You are here:   9/11 > How to Reverse the West's Decline
 

Social cohesion is what Ibn Khaldun called asabiyah. And Russell's description of Renaissance Italy fits precisely the postmodern, late capitalist West, with its urge to spend and its failure to save, its moral relativism and hyper-individualism, its political culture of rights without responsibilities, its aggressive secularism and resentment of any morality of self-restraint, and its failure to inculcate the habits of instinctual deferral that Sigmund Freud saw as the very basis of civilisation. Sayyid Qutb hated the West. Ibn Khaldun would have pitied the West. The pity is more serious than the hate.

There is a simple choice before us. Will we continue to act in ignorance of this other narrative? If so, we will replicate the fate of Greece in the second pre-Christian century as described by Polybius ("the people of Hellas had entered on the false path of ostentation, avarice and laziness"), and that of Rome two centuries later, when Livy wrote about "how, with the gradual relaxation of discipline, morals first subsided, as it were, then sank lower and lower, and finally began the downward plunge which has brought us to our present time, when we can endure neither our vices nor their cure." If we carry on as we are going, the West will decline and fall. 

There is, to my mind, only one sane alternative. That is to do what England and America did in the 1820s. Those two societies, deeply secularised after the rationalist 18th century, scarred and fractured by the problems of industrialisation, calmly set about remoralising themselves, thereby renewing themselves.

The three decades, 1820-1850, saw an unprecedented proliferation of groups dedicated to social, political and educational reform-building schools, YMCAs, orphanages, starting temperance groups, charities, friendly societies, campaigning for the abolition of slavery, corporal punishment and inhumane working conditions, and working for the extension of voting rights. Alexis de Tocqueville was astonished by what he saw in America and the same process was happening at the same time in Britain.

People did not leave it to government or the market. They did it themselves in communities, congregations, groups of every shape and size. They understood the connection between morality and morale. They knew that only a society held together by a strong moral bond, by asabiyah, has any chance of succeeding in the long run. That collective effort of remoralisation eventually made Britain the greatest world power in the 19th century and America in the 20th.

View Full Article
 
Share/Save
 
 
 
 
Sai
November 29th, 2011
6:11 PM
Extremely thought provoking... while most tend to accept the dominant narrative about American exceptionalism, he challenges that entirely offering an alternative narrative, one that is fresh and nuanced about the suicidal tendencies of great empires. He was also not afraid, amid the Islamaphobic zeitgeist spreading allover the world, to draw from an Islamic luminary. Anyway, whether you agree with him or not, this is a compelling essay.

DWMF
November 23rd, 2011
9:11 PM
The debt and decline of the West originates more with the likes of Barney Frank than with Ibn Khaldun; giveaway politics and borrowed money, which we are only now beginning to pay back.

Hugo Estrada
November 21st, 2011
1:11 PM
Wrong. Empires die when they run out of money. USSR wasn't decadent; it barely produced enough grain to feed itself. USSR bankrupted itself on a conquest war because it was so paranoid about how it was going to be destroyed by the West. Bin Laden did provoke an attack, but the goal was to induce the U.S. to engage in wars of conquest to bleed it financially. Where the argument is correct is in saying that lack of social cohesion has been a big contributor for this. But in the case of the U.S., this lack of social cohesion is expressed in an unwillingness for paying taxes, especially of the richest people.

Nokios
October 5th, 2011
11:10 AM
DANNY wrote:"America won the fight against the soviets, because RIGHT was on our side." I totally disagree...The loss of the whole Middle east to the conquering Arab armies at the 7th c. with the spread of Islam, the Islamic invasion of Spain,the loss of "Asia minor" followed by the fall of Constantinople to the Turcs all these contradict the idea of right & wrong ! They are clear proofs that you do not need to be right to win..You must be hungry, cruel fanatical and have the WILL to "DOMINATE"

Anonymous
October 5th, 2011
11:10 AM
The author forgot to mention a number of facts 1) The withdrawal from Vietnam 2) The shameful interaction with the Teheran Embassy hostage crisis by Carter and the "Democrats" 3) The author also seems to disregard all the old historians' accounts that attribute the fall of the Roman Empire to decadence and the loss of identity (from Cicero,Seneca,Plinus the Eldest to Montesquieu through Gibbons..)Most of the preceded Ibn Khaldoon Concerning the withdrawals from Vietnam,Lebanon & Somalia, it can be argued that victory in these wars was achieved by more "peaceful and less costly" means, nevertheless it was the leftist and "pacifist" media and pseudo-philosophers that were behind these shameful acts of "cowardice"

e2
September 26th, 2011
5:09 AM
But the Brit-ish Empire also dissolved ~ Empires come and go Like Disco Inferno.

christian
September 21st, 2011
1:09 PM
"The question is not radical Islam but, does the West believe in itself any more?" Regardless of whether one agrees fully or partially with Jonathan Sacks' proposed solution, he is to be commended for having insight to ask the right question. Excellent article.

Ladyingreen
September 19th, 2011
11:09 PM
Francis Fukuyama has reversed his stance. That said, the big fight today in Europe and America is the view of governance. Conservatives under the banner of personal responsibility and self reliance, want to limit the actions of the state to security and military affairs. People do not want to pay taxes to suuport the state, so the power of the state is declining. Read the recent Harpers article "Pennies from Heaven; How Mormon Economics guides the GOP". I wonder if most people will accept this as a good approach to governance and revival of the west.

Marvin
September 18th, 2011
9:09 PM
Every American needs to read this. No, every Westerner needs to read this.

Cecil
September 15th, 2011
10:09 PM
Please copy this link into your browser for my comments: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/40163412/How_to_reverse_the_moral_decay.pdf

Post your comment

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.