In this FrontPage Magazine article, Aaron Shuster argues that America’s cultural institutions have moved from merely encountering foreign ideological contagion to actively internalizing and transmitting it.
- Shuster frames the essay as the second part of a series, following an earlier piece about how the “American mind” was first breached by imported ideology.
- He uses the metaphor of a plague to describe how ideas outlive their originators and spread through institutions, generations, and cultural habits.
- Drawing on Czesław Miłosz’s The Captive Mind, Shuster argues that intellectual captivity rarely happens through one dramatic conversion. Instead, it develops through repeated compromises and accommodations.
- The article contends that people surrender independent judgment in exchange for certainty, belonging, moral approval, and a sense of purpose.
- Shuster cites Edward Bernays to argue that modern manipulation works best when people believe they have reached approved conclusions on their own.
- He describes a four-stage process: incubation in academia, dissemination through cultural intermediaries, institutionalization in major organizations, and internalization by individuals who begin policing themselves.
- The author argues that universities, journalism, bureaucracy, corporations, entertainment, and the arts have carried once-marginal ideas into mainstream civic life.
- He warns that language itself becomes a tool of control when approved terms stop clarifying reality and start disciplining perception.
- Shuster’s central concern is that society’s “guardians” — teachers, editors, judges, administrators, experts, and institutions — may themselves become captive, making them transmitters of the ideology they were supposed to scrutinize.
- The essay ends by arguing that America still needs an antidote, but the question is whether the country remembers how to administer it.
Read the full story: https://www.frontpagemag.com/the-capturing-of-the-american-mind/


