Sixty Years of Artificial Chaos in Service for Revolution

In the spring of 1966, the United States was in the midst of the Civil Rights Movement and Lyndon B.  Johnson’s War on Poverty.  It was at a time when the New Left concluded that American capitalism had neutralized the working class; therefore, it was no longer suitable to be cannon fodder for revolution.  To answer the collectivist call, two Columbia University School of Social Work professors—Richard A. Cloward and Frances Fox Piven—published a provocative essay in The Nation magazine.  Titled “The Weight of the Poor: A Strategy to End Poverty,” the May 2 article outlined what later became known as the Cloward-Piven strategy. 

Far from a conventional policy proposal, it was a calculated blueprint for social disruption.  Cloward and Piven, who were members of the ultra-left Democratic Socialists of America—where Piven was an honorary chair—argued that the existing welfare system, riddled with gaps between statutory eligibility and actual benefits, could be politically weaponized.  By organizing a mass enrollment drive to claim every available benefit, activists could intentionally overload local and state welfare bureaucracies, trigger fiscal crises, and force the federal government—then controlled by Democrats—to replace fragmented public assistance with a guaranteed annual income.

The professors were blunt about mechanics.  They noted that roughly eight million Americans received welfare, but at least as many more were eligible yet unserved because of restrictive local practices and bureaucratic hurdles.  “The discrepancy is not an accident stemming from bureaucratic inefficiency,” they wrote; “rather, it is an integral feature of the welfare system.” A “massive drive to recruit the poor onto the welfare rolls” would produce “bureaucratic disruption in welfare agencies and fiscal disruption in local and state governments.” This chaos would deepen rifts in the big-city Democratic coalition—pitting middle class and working class against the growing minority poor—compelling national Democrats to override local failures with a federal solution.  The ultimate goal: “to wipe out poverty by establishing a guaranteed annual income.”

Cloward and Piven framed their proposal not as charity but as leverage.  The poor, they observed, lacked the institutional power of organized labor.  Only collective disruption could extract political concessions.  Their essay coincided with the founding of the National Welfare Rights Organization (NWRO), which they helped inspire.  Militant local left-wing groups would conduct welfare drives, sit-ins, and protests to flood the system.

The strategy’s short-term impact was measurable.  Between 1966 and 1975, welfare caseloads surged dramatically.  AFDC (Aid to Families with Dependent Children) rolls expanded as eligibility rules loosened under pressure.  In New York City, the effects were especially acute; by the mid-1970s, roughly one in seven residents relied on public assistance, contributing to the city’s near-bankruptcy in 1975.  Cloward and Piven later claimed in works like “Regulating the Poor” (1971) and “Poor People’s Movements” (1977) that unrest—not administrative largesse—drove these gains.  Nevertheless, no national guaranteed income emerged.  Instead, the crisis helped provoke a conservative backlash that culminated in the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, which imposed work requirements and time limits.

Conservatives view the Cloward-Piven strategy not as a misguided reform effort but as a deliberate assault on American institutions.  Critics argue it exemplified radical Leftist tactics: manufacturing a crisis to justify the radical expansion of government power.  David Horowitz characterized it as a “strategy for forcing political change through orchestrated crisis.” James Simpson in American Thinker described it as “a gold mine of opportunity.” By flooding welfare offices, the plan allegedly aimed to bankrupt cities, erode the work ethic, and create a permanent underclass dependent on the state—paving the way for socialism.

John McWhorter, in “Winning the Race” (2006), linked the strategy to the post-1960s welfare explosion and its social costs, particularly in black communities.  He contended it fostered generations for whom “working for a living is an abstraction,” contributing to family breakdown, urban decay, and cycles of poverty.  Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and others amplified the argument during the Obama era, portraying the strategy as a template for broader “crisis exploitation”—from healthcare to immigration—designed to overwhelm systems and consolidate Leftist control.

It is easy to point to concrete outcomes as evidence of harm.  Nationally, welfare dependency correlated with rising single-parent households and declining labor-force participation among the poor.  The strategy, in this view, violated core American values of self-reliance and federalism.  It treated the poor as pawns in a revolutionary game rather than individuals deserving opportunity.  By the 1990s, even some Democrats embraced reform, conceding that unconditional aid without work incentives had failed.

Later scholarship by Piven and Cloward, including analyses of the Civil Rights and labor movements, emphasized that major left-wing reforms—from the New Deal to the Great Society—arose from disruptive protest rather than polite lobbying.  In “Poor People’s Movements,” they documented how “rule-breaking” by the powerless (read: a socialist revolution) extracts concessions during moments of elite vulnerability.

Leftist ideas, including the Cloward-Piven strategy, are often used to exacerbate social issues.  That being the case, the Left directly benefits from the resulting societal decay.  Moreover, while the Left collects its harvest, left-wing idealists, deeply entrenched in their trauma, time after time, fail to recognize that the Left has entrapped them in a cycle of misery.  This cycle is on full display everywhere the Left brings up identity politics: American blacks, Native Americans, non-Jews, Feminism, Liberation Theology, Woke, and many others.  Add to the list numerous “immigration caravans” of the not-so-distant past, premeditatedly politically organized to feed into the Cloward-Piven chaos and bankruptcy machine. 

There is a direct comparison between the Cloward-Piven strategy and other left-wing endeavors, like anti-Semitism, feminism, or transgenderism: they are not about wealth, gender, biology, race, ethnicity, or religion.  They are about realpolitik.  Along with racism, “critical theories,” postmodernism, “cancel culture,” and countless other methods, these tools of the Left were summoned to pave the way for a primitive power grab. 

If anti-Semitism exploited Jews, feminism was based on exploiting women to serve the power-hungry Left.  In turn, the Cloward-Piven political instrument exploited the poor.  Note, however, that from the Left’s attitude, if all these political endeavors lead to the destruction of the subject—Jews, women, or the poor—so be it.  For the pragmatic Left, there is no political struggle without collateral damage.

Six decades later, the Cloward-Piven strategy, as part of the Left toolbox, remains a Rorschach test for American politics.  Conservatives see a cautionary tale of engineered dependency and fiscal irresponsibility that, in a Machiavellian way, battered the very people it proclaimed to help. 

The Cloward-Piven essay’s enduring power lies in its frank acknowledgment that poverty could be part of political business.  Whether one regards the strategy as cynical manipulation or moral necessity, it forces a reckoning: in a republic, how much crisis is tolerable?  Cloward and Piven bet that the weight of the poor, thoroughly mobilized and meticulously pre-brainwashed, could bend the arc of policy.  History shows the bend was real—but the arc proved more resilient and contested than they anticipated.

[Originally Published in American Thinker]

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Gary Gindler Chronicles

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading