Multiculturalists consider themselves to be cosmopolitan. By
that fancy locution they are saying that all peoples are basically the same and
that all cultures are equally valid and worthwhile. If cultures compete or if
civilizations clash that can only be based on a misunderstanding, or better, on
endemic bigotry.
The sentiment flies so obviously in the face of reality and
human experience that only a true believing ideologue could accept it. And yet,
the ideologues embrace it because they do not believe in reality or experience.
They believe in their grandiose idea… that all boundaries between peoples
should be abolished and that everyone should be free to travel everywhere
whenever he or she wants.
Surely, the man who went to Berlin and declared himself to
be a “citizen of the world” deserves much of the blame for the current state of affairs.
Why would anyone have believed that Barack Obama would defend America’s
national interest, to say nothing of its sovereignty, when he identified as a
citizen of the world.
You recognize the rationalization. If people in the
underdeveloped world are poor, they should have the right to partake of the
riches of the developed world, unfettered by border controls or citizenship
requirements. After all, the logic of multiculturalism says that the rich got
rich by exploiting the poor. Allowing the poor, from wherever, to inhabit a
richer country is a righteous move toward social justice.
Following the logic of that argument, national identity
becomes meaningless, patriotism becomes trivial and your successes are not
really yours. Whatever you have was not earned. You are profiting from your
oppression of other people and must share whatever you have with whomever
arrives on your doorstep.
The theory echoes the famous words: from each according to
his ability; to each according to his needs. By this
formula, you will never be motivated to work hard or to develop your abilities.
If the profits of your labor are going to be distributed to people who have
neither the talent nor the industry to earn very much themselves, you will
certainly not be motivated to work at all. It’s the anti-work ethic.
In a cosmopolitan world people are only connected because
they share the same DNA. Since they only belong to the human species, nothing
they do will remove them from said species. If the need to belong to a
group is one of the primary bases for morality, the new cosmopolitanism points
us toward amorality.
If you can no longer identify yourself by your membership in
a group and by your loyalty to that group, you will be reduced to identifying
yourself by your beliefs and convictions, by the state of your mind or the
state of your soul. You will not be judged as a good American or even as a
loyal subject of the queen; you will be judged by how much your soul has been
purified of bigotry against people of different races, religions, ethnic groups
or genders.
Beyond all of the highfalutin theorizing, the Obama
administration has promoted its own brand of trendy cosmopolitanism by opening
the nation’s borders. We have seen the pictures of illegal immigrants rushing
through our nation’s porous southern border. We have seen classrooms disrupted
as they are filled with resettled refugees who do not speak the language and
who have never had a real education.
And we have seen a vision of the future in the madness of Frau
Merkel… for allowing her country to be invaded by refugees who detest Western
civilization and who want to undermine it from within.
Now that Donald Trump has seized the issue by promising to
build a wall and forcing Mexico to pay for it, Democrats have been trying to
fight back. Uri Friedman explains in The Atlantic:
In
recent days, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama have criticized Donald Trump as
hopelessly old-fashioned. During a rally in New Jersey on Friday, the former
U.S. president argued that
his wife has a better understanding of today’s interconnected world than her
Republican opponent in the 2016 election. The proof was Trump’s plan
to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border to prevent illegal
immigration and terrorism.
“The
last terrorist incident we had in America was in San Bernardino,” California,
Clinton told the crowd. “Those people were converted [to radical Islam] over
social media. … You can build a wall across our border with Canada as well.
Create giant sea walls along the Atlantic and the Pacific. … We can send the
whole U.S. Navy to the Gulf Coast and keep anybody from getting in there. We
could use every airplane the U.S. Air Force has got in the air to stop planes
from landing. You still couldn’t keep out the social media.”
On
Sunday, also in New Jersey, the current U.S. president got in on the action.
“The world is more interconnected than ever before, and it’s becoming more
connected every day,” Obama said.
“Building walls won’t change that. … [I]f the past two decades have taught us
anything, it’s that the biggest challenges we face cannot be solved in
isolation.”
When they start trotting out social media you know they have
a problem. And yet, the damage done by the Obama open borders policy is not
going to be undone very quickly. And the damage done to Europe by Frau Merkel
and company will not be undone for decades, if that.
Obviously enough, the proponents of open borders do not
really need to make an argument. They need merely to flood the zone with
refugees and then offer them work permits and even citizenship.
On this score Trump will get the better of the argument
because he owns the concrete symbol. It’s far easier to understand a wall than
it is to understand comprehensive immigration reform.
One suspects that a Trump presidency will not persuade
Mexico to pay for the wall. Most people do not care because they understand Trump to be saying
that it is not their fault that conditions have deteriorated to the point where
only a wall will stop the invasion.
When it comes to responsibility, those who put a citizen of
the world in the White House certainly do bear a considerable responsibility.
The issue, obviously enough, has nothing to do with
compassion or with empathy. It has to do with identity, not merely belonging to
a nation, but feeling a sense of pride in one’s nation. Moreover, in the grand
culture war against Western Civilization, the rising tide of refugees will, if
it reaches a tipping point, corrupt and undermine the civilization itself.
For this reason, Joshua Cooper Ramo has written a book
explaining that more and more nations are building walls. More and more nations
are protecting their territories from unwanted intruders. Apparently, they
understood the old adage by Ben Franklin:
Love
your neighbor; yet don’t pull down your hedge.
Or the better known version quoted by Robert Frost:
Good
fences make good neighbors.
Some people are not going to like it, but defending your
sovereign territory is akin to defending the female population. One reason that
the world was so horrified by events in Cologne on New Year’s Eve was that the
Merkel policy had made German women vulnerable to harassment and abuse and
molestation. Thanks to Merkel German women are now far less free to go out on
their own or to live as they wish. Just don't call it liberation.
In roughly the same way the women who live in the Feminist
Paradise of Sweden have been subjected to the Western world’s highest incidence
of rape. None of which, incidentally, is being committed by Swedish men.
These nations are so drunk with their ideology that they cannot
even see the problem. They are now attempting to solve it by offering
re-education lessons for refugee men. As a signal of feebleminded acquiescence,
you cannot do very much better.
According to Ramo, as the world becomes more cosmopolitan,
its peoples are building more and more walls:
Of the
51 fortified boundaries built between countries since the end of World War II,
around half were
constructed between 2000 and 2014. Hassner and Wittenberg found that
such boundaries—structures like the existing U.S.-Mexico
border fence, theIsrael-West
Bank barrier, and the Saudi Arabia-Yemen
border fence—tend to be constructed by wealthy countries seeking to keep
out the citizens of poorer countries, and that many of these fortifications
have been built between states in the Muslim world.
“The
walls, fences, and trenches of the modern world seem to be getting longer, more
ambitious, and better defended with each passing year,” Ramo writes. “The
creation of gates is … the corollary of connection.”
Recently,
many of those fences have
been appearing in Europe, as countries there struggle to process an
influx of migrants and refugees. (The chart above doesn’t account for all of
these new barriers, a number of which have been constructed since 2014.) The Economist observed in
January that, as a result of the refugee crisis and the conflict in Ukraine,
“Europe will soon have more physical barriers on its national borders than it
did during the Cold War.” New border controls and barriers, including Austria’s
proposed fence along the border with Italy, are threatening the
viability of the European Union’s passport-free Schengen
zone.
Do these walls work? Sometimes they do and sometimes they do
not. Ramo suggests that other policy initiatives should accompany the
wall-building. About that one must agree. Yet, one notes, as an example, that
when Israel walled off the Palestinian West Bank, terrorist attacks from that
area stopped.
Walls are real. They symbolize pride in country, loyalty to
country and a refusal to allow others to live off what we have built. One
suspects that the Republican argument in favor of walls is going to play better
than the Democratic love of cosmopolitanism. Unfortunately, more and more of
those who have entered the nation illegally will find ways to vote and to
exercise political power… the question is whether it is too late to reverse the
tide.
"The issue, obviously enough, has nothing to do with compassion or with empathy. It has to do with identity, not merely belonging to a nation, but feeling a sense of pride in one’s nation. Moreover, in the grand culture war against Western Civilization, the rising tide of refugees will, if it reaches a tipping point, corrupt and undermine the civilization itself."
ReplyDeleteThis is where the hammer hits the nail, and what the Left so assiduously refuses to acknowledge (if any of them even recognize the problem).
If you destroy Western Civilization -- and unfettered immigration without assimilation or education (of the pre-precious-snowflake variety) will have exactly that affect -- then there will no longer be any rich place to which the poor can flee.
Venezuela didn't even need immigration to destroy itself.
Where is Ares O. to tell you and us just how wrong you are?
ReplyDeleteThis is the single issue on which the election will be decided. However, there are sufficient numbers of inhabitants of what we still call the "United States of America" that hate this country that I would not want to bet on the outcome. This country was over when B. Hussein Obama was elected. Hillary will complete the process by empathizing with our enemies.
ReplyDeleteBetter get a gun.
"Good Walls Make Good Neighbors"
ReplyDeleteAnd good balls make good kids
Hey Sam L,
ReplyDeleteI think walls and fences are great, although I don't think you should boast your neighbor is going pay for it. Only a madman says things like that. Even Israel didn't demand the Palestinians pay for the walls, although crazily they did use their scarce resources to dig tunnels under the wall anyway.
I'm sure everyone knows the line "Good Walls Make Good Neighbors" comes from Robert Frosts poem, Mending Wall, and it wasn't a wall that kept people out, but a wall that delegates property lines so everyone knew what they were responsible for maintaining. And don't forget the line "something there is that doesn’t love a wall" so nature itself, or the freeze-thaw cycle at least, has a way of breaking our artificial boundaries.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mending_Wall
And about Berlin, I recall it was Reagan who went to Berlin in 1987 and said this, and the wall did go down soon after.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tear_down_this_wall!
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General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization, come here to this gate. Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate. Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!
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I forget the details of history, but know the wall was built after World War II when Nazi Germany was defeated by two temporary allies, but the wall wasn't build right away. And if the wall was across Berlin, it wasn't across the whole landscape, right? It would be interesting to learn more about that.
But if we go to the start of the "good walls make good neighbors", we can consider walls are not meant to keep out people but to make sure people know who's land is whos, and when you're on my side of the wall, you're my guest, and you're under my authority, and that's a more important distinction than simply keeping people out.
But immigration can look scary, if you become a citizen of MY country and MY culture, and try to change it to accommodate yours culture that, I may wonder about the future, and perhaps my descendants will live in a world that looks completely unlike what I grew up in.
I don't know how to relieve those fears, and I have my own, but at least Ronald Reagan's speech offers some hope. Tribalism is in our genes, and Civilization is still a young an unnatural thing in a 3+ million year genetic inheritance, something that exists by the force of will of culture and religion that can see we're all God's children, all children of Noah, and Adam, or at least 3 religions can claim that. So we are siblings, and we may fight, but we can find better ways, even if temporary walls are also necessary.
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We welcome change and openness; for we believe that freedom and security go together, that the advance of human liberty can only strengthen the cause of world peace.
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I don't think Trump was proposing that Mexico directly pay for the wall. It is estimated that $25 billion is sent back to Mexico annually from illegals working in the US-- most of that through Western Union or Walmart.
ReplyDeleteI think he was proposing a surcharge on that money, a tax if you will. 10% would net $2.5 billion annually, which would make a nice start on the wall.
About 1/4 of the Mexican border is already fenced, thanks to the Secure Border Fence Act of 2006. I think the wall is really a metaphor for securing our border, whether it be increased border guards or high tech surveillance, but more important is a willingness by Washington to just enforce the laws already on the books.
I think you would find most Americans support legal immigration, but any country has the right to decide who enters the country and from where. I certainly do.
Stuart said "... more and more of those who have entered the nation illegally will find ways to vote and to exercise political power ..."
ReplyDeleteAnd, Heaven help us, many states -including Colorado, where I live- are KNOWINGLY, WILLINGLY, DELIBERATELY aiding and abetting illegal aliens by providing them with Driver's Licenses.
Isn't there something about the term "accessory-after-the-fact" that should cause the Attorneys-General of such states to pause and consider the ramifications of providing "perverse incentives" to lawbreakers??? Or are they all convinced that the Current Official One-World Whim relieves them of any duty to uphold their oaths of office?
This country has lost its collective mind. And, furthermore, we are no longer a nation which believes in Rule-of-Law ... or even in the lessons of history.
That-right-there spells DOOM.