One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Main
17 things you don't know about the Koch family
May 1, 2015 09:05:45   #
no propaganda please Loc: moon orbiting the third rock from the sun
 
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014

2014 is the Year of the Kochs, apparently. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and other Democrats are working feverishly to cast the billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch as the symbols of big money run amok in politics. And there are a slew of new books coming out that delve deeply into the lives of the conservative donors and their compatriots.

The first, “Sons of Wichita: How the Koch Brothers Became America's Most Powerful and Private Dynasty,” came out Tuesday. It was written by Daniel Schulman, a senior editor in the Washington bureau of the liberal publication Mother Jones, and centers on the fraught family dynamics that shaped the four Koch brothers (yes, there are four).
Has Harry Reid's Koch brothers obsession paid off? Not really.(1:00)
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has mentioned the Koch brothers on the Senate floor more than 130 times, but his own constituents have never heard of the billionaire businessmen. (Jeff Simon/The Washington Post)

So far, the Kochs are taking a cautious posture toward the tome, which revisits a lot of painful family history.

"We have been aware of Mr. Schulman's book project since January of 2012 and had minimal participation since that time, mostly involving some fact-checking," Koch Industries spokesman Robert Tappan said in a statement. "Neither Charles Koch nor David Koch were interviewed for this book. We are in the process of reviewing Mr. Schulman's book and are reserving judgment at this time."

After getting an early copy and staying up late reading it, we pulled out some of the most interesting tidbits and revelatory details. The 17 best are below.

1. Charles Koch’s full name is Charles de Ganahl Koch.

He was named after his father’s mentor, Charles Francis de Ganahl, who “dabbled in everything from shipbuilding to oil, from plane manufacturing to gold mining, with business interests that spanned three continents.”

2. The family patriarch, Fred Koch, was a hard-charging and emotionally distant father who made the four boys -- Frederick, Charles and twins David and Bill -- work through their childhoods.

“He put them to work milking cows, bailing hay, digging ditches, mowing lawns, and wh**ever else he could think of,” Schulman writes. “The never-ending routine of chores was especially torturous during the summer months, when other local kids from Wichita’s upper crust whiled away the afternoons at the country club, the sounds of their delight literally wafting across 13th Street to the Kochs’ property.” A tearful Charles was shipped off to boarding school at 11. Also, the Kochs did not get a television set “until well into the 1950s.”

3. Fred Koch was such a staunch anti-c*******t that he distributed at least 2.6 million copies of a pamphlet he wrote, “A Business Man Looks at C*******m,” to every weekly newspaper in the country, among other recipients.

Present at the birth of the John Birch Society, Fred Koch served as one of its national leaders and held chapter meetings in the basement of his family’s Wichita mansion. His antipathy to socialism was so intense that when an acquaintance visited the family home in the 1960s, Charles Koch asked him to leave on the doorstep a copy of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises” that he was carrying. Hemingway “was a c*******t,” Charles explained to the guest.

4. Fred Koch removed his oldest son, Frederick, from his will, setting off one of the many intense struggles over money that tore the family apart.

According to Charles, his father cut out Frederick because he stole traveler’s checks and cash from him and then lied about it. Frederick denies the allegations, calling them part of “a calculated campaign of vilification.”

5. Charles Koch, who took over his father’s company, was a workaholic who finally got engaged at 37.

He proposed to his girlfriend of five years “over the phone and while paging through his calendar for an opening in his schedule.”

6. After getting involved in the Birch Society through his father, Charles Koch ultimately broke from the group because of its support for the Vietnam War.

He and another Birch Society member took out a full-page ad in the Wichita Eagle in May 1968 that read, “Let’s Get Out of Vietnam Now.”

7. As he embraced the libertarian movement, Charles Koch initially regarded the Republican Party with disdain.

“If this is our only hope then we are doomed,” he wrote in a four-page essay in the Libertarian Review in August 1978. “The Republican Party is the party of ‘business’ in the worse [sic] sense – in the sense of business accommodation and partnership with government.”

8. David Koch described his 1980 campaign as the Libertarian vice p**********l candidate as his “proudest achievement” on a questionnaire for his 25th class reunion at MIT.

9. Oil tycoon J. Howard Marshall II, who later married Anna Nicole Smith, played a pivotal role in helping Charles and David fend off a challenge from their brothers Bill and Frederick over control of Koch Industries.

That's why David Koch, a major patron of the New York City Opera, refused to give more support to save the faltering company when it put on the show “Anna Nicole” last year.

10. David Koch walked away from a 1991 plane crash in Los Angeles that k**led 22 people aboard his flight, including the couple seated directly across from him in first class.

The experience profoundly shook him. “I felt that the good Lord spared my life for a purpose,” he said later. “And since then, I’ve been busy doing all the good works I can think of.” The longtime bachelor -- known for throwing wild parties with scantily clad women – began seriously dating his future wife six months after the crash.

11. A two-decades-long battle between the brothers -- Charles and David versus Bill and, occasionally, Frederick– grew so bitter that the brothers hired private investigators to dig up dirt on one another. Bill’s investigators “pilfered trash from the homes and offices of Charles, David, and three of their lawyers, bribing janitors and trash collectors," Schulman writes.

The family war played out before jurors in a Topeka courtroom in 1998, in the case of Koch v. Koch Industries. During the trial, David broke down in tears on the stand recounting the tension between the brothers. After Charles and David prevailed, Bill told reporters he would appeal, adding, “These guys are crooks.”

12. After a slew of legal problems in the 1990s – including a record $296 million wrongful death award related to a leaky Koch pipeline that k**led two teenagers and a $35 million fine the company agreed to pay for Clean Water Act violations – Koch Industries went through a dramatic t***sformation. Charles Koch demanded “10,000% compliance with all laws and regulations” as the company beefed up its lobbying ranks and offloaded much of its pipeline system.

13. Charles, David and Bill ended their long-running feud in 2001, at a dinner held at Bill’s Palm Beach mansion to sign a final settlement divvying up their father’s property. It was the first time they had shared a meal in almost 20 years.

14. Koch Industries employees often spot Charles Koch “in the cafeteria, tray in hand and waiting patiently in line at the ‘healthy choice’ station,” Schulman writes.

15. The Koch-backed Citizens for a Sound Economy – a precursor to Americans for Prosperity – rented a rundown bus in 1994 to protest Hillary Clinton’s health-care overhaul proposal. As the then-first lady traveled the country on a bus tour to promote the plan, she was met by the group's broken-down bus, spray-painted with the words “This is Clinton Care."

16. The first donor conclave held by the Kochs in 2003 drew just 17 guests, many of them Charles’ friends.

Less than a decade later, at least 200 conservative donors signed up to be part of the Koch political network, helping pump more than $400 million into a web of politically active nonprofits in the 2012 campaign.

17. When President Obama won ree******n, an incredulous David Koch blamed the GOP’s drawn-out primary process for weakening Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

“We’ve got to do better with primaries,” he told a friend. “We’ve got to find ways to make sure our candidate is advantaged.”
Matea Gold is a national political reporter for The Washington Post, covering money

MOTHER JONES and ROLLING STONE have put together some entirely different material, to defame the Koch family and enhance the c*******t SOROS propaganda. Read the elder Koch's book after he stayed in the Soviet Union for some time and his impressions changed. I would believe that long before I would believe anything by Mother Jones and rolling Stones (considering their history of fraudulent publications)

Reply
May 1, 2015 09:37:35   #
robmull Loc: florida
 
no propaganda please wrote:
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014

2014 is the Year of the Kochs, apparently. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and other Democrats are working feverishly to cast the billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch as the symbols of big money run amok in politics. And there are a slew of new books coming out that delve deeply into the lives of the conservative donors and their compatriots.

The first, “Sons of Wichita: How the Koch Brothers Became America's Most Powerful and Private Dynasty,” came out Tuesday. It was written by Daniel Schulman, a senior editor in the Washington bureau of the liberal publication Mother Jones, and centers on the fraught family dynamics that shaped the four Koch brothers (yes, there are four).
Has Harry Reid's Koch brothers obsession paid off? Not really.(1:00)
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has mentioned the Koch brothers on the Senate floor more than 130 times, but his own constituents have never heard of the billionaire businessmen. (Jeff Simon/The Washington Post)

So far, the Kochs are taking a cautious posture toward the tome, which revisits a lot of painful family history.

"We have been aware of Mr. Schulman's book project since January of 2012 and had minimal participation since that time, mostly involving some fact-checking," Koch Industries spokesman Robert Tappan said in a statement. "Neither Charles Koch nor David Koch were interviewed for this book. We are in the process of reviewing Mr. Schulman's book and are reserving judgment at this time."

After getting an early copy and staying up late reading it, we pulled out some of the most interesting tidbits and revelatory details. The 17 best are below.

1. Charles Koch’s full name is Charles de Ganahl Koch.

He was named after his father’s mentor, Charles Francis de Ganahl, who “dabbled in everything from shipbuilding to oil, from plane manufacturing to gold mining, with business interests that spanned three continents.”

2. The family patriarch, Fred Koch, was a hard-charging and emotionally distant father who made the four boys -- Frederick, Charles and twins David and Bill -- work through their childhoods.

“He put them to work milking cows, bailing hay, digging ditches, mowing lawns, and wh**ever else he could think of,” Schulman writes. “The never-ending routine of chores was especially torturous during the summer months, when other local kids from Wichita’s upper crust whiled away the afternoons at the country club, the sounds of their delight literally wafting across 13th Street to the Kochs’ property.” A tearful Charles was shipped off to boarding school at 11. Also, the Kochs did not get a television set “until well into the 1950s.”

3. Fred Koch was such a staunch anti-c*******t that he distributed at least 2.6 million copies of a pamphlet he wrote, “A Business Man Looks at C*******m,” to every weekly newspaper in the country, among other recipients.

Present at the birth of the John Birch Society, Fred Koch served as one of its national leaders and held chapter meetings in the basement of his family’s Wichita mansion. His antipathy to socialism was so intense that when an acquaintance visited the family home in the 1960s, Charles Koch asked him to leave on the doorstep a copy of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises” that he was carrying. Hemingway “was a c*******t,” Charles explained to the guest.

4. Fred Koch removed his oldest son, Frederick, from his will, setting off one of the many intense struggles over money that tore the family apart.

According to Charles, his father cut out Frederick because he stole traveler’s checks and cash from him and then lied about it. Frederick denies the allegations, calling them part of “a calculated campaign of vilification.”

5. Charles Koch, who took over his father’s company, was a workaholic who finally got engaged at 37.

He proposed to his girlfriend of five years “over the phone and while paging through his calendar for an opening in his schedule.”

6. After getting involved in the Birch Society through his father, Charles Koch ultimately broke from the group because of its support for the Vietnam War.

He and another Birch Society member took out a full-page ad in the Wichita Eagle in May 1968 that read, “Let’s Get Out of Vietnam Now.”

7. As he embraced the libertarian movement, Charles Koch initially regarded the Republican Party with disdain.

“If this is our only hope then we are doomed,” he wrote in a four-page essay in the Libertarian Review in August 1978. “The Republican Party is the party of ‘business’ in the worse [sic] sense – in the sense of business accommodation and partnership with government.”

8. David Koch described his 1980 campaign as the Libertarian vice p**********l candidate as his “proudest achievement” on a questionnaire for his 25th class reunion at MIT.

9. Oil tycoon J. Howard Marshall II, who later married Anna Nicole Smith, played a pivotal role in helping Charles and David fend off a challenge from their brothers Bill and Frederick over control of Koch Industries.

That's why David Koch, a major patron of the New York City Opera, refused to give more support to save the faltering company when it put on the show “Anna Nicole” last year.

10. David Koch walked away from a 1991 plane crash in Los Angeles that k**led 22 people aboard his flight, including the couple seated directly across from him in first class.

The experience profoundly shook him. “I felt that the good Lord spared my life for a purpose,” he said later. “And since then, I’ve been busy doing all the good works I can think of.” The longtime bachelor -- known for throwing wild parties with scantily clad women – began seriously dating his future wife six months after the crash.

11. A two-decades-long battle between the brothers -- Charles and David versus Bill and, occasionally, Frederick– grew so bitter that the brothers hired private investigators to dig up dirt on one another. Bill’s investigators “pilfered trash from the homes and offices of Charles, David, and three of their lawyers, bribing janitors and trash collectors," Schulman writes.

The family war played out before jurors in a Topeka courtroom in 1998, in the case of Koch v. Koch Industries. During the trial, David broke down in tears on the stand recounting the tension between the brothers. After Charles and David prevailed, Bill told reporters he would appeal, adding, “These guys are crooks.”

12. After a slew of legal problems in the 1990s – including a record $296 million wrongful death award related to a leaky Koch pipeline that k**led two teenagers and a $35 million fine the company agreed to pay for Clean Water Act violations – Koch Industries went through a dramatic t***sformation. Charles Koch demanded “10,000% compliance with all laws and regulations” as the company beefed up its lobbying ranks and offloaded much of its pipeline system.

13. Charles, David and Bill ended their long-running feud in 2001, at a dinner held at Bill’s Palm Beach mansion to sign a final settlement divvying up their father’s property. It was the first time they had shared a meal in almost 20 years.

14. Koch Industries employees often spot Charles Koch “in the cafeteria, tray in hand and waiting patiently in line at the ‘healthy choice’ station,” Schulman writes.

15. The Koch-backed Citizens for a Sound Economy – a precursor to Americans for Prosperity – rented a rundown bus in 1994 to protest Hillary Clinton’s health-care overhaul proposal. As the then-first lady traveled the country on a bus tour to promote the plan, she was met by the group's broken-down bus, spray-painted with the words “This is Clinton Care."

16. The first donor conclave held by the Kochs in 2003 drew just 17 guests, many of them Charles’ friends.

Less than a decade later, at least 200 conservative donors signed up to be part of the Koch political network, helping pump more than $400 million into a web of politically active nonprofits in the 2012 campaign.

17. When President Obama won ree******n, an incredulous David Koch blamed the GOP’s drawn-out primary process for weakening Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

“We’ve got to do better with primaries,” he told a friend. “We’ve got to find ways to make sure our candidate is advantaged.”
Matea Gold is a national political reporter for The Washington Post, covering money

MOTHER JONES and ROLLING STONE have put together some entirely different material, to defame the Koch family and enhance the c*******t SOROS propaganda. Read the elder Koch's book after he stayed in the Soviet Union for some time and his impressions changed. I would believe that long before I would believe anything by Mother Jones and rolling Stones (considering their history of fraudulent publications)
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014 br br 2014 is the Year... (show quote)











Avid "anti-c*******t," NP, is all I have to know about the Koch family to know why the liberal progressive c*******t agenda is trying to dehumanize and eliminate them from conservative politics. "McCarthyism" [started in the 1950's because of Sen. Joe McCarthy] is the standard ploy c*******ts use to extricate opposing forces to the "Marxist/Alinskyite" movement in America, actually since the beginning of the 20th century with the American syndicated "journalism" of Edward Bernays, "The Father of Spin."

Reply
May 1, 2015 09:42:17   #
no propaganda please Loc: moon orbiting the third rock from the sun
 
robmull wrote:
Avid "anti-c*******t," NP, is all I have to know about the Koch family to know why the liberal progressive c*******t agenda is trying to dehumanize and eliminate them from conservative politics. "McCarthyism" [started in the 1950's because of Sen. Joe McCarthy] is the standard ploy c*******ts use to extricate opposing forces to the "Marxist/Alinskyite" movement in America, actually since the beginning of the 20th century with the American syndicated "journalism" of Edward Bernays, "The Father of Spin."
Avid "anti-c*******t," NP, is all I have... (show quote)


that is why I highlighted that point in red.
NPP

Reply
May 1, 2015 09:43:14   #
hnealc
 
no propaganda please wrote:
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014

2014 is the Year of the Kochs, apparently. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and other Democrats are working feverishly to cast the billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch as the symbols of big money run amok in politics. And there are a slew of new books coming out that delve deeply into the lives of the conservative donors and their compatriots.

The first, “Sons of Wichita: How the Koch Brothers Became America's Most Powerful and Private Dynasty,” came out Tuesday. It was written by Daniel Schulman, a senior editor in the Washington bureau of the liberal publication Mother Jones, and centers on the fraught family dynamics that shaped the four Koch brothers (yes, there are four).
Has Harry Reid's Koch brothers obsession paid off? Not really.(1:00)
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has mentioned the Koch brothers on the Senate floor more than 130 times, but his own constituents have never heard of the billionaire businessmen. (Jeff Simon/The Washington Post)

So far, the Kochs are taking a cautious posture toward the tome, which revisits a lot of painful family history.

"We have been aware of Mr. Schulman's book project since January of 2012 and had minimal participation since that time, mostly involving some fact-checking," Koch Industries spokesman Robert Tappan said in a statement. "Neither Charles Koch nor David Koch were interviewed for this book. We are in the process of reviewing Mr. Schulman's book and are reserving judgment at this time."

After getting an early copy and staying up late reading it, we pulled out some of the most interesting tidbits and revelatory details. The 17 best are below.

1. Charles Koch’s full name is Charles de Ganahl Koch.

He was named after his father’s mentor, Charles Francis de Ganahl, who “dabbled in everything from shipbuilding to oil, from plane manufacturing to gold mining, with business interests that spanned three continents.”

2. The family patriarch, Fred Koch, was a hard-charging and emotionally distant father who made the four boys -- Frederick, Charles and twins David and Bill -- work through their childhoods.

“He put them to work milking cows, bailing hay, digging ditches, mowing lawns, and wh**ever else he could think of,” Schulman writes. “The never-ending routine of chores was especially torturous during the summer months, when other local kids from Wichita’s upper crust whiled away the afternoons at the country club, the sounds of their delight literally wafting across 13th Street to the Kochs’ property.” A tearful Charles was shipped off to boarding school at 11. Also, the Kochs did not get a television set “until well into the 1950s.”

3. Fred Koch was such a staunch anti-c*******t that he distributed at least 2.6 million copies of a pamphlet he wrote, “A Business Man Looks at C*******m,” to every weekly newspaper in the country, among other recipients.

Present at the birth of the John Birch Society, Fred Koch served as one of its national leaders and held chapter meetings in the basement of his family’s Wichita mansion. His antipathy to socialism was so intense that when an acquaintance visited the family home in the 1960s, Charles Koch asked him to leave on the doorstep a copy of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises” that he was carrying. Hemingway “was a c*******t,” Charles explained to the guest.

4. Fred Koch removed his oldest son, Frederick, from his will, setting off one of the many intense struggles over money that tore the family apart.

According to Charles, his father cut out Frederick because he stole traveler’s checks and cash from him and then lied about it. Frederick denies the allegations, calling them part of “a calculated campaign of vilification.”

5. Charles Koch, who took over his father’s company, was a workaholic who finally got engaged at 37.

He proposed to his girlfriend of five years “over the phone and while paging through his calendar for an opening in his schedule.”

6. After getting involved in the Birch Society through his father, Charles Koch ultimately broke from the group because of its support for the Vietnam War.

He and another Birch Society member took out a full-page ad in the Wichita Eagle in May 1968 that read, “Let’s Get Out of Vietnam Now.”

7. As he embraced the libertarian movement, Charles Koch initially regarded the Republican Party with disdain.

“If this is our only hope then we are doomed,” he wrote in a four-page essay in the Libertarian Review in August 1978. “The Republican Party is the party of ‘business’ in the worse [sic] sense – in the sense of business accommodation and partnership with government.”

8. David Koch described his 1980 campaign as the Libertarian vice p**********l candidate as his “proudest achievement” on a questionnaire for his 25th class reunion at MIT.

9. Oil tycoon J. Howard Marshall II, who later married Anna Nicole Smith, played a pivotal role in helping Charles and David fend off a challenge from their brothers Bill and Frederick over control of Koch Industries.

That's why David Koch, a major patron of the New York City Opera, refused to give more support to save the faltering company when it put on the show “Anna Nicole” last year.

10. David Koch walked away from a 1991 plane crash in Los Angeles that k**led 22 people aboard his flight, including the couple seated directly across from him in first class.

The experience profoundly shook him. “I felt that the good Lord spared my life for a purpose,” he said later. “And since then, I’ve been busy doing all the good works I can think of.” The longtime bachelor -- known for throwing wild parties with scantily clad women – began seriously dating his future wife six months after the crash.

11. A two-decades-long battle between the brothers -- Charles and David versus Bill and, occasionally, Frederick– grew so bitter that the brothers hired private investigators to dig up dirt on one another. Bill’s investigators “pilfered trash from the homes and offices of Charles, David, and three of their lawyers, bribing janitors and trash collectors," Schulman writes.

The family war played out before jurors in a Topeka courtroom in 1998, in the case of Koch v. Koch Industries. During the trial, David broke down in tears on the stand recounting the tension between the brothers. After Charles and David prevailed, Bill told reporters he would appeal, adding, “These guys are crooks.”

12. After a slew of legal problems in the 1990s – including a record $296 million wrongful death award related to a leaky Koch pipeline that k**led two teenagers and a $35 million fine the company agreed to pay for Clean Water Act violations – Koch Industries went through a dramatic t***sformation. Charles Koch demanded “10,000% compliance with all laws and regulations” as the company beefed up its lobbying ranks and offloaded much of its pipeline system.

13. Charles, David and Bill ended their long-running feud in 2001, at a dinner held at Bill’s Palm Beach mansion to sign a final settlement divvying up their father’s property. It was the first time they had shared a meal in almost 20 years.

14. Koch Industries employees often spot Charles Koch “in the cafeteria, tray in hand and waiting patiently in line at the ‘healthy choice’ station,” Schulman writes.

15. The Koch-backed Citizens for a Sound Economy – a precursor to Americans for Prosperity – rented a rundown bus in 1994 to protest Hillary Clinton’s health-care overhaul proposal. As the then-first lady traveled the country on a bus tour to promote the plan, she was met by the group's broken-down bus, spray-painted with the words “This is Clinton Care."

16. The first donor conclave held by the Kochs in 2003 drew just 17 guests, many of them Charles’ friends.

Less than a decade later, at least 200 conservative donors signed up to be part of the Koch political network, helping pump more than $400 million into a web of politically active nonprofits in the 2012 campaign.

17. When President Obama won ree******n, an incredulous David Koch blamed the GOP’s drawn-out primary process for weakening Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

“We’ve got to do better with primaries,” he told a friend. “We’ve got to find ways to make sure our candidate is advantaged.”
Matea Gold is a national political reporter for The Washington Post, covering money

MOTHER JONES and ROLLING STONE have put together some entirely different material, to defame the Koch family and enhance the c*******t SOROS propaganda. Read the elder Koch's book after he stayed in the Soviet Union for some time and his impressions changed. I would believe that long before I would believe anything by Mother Jones and rolling Stones (considering their history of fraudulent publications)
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014 br br 2014 is the Year... (show quote)


:thumbup: :thumbup:
Good post!

Reply
May 1, 2015 10:08:30   #
Babsan
 
no propaganda please wrote:
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014

2014 is the Year of the Kochs, apparently. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and other Democrats are working feverishly to cast the billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch as the symbols of big money run amok in politics. And there are a slew of new books coming out that delve deeply into the lives of the conservative donors and their compatriots.

The first, “Sons of Wichita: How the Koch Brothers Became America's Most Powerful and Private Dynasty,” came out Tuesday. It was written by Daniel Schulman, a senior editor in the Washington bureau of the liberal publication Mother Jones, and centers on the fraught family dynamics that shaped the four Koch brothers (yes, there are four).
Has Harry Reid's Koch brothers obsession paid off? Not really.(1:00)
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has mentioned the Koch brothers on the Senate floor more than 130 times, but his own constituents have never heard of the billionaire businessmen. (Jeff Simon/The Washington Post)

So far, the Kochs are taking a cautious posture toward the tome, which revisits a lot of painful family history.

"We have been aware of Mr. Schulman's book project since January of 2012 and had minimal participation since that time, mostly involving some fact-checking," Koch Industries spokesman Robert Tappan said in a statement. "Neither Charles Koch nor David Koch were interviewed for this book. We are in the process of reviewing Mr. Schulman's book and are reserving judgment at this time."

After getting an early copy and staying up late reading it, we pulled out some of the most interesting tidbits and revelatory details. The 17 best are below.

1. Charles Koch’s full name is Charles de Ganahl Koch.

He was named after his father’s mentor, Charles Francis de Ganahl, who “dabbled in everything from shipbuilding to oil, from plane manufacturing to gold mining, with business interests that spanned three continents.”

2. The family patriarch, Fred Koch, was a hard-charging and emotionally distant father who made the four boys -- Frederick, Charles and twins David and Bill -- work through their childhoods.

“He put them to work milking cows, bailing hay, digging ditches, mowing lawns, and wh**ever else he could think of,” Schulman writes. “The never-ending routine of chores was especially torturous during the summer months, when other local kids from Wichita’s upper crust whiled away the afternoons at the country club, the sounds of their delight literally wafting across 13th Street to the Kochs’ property.” A tearful Charles was shipped off to boarding school at 11. Also, the Kochs did not get a television set “until well into the 1950s.”

3. Fred Koch was such a staunch anti-c*******t that he distributed at least 2.6 million copies of a pamphlet he wrote, “A Business Man Looks at C*******m,” to every weekly newspaper in the country, among other recipients.

Present at the birth of the John Birch Society, Fred Koch served as one of its national leaders and held chapter meetings in the basement of his family’s Wichita mansion. His antipathy to socialism was so intense that when an acquaintance visited the family home in the 1960s, Charles Koch asked him to leave on the doorstep a copy of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises” that he was carrying. Hemingway “was a c*******t,” Charles explained to the guest.

4. Fred Koch removed his oldest son, Frederick, from his will, setting off one of the many intense struggles over money that tore the family apart.

According to Charles, his father cut out Frederick because he stole traveler’s checks and cash from him and then lied about it. Frederick denies the allegations, calling them part of “a calculated campaign of vilification.”

5. Charles Koch, who took over his father’s company, was a workaholic who finally got engaged at 37.

He proposed to his girlfriend of five years “over the phone and while paging through his calendar for an opening in his schedule.”

6. After getting involved in the Birch Society through his father, Charles Koch ultimately broke from the group because of its support for the Vietnam War.

He and another Birch Society member took out a full-page ad in the Wichita Eagle in May 1968 that read, “Let’s Get Out of Vietnam Now.”

7. As he embraced the libertarian movement, Charles Koch initially regarded the Republican Party with disdain.

“If this is our only hope then we are doomed,” he wrote in a four-page essay in the Libertarian Review in August 1978. “The Republican Party is the party of ‘business’ in the worse [sic] sense – in the sense of business accommodation and partnership with government.”

8. David Koch described his 1980 campaign as the Libertarian vice p**********l candidate as his “proudest achievement” on a questionnaire for his 25th class reunion at MIT.

9. Oil tycoon J. Howard Marshall II, who later married Anna Nicole Smith, played a pivotal role in helping Charles and David fend off a challenge from their brothers Bill and Frederick over control of Koch Industries.

That's why David Koch, a major patron of the New York City Opera, refused to give more support to save the faltering company when it put on the show “Anna Nicole” last year.

10. David Koch walked away from a 1991 plane crash in Los Angeles that k**led 22 people aboard his flight, including the couple seated directly across from him in first class.

The experience profoundly shook him. “I felt that the good Lord spared my life for a purpose,” he said later. “And since then, I’ve been busy doing all the good works I can think of.” The longtime bachelor -- known for throwing wild parties with scantily clad women – began seriously dating his future wife six months after the crash.

11. A two-decades-long battle between the brothers -- Charles and David versus Bill and, occasionally, Frederick– grew so bitter that the brothers hired private investigators to dig up dirt on one another. Bill’s investigators “pilfered trash from the homes and offices of Charles, David, and three of their lawyers, bribing janitors and trash collectors," Schulman writes.

The family war played out before jurors in a Topeka courtroom in 1998, in the case of Koch v. Koch Industries. During the trial, David broke down in tears on the stand recounting the tension between the brothers. After Charles and David prevailed, Bill told reporters he would appeal, adding, “These guys are crooks.”

12. After a slew of legal problems in the 1990s – including a record $296 million wrongful death award related to a leaky Koch pipeline that k**led two teenagers and a $35 million fine the company agreed to pay for Clean Water Act violations – Koch Industries went through a dramatic t***sformation. Charles Koch demanded “10,000% compliance with all laws and regulations” as the company beefed up its lobbying ranks and offloaded much of its pipeline system.

13. Charles, David and Bill ended their long-running feud in 2001, at a dinner held at Bill’s Palm Beach mansion to sign a final settlement divvying up their father’s property. It was the first time they had shared a meal in almost 20 years.

14. Koch Industries employees often spot Charles Koch “in the cafeteria, tray in hand and waiting patiently in line at the ‘healthy choice’ station,” Schulman writes.

15. The Koch-backed Citizens for a Sound Economy – a precursor to Americans for Prosperity – rented a rundown bus in 1994 to protest Hillary Clinton’s health-care overhaul proposal. As the then-first lady traveled the country on a bus tour to promote the plan, she was met by the group's broken-down bus, spray-painted with the words “This is Clinton Care."

16. The first donor conclave held by the Kochs in 2003 drew just 17 guests, many of them Charles’ friends.

Less than a decade later, at least 200 conservative donors signed up to be part of the Koch political network, helping pump more than $400 million into a web of politically active nonprofits in the 2012 campaign.

17. When President Obama won ree******n, an incredulous David Koch blamed the GOP’s drawn-out primary process for weakening Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

“We’ve got to do better with primaries,” he told a friend. “We’ve got to find ways to make sure our candidate is advantaged.”
Matea Gold is a national political reporter for The Washington Post, covering money

MOTHER JONES and ROLLING STONE have put together some entirely different material, to defame the Koch family and enhance the c*******t SOROS propaganda. Read the elder Koch's book after he stayed in the Soviet Union for some time and his impressions changed. I would believe that long before I would believe anything by Mother Jones and rolling Stones (considering their history of fraudulent publications)
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014 br br 2014 is the Year... (show quote)

Let's start a T***H finding on George SOROS and now the CLINTONS.Would be interesting to say the least.Add Pelosi to this even more interesting

Reply
May 1, 2015 10:21:51   #
no propaganda please Loc: moon orbiting the third rock from the sun
 
Babsan wrote:
Let's start a T***H finding on George SOROS and now the CLINTONS.Would be interesting to say the least.Add Pelosi to this even more interesting


:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:

Reply
May 1, 2015 11:34:13   #
emarine
 
no propaganda please wrote:
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014

2014 is the Year of the Kochs, apparently. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and other Democrats are working feverishly to cast the billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch as the symbols of big money run amok in politics. And there are a slew of new books coming out that delve deeply into the lives of the conservative donors and their compatriots.

The first, “Sons of Wichita: How the Koch Brothers Became America's Most Powerful and Private Dynasty,” came out Tuesday. It was written by Daniel Schulman, a senior editor in the Washington bureau of the liberal publication Mother Jones, and centers on the fraught family dynamics that shaped the four Koch brothers (yes, there are four).
Has Harry Reid's Koch brothers obsession paid off? Not really.(1:00)
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has mentioned the Koch brothers on the Senate floor more than 130 times, but his own constituents have never heard of the billionaire businessmen. (Jeff Simon/The Washington Post)

So far, the Kochs are taking a cautious posture toward the tome, which revisits a lot of painful family history.

"We have been aware of Mr. Schulman's book project since January of 2012 and had minimal participation since that time, mostly involving some fact-checking," Koch Industries spokesman Robert Tappan said in a statement. "Neither Charles Koch nor David Koch were interviewed for this book. We are in the process of reviewing Mr. Schulman's book and are reserving judgment at this time."

After getting an early copy and staying up late reading it, we pulled out some of the most interesting tidbits and revelatory details. The 17 best are below.

1. Charles Koch’s full name is Charles de Ganahl Koch.

He was named after his father’s mentor, Charles Francis de Ganahl, who “dabbled in everything from shipbuilding to oil, from plane manufacturing to gold mining, with business interests that spanned three continents.”

2. The family patriarch, Fred Koch, was a hard-charging and emotionally distant father who made the four boys -- Frederick, Charles and twins David and Bill -- work through their childhoods.

“He put them to work milking cows, bailing hay, digging ditches, mowing lawns, and wh**ever else he could think of,” Schulman writes. “The never-ending routine of chores was especially torturous during the summer months, when other local kids from Wichita’s upper crust whiled away the afternoons at the country club, the sounds of their delight literally wafting across 13th Street to the Kochs’ property.” A tearful Charles was shipped off to boarding school at 11. Also, the Kochs did not get a television set “until well into the 1950s.”

3. Fred Koch was such a staunch anti-c*******t that he distributed at least 2.6 million copies of a pamphlet he wrote, “A Business Man Looks at C*******m,” to every weekly newspaper in the country, among other recipients.

Present at the birth of the John Birch Society, Fred Koch served as one of its national leaders and held chapter meetings in the basement of his family’s Wichita mansion. His antipathy to socialism was so intense that when an acquaintance visited the family home in the 1960s, Charles Koch asked him to leave on the doorstep a copy of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises” that he was carrying. Hemingway “was a c*******t,” Charles explained to the guest.

4. Fred Koch removed his oldest son, Frederick, from his will, setting off one of the many intense struggles over money that tore the family apart.

According to Charles, his father cut out Frederick because he stole traveler’s checks and cash from him and then lied about it. Frederick denies the allegations, calling them part of “a calculated campaign of vilification.”

5. Charles Koch, who took over his father’s company, was a workaholic who finally got engaged at 37.

He proposed to his girlfriend of five years “over the phone and while paging through his calendar for an opening in his schedule.”

6. After getting involved in the Birch Society through his father, Charles Koch ultimately broke from the group because of its support for the Vietnam War.

He and another Birch Society member took out a full-page ad in the Wichita Eagle in May 1968 that read, “Let’s Get Out of Vietnam Now.”

7. As he embraced the libertarian movement, Charles Koch initially regarded the Republican Party with disdain.

“If this is our only hope then we are doomed,” he wrote in a four-page essay in the Libertarian Review in August 1978. “The Republican Party is the party of ‘business’ in the worse [sic] sense – in the sense of business accommodation and partnership with government.”

8. David Koch described his 1980 campaign as the Libertarian vice p**********l candidate as his “proudest achievement” on a questionnaire for his 25th class reunion at MIT.

9. Oil tycoon J. Howard Marshall II, who later married Anna Nicole Smith, played a pivotal role in helping Charles and David fend off a challenge from their brothers Bill and Frederick over control of Koch Industries.

That's why David Koch, a major patron of the New York City Opera, refused to give more support to save the faltering company when it put on the show “Anna Nicole” last year.

10. David Koch walked away from a 1991 plane crash in Los Angeles that k**led 22 people aboard his flight, including the couple seated directly across from him in first class.

The experience profoundly shook him. “I felt that the good Lord spared my life for a purpose,” he said later. “And since then, I’ve been busy doing all the good works I can think of.” The longtime bachelor -- known for throwing wild parties with scantily clad women – began seriously dating his future wife six months after the crash.

11. A two-decades-long battle between the brothers -- Charles and David versus Bill and, occasionally, Frederick– grew so bitter that the brothers hired private investigators to dig up dirt on one another. Bill’s investigators “pilfered trash from the homes and offices of Charles, David, and three of their lawyers, bribing janitors and trash collectors," Schulman writes.

The family war played out before jurors in a Topeka courtroom in 1998, in the case of Koch v. Koch Industries. During the trial, David broke down in tears on the stand recounting the tension between the brothers. After Charles and David prevailed, Bill told reporters he would appeal, adding, “These guys are crooks.”

12. After a slew of legal problems in the 1990s – including a record $296 million wrongful death award related to a leaky Koch pipeline that k**led two teenagers and a $35 million fine the company agreed to pay for Clean Water Act violations – Koch Industries went through a dramatic t***sformation. Charles Koch demanded “10,000% compliance with all laws and regulations” as the company beefed up its lobbying ranks and offloaded much of its pipeline system.

13. Charles, David and Bill ended their long-running feud in 2001, at a dinner held at Bill’s Palm Beach mansion to sign a final settlement divvying up their father’s property. It was the first time they had shared a meal in almost 20 years.

14. Koch Industries employees often spot Charles Koch “in the cafeteria, tray in hand and waiting patiently in line at the ‘healthy choice’ station,” Schulman writes.

15. The Koch-backed Citizens for a Sound Economy – a precursor to Americans for Prosperity – rented a rundown bus in 1994 to protest Hillary Clinton’s health-care overhaul proposal. As the then-first lady traveled the country on a bus tour to promote the plan, she was met by the group's broken-down bus, spray-painted with the words “This is Clinton Care."

16. The first donor conclave held by the Kochs in 2003 drew just 17 guests, many of them Charles’ friends.

Less than a decade later, at least 200 conservative donors signed up to be part of the Koch political network, helping pump more than $400 million into a web of politically active nonprofits in the 2012 campaign.

17. When President Obama won ree******n, an incredulous David Koch blamed the GOP’s drawn-out primary process for weakening Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

“We’ve got to do better with primaries,” he told a friend. “We’ve got to find ways to make sure our candidate is advantaged.”
Matea Gold is a national political reporter for The Washington Post, covering money

MOTHER JONES and ROLLING STONE have put together some entirely different material, to defame the Koch family and enhance the c*******t SOROS propaganda. Read the elder Koch's book after he stayed in the Soviet Union for some time and his impressions changed. I would believe that long before I would believe anything by Mother Jones and rolling Stones (considering their history of fraudulent publications)
By Matea Gold May 20, 2014 br br 2014 is the Year... (show quote)


When all else fails either read the directions or follow the money.... The cold war with Stalin started shortly after WW2 , 1947 or so.... Koch was still profiting in the millions from the c*******t Stalin well into the 50's, American patriot or t*****r.... you learn and you decide... Funding the Birchers, I wonder why.... Now skip ahead a few years... who funded citizens united and what did it do to Democracy in America... search and draw your own conclusions.... One last thought... who funds the propaganda that divides the people and why... How about instead of spending your time arguing with one another about the issues they want you to argue about.... learn what they dont want you to know about... Deception is simple when we all act like fools... A united, well informed e*****rate is the only way to defeat plutocracy.

Reply
May 1, 2015 15:43:26   #
Babsan
 
no propaganda please wrote:
:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:


Interesting how few of the Liberal/Demonrat/C*******ts got on board here.Maybe it smells too rotten if their IDOLS were investigated

Reply
May 1, 2015 17:24:28   #
permafrost Loc: Minnesota
 
emarine wrote:
When all else fails either read the directions or follow the money.... The cold war with Stalin started shortly after WW2 , 1947 or so.... Koch was still profiting in the millions from the c*******t Stalin well into the 50's, American patriot or t*****r.... you learn and you decide... Funding the Birchers, I wonder why.... Now skip ahead a few years... who funded citizens united and what did it do to Democracy in America... search and draw your own conclusions.... One last thought... who funds the propaganda that divides the people and why... How about instead of spending your time arguing with one another about the issues they want you to argue about.... learn what they dont want you to know about... Deception is simple when we all act like fools... A united, well informed e*****rate is the only way to defeat plutocracy.
When all else fails either read the directions or ... (show quote)


Good reply, Marine.. Could not say it any better.. :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:

Reply
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
Main
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.