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Joshua N. Haldeman

Canadian-South African politician and chiropractor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joshua N. Haldeman
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Joshua Norman Haldeman (November 25, 1902 – January 13, 1974) was an American-born Canadian-South African chiropractor, aviator, and politician.[2] He became involved in Canadian politics, backing the technocracy movement, before moving to South Africa in 1950. Over the course of decades, Haldeman repeatedly expressed racist, antisemitic, and antidemocratic views.[1] In South Africa he was a supporter of apartheid and promoted a number of conspiracy theories. A pilot since 1948, he died in a plane crash in 1974. Haldeman is the maternal grandfather of businessman Elon Musk.

Quick Facts Leader of the Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan, Preceded by ...
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Early life, family and education

Haldeman was born in 1902 in Pequot Lakes, Minnesota, to father John Elon Haldeman, whose Mennonite ancestors had migrated to the US from the Swiss village of Signau in the 18th century to escape religious persecution, and mother Almeda Jane (Norman) Haldeman.[2][3] He had a sister, also named Almeda.[4] When he was two years old, his father was diagnosed with diabetes; in an effort to treat her husband, his mother studied at E. W. Lynch's Chiropractic School in Minneapolis and earned her D.C. on January 20, 1905.[2] The family then moved to Saskatchewan, where she became the first recorded chiropractor in Canada.[2][1][5][6]

John Haldeman died in 1909. Almeda Haldeman remarried to Heseltine Wilson. Joshua Haldeman was reared on Wilson's ranch.[2]

Haldeman attended a number of colleges and universities, including Moose Jaw College, Regina College, Manitoba Agricultural College, and the University of Chicago. He graduated in 1926 from B. J. Palmer's Palmer School of Chiropractic in Iowa.[2] Haldeman remained a friend of Palmer and a user of the neurocalometer, a device which Palmer leased to practitioners.[2]

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Early career

After a short time practicing as a chiropractor, Haldeman concentrated on farming, but the Great Depression led to his losing the farm in the mid-1930s. Thereafter, he worked in a variety of jobs including as a cowboy and a rodeo performer, then resumed a career as a chiropractor.[2][7]

Haldeman represented Saskatchewan at the founding of the Dominion Council of Canadian Chiropractors (later the Canadian Chiropractic Association)[2] and was elected provincial representative in 1943.[8] He was a founder member of the board of the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College.[2] In 1947, he was elected vice president of the DCCC, and from 1948 to 1950 he was its appointed representative to the board of control of the International Chiropractors Association.[2]

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Political activity in Canada

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From 1936 to 1941, he was involved in Howard Scott's Technocracy Incorporated,[2][9][10] which led to his arrest under the wartime Defence of Canada Regulations on October 8, 1940, in Vancouver by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police on a charge of membership in an illegal organization.[11] Technocracy Incorporated had been banned in Canada following the start of World War II since the organization was deemed subversive to the war effort.[12] He was returned to Regina and released on $8,000 bail;[13] at trial, he was fined $200 for his role "writing, publishing, or circulating" a document titled "Statement of Patriotism by Those Who Were Technocrats", which the court deemed likely to cause "disaffection to His Majesty".[14][15]

In 1941, he resigned from that group and for two years attempted to form his own political party, publishing a newsletter titled Total War & Defence. As an avowed anti-communist, Haldeman objected to Technocracy Incorporated's declaration of support for the Soviet Union following the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941.[2] Haldeman's son-in-law Errol Musk claimed in 2024 that Haldeman sympathized with Nazi Germany during World War II.[16]

In 1943, Haldeman joined the Social Credit Party of Canada and served as the Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan's leader,[17] but failed to be elected in the constituency of Yorkton in the 1948 Saskatchewan general election.[18]

During that time, Haldeman formally made statements discouraging the publicizing of the prevalent antisemitism in the party.[19] However, he also gave a speech defending a decision by a party newspaper to publish the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, an antisemitic fabrication claiming an International Jewish conspiracy to rule the world. In his speech, Haldeman said "that the plan as outlined in these protocols has been rapidly unfolding in the period of observation of this generation."[1] He would later claim that apartheid South Africa was leading "White Christian Civilization" against the "International Conspiracy" of Jewish bankers and the "hordes of Coloured people" he claimed they controlled.[1]

In the 1945 Canadian federal election, he made a bid for a seat in the federal parliament, placing fourth in Prince Albert with 4.3% of the vote, losing to Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. In 1946, he cited the party's opposition to communism in the press.[20] In the 1949 Canadian federal election he ran in Lake Centre losing to future prime minister John Diefenbaker.[21]

He was chairman of the party's national council until 1949, when he resigned.[2]

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South Africa

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In 1950, he emigrated with his family to South Africa and settled in the capital Pretoria, where he opened a chiropractic clinic.[2][22] He served as secretary of the South African Chiropractors Association from 1952 to 1959, after which he was its president until 1969.[2]

Haldeman's move to South Africa was motivated by support for apartheid, and he was a supporter of the ruling National Party of South Africa. He told Afrikaner nationalist Die Transvaler, an extremist newspaper that was described as "a tool of the Nazis in South Africa" by a South African judge: "Instead of the Government's attitude keeping me out of South Africa, it had precisely the opposite effect—it encouraged me to come and settle here."[1]

In 1951, he wrote an article about South Africa for the Saskatchewan newspaper, the Regina Leader-Post, defending apartheid and writing of Black South Africans: "The natives are very primitive and must not be taken seriously... Some are quite clever in a routine job, but the best of them cannot assume responsibility and will abuse authority. The present government of South Africa knows how to handle the native question."[1][22]

Weeks after the Sharpeville massacre on 21 March 1960, Haldeman self-published The International Conspiracy to Establish a World Dictatorship and the Menace to South Africa, a 42-page response to the massacre. The United Nations passed Resolution 134, the body’s first official condemnation of apartheid and the beginning of decades of diplomatic isolation. Later Haldeman self-published a second book alleging international conspiracies: The International Conspiracy in Health targeted fluoridation, vaccinations, and health insurance.[1][23]

Errol Musk said of his wife's family: "They were very fanatical in favor of apartheid... [Maye's] parents came to South Africa from Canada because they sympathised with the Afrikaner government. They used to support Hitler and all that sort of stuff."[24]

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Personal life and death

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Haldeman married Eve Peters in 1934. Their first child, Joshua Jerry Noel Haldeman, was born the same year. The couple divorced by 1937.[21][2] He remarried in 1942 to Winnifred Josephine Fletcher, a dance teacher, with whom he had 4 children, including twin daughters, Maye and Kaye, born in 1948. Through his daughter Maye, his grandson is billionaire businessman Elon Musk.[2] Haldeman's technocratic ideas have allegedly influenced Elon Musk's views.[25][26]

To facilitate travel between his home and practice in Regina and his various other commitments, including the ICA in Davenport, Iowa, Haldeman took flying lessons, earning his pilot's license in 1948 and buying a single-engine plane.[2][27][28] He and his second wife became known as flying enthusiasts, toured North America, and in the mid-1950s co-wrote a book titled The Flying Haldemans: Pity the Poor Private Pilots.[2] The Haldemans continued to fly extensively after moving to South Africa. In 1954, they flew some 30,000 miles to Australia and back via Asia, possibly the longest journey by a private pilot in a single-engine plane.[2][27] Beginning in 1953, they also undertook a dozen expeditions in search of the "Lost City of the Kalahari".[2][1][27][29] Haldeman co-founded the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association of South Africa and served as a representative on the Civil Aviation Advisory Council and the Air Navigation Regulations Committee of South Africa.[27] In 1956, he also tied for first place in the third edition of the trans-Africa Algiers-Cape Town Rally, driving a Ford Ranch-Wagon 5.4L.[30]

On January 13, 1974, he and a passenger were killed when his plane's wheels caught in a powerline during a practice landing in his plane.[1][31][32]

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Influence on Elon Musk

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According to Jill Lepore, professor of history at Harvard University, many of Musk's ideas about politics, governance and economics resemble those of his grandfather Joshua Haldeman. She noted the similarity between Musk's involvement with the Department of Government Efficiency and Technocracy's proposal to eliminate most government services, including "90 percent of courts", and for what remains to be made "much more efficient". She said that Musk's popularization of the phrase "woke mind virus" echoes Haldeman's belief that "intensive mass mind conditioning" was being used by newspapers, media and university professors to spread ideas of equality of races and opposition to apartheid.[33]

Soledad Gallego-Díaz agreed with Lepore's analysis, adding that while Musk appears not to hold democracy "in high regard" (recalling Musk's alleged Nazi salute), the Technocracy movement described liberal democracy as a "failed" system.[34] Lepore notes that Technocracy called to "dispense with" popular elections, and rejected, in their words, "the basic tenet of the democratic ideal, namely that all men are created free and equal".[33]

Some commentators have noted a similarity between the name of Musk's first child with Grimes, X Æ A-12, and the numbers that Technocracy members were required to adopt in place of names (such as 1x1809x56, or Haldeman's number, 10450-1).[34][35][36] A contemporary article in The Buffalo News said that these numbers, along with the uniforms worn by members and salutes they greeted each other with, "give [Technocracy] the tone of an incipient fascist movement".[35][37]

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Electoral record

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References

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