Jason Stutten

Jason Lay Stutten (June 1, 1913 - April 22, 1971) was a prominent American political thinker and writer, best known for his 1948 essay Structured Society, in which he outlines a highly meritocratic and somewhat (by his own admittance) authoritarian structure of government referred to as Ordered Democracy. He gained a sizable audience in the scientific community, who were drawn to the technocratic aspects of his proposal. Many, though, criticized his ideas, such as his support for intellectual discrimination and eugenics, as well as the authoritarian characteristics of his hypothetical government.

Early Life
Jason Lay Stutten was born on June 1, 1913 to Raymond and Carol Stutten, both of whom were biochemists by education.

Opposition to the United Nations and the state of Israel
In segments of an essay later incorporated into Structured Society, Stutten writes of his disapproval of the contemporary internationalism of the United Nations,"No entity stands out so gracelessly in this modern era of continentalism than the international United Nations, which today can be seen as the medium by which the United States, the United Kingdom, and the other ex-imperial governments can continue to act out their exceptionalism, Zionism, and neo-colonialist pursuits under the auspices of international security and globalism."He observed that while ostensibly many former colonies were rapidly gaining independence, and being accepted as member states of the United Nations, it was ultimately the five permanent members - China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States - who retained primary control of the organization, and utilized it as a tool for continued interventionism.

Stutten was a devout anti-Zionist, and he was quick to denounce the creation of the state of Israel and the displacement of Palestinians as an example of the expansionism perpetrated by the world superpowers using the United Nations as a facade for globalization and Zionism.