Francis Fox Piven
Globalization Destruction: Piven Gleefully ‘Hopes’ and Explains How Countries Like China Can Shut Down USA and Bring Revolutionary Transformation
Basic Globalization Revolution Theory:
Our computers, information technology, energy, even some food is all imported from authoritarian nations whose workers make less than dollars a day . Like the Romans who, at the end of their reign, had three slaves for every citizen, the United States, because of globalization, is completely dependant on slave labor. It would only take organized strikes (shut downs) from a small coalition of nations led for example by China to bring us to our knees.
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/globalization-destruction-piven-gleefully-hopes-and-explains-how-countries-like-china-can-shut-down-usa-and-bring-revolutionary-transformation/
Piven: Violence Is Okay if It‘s a ’Big Part of Your Strategy’
August 21, 2010 Read a bit about this video and the Deacons of Defense. Francis Fox Piven advocates and encorages violence http://ow.ly/2sVbb
Spotlight From Glenn Beck Brings a CUNY Professor Threats
On his daily radio and television shows, Glenn Beck has elevated once-obscure conservative thinkers onto best-seller lists. Recently, he has elevated a 78-year-old liberal academic to celebrity of a different sort, in a way that some say is endangering her life.
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On Jan. 5, 2010, Glenn Beck delivered one of several attacks on Richard Cloward, now deceased, and his wife and collaborator, Frances Fox Piven, who wrote about ending poverty.
Frances Fox Piven, a City University of New York professor, has been a primary character in Mr. Beck’s warnings about a progressive take-down of America. Ms. Piven, Mr. Beck says, is responsible for a plan to “intentionally collapse our economic system.”
Her name has become a kind of shorthand for “enemy” on Mr. Beck’s Fox News Channel program, which is watched by more than 2 million people, and on one of his Web sites, The Blaze. This week, Mr. Beck suggested on television that she was an enemy of the Constitution.
Never mind that Ms. Piven’s radical plan to help poor people was published 45 years ago, when Mr. Beck was a toddler. Anonymous visitors to his Web site have called for her death, and some, she said, have contacted her directly via e-mail.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/22/business/media/22beck.html
MORE FROM THE BLAZE:
A Guide to the Ideas and Violent Rhetoric of Frances Fox Piven
Who’s really calling for violence, Glenn Beck or Frances Fox Piven?
There’s been some talk recently criticizing Glenn Beck for speaking out against Frances Fox Piven and her calls for “angry” revolution. For example, the New York Times ran a story over the weekend saying Beck‘s expose of Piven’s strategy to overwhelm the government welfare rolls and have people rise up (and the stories about that on The Blaze) has incited violence. Piven’s favorite soap box The Nation ran a similar story on Thursday. Both stories references a few errant comments left on this website.
But lacking from those stories, and from the stories of the other outlets that have picked them up, is not only Beck’s numerous calls for non-violence, but also any legitimate look at what Piven has said. Stanley Kurtz on National Review Online today noticed as much:
An article by Brian Stelter in Saturday’s New York Times is a thinly disguised gesture of support for The Nation’s campaign. The piece downplays Piven’s radicalism, noting that her widely criticized call for intentionally creating a political and economic crisis in America’s welfare system was made 45 long years ago. Although Piven has freely described her own strategy as an effort to set off “fiscal and political crises in the cities,” Stelter delicately avoids the word “crises,” writing instead of “fiscal and political stress.”
Kurtz points out, however, that violence is an integral part of the Cloward-Piven strategy:
Calls for the escalation and manipulation of violent rioting have long been central to Piven’s strategy. Her 1977 book with Cloward, Poor People’s Movements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail, detailed the rationale behind the infamous crisis strategy of a decade before. The core argument is that the poor and unemployed are so isolated from the levers of power in America that their greatest potential impact is to withhold “quiescence in civil life: they can riot.”
At the heart of the book, Cloward and Piven luxuriously describe instances of “mob looting,” “rent riots,” and similar disruptions, egged on especially by Communist-party organizers in the 1930s. Many of those violent protests resulted in injuries. A few led to deaths. The central argument of Poor People’s Movements is that it was not formal democratic activity but violent disruptions inspired by leftist organizers that forced the first great expansion of the welfare state.
Toward the end of the book, when Cloward and Piven describe their own work with the National Welfare Rights Organization, they treat the violent urban rioting of the Sixties as a positive force behind that era’s expansion of the welfare state.
So what has Piven been talking about? Below is a montage of quotes and clips of her explaining her strategy, which includes violence:
Violence is okay as long as it’s part of a bigger strategy:
In a piece from The Nation in December, Piven says the unemployed must get angry, and explains that an effective jobless movement will look like the violent riots in Greece and England:
“So where are the angry crowds, the demonstrations, sit-ins and unruly mobs?” she writes. “After all, the injustice is apparent. Working people are losing their homes and their pensions while robber-baron CEOs report renewed profits and windfall bonuses. Shouldn’t the unemployed be on the march? Why aren’t they demanding enhanced safety net protections and big initiatives to generate jobs?” […]
An effective movement of the unemployed will have to look something like the strikes and riots that have spread across Greece in response to the austerity measures forced on the Greek government by the European Union, or like the student protests that recently spread with lightning speed across England in response to the prospect of greatly increased school fees. [Emphasis added]
Here Piven says there needs to be “tumult disorder pressure” in order to force Barack Obama to “make choices”:
Vodpod videos no longer available.
Piven saying that with the financial crisis, “all the pieces are in place for a massive defiant movement”:
Vodpod videos no longer available.disscussion, posted with vodpod
And finally, Piven explaining how effective strikes “cause a lot of trouble”:
It’s the above videos that the New York Times and others have ignored. The better story, it seems to those outlets, is painting those who point out violent rhetoric as violent rather than looking into their claims.
As a final point, we don’t expect Piven to stop talking about her ideas. Thus, will be a story that we’ll update in the future whenever necessary.
Read more about Piven here and here. Additionally, Kurtz writes extensively about Piven in his book, Radical-in-Chief.
Editor’s note: A reminder that comments are monitored. The Blaze retains the right to delete comments it deems inappropriate, as well as the right to ban those who write them. http://www.theblaze.com/stories/a-guide-to-the-ideas-and-violent-rhetoric-of-frances-fox-piven/


