One recalls Francis Fukuyama’s famous argument. Namely
that, at the end of the twentieth century, liberal democracy had emerged as the
crowning glory of civilization, the ne plus ultra of governmental systems, the
victor over all other forms of government. When Communism collapsed of its own
internal contradictions—everywhere but in the minds of American graduate
students—liberal democracy was the only system left standing.
Since Fukuyama included free market capitalism in the
broader category of liberal democracy, he covered himself against the chance
that someone would find a better political system. Or that the public would sour on
liberal democracy. Or that democratic elections would promote leaders who had
no use for democracy. Or would discover that no system can function when it is run by incompetent self-interested people who do not believe in the system.
As you know, Fukuyama was reading from a Hegelian chapbook.
One recalls that Marx was doing the same. In itself this tells us to be
skeptical of his conclusions. He believed that the movement of the World Spirit
had produced liberal democracy. We have a right to doubt his conclusions.
And one must recall, because everyone overlooks it, that
America was founded as a Republic, not as a democracy. As you know, the
American president is not elected by a raw majority. The Electoral College is
not proportional to the population. And the balance of powers that is
fundamental to the American constitution guards the people against spasms of
democratic madness.
Fukuyama could not have known it at the time, but the rise
of China has influenced the way people around the world see the current
civilizational conflict between liberal democracy and authoritarian capitalism. One remarks that, countries like the United States and France have far more
bureaucrats per capita and far more regulations than do the putatively
Communist Chinese government.
And yet, China takes a decidedly negative view of free expression,
of the free press and even of student revolutionaries. Recall the way the
government treated the pro-democracy demonstrators at Tiananmen Square in 1989.
Yet, the prognostications of Nick Kristof notwithstanding, China
is prospering. Its leaders maintain their power, because the system is
producing prosperity. Thus, Chinese leaders still have what they call the Mandate
of Heaven. It is not quite the same as the will of the people.
Given a choice between authoritarian capitalism and debates
over transgrendered locker rooms, the Chinese people prefer the former.
Given the choice between working to prosper and entering into a seemingly
endless game of whack-a-bigot, the Chinese prefer the former. They did not
vote, but they are not feeling aggrieved either. We Americans vote and we feel aggrieved
all the time.
Americans believe in democracy, but they have not been doing
a very good job of selling it to the world. Or even to their own people.
Americans love their unruly democracy. But, they no longer
understand that if they want to have other nations emulate it, they need to
make it work. And, let us not forget, whereas the idea and the practice of
democracy goes back to Attic Greece, it has no such roots in Chinese culture or
thought.
Undoubtedly, the clash between Chinese and American
civilizations is the story of our times. And, for now, the Chinese system is
looking better and better to many Americans.
Here we need to be careful. The students who especially
dislike democracy and free expression are not militating for authoritarian
capitalism. They are clamoring for socialism. After all, it has
failed everywhere it has been tried, so students, idealistic to a fault, want
to try it again.
Other Americans are also being attracted to more
authoritarian rule. In particular they seem more comfortable with rule by the
military than with rule by politicians. Why is this so? Perhaps it shows that people
understand that soldiers are less motivated by self-interest, whereas
politicians, led by Hillary and Bill Clinton, seem motivated by nothing but
self-interest.
Young people are not as much of a mystery as you might
imagine. They have known one president and they have seen that president run
roughshod over the separation of powers and American constitutional law. They
have seen him rule by executive decree, lie to the people systematically, get
away with the lies, and prefer his golf game over a show of concern for the
people of flood-ravaged Louisiana. Self-interest and self-indulgence… quite the
combo.
Today’s young people have also, and this is more important,
lived under a president who has no real commitment to American exceptionalism,
who does not believe that America is a great country, and who does not want to win out in the clash of civilizations. They have seen a
president disparage his nation and surrender to its enemies.
If you are young and impressionable, if you have been brainwashed
with political correctness from the time you were out of diapers, if you see
life as a therapeutic project, you are not going to like free competition in
free markets. You will feel entitled to get what you have not earned.And you are not going to have any real use for the marketplace of
ideas, either.
Today’s college students are more likely to believe in
socialism, in receiving more benefits for working less. They want to shut down
free speech and free markets. They are more like the Red Guards than like the
current leaders of China.
The young Americans who flocked to Bernie Sanders are surrender
junkies. They wish to surrender to Islamist terrorism, to surrender to a
massive wave of immigrant refugees, and to surrender to newly empowered
capitalistic China. They believe that competition is yesterday's game.
When so many of your countrymen and women have been
indoctrinated to the point where they can no longer think, what do you do?
4 comments:
"When so many of your countrymen and women have been indoctrinated to the point where they can no longer think, what do you do?"
Re-read your Old Testament stories.
Once again, this is due to the influence of cunt in our political process--culminating in a society in which life must be all bliss, all the time, and the government must step in to make it so.
Perversely, the characteristics of Chinese society you described are the result of all too many surplus men ("bare branches")--since millions of baby girls were sacrificed to China's one-child policy and cultural preference for sons. A macho society like that has its own problems, which unfortunately will some day become ours as well.
"Bernie's a cool dude. Feel the bern. Socialism makes life simpler and cheaper. It's dope."
Young people believe that surrender is yet another expression of indifference and that, freely chosen, it is really strategic submission. That means that submission is just a way to get people to leave you alone so you can do whatever you want to do. You know, throw the annoying douchebags a bone and make them feel like they've won something, and then the youngsters can go back to doing whatever they want. So surrender = getting what you want. Consider it thought-out anomie for spoiled, smarty-pants white kids who don't work.
"Yeah, whatever. That's cool with me."
But they don't understand the world, and what the world has in store for them. Consider shariah -- shariah is a bit more than a tossing a bone over the fence get someone else to stop barking so you can play your video games or text with your friend sitting next to you. You see, Islamists actually expect you to live under shariah's rules, where your house is no castle, and your Glowing Box can be confiscated as a filth-distribution system. And tight, low-rise jeans are replaced with burquas. Shariah is not a choice, it's a totalitarian religious system... imposed, not chosen.
"But that's so UNFAIR!!!"
Islam literally means "submission." No one has taught our young people this. They know Islam as the religion of peace, while simultaneously believing the Little Sisters of the Poor should get with Obama's program that lets them stay on their parents' health insurance until they're 26. What could be wrong with that???
"OMG, what's wrong with this NUNS???"
Liberal Democracy...with the old, classical definition of liberal. "Liberal" democracy, is noticeably illiberal.
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