-Caveat Lector-

http://www.antiwar.com/stromberg/s122600.html

The Old Cause
by Joseph R. Stromberg
Antiwar.com
December  26, 2000
Western Civilization: Love It Or Leave It
AGAIN THE MILLENNIUM

Today we stand just a few days this side of the real thousand-year
mark, that is, midnight 31 December 2000.  You knew I wasn't
going to let that go, didn't you?   I still wonder why all the calendar-
challenged classes insisted on having a big song and dance last
year, but can't be bothered, it seems, to notice that January 1,
2001 is more than an ordinary New Year's Day.  The Brits even
built an insane Millennium Dome, which no one admits to liking, for
last year's premature party.  I suggest moving it to the fairgrounds
of one of our Midwestern States.   You could get a lot of grain and
cattle into that thing.

The reason why the New Millennium was welcomed in the wrong
year may be the same reason a lot of things happen when they
do.  Sir Ernest Gellner, the sociologist, once referred to the "postal
error theory of history," which may not have been original with him.
This theory held that, by some terrible mistake, the liberating,
revolutionary message meant for the working classes had been
handed over to sundry nationalist movements, with deplorable
results.  Of course,  where the message did get in the "right"
hands, even more damage was done, but why quibble?  Historians
still shed a conventional tear about what happened to poor Rosa
Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, but don't these historians know
what the comrades wanted to do?   Evidently, the "social changes"
envisioned by the comrades were just the thing, but at the end of
the 20th century we ought to know better.

METAHISTORY, QUIGLEY, AND ‘CONSPIRACIES'
Metahistorians like Oswald Spengler, Arnold Toynbee, Pitrim
Sorokin, and Carroll Quigley sought to find the processes by which
civilizations rise and decline.  The first three were rather gloomy –
reacting in part to the civilizational disaster known as World War I
– although Spengler did dare us to throw those historical dice.
  It's just as well that he died before various historical actors threw
them in the disaster known as World War II.

One of the players in World War II, Uncle Joe Stalin, had a
metahistorical doctrine of his own, to which he contributed a
number of turgid essays even less readable than those of Lenin
and Trotsky.  On Joe's orders, as orchestrated by a Stalinist
professor of anthropology at Columbia University, Trotsky met with
assassination.  No wonder no one trusts anthropologists any
more.  Anyway, Stalin's historical doctrine held that if everyone
gave up control of everything to his regime, in time everyone would
have strawberries and cream, after which this horrible regime would
"wither away."  Even at 20 million plus deaths this seemed a good
deal to many people.  Others understandably resisted and under
cover of helping out, the other Uncle – Sam – made his bid for
world dominance.

Buoyed up by their own sense of competence, Yankee ingenuity,
and American know-how, our northeastern elite built a world empire
on which the sun has not yet set.  They didn't notice, or didn't
much care to notice, that in the process they had deconstructed
their own country.  Perhaps they just thought of it as a convenient
  place to stand while carrying out their good work.  I only wish
they had presented it clearly to the voters: "Support the empire,
destroy your way of life, you'll feel better when it's all over."  I'll bet
there wouldn't have been as big a consensus, had they done so.
So they said, instead: "Give us total power to stop the commies
and we'll give it back later.  Trust us."  Many people did trust
them.  H. L. Mencken long ago addressed why that might be.

PHASES OF CIVILIZATION

In a roundabout way, this brings us back to Quigley.  The Evolution
of Civilizations (Indianapolis: Liberty Press, 1979 [1961]) is
probably his most important book.  In this work Quigley sought to
find the developmental pattern of civilizations.  Very briefly, he
spied seven phases in the life of any civilization which lasted long
enough to go through the full set.  These are mixture, gestation,
expansion, conflict, empire, decay, and invasion.  These phases
are not "given" to observation but are generalized from what we
know about past civilizations.  There is no predictive science here,
nor does every civilization go through all seven stages.  Constituent
states within a civilization might so weaken the civilization through
constant warfare as to skip the empire phase, going straight from
conflict to decay and invasion.  A civilization in one of the first two
phases might run up against another in its expansion phase and
simply succumb.

Quigley believed that Western Civilization had, in effect, recycled
itself three times.  Uniquely, it had gone through three expansion
phases based on feudalism, merchant capitalism, and industrial
capitalism, respectively.  Each expansion phase had kindled a
conflict phase without, however, leading to a universal empire
incorporating all or most of the civilization.  When Quigley wrote, it
was not clear whether the United States could or would bring the
dubious blessings of universal empire to Western Civilization.

AN ANTI-WESTERN UNIVERSAL EMPIRE FOUNDED BY THE
WEST?

In recent decades, the will to extend US imperialism everywhere
has certainly been in evidence. What is interesting is that in recent
years the US leadership's will-to-power has gone hand in hand with
an anti-Western rhetoric about universal values, "diversity," and the
like.  The elite wields this rhetoric against its own backward
American people, who are expected to pay for the elite's moral and
political lost weekends, whatever the damage to the original
republican scheme which the people were blind enough to let go.

Empires tend to proclaim some universal mission as justification
for their existence.  This may be the first time that an empire has
proclaimed the suicide of its civilization as part of its mission.
Even the Spanish empire's trinity of God, gold, and glory seems
more appealing than amalgam of enforced diversity, the
implementation of UNESCO directives, and the realization of the
UN Declaration of Human Rights, here and now – if that were the
only other choice.

IS ANYTHING TO BE DONE?

The best choice of all would be to abandon the path of empire, for
empire destroys not just hapless foreigners in its path but the core
civilization from which it arose.  Of course ruling elites do not give
up their projects willingly.  Some pressure from below will be
needed.  Now there is a task worthy of a new millennium.  I
suppose those who don't value Western Civilization won't give a
monkey's whether empire destroys it or not.   Anti-imperialists will
just have to learn how to talk past them to those who have some
lingering attachment to their own inheritance.

Historians go astray quickly when predicting the future.  I won't
make any predictions.  Assessing "the present situation" (as the
Marxists like to say) is enough for now.  There is plenty of work to
go around.

In Quigleyan terms we see signs of the last three phases of
civilization – empire, decay, and invasion – all around us,
simultaneously.  The strains on what the New Left used to call "the
system" are many. Too bad so many of the New Left are now in
the system.  The late shambles of an election may be a good
sign.  It will be harder to inflict "fair elections" on the foreign enemy
state of the week in the face of the inevitable ridicule.  Next, the
Bushians – whatever their interest in rigging the world oil market
  – seem to lack their late opponents' ideological mania for doing
right globally.  Finally, there are a few signs of cultural resistance.
Home-schooling is just one of them.

These may be reasons for guarded optimism.  Ludwig von Mises,
who wrote eloquently of the unique relationship of Western
Civilization to freedom, also had this to say: "Bad policies can
disintegrate our civilization as they have destroyed many other
civilizations.  But neither reason nor experience warrants the
assumption that we cannot avoid choosing bad policies and
thereby wrecking our civilization.1

Note
1. Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History (Auburn: Ludwig von
Mises Institute, 1985), p. 221.


--

If a nation values anything more than freedom, it will lose its freedom; and the irony 
of it is that if it is comfort or money that it values more, it will lose that, too. - 
Somerset Maugham

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to