In a wonderful Commentary article Bruce Bawer takes down the
concept of citizen of the world. John Hinderaker reports on it for Powerline
(via Maggie’s Farm.) For our purposes we will look at Bawer’s article.
Bawer dates the advent of the concept to Diogenes, who lived
in the fourth century A.D., but the more modern source lies in Immanuel Kant.
In his essay on the idea of a universal history Kant claimed that we should all
become citizens of the world. Barack Obama echoed the thought in a 2008 address
he delivered in Germany at the Brandenburg Gate.
So, the concept embodies Enlightenment
idealism. I assume that we all know that the Enlightenment in Germany
had nothing to do with the British and Scottish versions. Since the time of
early Greek philosophy idealism and empiricism have been warring against each
other. Arthur Herman has written an excellent book about the history of the
conflict, entitled The Cave and the Light.
Anyway, citizenship of the world is an idealistic concept, one that disregards
nations, borders, boundaries and true citizenship in exchange for the promise
of a world of milk and honey, peace and prosperity where we would fight no more
wars because we will all belong to one hulking planetary whole.
Bawer approvingly quotes the hapless Theresa May, in one of
her rare moments of lucidity:
…if you
believe you are a citizen of the world, you are a citizen of nowhere.
Ironically, of perhaps paradoxically, the thrust toward
global citizenship began after Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan were defeated by
the armies of the Anglosphere in World War II. It intensified after the same
Anglosphere defeated Communism in the Cold War. Thus it feels like a victor's lament... for having hurt the feelings of the losers.
Obviously enough, Woodrow Wilson's ill-fated league of nations-- another Kantian concept-- showed that global citizenship was a bad idea.
Bawer explains:
Ironically
enough, the contemporary enthusiasm for global citizenship has its roots in the
historical moment that marked the triumph of modern national identity and
pride—namely, the World War II victory of free countries (plus the Soviet
Union) over their unfree enemies. Citizens of small, conquered nations resisted
oppression and, in many cases, gave their lives out of sheer patriotism and
love of liberty. As Allied tanks rolled into one liberated town after another,
people waved flags that had been hidden away during the occupation. Germany and
Japan had sought to create empires that erased national borders and turned free
citizens into subjects of tyranny; brave patriots destroyed that dream and
restored their homelands’ sovereignty and freedom. And yet a major consequence
of this victory was the establishment of an organization, the United Nations.
Its founding rhetoric, like that of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, was all
about the erasure of borders, even as it hoisted its own baby-blue flag
alongside those of its members.
It seems to
be a reaction against the martial values that won the wars. Under the guise of
preventing wars the reactionaries tried to revalue more feminine maternal values, ones that cared more for caring and less for competition:
The
chief force behind the Declaration was Eleanor Roosevelt, the chair of the UN’s
Human Rights Commission. In a 1945 newspaper column, she had had some
interesting things to say about patriotism and what we would now call
globalism. “Willy-nilly,” she wrote, “everyone [sic] of us cares more for his
own country than for any other. That is human nature. We love the bit of land
where we have grown to maturity and known the joys and sorrows of life. The
time has come however when we must recognize that our mutual [sic] devotion to
our own land must never blind us to the good of all lands and of all peoples.”
The illusion is sustained by the United Nations, another
political and cultural fraud:
Behind
the Iron Curtain, captive peoples weren’t citizens, global or otherwise, but
prisoners. Yet in the West, the UN’s language of what we now call global
citizenship started to take hold, and the UN began to be an object of
widespread, although hardly universal, veneration. In reality, the UN may be a
massive and inert bureaucratic kleptocracy yoked to a debating society, most of
whose member states are unfree or partly free; but people in the free world who
grow starry-eyed at the thought of global citizenship view it as somehow magically
exceeding, in moral terms, the sum of its parts.
Bawer taxes the movement with moral dereliction. If you do
not belong to a country you need not concern yourself with defending the
country. And you have no responsibilities to your fellow citizens, because
everyone the world over is a citizen of the world. If we believe
that we must care for everyone who is alive we are going to find ourselves in
the position of not caring for anyone.
5 comments:
Hume > Kant. Marilyn Monroe > Eleanor Roosevelt. USA > shithole countries.
If I am a "citizen of the world, do I have to pay taxes to every country in the world? What are they doing FOR me, that I should pay taxes to them? Which ones will try to draft me into military service?
“Willy-nilly,” she wrote, “everyone [sic] of us cares more for his own country than for any other. That is human nature." This is where we grew up. We "speaka da language".
Our friends and family are here.
A certain amount of this is due to a belief that *technologies of interconnection* make a global society & government necessary and desirable. The Confederate general Edward Porter Alexander, who was Lee’s artillery commander at Gettysburg, became a railroad president after the war. His experiences in running a major transportation system probably had something to do with the evolution of his thoughts regarding state’s rights:
"Well that (state’s rights) was the issue of the war; & as we were defeated that right was surrendered & a limit put on state sovereignty. And the South is now entirely satisfied with that result. And the reason of it is very simple. State sovereignty was doubtless a wise political instution for the condition of this vast country in the last century. But the railroad, and the steamboat & the telegraph began to transform things early in this century & have gradually made what may almost be called a new planet of it… Our political institutions have had to change… Briefly we had the right to fight, but our fight was against what might be called a Darwinian development – or an adaptation to changed & changing conditions – so we need not greatly regret defeat."
I think a lot of the belief in unlimited globalization is implicitly driven by an extension of Alexander’s argument, with the jet plane, the container ship, and the Internet taking the place of the railroad, steamboat, and telegraph.
See my post What Are the Limits of the Alexander Analysis?
https://chicagoboyz.net/archives/54565.html
Bauer's "language of global citizenship" is also the language of international socialism.
This is not a coincidence. The UN is a cultural and political fraud whose foundations were laid by a Soviet agent, Algier Hiss.
Multiracial nationalism is the same thing as World Citizenship.
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