Bellah sees his work as a demonstration that "we are all in this...together" which will "make just a bit more likely the actualisation of Kant's dream of a world civil society that could at last restrain the violence of state organised societies toward each other and the environment". Bellah's dream would be most people's nightmare, because the only states that are ever likely to be restrained by "world civil society" are Western states, leaving them hopelessly exposed to the aggression of the rest.
Despite the incessant invocation of Kant's essay on "perpetual peace" to undermine American exceptionalism by liberal professors like Bellah, the sage of Königsberg himself would have been horrified by the way in which the mythology of Western decline has infected academic discourse on international relations. The UN itself, supposedly inspired by Kant's vision, is the best illustration of what has gone wrong. Predicated on the notion that the power of the West is the problem rather than the solution, the UN and the rest of "world civil society" goes to inordinate lengths to cut the US and its allies down to size, while simultaneously blackmailing the West into donating protection money known as "aid" to some of the most nefarious despots on the planet.
The proposed new state of "Palestine", now legitimised by the UN General Assembly, depends entirely on such ransoms, most of which sticks to the fingers of the terrorists and their civilian sponsors. Without the mythology of decline, the West would refuse to acquiesce in such a grotesque extortion racket.
A minority of recent writers on American decline do so more in sorrow than in schadenfreude. Among them two stand out: Niall Ferguson and Mark Steyn. Ferguson's Civilization: The West and the Rest is the latest in a long line of books in the genre of decline mythology launched by Spengler. Ferguson is, however, no ardent declinist: his books on British and American history, Empire and Colossus, are emphatically pro-Western. So, too, is Civilization. It is just that once Orientals have learnt to imitate the key features that led to Western dominance, they are bound to catch up with and even overtake their mentors. And so he concludes that the West will inevitably cede hegemony to the Asian powers, among which China and India were latecomers but are all the more successful for that. He also thinks that the Chinese are almost ready to take over. "What we are living through now is the end of 500 years of Western predominance." Ferguson, incidentally, is also unwittingly echoing Spengler when he talks up the threat of China. In Years of Decision, his sequel to The Decline of the West, Spengler warned against the "Oriental peril". Spengler saw the West overwhelmed by Asian hordes and it is true that the European empires were defeated by the Japanese with extraordinary speed in 1941-42. However, the Western champion, the US, struck back even harder, ensuring not only the defeat of Imperial Japan, but the ultimate triumph of the Western model in the Far East.
- Liberty And Sovereignty
- Art And Public Culture In The 1830s And Today
- The Casanova Of LaSalle Street
- The Writer
- New Poetry
- Cartagena Poems
- A British Subject
- Travels with Betjeman
- Kizerman and Feigenbaum
- Communism’s Comeback?
- Irving Kristol on Jews and Judaism
- The State of Charity
- Teeth
- La Buena Muerte
- Judaeophobia
- Cool It
- Rachmones
- From 'Russia'
- 'Going Out' and Five Other Poems
- The Final Edition


















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