DigitalDave
Sexy Beast!
I thought there was some good food for thought in this article worth sharing. I don't agree with all of it, however it's pretty insightful on the divide and anger being expressed.
https://americanaffairsjournal.org/2017/02/a-renewed-republican-party/
“However sudden and momentous be events that have just taken place so swiftly, the author can claim that they have not taken him by surprise.” So wrote Tocqueville in the Author’s Preface to the Twelfth Edition of Democracy in America, on the occasion, in 1848, of the final political repudiation of the effort to restore monarchy in France. America, of course, has had no monarchy. The Trump ascendancy, nevertheless, was the repudiation of the Bush and Clinton family dynasties—no small accomplishment, and something that would have been inconceivable two long years ago. Most did not see this coming. The few who did were either ignored or excoriated. France found itself in new political territory after 1848; America finds itself in new political territory after 2016.
Source: Metrocosm.com.
What happened? By what light should the election of Donald Trump and our abrupt national reorientation be understood? Those loyal to the Clinton wing of the Democratic Party see Trump’s election as a reversion to the racism that was only partially masked by the election of Barack Obama in 2008. In short, they continue, after the election, to double down on the identity politics trope that lost them the 2016 election in the first place, by 74 electoral votes—306 to 232. The election results by county show an even starker margin of victory for Trump. Is this racism? Perhaps populism? Perhaps something else? My remarks here will be concerned with how we should think about what happened—not just in the abstract, but with a view to how the Republican Party should go forward from here.
National Sovereignty, Not Populism
For several generations conservatives have thought that the domestic enemy was progressivism. Now they imagine they face a new problem: populism. True, what has happened in America in the last few years looks like a populist uprising against bicoastal global elites. Populism in America, however, historically has been a domestic matter, inscribed from the founding of our country in the alternative visions of Jefferson and Hamilton. When Hamilton gets the upper hand for a few decades, Jefferson protests. The recent uprising, while leveled against bicoastal elites, is not a protest in the name of a faction of America, but in the name of American sovereignty itself. The Washington and New York elites are not proxies for a faction of America, but proxies for globalism. To call what has happened “populism” is to miss the real issue.
What we are witnessing is less Jefferson versus Hamilton than Tocqueville versus the cosmopolitan idea that the French Revolution set in motion.
The proof, I think, is the description we are hearing of this so-called populism. If you listen to the consensus among the global elites, you would have to believe that America (and indeed, Britain and Europe) has been beset by irrationalism. The only available alternative, purportedly, is the rationalism that is globalism. We have been here before—during the French Revolution. Then, any parochial attachment, any interest that was not universal, had no place in the new cosmic order the revolutionaries were creating. The fate of these attachments and interests was the terror of the guillotine. To be rational was to be universal; to be universal was to be rational. That is the cosmopolitan, globalist frame of mind. Those who do not have this mindset—those who cling to their guns and their religion—are, by definition, irrational.
Tocqueville, as I indicated, was among the first to see this cosmopolitan mindset emerge. The whole of his Democracy in America can be seen as an attempt to show that, once the links that hold us fast in the aristocratic age have been broken, democratic man must be relinked, or he will hover over the world, without connection, and become cosmopolitan man. Tocqueville’s ideas about voluntary associations, about family, about religion, and about federalism, point to the need to bring the soul down to earth, to connect it to others. The embodied soul formed through these institutions is hardly irrational, as the cosmopolitan would insist; the embodied soul, on the contrary, is the healthy soul, whose interests are formed in and through relations with others.
It is the globalist, the cosmopolitan, then, who sees in the opposing party—the Party of Trump, it turns out—the irrationality of populism. Tocqueville saw this cosmopolitan—yes, diseased—way of thinking, and sought a cure: a liberal polity in which citizens love their towns, cities, states, and nation, because they have a hand in making them. That is what American citizens want back: their towns, counties, cities, states, and country. There is a big difference between irrationalism and “well-considered patriotism” (as Tocqueville called it). American citizens know the difference; the Left does not. That is why the Left so virulently opposes everything that stands against cosmopolitanism.
What term, then, should Republicans use to name the repudiation of globalism during the recent historic election? There will be a division, I suspect, along the lines we saw during the painful run-up to the 2016 election itself. On the one hand, Republicans who sided with globalists on the issue of commerce or who had a low estimation of American culture will indeed call what has happened a populist revolt. On the other hand, Republicans who think that globalism has not only been a disaster for the whole of the America but also that it is theoretically untenable will—or should—call what has happened a revolt in the name of national sovereignty, not populism.
Globalism and Identity Politics
Globalism, as we know, has benefitted a narrow swath of America, as the electoral map of 2016 indicates. Counties that voted for Clinton are the jurisdictional overlayment of the cities and regional zones in which a preponderance of citizens are involved in the global “management” (the buzzword of the globalist epoch) of materials or, more importantly, information. These voters were generally inattentive to their fellow citizens who were not in on the globalist game plan. For them, political justice involved material growth made possible by global management and the identity debt-points that global elites dispensed to this or that oppressed “identity” group as a consequence of past infractions or of the irredeemable fault of others—typically (the imaginary category of) White People. These two together were the theoretical centerpieces of 2016 Clinton campaign.
That globalism and identity politics went together in the minds of so many Democrats is no mere quirk or accident. What binds globalism and identity politics together is the judgment that national sovereignty is not the final word on how to order collective life. This judgment against national sovereignty—let us state the matter boldly—was the animating principle of the post-1989 world order, an order that is now collapsing before our eyes. Citizens who came of age after 1989 scarcely know how daring this project has been and, thanks to the American university, can scarcely conceive of any alternative to it. The post-1989 world order, however, is not fixed and immutable. It is, moreover, a rather bold historical experiment. A brief digression into the history of Western political thought confirms that this is so. Republicans must understand the long-standing viable alternative that predates the post-1989 experiment; and they must understand it in their very bones. For unless they grasp the real reason for the recent collapse, they will be tempted to see the repudiation of the political classes of both parties as a mere populist uprising, which will, they hope, dissipate as citizens either accept their fate in a globalized world or cease to be irrational. The larger issue, now that the post-1989 world is collapsing, is not populism, but rather national sovereignty. Let us see why.
The Peace of Westphalia, which formally inaugurated the modern European system of nation-states, came into effect in 1648. Shortly thereafter, in 1651, Hobbes wrote one of the great works in the history of political philosophy, Leviathan. In a now-common reading of that work, and correct so far as it goes, Hobbes’s Leviathan provides us with the individuated self, oriented by self-interest and the fear of death. These ideas are in Leviathan, but they only scratch the surface of that great work. Hobbes’s deeper concern in Leviathan was the English Civil War, which in no small part was a religious war involving the claims of Roman Catholics and Presbyterians. The doctrinal difference between the Roman Catholics and the Presbyterians need not concern us; what matters is where each of these Christian sects located sovereignty. Hobbes thought that Roman Catholics were guilty of what we might call “false universalism,” because they vested sovereignty at the supra-state level, in Rome. Hobbes thought that the Presbyterians were guilty of what we might call “radical particularism,” because they vested sovereignty at the sub-state level, in private conscience. The English Civil War occurred, on Hobbes’s reading, because of these religious wagers that peace and justice were possible without national sovereignty. In his estimation, these supra- and sub-state alternatives are perennial temptations of the human heart. Their defenders may promise much, but neither “commodious living” nor justice are possible through them. Only by vesting sovereignty in the state can there be improvement for citizens and workable understandings of justice.
The post-1989 experiment with globalism and identity politics demonstrates that Hobbes was correct, so long ago, that supra- and sub-state sovereignty are perennial temptations of the human heart. The post-1989 version of that temptation saw global elites use the apparatus of the state to bolster so-called free trade, international law, global norms, and international accords about “climate change,” the advances towards which purported to demonstrate the impotence of the state itself. In such a world managed from above, the only task left for the Little People was to feel good—or feel permanent shame—about their identities, and perhaps to get involved in a little “political activism” now and again, to show their commitment (on Facebook, of course) to “social justice.” The Little People in such a world were not citizens, they were idle “folks,” incapable of working together, because what really mattered was not rational deliberation with their neighbors, but what they owed, or were owed, by virtue of their identities. Determining the calculus of their debt, in turn, were Very White Progressives in the Democratic Party who cared not a jot about the real outstanding debt of $19 trillion owed by the U.S. treasury. These Very White Progressives sought to adjudicate justice from above, by legal carve-outs or, if necessary, by executive actions pertaining, for example, to transsexual bathrooms, so that all “identities” could have their due. Fortunately, 2016 was year the American electorate decided this ghastly fate was not to be theirs.
The American University
These observations about the post-1989 wager that is globalization and identity politics would not be complete without comment about the complicity of our American universities in this bold but deeply destructive experiment. Our universities, rather than standing above globalization and identity politics, have been the engine of it. At Georgetown, where I have taught for over two decades, students who are fearful that one small misstep will cause them to join the swelling ranks of the Little People quickly learn that to succeed, their studies must focus on “politics and culture” (an actual major, in the School of Foreign Service). What this really amounts to is the following: my students endure semester after semester of mind-numbing economics and international business classes, the very language of globalization; then they are titillated in their Prefix-Studies courses about the debt points others owe them, or they owe others, by virtue of their identity. Keynesian economics and Foucault: the global forces that we can manage, and the subterranean forces of the Id that have no right to be managed. What more could you need in an undergraduate education? Certainly not the study of state constitutions, the rule of law, municipal government, and all the boring stuff you would need to know to become thoughtful citizens who actually build a world together. Above all, you would not need the history of political thought—for now we finally know what the answer to 2,500-year-old question of justice is, namely, “social justice.”
The post-1989 experiment in globalization and identity politics, however, is not sustainable, no matter how forcefully our American universities defend it. That that experiment might need a defense has not yet occurred to those in charge. So far, we have seen only mourning, as the scores of letters sent out across the country by university presidents to their faculty and students attest. The anger is on the way, though. The promulgation of the language of globalization and identity politics is—dare I say it—the sole purpose of the modern, exorbitantly priced American university. That is why the anger will come. Hobbes recognized a long time ago that the post-1989 configuration of ideas and commitments could not work in the end. The year 2016 has proved Hobbes right, though the universities cannot yet bring themselves to admit it. State sovereignty matters. The alternative of globalization and identity politics had to collapse, because sovereignty cannot be located in those two places if life is to go well.
cont...
https://americanaffairsjournal.org/2017/02/a-renewed-republican-party/