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  • ..., a group of right-wing intellectuals who were highly critical of the post-war consensus around government intervention in the economy. He was advised by ...ional strength to have a large minority with such divided loyalties during war.<ref>Anthony Brown, [http://www.civitas.org.uk/pdf/cs23.pdf ''Do We Need Ma
    37 KB (5,383 words) - 10:09, 30 January 2023
  • ...umps and rubella (MMR) controversy reveals some of the key features of the cultural climate affecting matters of health and illness in contemporary society. A ...risk is exaggerated<ref>Who study, debate, and publish reports on various cultural, social and economic issues, with an 'emphasis on the value of personal res
    119 KB (16,177 words) - 08:21, 6 November 2021
  • ...1-56584-664-8. [Aka, ''Who Paid the Piper?: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War'' 1999, Granta (UK edition)].
    8 KB (1,121 words) - 09:19, 28 February 2014
  • ==Links to US cold warriors== ...d by the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] from the early days of the Cold War. <ref>Tom Easton, [http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/articles/l31whowh.htm
    6 KB (948 words) - 15:22, 3 March 2015
  • The IRD... played a major role in Western news and cultural media from 1948-1977. It financed a publishing house ‘Ampersand’ and at ...that of a “civil department”.<ref>Sources: Britain's Secret Propaganda War By Paul Lashmar and James Oliver, Sutton Publishing, 1998; MI6: Fifty Years
    24 KB (3,564 words) - 17:08, 19 November 2017
  • ...ected groups which covertly influenced the political landscape of the post-war UK including the [[Economic League]], The [[Council on Foreign Relations]], World War 1 produced the modern British state - the Cabinet Office etc. - and mobilis
    178 KB (28,232 words) - 12:30, 7 September 2022
  • ...rown evoked the spirit of the [[Cultural Cold War]] as a precedent for the War on Terror. ::When Britain and America set out to win the Cold War, we realised victory lay both in our military power and in persuading peopl
    13 KB (2,025 words) - 12:19, 24 December 2016
  • ...March 2009</ref> The book notes on his Autobiography state that 'After the war, he reported firsthand on the founding of Israel and the bloody siege of Je ...s. Laqueur writes that he 'visited the headquarters of the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] in Paris for the first time in May 1953.' According to Laqueur, h
    21 KB (3,074 words) - 10:25, 7 April 2009
  • ...or ''[[National Review]]''. Crozier was a Distinguished Visiting Fellow on War, Revolution, and Peace of [[Stanford University]]'s [[Hoover Institution]]. ..., however, turned down this offer but later did a study for [[Congress for Cultural Freedom|CCF]], investigating its South American network.
    29 KB (4,431 words) - 15:36, 23 November 2021
  • ...ture of Socialism and one-time consultant to the CIA-funded [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]]. Crosland became Lipsey's mentor, hiring him as adviser at the D ...liance, Future Challenges', was very relevant to a world in which the Cold War was moving into a new phase with the crumbling of the former Soviet empire.
    26 KB (4,066 words) - 21:14, 18 February 2011
  • ...olis, these 'experts' represent an ideology that has its roots in the cold war and in Israeli conservatism', ''New Statesman'' June 14. 2004.</ref> ...ngton in 1984, reappear as neoconservatives in the run-up to the 2003 Iraq war. They include [[Jeane Kirkpatrick]], [[Charles Krauthammer]], [[Michael Led
    8 KB (1,118 words) - 15:28, 8 September 2014
  • ...roup, and it was subsequently renamed the '''International Association for Cultural Freedom''' (IACF). At its height, the CCF/IACF was active in some thirty-fi ...d government policy.<ref>Who Paid the Piper, The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Francis Stonor Saunders, Granta Books, 2000, pp98-99.</ref>
    10 KB (1,489 words) - 15:35, 20 February 2020
  • ...can interests...CIA money can be traced flowing through the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] to such magazines as [[Encounter]] which have given Labour politi ...tern in its heyday. One of its targets in the years since the Second World War has been the British Labour Party.
    30 KB (4,873 words) - 13:18, 23 May 2009
  • Russian refusal to join ERP marked the start of the Cold War and historians will continue to argue which side was to blame. Certainly Co ...£40,000 that this cost-a huge amount for Europe still recovering from the war-the Congress could not have been held.
    6 KB (943 words) - 13:16, 27 February 2011
  • ...and collaborators to the U.S. public as democratic freedom fighters in the war against communism {{note|2}} Some became leaders in the Republican Party's ...ressional hearings exposed a network of ostensibly private labor, student, cultural media and other organizations that were funded by the CIA, using conduit fo
    43 KB (6,368 words) - 12:00, 29 March 2013
  • *'The Cultural Cold War; Faust not the Pied Piper', New Politics: A Journal of Socialist Thought, V ...why we need a solidarity campaign with the Iraqi people not an &ldquo;anti-war&rdquo; movement&rdquo;'
    7 KB (901 words) - 15:03, 8 October 2006
  • ...ant to a film production company and a member of an EU High Level Group in Cultural Diversity in the Audiovisual Sector. She was recently appointed to serve on ...orces in the post-Cold War era. After working in intelligence during World War II, he served as a personal assistant to [[Gladwyn Jebb]], who established
    14 KB (2,048 words) - 11:32, 20 August 2010
  • ...construction of a cultural disaster: New Labour’s Millennium Experience, Cultural Studies, Vol. 17, No. 5: p. 669 - 90.</ref> ...r (2003) [http://www.amcham.hu/businesshungary/17-04/articles/17-04_04.asp WAR IN IRAQ], Business Hungary, vol.17. No.4. </ref>
    11 KB (1,584 words) - 12:28, 2 November 2008
  • ...azon.co.uk/Cultural-Difference-Media-Memories-Anglo-American/dp/0304701114 Cultural Difference, Media Memories: Anglo-American Images of Japan]", Continuum, 19 ...a in post-Cold War conflicts. He is on the editorial board of the ''Media, War and Conflict'' journal.<ref>South Bank University [http://myweb.lsbu.ac.uk/
    2 KB (295 words) - 15:17, 6 October 2013
  • ...o an Indian anti-communist politician, Minoo Misani, who in the early post-war years, founded the Democratic Research Service and published a magazine cal pre-war member of the [[Imperial Policy Group]].(88)
    18 KB (2,761 words) - 06:51, 14 May 2010

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