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Welcome to the Neoconservatives Portal on Powerbase
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Powerbase has a policy of strict referencing and is overseen by an Managing editor and a Sysop and several associate portal editors. The editor of the Neoconservatives Portal is Tom Griffin.
Welcome to Powerbase—your guide to networks of power, lobbying and deceptive PR.
According to Irving Kristol, one of the leading US neoconservatives, it is a movement of liberals "mugged by reality". Stephen J. Sniegoski reports that "the term was coined by socialist Michael Harrington as a derisive term for leftists and liberals who were migrating rightward. Many of the first generation neoconservatives were originally liberal Democrats or even socialists and Marxists, often Trotskyites. Most originated in New York, and most were Jews. They drifted to the right in the 1960s and 1970s as the Democratic Party moved to the anti-war McGovernite left."[1]
The Neoconservatives portal focuses on:
- US and international neoconservatives active in Europe. This included 'Scoop Jackson Democrats' as well as those associated with the Republican party.
- Europeans who self-identify as neoconservatives or who have been heavily influenced by the US neoconservative tradition.
- Europeans participating in projects and organisations with significant neoconservative participation, or which reflect a neoconservative ethos. The origins of the the neoconservatives are closely bound up with cold war political warfare networks which sought to enlist a broad spectrum of European actors in support of US policies. US-based neoconservatives have drawn on this tradition to construct heterogeneous and at times conflicting alliances extending from the far-right to the liberal-left.
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Categories
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Categories associated with this page:
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Priority pages on Neocons
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UK
US
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Recent changes on Neoconservatives on Powerbase
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References and Resources
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Articles
- Craig Unger, From the Wonderful Folks Who Brought You Iraq, Vanity Fair, March 2007
- James Bamford, Iran: The Next War, Rolling Stone, August 10, 2006
- W. Patrick Lang, Drinking the Kool Aid, Middle East Policy Council Journal, Volume XI, Summer 2004, Number 2
- John Kampfner, The British neoconservatives, New Statesman, 12 May 2003.
- Daniel Luban, Kristol Palace, Kristol Palace], N+1, 6 October 2011.
Videos
Resources
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References
- ↑ Stephen J. Sniegoski, The Transparent Cabal, Enigma Editions, Norfolk, Virginia, 2008,p25.
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