Cultural House of Cards
by William S. Lind
Paul Weyrich asked me to turn my historian's eye on the question of "Where
Are We?" I am afraid my answer to that question cannot be an encouraging
one. From an historical perspective we are living in a house of cards.
Internationally, we have committed the classic error of dominant powers:
overextension. By adopting an offensive grand strategy that demands everyone
else in the world accept the values of "democratic capitalism" - - the neo
cons' little present to the rest of us - - we have overreached. We are now
bogged down in two wars, in Iraq and in Afghanistan. Every indication I see,
as a military historian, tells me we are not winning and will not win either
one.
While most Americans, not just conservatives, would be happy to take care of
ourselves and let the rest of the world take care of itself, the Washington
Establishment lives off the "Great Power" game. Will the loss of two
wars force that Establishment to face reality? Probably not, at least until,
in classic Great Power fashion, it bankrupts the country. The U.S. defense
budget already equals what all the rest of the countries in the world spend
for defense. No nation can sustain that burden without financial collapse.
In fact, we are already in over our heads financially, as the national debt
and the trade deficit show. When those bills come due, the only way we will
be able to pay them is by inflating the currency. Inflation, in turn, if it
is severe enough, undermines and eventually destroys the middle class,
another classic event in a Great Power's fall.
Already, America's middle class is being eroded by the export of
manufacturing jobs under the rubric of "free trade," to which both political
parties seem to have sworn blood oaths. People cannot sustain middle class
standards of living with "service industry" jobs, as is evident in any Third
World country. In fact, America's economy already shows a classic Third
World pattern, exporting commodities and importing manufactured goods.
Added to imperial overreach, financial imprudence and voluntary
de-industrialization is the fact that we are being invaded. Both parties see
no evil as millions of immigrants from very different cultures pour into our
country through what are effectively open borders. Not only does this
further undermine the American middle class by lowering wages, it sets us up
for Fourth Generation war on our own soil. Internal wars are yet another
classic element in the fall of a Great Power.
Of course, to all of this we have to add the collapse of our culture, a
phenomenon which was no accident. It is the product of a small group of
cultural Marxists, the Frankfurt School, whose purpose was to destroy
Western culture and who have made remarkable strides to that end. Once a
country's culture goes, everything else goes too, sooner or later.
People often ask me if we are seeing a reenactment of the fall of Rome, and
there are certainly some parallels. One could argue that Rome's situation
was actually better, in that Christianity was a rising force instead of a
declining one (Western culture survived the Dark Ages by hiding out in the
monasteries).
But there is a parallel I like better, and that is Spain in the 17th
century. Spain was the first true world power, with a globe-circling empire.
She was enormously rich (when the Spanish Armada was destroyed, King Philip
II just built another one). By the first half of the 17th century, when
Spain's power was beginning to totter (thanks once again to imperial
overextension and financial imprudence), many leading Spaniards saw that
reform and retrenchment were needed. They put forward well-considered plans
for such reform, some of which would probably have worked. But none of the
reform programs could cut through the power of the interests at court that
lived off Spain's decay - - just as powerful interests in Washington live
off our decay. I think that if Spain's equivalent of a prime minister at
that time, the Count-Duke of Olivares, were to find himself in today's
Washington, it would all feel very familiar (if you want to read a good book
on Spain's decline and fall, I recommend J.H. Elliott's biography of
Olivares).
America may be luckier than Spain, and perhaps we will be able to deal with
our foreign policy, military, financial, trade and cultural crises
separately, over time. But I think the greater probability is that they will
come in close enough succession that they will feed on and magnify each
other, until they become a single vast, systemic crisis - - the fall of the
house of cards. That creates a vacuum which, in the old days, usually
resulted in a change of dynasties (from the Hapsburgs to the Bourbons, in
Spain's case). What does that mean for the next conservatism? It means
conservatives should get ready now in order to fill that vacuum when it
comes.
William S. Lind is Director for the Center for Cultural Conservatism of the
Free Congress Foundation.
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