Sultan Knish blog
For most of human history the family was the basic social unit of the
species. Family was a way of passing down genes, beliefs and wealth. It
was a retirement plan that you paid into by keeping your children alive
long enough for them to grow up and support you. It allowed the
individual to pass on his ideas to people who would care about them
because they were part of their heritage. Family was a collective
endeavor, small enough to reflect the individual. It was a practical and
philosophical aim that made life beautiful and meaningful.
But who really needs it anymore?
The
basic practical functions of the family have been replaced by the nanny
state. It is the nanny that takes over the care and teaching of the
child as soon as possible. And when their parents grow old, it is that
same nanny that oversees their care and death.
Governments have
come to serve as undying guardians of human society, ushering new life
into the world and ushering old life out of it. New parents are as
likely to turn to the government for help as they are to their extended
family. When their child is old enough to look around for a career, it
is the government that they expect to provide the education and the
jobs. And when they grow old, the child can keep on working at his
government job and paying off his student loans knowing that the
government will be there to make all the difficult and expensive
decisions about their care.
With all that taken care of, who needs parents or children anyway?
People
once had children to pass on wealth, genes and beliefs. But wealth is
now thought to be the collective property of society, which is taxed to
death or often just given away on some quixotic quest to stamp out
disease in Africa or illiteracy in Antarctica. The thought of passing on
genes carries with it a tinge of racism for the European and
European-descended populations whose birth rates are dropping, but
raises no such concerns for minority groups with high birth rates. That
only leaves beliefs, which are also thought to be the collective
property of the society and the state. Public education, mandatory in
some countries, means that the best way to reproduce your beliefs is not
to have children, but to get a job as a teacher.
The family has
been displaced and replaced. In some places it is even repressed. Like
an old station wagon, it idles by the side of the road, while its former
owners drive away in their new sleek electric government compact
car built for two or a micro-car built for one into a wonderful
childless future of unfunded pensions, social collapse and death panels.
Marriage
rates have dropped sharply. Not only is divorce more commonplace, but
many couples aren't even bothering to marry at all. And many of those
who do marry don't bother having children. Childfree is the new Zero
Population Growth, not on behalf of the planet, but on behalf of the
self. Modern society has made the price of children extremely expensive
and many couples have found it easier to end the family with their own
deaths.
The future of the West has been aborted or never conceived. It has been broken up, divorced and never married.
The
state gave its citizens the impression that it could fulfill all the
functions of a family far better than the real thing. Its appeal was the
power of bigness, the stability of a system too big to fail and rooms
full of experts working night and day to improve on the fallible family.
With its vast industrial social services bureaucracy, the state would
be able to provide a more stable social safety net, save everyone money
on health care, educate their children, care for their elders,
perpetuate their values, protect their income, safeguard their way of
life and usher in a bright new future.
Unfortunately not only
can't the state do any of these things better than the family, but it
can't do them at all without the family. And the family has collapsed,
falling apart into disassociated lonely individuals, looking for their
father and mother, their children and their future, in the great
soulless body of the state.
"The State is the great fiction
through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody
else," Fredrick Bastiat wrote. At its most basic the state is a pyramid
scheme into which everyone pays into and from which everyone expects to
extract more than their fair share. At the very least they expect the
state to function like a wise investment fund, taking their taxes and
investing them in ways that will maximize their social return.
Unfortunately
the state is more like an actual pyramid scheme whose schemers squander
as much of the money as they can while pressuring the suckers to throw
in more and more, promising big returns and parading around the model
investors who made a fortune as their success stories.
Invest
more in education, the schemers of the state urge, presenting as an
example a few individual students from the diminishing percentage of
college graduates who are actually able to find a full-time job based on
their degree. Invest more in healthcare they cry, trotting out the
elderly and the children who depend on social services, even while those
same schemers are robbing those services blind. Invest in foreign aid,
in the war on poverty, in infrastructure and the environment and a
thousand other social funds, they cry, even as all the trillions of
their former investments have gone up in smoke.
Money however is
replaceable. Children are not. And nowhere has the pyramid scheme of the
social state schemer proven more disastrous than in the collapse of the
family. The state has usurped the family, but it depends on the family
to crank out industrious little taxpayers, small men and women who will
work the shops and factories, toiling night and day, paying their fines
and fees dutifully while raising the next generation of taxpayers.
Without the family, the pyramid scheme of the state faces a demographic
collapse.
Europe has turned to the American solution, bringing in
huge numbers of immigrants to fill the demographic dead zone left
behind by the progressive state. And America has doubled down on that
same solution. But the solution is no solution.
Importing large
numbers of immigrants into a vital and booming society is a shot in the
arm, but doing the same in a troubled society in decline is a shot in
the head. The difference between integration and conquest is a matter of
demographics. If the numbers are not on your side, then you aren't
expanding your own country, you're giving it away.
Immigrants
from the Third World have fared the worst. Caught between a declining
West and a backward East, they have produced large and broken families
that explode into violence as their children carve out their own rough
tribal identities in ethnic gangs and religious terrorist groups across a
lost and bewildered land. Not only have they failed to become the
taxpayers of the future, upholding the oversized pensions of tomorrow
with the labor of today, but they have become an even larger drain on
the social services that they were meant to bail out.
In 1848,
Marx and Engels published the Communist Manifesto fearsomely declaring,
"A spectre is haunting Europe — the spectre of communism." At that time
the birth rate in Germany was five children. Today it isn't even two.
The spectre of Communism is no longer haunting Europe. It has come and
gone. Under Socialism, it is the spectre of demographics that haunts
Europe. It is the dead children, no longer killed in factories or
protests, but in clinics and for convenience's sake, that float
aimlessly through the streets of Munich, London and Paris. Europe is no
longer haunted by its dead, but by those who were never born.
Socialism
has left behind a terrible bill and there is no one left to pay it. The
population is crashing in every Western country. The elderly are losing
their generous benefits, the men and women of middle age worry for the
future and the youth no longer believe in the future at all. The streets
are full of angry foreign teenagers, grinning and glaring, cutting and
smashing, and the veiled women shop for goat in small dirty butcher
shops. The old native men and women, of the stock that once made world
empires, dream of leaving it all behind for Greece or Spain where they
hope for a familiar foreignness, rather than the foreign foreignness
that has overwhelmed their countries and made their cities no longer
their own.
The state replaced the family. It told men and women
that they no longer needed to make permanent commitments to each or to
their parents and children. So long as they paid their taxes, the state
would bear the burden of their commitments. And so men and women gave up
on each other, parents gave up on their children and children gave up
on their parents, the family fell apart and now the state that took its
place is also falling apart.
A
building cannot be built on nothing. The tallest tower is only as
strong as its foundation. A skyscraper may touch the sky, but it is its
grip on the ground that truly counts. A civilization may reach for the
sky and the stars, but it is sustained by the soil of the family and the
roots of the basic social structures created by individuals
perpetuating individuals, not the gargantuan social mechanisms of the
state.
When a civilization destroys its families, then it
destroys itself. A man cannot cut out his own heart and live. A society
cannot destroy its own capacity for life and regeneration, and continue
on blithely occupying itself with the wars on obesity, poverty, racism,
cough syrup and gendered pronouns. The state may seem impressive, but it
is only a scheme by which people pay officials to make life better for
them. When the number of people begins to decline while the number of
officials increases, then the man touches the place where his empty
heart was, stumbles and falls.
American cities and states have
built up a vast social infrastructure of schools and hospitals that
there will not be enough children to use. From Detroit to California,
the future is four teachers to an empty classroom and eight nurses to an
empty hospital. The state that is too big to fail has grown bigger than
its people. Like Saturn, the progressive revolution has devoured its
own children leaving behind only the empty hallways and empty treasuries
of the state.
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