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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. 

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Lord Truth
February 28th, 2012
3:02 PM
Doc says,as of course most Americans believe, that The Founding Fathers..Constructed a government that strictly limited power, and divided it three ways... In fact the American system of government is merely an exact copy of the British system existing in 1776.There is a House of Commons..the Repressentatives,AHouse of Lords..the UNELECTED Senate (unelected until 1919) and a King whose powers are almost exactly those of George III His abilities to act are very limited as were GIII except for going to war.All discussion used the name King until it was realised that King was inappropriate for an elected monarch and President was chosen instead George III was a constitutional monarch and although Jefferson who wrote the Declaration of Independence,laughed at the rubbish he wrote about GIII being a tyrant ..saying I had to write something... much harm has been done over the years by those foolish lies Americas present problems come from copying the original British system producing endless blockages of political movement. In Britain where suspicion of the monarchy was endemic ,the monarchs powers were gradually stripped away until when Victoris arrived in 1837,she had only the power to choose the head of the military, a power removed a few months later.Since that time all British monacrchs have been little more than cardboard figures their ultimate power of refusing to sign an Act they found repugnant easily forestalled by forced abdication or changes to the constitution.America is still living in 1776. I have often thought that American politics that the world generally regards as boring would instantly spring to life if the Americans used the word King instead of President.Then the real picture would fall into place and everything become clear.

Paul Harmon
November 3rd, 2011
11:11 PM
Very good Doc. I agree with you completely.

Carl
November 3rd, 2011
10:11 AM
Minor quibble-The PLA missles would most likely be aimed at the US 7th Fleet (Western Pacific) instead of the 6th Fleet (Mediterranean)

Doc
November 2nd, 2011
5:11 PM
I like your optimism, and I hope you're right. However, we are a wicked people, and we get the gov't we deserve. I don't think the Founders '...trusted in the good sense of the American people.' They trusted in God, most of them, and they knew that people are basically wicked, not basically good. So they constructed a gov't that strictly limited power, and divided it three ways. Besides allowing a branch of gov't that had not descended as far into wickedness to block the wicked designs of another branch, it plays the wickedness of one branch against the other, often resulting in a most laudable gridlock. “No Man’s life liberty or property is safe while the legislature is in session” (Twain; possibly apocryphal). Unfortunately, eventually We the People succeeded in emulating the Israelites of old. They rejected the prophet Samuel, insisting on having a king. Here they had a direct line to God for any problem, and they wanted a king instead. One assumes that they were not all witless. Therefore only being in a state of denial can explain their demand for a king. Likewise, We the People have inherited our own Book of the Law; not God's Word itself, which is not after all a document directly prescribing a form of gov't, but the Constitution, which was clearly largely influenced by the knowledge of human nature granted by the Scriptures. And, like the Israelites, we have rejected it. At one point the Israelites completely lost their Book. We have not lost ours; rather We the People have allowed and encouraged our legislators to trample it into the dust, honoring it with their lips while their (and our) hearts are far from its principles of strictly limited gov't. We may bounce back. But it's hard to see how we can avoid the equivalent of societal meltdown. Raising taxes sufficiently to meet even a fraction of the 'entitlement' costs in the coming years will only ruin the economy further, resulting in less tax income, not more. Cutting the 'entitlement' payouts sufficiently to substantially ease the budgetary strain would have to be draconian enough that we might as well end them and be done with it. But without a growing economy to provide the employment and entrepreneurial opportunities the poor so desperately need, that way lies disaster. Plus, ending the entitlements is so politically unacceptable that hardly anyone except a few Libertarian and Constitution party 'cranks' even mention it. Rare is the politician willing to state the obvious, to point out that the Emperor has no clothes, that the 'entitlements' (SocSec, Medicare, Welfare, etc), as well as a whole vast swathe of other nearly untouchable Fed agencies (EPA, OSHA, FDA, ATF, etc, etc) are grossly unConstitutional. If we are granted a revival of common sense by the Lord, and we flock to the standard of the Constitution, and we insist that our legislators end the bureaucrazies that throw, not sand, but boulders into the gears of the economy of the Republic, then we might successfully grow our way out of this. Otherwise, this does not end well.

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