Cloward and Piven Strategy
The Cloward - Piven Strategy is a plan of action developed by Richard Cloward and his wife Frances Fox Piven, the namesakes for the strategy. The plan entails collapsing the U.S. economy by overburdening the welfare roles in a way which would leverage unheard of levels of spending and debt to the point of total systemic collapse. Cloward and Piven wrote about their plan in an article they co-authored in the 1960s called "Mobilizing the Poor: How it Could Be Done." Later, it was published in The Nation, under the title "The Weight of the Poor: A Strategy to End Poverty."
Overview
Cloward and Piven were radical leftist Columbia University professors who believed in "change" and "social justice." Inspired by the Watts riots of Los Angeles in 1965, they wrote and published their article which outlined the best way to bring the kind of Saul Alinsky-type social change to America.
Implementation
"In their estimation, it was to overwhelm the system and bring about the fall of capitalism by overloading the government bureaucracy with impossible demands and bring on economic collapse."[1] Following its publication, liberal activists like Barack Obama were attracted to the so-called "crisis strategy" or "Cloward-Piven Strategy," as it came to be called, and were eager to put it into effect.[2]
See also
- Biden Putsch
- Motor Voter Act
- Obamacare
- For the People Act
- Biden border crisis
- 2018 Migrant caravan
- Long march through the institutions
References
Eternal links
- Recent Efforts to Overload the American System, Discover the Networks
- Barack Obama and the Strategy of Manufactured Crisis, American Thinker
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