 2010). "Karl Hess and the Death of Politics". Mises Daily.
  • : final chapter from Dear America
  • "Why Neighborhoods Must Secede": 1972 article by Hess
  • From Far Right to Far Left– and Farther– With Karl Hess by James Boyd: 1970 New York Times article about Hess
  • The Lawless State: A Libertarian View of the Status of Liberty (1969) The Lawless State

karl, hess, this, article, about, american, author, painter, painter, scientist, scientist, born, carl, hess, 1923, april, 1994, american, speechwriter, author, also, political, philosopher, editor, welder, motorcycle, racer, resister, libertarian, activist, c. This article is about the American author For the painter see Karl Hess painter For the scientist see Karl Hess scientist Karl Hess born Carl Hess III May 25 1923 April 22 1994 was an American speechwriter and author He was also a political philosopher editor welder motorcycle racer tax resister and libertarian activist His career included stints on the Republican right and the New Left before embracing a mix of left libertarianism and laissez faire anarcho capitalism 1 Later in life he summed up his role in the economy by remarking I am by occupation a free marketer crafts and ideas woodworking welding and writing 2 Karl HessBornCarl Hess IIIMay 25 1923Washington D C DiedApril 22 1994 1994 04 22 aged 70 Charlottesville VANationalityAmericanOccupationsSpeechwriter author welderYears active1940 1994Employer s Mutual Broadcasting System The Washington Daily News Newsweek American Enterprise Institute The Libertarian ForumPolitical partyLibertarian PartySpouseTherese second wife ChildrenKarl Hess IV Contents 1 Early life 2 Political activities 3 Adams Morgan experiment and back to the land 4 Legacy 5 Bibliography 6 Films 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life EditHess was born Carl Hess III 3 in Washington D C and moved to the Philippines as a child His parents were of German and Spanish ancestry When his mother discovered his father s marital infidelity she divorced her wealthy husband and returned with Karl to Washington She refused alimony or child support and took a job as a telephone operator raising her son in very modest circumstances 2 Karl s mother encouraged curiosity and direct learning She often insisted that Karl figure things out for himself or increase his knowledge through reading Karl believing as his mother did that public education was a waste of time rarely attended school to evade truancy officers he registered at every elementary school in town and gradually withdrew from each one making it impossible for the authorities to know exactly where he was supposed to be He had developed great reverence for libraries this became very basic to his personal philosophy and in his autobiography he wrote Literacy is the basic tool in the workshop of the entire world 2 As a young person Karl played tennis learned marksmanship and pursued fencing Later on he learned gunsmithing He officially dropped out at 15 and went to work for the Mutual Broadcasting System as a newswriter at the invitation of Walter Compton a Mutual news commentator who resided in the building where Mrs Hess operated the switchboard Hess continued to work in the news media and by age 18 was assistant city editor of The Washington Daily News 2 Early during the Second World War Hess enlisted in the U S Army in 1942 but was discharged when they discovered he had contracted malaria in the Philippines 2 He was later an editor for Newsweek and The Fisherman He worked as a staff writer and sometimes as a freelancer for a number of anti Communist periodicals In the 1950s he worked for the Champion Papers and Fibre Company He was dismayed that people in the management portion of the corporate world seemed more interested in personal advancement than in doing good work At Champion his bosses encouraged him to get involved in conservative politics for the company s benefit In doing so he met Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater and many other prominent Republicans thus beginning the GOP epoch of his life 2 In his book Dear America Hess wrote that he became an atheist because his temporary job as a coroner s assistant when he was 15 left him convinced that people were simply flesh and blood beings with no afterlife Consequently he stopped attending church he had been a devout Roman Catholic Years later while on leave from Champion and working for the American Enterprise Institute AEI he resumed attending church because virtually all of his AEI colleagues did so His return merely reinforced his atheism on one Sunday morning while enduring a service as his young son sat on his lap Hess became disgusted with himself for exposing his child to an institution he himself had rejected Political activities EditHess was the primary author of the Republican Party s 1960 and 1964 platforms In the lead up to the 1964 presidential election Hess worked closely with Barry Goldwater He came to view Goldwater as a man of sterling character a conservative holding a number of significant libertarian convictions Hess worked as a speechwriter and explored ideology and politics He was widely considered to be the author of the renowned Goldwater line Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue but revealed that he had encountered it in a letter from Lincoln historian Harry Jaffa and later learned it was a paraphrase of a passage from Cicero 4 He later called this his Cold Warrior phase Following the 1964 presidential campaign in which Lyndon Johnson trounced Goldwater Hess became disillusioned with traditional politics and became more radical Hess and others on the losing team had found themselves outsiders within the national Republican party because of their support of the controversial Goldwater Hess felt that he had been purged by the Republicans and he departed from involvement with grand scale politics altogether In 1965 Hess took up motorcycle riding His need to occasionally repair his motorcycles led to his interest in welding which he learned at Bell Vocational School Welding skills gave him something he could trade upon Initially he set up a commercial partnership with a fellow Bell graduate doing on site industrial welding Eventually his skill led to an involvement with welded metal sculpture All of this unfolded around the same time as his divorce from his first wife Hess hereafter publicly criticized big business suburban American hypocrisy and the military industrial complex Though well beyond college age Hess joined Students for a Democratic Society worked with the Black Panther Party and protested the Vietnam War 2 After his work on the Goldwater campaign Hess was audited by the Internal Revenue Service which he believed was in retaliation for his support of the losing candidate In response he sent the IRS a copy of the Declaration of Independence with a letter saying that he would never again pay taxes Hess claimed that the IRS then threatened to put a lien on all of his property and 100 of his future earnings He was supported financially thereafter by his wife and used barter to keep himself afloat 5 unreliable source In 1968 Richard Nixon was elected president and Barry Goldwater returned to the Senate as Arizona s junior senator Hess despite now being a member of the New Left had recently written some speeches for Goldwater and resumed their close personal relationship he had concluded that American men should not be forced into military service and urged Goldwater to submit legislation abolishing conscription Goldwater replied Well let s wait and see what Dick Nixon wants to do about that one Hess despised Nixon almost as much as he admired Goldwater and could not tolerate the notion that Goldwater would defer to Nixon Thus ended one of Hess s closest professional associations and the situation significantly compromised one of his deepest friendships Nixon abolished conscription during his presidency with Goldwater s support Hess began reading American anarchists largely because of the recommendations of his friend Murray Rothbard Hess said that upon reading the works of Emma Goldman he discovered that anarchists believed everything he had hoped the Republican Party would represent and that Goldman was the source for the best and most essential theories of Ayn Rand without any of the crazy solipsism that Rand was so fond of 6 From 1969 to 1971 Hess edited The Libertarian Forum with Rothbard Hess had come to put his focus on the small scale on community He said Society is people together making culture He deemed two of his cardinal social principles to be opposition to central political authority and concern for people as individuals His rejection of standard American party politics was reflected in a lecture he gave during which he said The Democrats or liberals think that everybody is stupid and therefore they need somebody to tell them how to behave themselves The Republicans think everybody is lazy 7 In 1969 and 1970 Hess joined with others including Murray Rothbard Robert LeFevre Dana Rohrabacher Samuel Edward Konkin III and former Students for a Democratic Society SDS leader Carl Oglesby to speak at two left right conferences which brought together activists from both the Old Right and the New Left in what was emerging as a nascent libertarian movement 8 unreliable source As part of his effort to unite right and left libertarianism Hess would join the SDS as well as the Industrial Workers of the World IWW of which he explained We used to have a labor movement in this country until I W W leaders were killed or imprisoned You could tell labor unions had become captive when business and government began to praise them They re destroying the militant black leaders the same way now If the slaughter continues before long liberals will be asking What happened to the blacks Why aren t they militant anymore 9 In the 1980s Hess joined the Libertarian Party which was founded in 1971 and served as editor of its newspaper from 1986 to 1990 Adams Morgan experiment and back to the land EditHess was an early proponent of the back to the land movement and his focus on self reliance and small communities happened in part by government mandate According to a Libertarian Party News obituary When the Internal Revenue Service confiscated all his property and put a 100 percent lien on all of his future earnings Hess who had taught himself welding existed on bartering his work for food and goods 10 unreliable source Hess s life as a welder put him in rapport with a very large segment of the American population who are manual laborers He eventually came to the conviction that virtually no one in national politics identified with these people anymore Hess s revolt against public giantism reflected a distrust toward large corporate business as well as big government After Hess had made friends within the New Left and related circles he began to encounter the young new breed appropriate technology enthusiasts 11 exemplified by the early 1970s in the editors and readerships of the Whole Earth Catalog and Mother Earth News In the early 1970s Hess became involved in an experiment with several friends and colleagues to bring self built and managed technology into the direct service of the economic and social life of the at the time poor largely African American neighborhood of Adams Morgan in Washington D C It was the neighborhood in which Hess had spent his childhood Afterward Hess wrote a book entitled Community Technology which told the story of this experiment and its results According to Hess the residents had a vigorous go at participatory democracy and the neighborhood seemed for a time like a fertile ground for the growth of community identity and capability Much of the technological experimentation Hess and others engaged in there was successful in technical terms apparatus was built food raised solar energy captured etc For instance Hess wrote In one experiment undertaken by the author and associates an inner city basement space roughly thirty by fifty feet was sufficient to house plywood tanks in which rainbow trout were produced at a cost of less than a dollar per pound In a regular production run the total number of fish that can be raised in such a basement area was projected to be five tons per year 12 He taught courses and lectured on Appropriate Technology and Social Change in this period at the Institute for Social Ecology in Vermont Nonetheless the Adams Morgan neighborhood continuing on what he felt was a path of social deterioration and real estate gentrification declined to devote itself to expanding on the technology Hence in his view a needy community got little value from the application of viable technology Subsequently Hess and his wife Therese moved to rural Opequon Creek between Martinsburg and Kearneysville West Virginia where he set up a welding shop as partial support for his household He became deeply involved with local affairs there Hess built an affordable house that relied largely on passive solar heating and took an interest in wind power and all forms of solar energy The house they built was a 2000 sq ft sun warmed earth sheltered structure constructed mostly using their own labor and at cost of just 10 000 mid 1970s dollars They acquired most of the tools needed for the construction and the appliances needed for a comfortable modern life second hand 2 By the late 1970s Hess saw solar energy as emblematic of decentralization and nuclear energy as emblematic of central organization 11 Hess wrote for a survivalist newsletter titled Personal Survival P S Letter which was published from 1977 to 1982 It was first published and edited by Mel Tappan In the same time period Hess authored the book A Common Sense Strategy for Survivalists Hess ran a symbolic campaign for Governor of West Virginia in 1992 When asked by a reporter what his first act would be if elected he quipped I will demand an immediate recount Legacy EditIn a Reuters op ed piece in 2012 New Yorker Maureen Tkacik asserted that Karl Hess was the ideological grandfather of the anti 1 movement making Hess the direct antecedent of thinkers like Ron Paul and both the Tea Party movement and the Occupy movement She cites the detailed argument Hess in his libertarian phase put forward in his book Dear America to delineate and decry the extreme concentration of power in the hands of a tiny financial and stock holding elite Tkacik quotes passages from Hess s book to offer proof that Hess developed the language of the 1 versus the 99 the former being those whose role according to Hess is demonstrably detrimental to the vast majority of Americans 13 Bibliography EditArticles The Lawless State A Libertarian View of the Status of Liberty National Issues Series of Politics Constitutional Alliance Vol 4 No 4 1969 Desperate Character 1976 Books In a Cause That Will Triumph The Goldwater Campaign and the Future of Conservatism 1967 OCLC 639505 The End of the Draft The Feasibility of Freedom with Thomas Reeves 1970 ISBN 0394708709 Dear America 1975 autobiography anarchist manifesto ISBN 0688028985 Neighborhood Power The New Localism with David Morris 1975 ISBN 0807008753 Community Technology 1979 ISBN 1559501340 A Common Sense Strategy for Survivalists 1981 OCLC 9625419 Three Interviews 1981 OCLC 9663274 Capitalism for Kids 1986 ISBN 0942103068 Mostly on the Edge An Autobiography edited by Karl Hess Jr 1999 ISBN 1573926876Book reviews Review of The Fabulous Insects edited by Charles Neider The Freeman May 17 1954 p 607 Films EditKarl Hess Toward Liberty is a documentary film which won the Academy Award for best short documentary in 1981 after having previously won a Student Academy Award Another documentary prominently featuring Hess is the 1983 film Anarchism in America 14 References Edit Hess Karl The Death of Politics Interview in Playboy July 1976 Archived 2019 08 02 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h Hess 1999 sfn error no target CITEREFHess1999 help Riggenbach Jeff May 23 2010 Karl Hess and the Death of Politics mises org Retrieved February 11 2015 Hess 1999 pp 168 70 sfn error no target CITEREFHess1999 help Gross David ed We Won t Pay A Tax Resistance Reader ISBN 1434898253 pp 437 441 Karl Hess compares Emma Goldman and Ayn Rand YouTube Halle Roland and Ladue Peter 1980 Karl Hess Toward Liberty Direct Cinema Ltd M16 2824 K Libertarian History From Far Right to Far Left and Farther With Karl Hess by James Boyd 1970 The New York Times LP News Jun 94 Karl Hess 1923 1994 Archived from the original on November 15 2005 Retrieved 2003 09 29 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Halle Roland and Ladue Peter 1980 Hess Karl 1979 Community Technology New York Harper amp Row p 31 Tkacik Maureen September 20 2012 The radical right wing roots of Occupy Wall Street access date 2013 03 09 published by Reuters Edition U S Anarchism in America Alexpeak com January 15 1983 Retrieved November 24 2022 Further reading EditDoherty Brian 2008 Hess Karl 1923 1994 In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cato Institute pp 225 226 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n136 ISBN 978 1412965804 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Karl Hess The Karl Hess Club LP News Jun94 Karl Hess 1923 1994 at the Wayback Machine archived November 15 2005 Appearances on C SPAN Karl Hess Freedom Circle The Plowboy Interview Karl Hess The Death of Politics 1969 Playboy article by Hess Riggenbach Jeff May 13 2010 Karl Hess and the Death of Politics Mises Daily Coming Home final chapter from Dear America Why Neighborhoods Must Secede 1972 article by Hess From Far Right to Far Left and Farther With Karl Hess by James Boyd 1970 New York Times article about Hess The Lawless State A Libertarian View of the Status of Liberty 1969 The Lawless State Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karl Hess amp oldid 1123542476, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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