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The End of Ideology?
Townhall.com ^ | April 15, 2014 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 04/15/2014 6:25:41 AM PDT by Kaslin

On our TV talk shows and op-ed pages, and in our think tanks here, there is rising alarm over events abroad. And President Obama is widely blamed for the perceived decline in worldwide respect for the United States.

Yet, still, one hears no clamor from Middle America for "Action This Day!" to alter the perception that America is in retreat.

If a single sentence could express the seeming indifference of the silent majority of Americans to what is going on abroad, it might be the simple question: "Why is this our problem?"

If a Russian or Ukrainian flag flies over Simferopol, why should that be of such concern to us that we send U.S. warships, guns or troops? If Japan and China fight over islets 10,000 miles away, islets that few Americans can find on a map, why should we get into it?

And, truth be told, the answers of our elites are unconvincing.

One explanation for America's turning away from these wars is that we see no vital interest in these conflicts -- from Syria to Crimea, Afghanistan to Iraq, the South China Sea to the Senkaku Islands.

Moreover, the prime motivator of a half-century of sacrifice in a Cold War that cost us trillions and 90,000 dead in Korea and Vietnam -- the belief we were leading the forces of light in a struggle against the forces of darkness that ruled the Sino-Soviet Empire -- is gone.

The great ideological struggle of the 20th century between totalitarianism and freedom, communism and capitalism, militant atheism and Christianity is over.

The Communist empire collapsed. Only the remnants remain in backwaters like Cuba. Marxism-Leninism as an ideology guiding great powers is a dead faith. The Communist party may rule China, but state capitalism has produced Chinese billionaires who do not wave around Little Red Books.

Lenin's remains may lie in Red Square, and Mao's in Tiananmen Square, but these are tourist sites, not shrines to secular saviors who remain objects of worship.

The one region where religion or ideology drives men to fight and die to create a world based on the tenets of the faith is in the Islamic world. Yet, as CIA Director Richard Helms observed, the three nations that had adopted Islamist ideology -- the Afghanistan of the Taliban, the Ayatollah's Iran and Sudan -- all became failed states.

Yet, when the faith or ideology of a civilization or nation dies, something must replace it. And around the world what peoples and regimes seem to be turning to is nationalism.

Vladimir Putin has taken back Crimea and declared himself the protector of Russians in the former republics of the Soviet Union.

China's claims against Japan in the East China Sea are rooted in 19th-century maps and 21st-century nationalism, propelled by a hatred born of Japan's brutality in the conquest of China from 1931 to 1945.

Japan's response is not to reassert the divinity of the emperor. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is invoking nationalism, seeking to break out from under the pacifist constitution imposed after World War II.

America, too, seems to be searching for a substitute for anti-communism, to justify global commitments that seem to have less and less to do with vital national interests.

Bush I spoke of building a "New World Order." The phrase is now an epithet. George W. Bush declared America's mission to be "ending tyranny in our world." The new deity to which America seemed to want to convert mankind was the golden calf of democracy.

But when democracy -- one man, one vote -- produced Hamas in Palestine and the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo, second thoughts and sudden apostasies began.

At the end of the Cold War Francis Fukuyama predicted that we were approaching the "End of History," where liberal democracy would prove the final form of governance, embraced by all mankind.

Yet not only in Russia and China, but also in much of Europe and the Third World, democracy seems to be not so much an end in itself for peoples, but a means to advance a greater cause.

The call of tribe and nation appears more compelling. And the Western gospel that all religions, races, nations, and tribes are equal and should be treated equally, while paid lip service, is disbelieved.

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called democracy a bus you get off of when it reaches your stop. His stop was a moderate Islamist state that conformed to his own and his party's principles.

Understandably, countries all over the world want America to come fight their wars. But while that may be in their interest, is it any longer in ours?

The American imperium, the last of the great Western empires, may be about to come down with the suddenness of the other empires of the 20th century.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Russia
KEYWORDS: demagogue; patbuchanan; patpukeanan; pitchforkpat; putinsbuttboys; russia; ukraine; vladimirputin

1 posted on 04/15/2014 6:25:42 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Isolationism as national policy became extinct on July 16th, 1945, based on events at the White Sands Proving Ground in the New Mexico desert.
2 posted on 04/15/2014 6:33:16 AM PDT by bassmaner (Hey commies: I am a white male, and I am guilty of NOTHING! Sell your 'white guilt' elsewhere.)
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To: Kaslin

Simply put, the American people will not risk nuclear war or agree to shed their blood to secure the borders of the Ukraine.


3 posted on 04/15/2014 6:34:16 AM PDT by allendale
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To: Kaslin
Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called democracy a bus you get off of when it reaches your stop.

That might be the greatest come-back to a lib who screaches "DEMOCRACY!" in one's face.

4 posted on 04/15/2014 6:35:47 AM PDT by Oratam
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To: bassmaner

nicely said


5 posted on 04/15/2014 6:42:21 AM PDT by Nifster
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To: Kaslin

You know, there was a time when our national security was based on a standing army here within our own borders and shore batteries of artillery along our coasts, and, of course, a navy to keep the sea-lanes open for the shipping of things necessary to our well-being. The world has changed. Today our national Security can be threatened in faraway places.


6 posted on 04/15/2014 6:43:46 AM PDT by elhombrelibre (Against Obama. Against Putin. Pro-freedom. Pro-US Constitution.)
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To: allendale

As much as I hate what Putin is doing, I agree that we won’t shed blood for Ukraine. There are other ways to help, though.


7 posted on 04/15/2014 6:45:01 AM PDT by elhombrelibre (Against Obama. Against Putin. Pro-freedom. Pro-US Constitution.)
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To: Kaslin
Pat misses on this one. The real reason, We the People have little or no interest in what is happening in Arabistan or the Ukraine or Far East is, we are facing a huge crisis here. From open borders to Federal armies (BLM, IRS, DEA, ATF, FBI, DHS) and their mercenaries as we saw used used at Bunkeville. The over reach and now the push back in New York and Connecticut.
I think we may, just may have reached that tipping point. I know, I have.
8 posted on 04/15/2014 6:50:32 AM PDT by Tupelo (I feel more like Philip Nolan every day)
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To: Tupelo

Plus the US is no longer a bastion of morality in the world.


9 posted on 04/15/2014 6:52:02 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Oratam

That was a pretty powerful statement. Makes you think...


10 posted on 04/15/2014 6:54:31 AM PDT by DwFry (Baby Boomers Killed Western Civilization!)
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To: Oratam

I always like using “Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what’s for dinner.”


11 posted on 04/15/2014 6:57:11 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Kaslin

What we are completely ignoring is, we have a country with five times our population, growing like mad, and excluding our own investors from their home market.

We can build there, but not truly own.

We can invest there, but not truly buy.

Five times our population.

America we need to build up America.


12 posted on 04/15/2014 6:59:12 AM PDT by Cringing Negativism Network (http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c5700.html#2013)
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To: allendale

While I completely agree I can’t help but wonder why knowing this our gummint continued to leave in effect our signature as part of NATO (I guess)on a Treaty that was supposed to “guarantee Ukraine’s sovereignty”?


13 posted on 04/15/2014 7:13:29 AM PDT by wastoute (Government cannot redistribute wealth. Government can only redistribute poverty.)
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To: Oratam

Yes, that’s a very profound observation by the Turk and a great metaphor.


14 posted on 04/15/2014 9:08:54 AM PDT by aquila48
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