Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Fear of a Lonely Planet


Sultan Knish

The left of center European press has responded to Prime Minister Cameron's veto of EU 2.0 with all the hysteria of a man on a desert island who sees the rescue plane flying off into the distance. Equal to them is the American press which is already barking that if we don't sign on to Durban's boondoggle and accept a global environmental court, then we have doomed the planet.

This pathological drive toward regional and global union regardless of the negatives seems more like a neurotic reaction than serious policy. Is the UK really doomed outside of the EU, especially since for all the hyperbole it isn't anywhere near to being outside the EU, and is a failure to create another disastrous bureaucracy in the name of saving the planet from disaster really going to doom the human race? Union has become the neurotic obsession of progressive politics, regardless of whether that union does anyone any good or not. If we could pretend that EU 1.0 was leaving behind the ghosts of nationalism for union, EU 2.0 is mostly compensating for the failures of EU 1.0 with greater centralization and wishful thinking. There isn't even the ghost of optimism or idealism on display here, it's the board of Olympus deciding to cook even more books in the hopes that shareholders don't notice that the whole thing is unworkable.

The problem with federalizing and unifying everything is that it's expensive. Multiple authorities mean more costs. Bulking up the bureaucracy isn't a triumph of the human spirit, it's the last days of half a dozen empires.

The unified humanity under a global government project is a bad idea spawned by people who couldn't properly run nations, let alone the world. And even more foolishly, its proponents like H.G. Wells assumed that such a project would be run by likeminded European socialists who would whip the religion and the nationalism out of all the peons. Their vision was really the British Empire, administering a global bureaucracy of reason, in which people might speak different languages, but they would all think the same way.

In its shameless arrogance this vision didn't account for a Gandhi or a Mohammed, it assumed that the day when Europe and the Anglo Colonies agreed to fall in line with a rational brotherhood of man, then all the little brothers in Asia, Africa and the Middle East would join the consensus and learn to love the smiling mustachioed face of Big Brother.

But China, India and the Muslim world have their own agendas, which are the old-fashioned kind, national greatness through industrial prosperity and armed force. And Western leftists have been left standing there like the successful elder brother who drops out of his law practice to join a cult and then returns home shocked to realize that the rest of the clan is still working for a living.

What the left mistook for the triumph of reason is actually a cult of the smug who have learned to preach to themselves so well that they are incapable of stepping outside the box and understanding that their way is not the path to a new utopia, it's a bunch of silliness so hopelessly detached from human history and human nature that they might as well be wearing white robes and munching on lotus sandwiches.

A dominant culture imposing its mores and laws on the regions under its culture is nothing new, but trying to do it without being dominant only makes you seem foolish. And trying to export your own assumptions, without at least having the sense to wrap them up as a religion, and then assuming that all reasonable people think the way you do is a formula for being either an annoying tourist or a leftist activist.

The Jews are probably one of the best examples of a small group of people which managed to spread its ideas and values around the world, but in universalizing their values, they also became universally hated, and those ideas and values took very different forms the further they traveled. Islam is related to Judaism in much the same way that Islamic democracy is related to American democracy, it adopts some of the forms while entirely missing the point because its administrators and actors share few of the same values.

Judaism or the American version of open elections are based on assumptions that are not exported along with the forms. And the same goes for any system which is exported to people who adopt the forms, but not the values. One G-d or one man, one vote, are concepts, how they are implemented depends on the value systems of those who take them on. Value systems that are fundamentally authoritarian will adopt anything from religion to democracy within the limits of an authoritarian system.

The United Nations alone should have been a cautionary tale of how the idealistic assumptions are not transmitted into the actual functioning of a system, and how that system is furthered altered when it is slowly taken over by people coming into it from authoritarian political and social systems.And the EU is a refresher course in how idealism applied to controlling people rapidly turns into a dysfunctional totalitarian system that disdains the individual and refuses to listen to criticism.

After the Civil War the United States dived headlong into unionism and you can measure that by the number of places named or renamed something with the word "Union" in it. Having come close to splitting apart there was a national obsession to federalize everything. Universal education, universal authority and universal everything became the motto.

Some 70 years after a war fought over whether states could secede from the union, the New Deal apportioned unlimited authority to the president and the subsidiary bureaucracies under his control. Much of that authority was eventually rolled back, the country has never recovered from that hiccup of absolute power vested in a central authority during a crisis.

If Theodore Roosevelt's New Nationalism at least attempted to put the people at the reins of an unlimited authority, his cousin's New Deal was scientific government in all its totalitarian horror and bureaucratic incompetence. A horror that no one learned anything from. The New Deal gave way to the New Frontier and the Great Society and finally Hope and Change, leaving the country deep in debt and at the mercy of an ideological bureaucracy tightening its grip on power.

And yet any attempt to roll back the rolling disaster is met with cries of "Reactionary" as if local power and local authority were nothing less than cave-dwelling cannibalism. The only solution is to go forward, to bigger unions and larger federal monstrosities that share all the flaws of the old version but promise to restrain them by having smarter people sitting in one room and making all the decisions. Anyone who points out that this is a bad idea is treated as if he had suggested that maybe the sun does revolve around the earth after all.

It's the unionists though who put forward a determinedly geocentric model of the human solar system. It is they who insist that the massive sun of the people must revolve around the planet of government, rather than that government should revolve around the people. Adding more mass to government does not make it into a sun, a source of energy and light, it makes it into a heavier satellite, but no matter how heavy planet government becomes, it will not unleash a gravity field that will force the people to revolve around it.

On the lonely planet of government, the neurotic left keeps crying that we must all unite or be isolated. Countries must tear down their borders, nations must give up their identities, lawmaking must be given over to vast undemocratic global associations and anything else is primitivism. To refuse union is to linger in the tribal hut while ignoring the wider world where everyone is integrating into one great shapeless mass of brotherhood, sisterhood and transgenderhood.

But outside of a few neighborhoods in some parts of Western cities, that world doesn't actually exist, and it hardly exists even there. True integration takes centuries and it forms around a new national and ethnic identity. Take the English for example or the Italians. Even the American experiment mainly blended various flavors of Europe, some more exotic than others, into a meta-identity built on hard work, self-reliance and national patriotism. Attempts to repeat that experiment without the hard work, the self-reliance and the patriotism, and extended beyond immigrants from Europe, has not exactly been successful.

All the neurosis that we must unite or be divided is misplaced. It is not unity that ends loneliness, but our unique identities that give us a place in the world. Local values define who we are much more so than any universal values do. Excessive unionism is much more divisive and isolating than a local sustainable national culture.

In a fragmented Europe where the elites are bent on union, people are still far more enthusiastic about their soccer teams, than they are about the European Union. The neighborhood, the city and the nation, the micro-identities that build up contribute far more to character than the vision of a united world.

But there is no place so lonely as a crowd, whether it is a crowd of men or a crowd of nations, losing themselves in a shapeless mass. It is only the lonely world governmenters who fear local identities so much that they must escape into fantasies of regional and global orders.

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