Posted on 01/19/2011 6:58:15 AM PST by SeekAndFind
If I am pessimistic about the future of liberty, it is because I am pessimistic about the strength of the English-speaking nations, which have, in profound ways, surrendered to forces at odds with their inheritance. Declinism is in the air, but some of us apocalyptic types are way beyond that. The United States is facing nothing so amiable and genteel as Continental-style decline, but something more like sliding off a cliff.
In the days when I used to write for Fleet Street, a lot of readers and several of my editors accused me of being anti-British. Im not. Im extremely pro-British and, for that very reason, the present state of the United Kingdom is bound to cause distress. So, before I get to the bad stuff, let me just lay out the good. Insofar as the world functions at all, its due to the Britannic inheritance. Three-sevenths of the G7 economies are nations of British descent. Two-fifths of the permanent members of the U.N. Security Council areand, by the way, it should be three-fifths: The rap against the Security Council is that its the Second World War victory parade preserved in aspic, but, if it were, Canada would have a greater claim to be there than either France or China. The reason Canada isnt is because a third Anglosphere nation and a second realm of King George VI would have made too obvious a truth usually left unstatedthat the Anglosphere was the all but lone defender of civilization and of liberty. In broader geopolitical terms, the key regional powers in almost every corner of the globe are British-derivedfrom Australia to South Africa to Indiaand, even among the lesser players, as a general rule youre better off for having been exposed to British rule than not: Why is Haiti Haiti and Barbados Barbados?
And of course the pre-eminent power of the age derives its political character from eighteenth-century British subjects who took English ideas a little further than the mother country was willing to go. In his sequel to Churchills great work, The History of the English-Speaking Peoples, Andrew Roberts writes:
Just as we do not today differentiate between the Roman Republic and the imperial period of the Julio-Claudians when we think of the Roman Empire, so in the future no-one will bother to make a distinction between the British Empireled and the American Republicled periods of English-speaking dominance between the late-eighteenth and the twenty-first centuries. It will be recognized that in the majestic sweep of history they had so much in commonand enough that separated them from everyone elsethat they ought to be regarded as a single historical entity, which only scholars and pedants will try to describe separately. If you step back for a moment, this seems obvious. There is a distinction between the English-speaking peoples and the rest of the West, and at key moments in human history that distinction has proved critical.
Continental Europe has given us plenty of nice paintings and agreeable symphonies, French wine and Italian actresses and whatnot, but, for all our fetishization of multiculturalism, you cant help noticing that when it comes to the notion of a political Westone with a sustained commitment to liberty and democracythe historical record looks a lot more unicultural and, indeed (given that most of these liberal democracies other than America share the same head of state), uniregal. The entire political class of Portugal, Spain, and Greece spent their childhoods living under dictatorships. So did Jacques Chirac and Angela Merkel. We forget how rare on this earth is peaceful constitutional evolution, and rarer still outside the Anglosphere.
Decline starts with the money. It always does. As Jonathan Swift put it:
A baited banker thus desponds, From his own hand foresees his fall, They have his soul, who have his bonds; Tis like the writing on the wall. Today the people who have Americas bonds are not the people one would wish to have ones soul. As Madhav Nalapat has suggested, Beijing believes a half-millennium Western interregnum is about to come to an end, and the world will return to Chinese dominance. I think theyre wrong on the latter, but right on the former. Within a decade, the United States will be spending more of the federal budget on its interest payments than on its military.
According to the cbos 2010 long-term budget outlook, by 2020 the U.S. government will be paying between 15 and 20 percent of its revenues in debt interestwhereas defense spending will be down to between 14 and 16 percent. America will be spending more on debt interest than China, Britain, France, Russia, Japan, Germany, Saudi Arabia, India, Italy, South Korea, Brazil, Canada, Australia, Spain, Turkey, and Israel spend on their militaries combined. The superpower will have advanced from a nation of aircraft carriers to a nation of debt carriers.
What does that mean? In 2009, the United States spent about $665 billion on its military, the Chinese about $99 billion. If Beijing continues to buy American debt at the rate it has in recent years, then within a half-decade or so U.S. interest payments on that debt will be covering the entire cost of the Chinese military. This year, the Pentagon issued an alarming report to Congress on Beijings massive military build-up, including new missiles, upgraded bombers, and an aircraft-carrier R&D program intended to challenge American dominance in the Pacific. What the report didnt mention is whos paying for it. Answer: Mr. and Mrs. America.
Within the next five years, the Peoples Liberation Army, which is the largest employer on the planet, bigger even than the U.S. Department of Community-Organizer Grant Applications, will be entirely funded by U.S. taxpayers. When they take Taiwan, suburban families in Connecticut and small businesses in Idaho will have paid for it. The existential questions for America loom now, not decades hence. What we face is not merely the decline and fall of a powerful nation but the collapse of the highly specific cultural tradition that built the modern world. It starts with the moneyit always does. But the money is only the symptom. We wouldnt be this broke if we hadnt squandered our inheritance in a more profound sense.
Britains decline also began with the money. The U.S. Lend-Lease program to the United Kingdom ended with the war in September 1946. London paid off the final installment of its debt in December 2006, and the Economic Secretary, Ed Balls, sent with the check a faintly surreal accompanying note thanking Washington for its support during the war. They have our soul who have our bonds: Britain and the world were more fortunate in who had Londons bonds than America is seventy years later. For that reason, in terms of global order, the transition from Britannia ruling the waves to the American era, from the old lion to its transatlantic progeny, was one of the smoothest transfers of power in historyso smooth that most of us arent quite sure when it took place. Andrew Roberts likes to pinpoint it to the middle of 1943: One month, the British had more men under arms than the Americans; the next month, the Americans had more men under arms than the British.
The baton of global leadership had been passed. And, if it didnt seem that way at the time, thats because it was as near a seamless transition as could be devisedalthough it was hardly devised at all, at least not by London. Yet we live with the benefits of that transition to this day. To take a minor but not inconsequential example, one of the critical links in the post-9/11 Afghan campaign was the British Indian Ocean Territory. As its name would suggest, its a British dependency, but it has a U.S. military basejust one of many pinpricks on the map where the Royal Navys Pax Britannica evolved into Washingtons Pax Americana with nary a thought: From U.S. naval bases in Bermuda to the Anzus alliance down under to Norad in Cheyenne Mountain, Londons military ties with its empire were assumed, effortlessly, by the United States, and life and global order went on.
One of my favorite lines from the Declaration of Independence never made it into the final text. They were Thomas Jeffersons parting words to his fellow British subjects across the ocean: We might have been a free and great people together. But in the end, when it mattered, they were a free and great people together. Britain was eclipsed by its transatlantic offspring, by a nation with the same language, the same legal inheritance, and the same commitment to liberty.
Its not likely to go that way next time round. And next time round is already under way. We are coming to the end of a two-century Anglosphere dominance, and of a world whose order and prosperity many people think of as part of a broad, general trend but which, in fact, derive from a very particular cultural inheritance and may well not survive it. To point out how English the world is is, of course, a frightfully un-English thing to do. No true Englishman would ever do such a ghastly and vulgar thing. You need some sinister rootless colonial oik like me to do it. But theres a difference between genial self-effacement and contempt for ones own inheritance.
Not so long ago, Geert Wilders, the Dutch parliamentarian and soi-disant Islamophobe, flew into London and promptly got shipped back to the Netherlands as a threat to public order. After the British Government had reconsidered its stupidity, he was permitted to return and give his speech at the House of Lordsand, as foreigners often do, he quoted Winston Churchill, under the touchingly naive assumption that this would endear him to the natives. Whereas, of course, to almost all members of Britains governing elite, quoting Churchill approvingly only confirms that youre an extremist lunatic. I had the honor a couple of years back of visiting President Bush in the White House and seeing the bust of Churchill on display in the Oval Office. When Barack Obama moved in, he ordered Churchills bust be removed and returned to the British. Its present whereabouts are unclear. But, given what Sir Winston had to say about Islam in his book on the Sudanese campaign, the bust was almost certainly arrested at Heathrow and deported as a threat to public order.
Somewhere along the way a quintessentially British sense of self-deprecation curdled into a psychologically unhealthy self-loathing. A typical foot-of-the-page news item from The Daily Telegraph:
A leading college at Cambridge University has renamed its controversial colonial-themed Empire Ball after accusations that it was distasteful. The £136-a-head Emmanuel College ball was advertised as a celebration of the Victorian commonwealth and all of its decadences. Students were urged to party like its 1899 and organisers promised a trip through the Indian Raj, Australia, the West Indies, and 19th century Hong Kong.
But anti-fascist groups said the theme was distasteful and insensitive because of the British Empires historical association with slavery, repression and exploitation.
The Empire Ball Committee, led by presidents Richard Hilton and Jenny Unwin, has announced the word empire will be removed from all promotional material.
The way things are going in Britain, it would make more sense to remove the word balls.
Its interesting to learn that anti-fascism now means attacking the British Empire, which stood alone against fascism in that critical year between the fall of France and Germanys invasion of Russia. And its even sadder to have to point out the most obvious fatuity in those anti-fascist groups litany of evilthe British Empires association with slavery. The British Empires principal association with slavery is that it abolished it. Before William Wilberforce, the British Parliament, and the brave men of the Royal Navy took up the issue, slavery was an institution regarded by all cultures around the planet as as permanent a feature of life as the earth and sky. Britain expunged it from most of the globe.
It is pathetic but unsurprising how ignorant all these brave anti-fascists are. But there is a lesson here not just for Britain but for the rest of us, too: When a society loses its memory, it descends inevitably into dementia. As I always try to tell my American neighbors, national decline is at least partly psychologicaland therefore what matters is accepting the psychology of decline. Thus, Hayeks greatest insight in The Road to Serfdom, which he wrote with an immigrants eye on the Britain of 1944:
There is one aspect of the change in moral values brought about by the advance of collectivism which at the present time provides special food for thought. It is that the virtues which are held less and less in esteem and which consequently become rarer are precisely those on which the British people justly prided themselves and in which they were generally agreed to excel. The virtues possessed by Anglo-Saxons in a higher degree than most other people, excepting only a few of the smaller nations, like the Swiss and the Dutch, were independence and self-reliance, individual initiative and local responsibility, the successful reliance on voluntary activity, noninterference with ones neighbor and tolerance of the different and queer, respect for custom and tradition, and a healthy suspicion of power and authority.
Within little more than half a century, almost every item on the list had been abandoned, from independence and self-reliance (some 40 percent of Britons receive state handouts) to a healthy suspicion of power and authoritythe reflex response now to almost any passing inconvenience is to demand the government do something. American exceptionalism would have to be awfully exceptional to suffer a similar expansion of government without a similar descent, in enough of the citizenry, into chronic dependency.
What happened? Britain, in John Foster Dulless famous postwar assessment, had lost an empire but not yet found a role. Actually, Britain didnt so much lose the Empire: it evolved peacefully into the modern Commonwealth, which is more agreeable than the way these things usually go. Nor is it clear that modern Britain wants a role, of any kind. Rather than losing an empire, it seems to have lost its point.
This has consequences. To go back to Cambridge Universitys now non-imperial Empire Ball, if the cream of British education so willingly prostrates itself before ahistorical balderdash, what then of the school systems more typical charges? In cutting off two generations of students from their cultural inheritance, the British state has engaged in what we will one day come to see as a form of child abuse, one that puts a huge question mark over the future. Why be surprised that legions of British Muslims sign up for the Taliban? These are young men who went to school in Luton and West Bromwich and learned nothing of their country of nominal citizenship other than that its responsible for racism, imperialism, colonialism, and all the other bad -isms of the world. If thats all you knew of Britain, why would you feel any allegiance to Queen and country? And what if you dont have Islam to turn to? The transformation of the British people is, in its own malign way, a remarkable achievement. Raised in schools that teach them nothing, they nevertheless pick up the gist of the matter, which is that their society is a racket founded on various historical injustices. The virtues Hayek admired? Ha! Strictly for suckers.
When William Beveridge laid out his blueprint for the modern British welfare state in 1942, his goal was the abolition of want, to be accomplished by cooperation between the State and the individual. In attempting to insulate the citizenry from the vicissitudes of fate, Sir William succeeded beyond his wildest dreams: Want has been all but abolished. Today, fewer and fewer Britons want to work, want to marry, want to raise children, want to lead a life of any purpose or dignity. Churchill called his book The History of the English-Speaking Peoplesnot the English-Speaking Nations. The extraordinary role played by those nations in the creation and maintenance of the modern world derived from their human capital.
What happens when, as a matter of state policy, you debauch your human capital? The United Kingdom has the highest drug use in Europe, the highest incidence of sexually transmitted disease, the highest number of single mothers; marriage is all but defunct, except for toffs, upscale gays, and Muslims. For Americans, the quickest way to understand modern Britain is to look at what lbjs Great Society did to the black family and imagine it applied to the general population. One-fifth of British children are raised in homes in which no adult works. Just under 900,000 people have been off sick for over a decade, claiming sick benefits, week in, week out, for ten years and counting. Indolence, as Machiavelli understood, is the greatest enemy of a free society, but rarely has any state embraced this oldest temptation as literally as Britain. There is almost nothing you cant get the government to pay for.
Plucked at random from The Daily Mail: A man of twenty-one with learning disabilities has been granted taxpayers money to fly to Amsterdam and have sex with a prostitute. Why not? His social worker says sex is a human right and that his client, being a virgin, is entitled to the support of the state in claiming said right. Fortunately, a £520 million program was set up by Her Majestys Government to empower those with disabilities. Hes planning to do more than just have his end away, explained the social worker.
The girls in Amsterdam are far more protected than those on U.K. streets. Let him have some funId want to. Wouldnt you prefer that we can control this, guide him, educate him, support him to understand the process and ultimately end up satisfying his needs in a secure, licensed place where his happiness and growth as a person is the most important thing? Refusing to offer him this service would be a violation of his human rights. And so a Dutch prostitute is able to boast that among her clients is the British Government. Talk about outsourcing: given the reputation of English womanhood, youd have thought this would be the one job that wouldnt have to be shipped overseas. But, as Dutch hookers no doubt say, lie back and think of Englandand the check theyll be mailing you.
After Big Government, after global retreat, after the loss of liberty, there is only remorseless civic disintegration. The statistics speak for themselves. The number of indictable offences per thousand people was 2.4 in 1900, climbed gradually to 9.7 in 1954, and then rocketed to 109.4 by 1992. And that official increase understates the reality: Many crimes have been decriminalized (shoplifting, for example), and most crime goes unreported, and most reported crime goes uninvestigated, and most investigated crime goes unsolved, and almost all solved crime merits derisory punishment. Yet the law-breaking is merely a symptom of a larger rupture. At a gathering like this one, John OSullivan, recalling his own hometown, said that when his grandmother ran a pub in the Liverpool docklands in the years around the First World War, there was only one occasion when someone swore in her presence. And he subsequently apologized.
The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there. But viewed from 2010 England the day before yesterday is an alternative universeor a lost civilization. Last year, the Secretary of State for Children (both an Orwellian and Huxleyite office) announced that 20,000 problem families would be put under twenty-four-hour cctv supervision in their homes. As the Daily Express reported, They will be monitored to ensure that children attend school, go to bed on time and eat proper meals. Orwells government telescreen in every home is close to being a reality, although even he would have dismissed as too obviously absurd a nanny state that literally polices your bedtime.
For its worshippers, Big Government becomes a kind of religion: the state as church. After the London Tube bombings, Gordon Brown began mulling over the creation of what he called a British equivalent of the U.S. Fourth of July, a new national holiday to bolster British identity. The Labour Party think-tank, the Fabian Society, proposed that the new British Day should be July 5th, the day the National Health Service was created. Because the essence of contemporary British identity is waiting two years for a hip operation. A national holiday every July 5th: They can call it Dependence Day.
Does the fate of the other senior Anglophone power hold broader lessons for the United States? Its not so hard to picture a paternalist technocrat of the Michael Bloomberg school covering New York in cctv ostensibly for terrorism but also to monitor your transfats. Permanence is the illusion of every age. But you cannot wage a sustained ideological assault on your own civilization without profound consequence. Without serious course correction, we will see the end of the Anglo-American era, and the eclipse of the powers that built the modern world. Even as Americas spendaholic government outspends not only Americas ability to pay for itself but, by some measures, the worlds; even as it follows Britain into the dank pit of transgenerational dependency, a failed education system, and unsustainable entitlements; even as it makes less and less and mortgages its future to its rivals for cheap Chinese trinkets, most Americans assume that simply because theyre American they will be insulated from the consequences. There, too, are lessons from the old country. Cecil Rhodes distilled the assumptions of generations when he said that to be born a British subject was to win first prize in the lottery of life. On the eve of the Great War, in his play Heartbreak House, Bernard Shaw turned the thought around to taunt a British ruling class too smug and self-absorbed to see what was coming. Do you think, he wrote, the laws of God will be suspended in favor of England because you were born in it?
In our time, to be born a citizen of the United States is to win first prize in the lottery of life, and, as Britons did, too many Americans assume it will always be so. Do you think the laws of God will be suspended in favor of America because you were born in it? Great convulsions lie ahead, and at the end of it we may be in a post-Anglosphere world.
The Gerkhas and soccer hooligans are the only groups in tact worthy of governing England. Time is ticking.......
Great article by Steyn. Thanks for posting.
product of our heritage bump for later.........
He is one of our greatest thinkers. And writers.
The stock market never declines.
The stock market always comes back.
Your house is your biggest investment and will always increase in value.
Funny how we grow to accept such articles of faith without basis.
“theres a difference between genial self-effacement and contempt for ones own inheritance.”
Nail on the head - and it describes perfectly where the left has miseducated the last 2 generations of young people in this nation.
However, I believe there is a faithful remnant that will not “go gently into that good night”. I believe we will fight for this nation, for the principles on which it was founded. We may end up smaller, but those principles cannot be erased.
Colonel, USAFR
Definitely so. IMO, Steyn is a modern-day Buckley... with an edge, and without the stodginess.
Whoa. This article’s a heavy 7-course meal.
Gonna take a while to digest all of this one.
Incredibly well thought out and written article worthy of Thomas Paine. The challenge is to get it into our teens heads.
The Empire Ball Committee, led by presidents Richard Hilton and Jenny Unwin, has announced the word empire will be removed from all promotional material.
The way things are going in Britain, it would make more sense to remove the word balls.
LOL - but I'm crying too. Guess those best-and-brightest at Oxbridge never learned the British role in the abolition of slavery.
Considering that the UK is leading the West into the abyss of destruction with America following right behind it I really shouldn’t feel sorry for the chaps.
Mark hits it directly on the head. Indeed a hard course correction is in order, or "America" will be a thing of the past. Personally, I think that transition is entering the home stretch. I hope I'm wrong.
His content is Buckley. His humor and ability to turn a phrase I liken more to Chesterton :-)
Britain was a successful, dominant nation expressly because it was a fascist, expansionist empire. Like Rome, it benefited tremendously from the control, takings & imposed trade amongst its conquered lands.
So too the US; we learned well the lessons from Nazi Germany. That is, nothing quite serves up economic growth & stability like an organized military-industrial policy.
But now GB, the US, and Canada as well have seemingly rejected the policies of the past and are now simply resting on their laurels.
Riddle me this - how do bankrupt states provide the types of social benefits handed out like GB and the US? It's because these two countries still benefit from their vast asset holding & military strength to enforce the $dollar standard ie rentiers.
I know history is a little unpleasant. People either need to get over the fact that if one wishes to become/remain dominant, there are certain things one must do. You know, rule of the jungle and all that. China doesn't have these sentimental issues, thus they are poised to take over the world.
PING
I’m afraid I concur. I think the anglosphere has had it. Time to start learning Mandarin and Arabic.
Well worth the time. What a writer! Passion AND intelligence
Those would be for business and religious purposes. We'll need Spanish too for everyday interaction.
Our politicians have mortgaged our independence to China and nearly all of them cheerfully propose to take on more debt. I have admiration for Hu Jintao - he’s not stupid and though he may he be a Communist, he comes from a nation with a long entrepreneurial tradition and a history of investment and saving for the future. We should take a lesson from the Chinese in thrift and growth.
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