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The Crisis of Western Civ
New York Times | 21 April 2017
David Brooks |
Between
1935 and 1975, Will and Ariel Durant published a series of volumes that
together were known as “The Story of Civilization.” They basically told
human history (mostly Western history) as an accumulation of great
ideas and innovations, from the Egyptians, through Athens, Magna Carta,
the Age of Faith, the Renaissance and the Declaration of the Rights of
Man. The series was phenomenally successful, selling over two million
copies.
That
series encapsulated the Western civilization narrative that people, at
least in Europe and North America, used for most of the past few
centuries to explain their place in the world and in time. This
narrative was confidently progressive. There were certain great figures,
like Socrates, Erasmus, Montesquieu and Rousseau, who helped fitfully
propel the nations to higher reaches of the humanistic ideal.
This
Western civ narrative came with certain values — about the importance
of reasoned discourse, the importance of property rights, the need for a
public square that was religiously informed but not theocratically
dominated. It set a standard for what great statesmanship looked like.
It gave diverse people a sense of shared mission and a common
vocabulary, set a framework within which political argument could happen
and most important provided a set of common goals.
Starting
decades ago, many people, especially in the universities, lost faith in
the Western civilization narrative. They stopped teaching it, and the
great cultural transmission belt broke. Now many students, if they
encounter it, are taught that Western civilization is a history of
oppression. It’s
amazing what far-reaching effects this has had. It is as if a
prevailing wind, which powered all the ships at sea, had suddenly ceased
to blow. Now various scattered enemies of those Western values have
emerged, and there is apparently nobody to defend them.
The
first consequence has been the rise of the illiberals, authoritarians
who not only don’t believe in the democratic values of the Western
civilization narrative, but don’t even pretend to believe in them, as
former dictators did.
Over
the past few years especially, we have entered the age of strong men.
We are leaving the age of Obama, Cameron and Merkel and entering the age
of Putin, Erdogan, el-Sisi, Xi Jinping, Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump.
The
events last week in Turkey were just another part of the trend. Recep
Tayyip Erdogan dismantles democratic institutions and replaces them with
majoritarian dictatorship. Turkey seems to have lost its desire to join
the European idea, which no longer has magnetism and allure. Turkey
seems to have lost its aspiration to join the community of democracies
because that’s no longer the inevitable future.
More
and more governments, including the Trump administration, begin to look
like premodern mafia states, run by family-based commercial clans.
Meanwhile, institutionalized, party-based authoritarian regimes, like in
China or Russia, are turning into premodern cults of
personality/Maximum Leader regimes, which are far more unstable and
dangerous.
Then
there has been the collapse of the center. For decades, center-left and
center-right parties clustered around similar versions of democratic
capitalism that Western civilization seemed to point to. But many of
those centrist parties, like the British and Dutch Labour Parties, are
in near collapse. Fringe parties rise.
In
France, the hard-right Marine Le Pen and the hard-left Jean-Luc
Mélenchon could be the final two candidates in the presidential runoff.
Le Pen has antiliberal views about national purity. Mélenchon is a
supposedly democratic politician who models himself on Hugo Chávez.
If
those two end up in the finals, then the European Union and NATO, the
two great liberal institutions of modern Europe, will go into immediate
crisis.
Finally,
there has been the collapse of liberal values at home. On American
campuses, fragile thugs who call themselves students shout down and
abuse speakers on a weekly basis. To read Heather MacDonald’s account of
being pilloried at Claremont McKenna College is to enter a world of chilling intolerance.
In
America, the basic fabric of civic self-government seems to be eroding
following the loss of faith in democratic ideals. According to a study
published in The Journal of Democracy, the share of young Americans who
say it is absolutely important to live in a democratic country has
dropped from 91 percent in the 1930s to 57 percent today.
While
running for office, Donald Trump violated every norm of statesmanship
built up over these many centuries, and it turned out many people didn’t
notice or didn’t care.
The faith in the West collapsed from within. It’s amazing how slow people have been to rise to defend it.
There have been a few lonely voices. Andrew Michta laments the loss of Western confidence in an essay in The American Interest. Edward Luce offers a response in his forthcoming book “The Retreat of Western Liberalism.” But liberalism has been docile in defense of itself
.
These
days, the whole idea of Western civ is assumed to be reactionary and
oppressive. All I can say is, if you think that was reactionary and
oppressive, wait until you get a load of the world that comes after it.
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