Le dernier mot: <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=838>  Washingtonian
madness


by Srdja Trifkovic

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=838#more-838

My farewell column has a melancholy air not only because all partings are
inherently sad, but because the times are genuinely grim. The world is
changing… not for the better, and America is making a disproportionate
contribution to the process. There is a malaise at the very core of this
country's foreign-policymaking, on both sides of the dominant duopoly in
Washington. At its poles there may be differences over tactics and means,
but the alleged necessity of America's continued, open-ended "engagement" in
faraway lands is never questioned – and it will not be questioned under the
new regime.

The madness is an amorphous beast, and it is still remarkably unaffected by
the awful financial and economic reality. It has many
names—multiculturalism, one-worldism, tolerantism, inclusivism,
antidiscriminationism—that demand engagement abroad and wide-open doors at
home. Both abroad and at home, the impulse is neurotic; its justification,
gnostic. It reflects the collective loss of nerve, faith, and identity of a
diseased society, producing a self-destructive malaise that is literally
unprecedented in history.

The intoxication is the arrogant belief that our reason and our science and
our technology can resolve all the dilemmas and challenges of our existence,
and, in particular, that enlightened abstractions—democracy, human rights,
free markets—can be spread across the world and are capable of transforming
it in a way that would ultimately turn Muhammads into Joes (which is what
they all want, we are assured, or would choose only if they could think
clearly). Both the madness and the intoxication have a "left," essentially
Wilsonian, narrative (one-world, postnational, compassionate,
multilateralist, therapeutic) and a "right," or neoconservative, one
(democracy-exporting, interventionist, monopolar, boastfully
self-aggrandizing).

Though differing in practice, both outlooks are utopian and firmly rooted in
the legacy of the Enlightenment and the rejection of any power independent
of "the market" and the ostensible will of the multitude. Both hold that Man
is naturally good and improvable, that human conflict is unnatural and
vanquishable, that chaos and bloodshed around the world are primarily the
fruits of some flawed policies of the West (Wilsonians) or the result of our
insufficient "engagement" (neoconservatives).

The former find remedies in endless self-examination, in the supranational
mechanisms of "collective security" controlled by themselves, and in the
promotion of "dialogue" with every Third World tyrant and madman, for as
long as he declares a grievance against us. The latter rely on the use of
force to impose their benevolent global order on a supposedly grateful
pre-postmodern humanity. Both are determined to make the world as they want
it to be rather than to deal with the world as it is. This produces policies
that are invariably flawed, often evil, and occasionally fatal. Both are
united in their loathing of the realist view of America not as an
ever-expanding empire but as a republic with definable borders and interests
rooted in her history, culture, and tradition. When a realist warns of the
Hobbesian nature of the real world and advocates national interest as the
foundation of this country's external affairs, they both cry in unison,
"Isolationism!" "Racism!" or some other ism.

It is incorrect to describe Wilsonianism and neoconservatism as two
"schools" of foreign policy. They are, rather, two sects of the same Western
heresy that has its roots in the Renaissance and its fruits in liberal
democracy. Their shared denominational genes are recognizable not in what
they seek but in what they reject: polities based on national and cultural
commonalities; durable elites and constitutions; and independent economies.
Both view all permanent values and institutions with unrestrained hostility.
Both exalt state power and reject any political tradition based on the
desirability of limited government at home and nonintervention in foreign
affairs. Both claim to favor the "market" but advocate a kind of state
capitalism managed by the transnational apparatus of global financial and
regulatory institutions.Their shared core belief—that society should be
managed by the state in both its political and its economic life—is equally
at odds with the tenets of the liberal left and those of the traditional
right. Far from being "patriotic" in any conventional sense, they both
reject the real, historic America in favor of a propositional construct
devoid of all organic bonds and collective memories.

The two sects' deep-seated distaste for the traditional societies, regimes,
and religion of the European continent was manifested in President Clinton's
war against the Serbs in 1999 and in their unanimous support for Kosovo's
independence today.

For the same reason, they share a visceral Russophobia, a soft spot for
Chechen jihadists, and a commitment to NATO expansion. Both Wilsonians and
neoconservatives are united in opposing democracy in postcommunist Eastern
Europe, lest it produce governments that will base the recovery of their
ravaged societies on the revival of the family, sovereign nationhood, and
the Christian Faith. Inevitably, they have joined forces in creating and
funding political parties and NGOs east of the Trieste-Stettin Line that
promote the entire spectrum of postmodern isms that have atomized America
and the rest of the West for the past four decades. From Bratislava to
Bucharest to Belgrade, both present the embrace of deviancy, perversion, and
morbidity as the litmus test of an aspirant's "Western" clubbability.
Ultimately, both sects share the Straussian dictum that the perpetual
manipulation of hoi polloi by those in power is necessary because they need
to be told what is good for them.

 The essential similarity of Wilsonians and neoconservatives is apparent.The
inability of most patriotic, traditionalist Middle Americans to recognize
that similarity and its implications is a problem. They have no difficulty
in recognizing the weirdness or evil of, say, Hillary Clinton, but they
would be hard-pressed to detect identical traits in an equally radical
sectarian who has morphed into a self-styled "conservative" of the Weekly
Standard variety. As Brian Mitchell notes in the conclusion to his book
Eight Ways to Run the Country, the obvious disharmony between the genuine
conservatism of ancient ideals—whether Anglo-American or orthodox
Christian—and the ruthlessly new ideology of "democratic capitalism"
embodied in Michael Ledeen's Creative Destructionism is lost on the average
"Red" American who votes Republican and watches FOX News:

It remains to be seen how far capitalism will carry us before social
conservatives awake to its dangers. When free men are allowed to amass great
fortunes from global rackets in gambling, pornography, prostitution,
narcotics, weaponry, and usury, the permanent things can only expect short
shrift. Ultimately, such unrestrained capitalism is on the side of our
enslavers. In a thoroughly capitalist world, men will buy and sell each
other. Only a power independent of the free market can save us from the
slave market.

Historically, Mitchell notes, only two institutions have been up to the
task: the institutions of nondemocratic governments that guard against
accumulation of wealth outside government control, and a unified Christian
Church whose wealth and power are committed to nonmarket purposes.
"Democracy alone is no match for the market," Mitchell concludes, "for
democracy is itself a market, selling power to the highest bidder." Indeed,
democracy in America is a corrupt "democratic process" run by an elite class
that conspires both to make secondary issues important and to treat
important issues as either irrelevant or illegitimate: One party may be in;
another, out; but the regime is in power permanently.

The global power of the Wilsonian-neoconservative regime is unlikely to be
broken incrementally by an America gradually coming to her senses. It will
indeed be broken, but the price will be paid in Middle American blood and
treasure. We cannot know when and how this will happen—but happen, it will.
We cannot know what will be the theme of after-dinner discussions a hundred
years hence, but we do know it will not be the global grandeur of the
liberal-democratic-capitalist Pax Americana.

 

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