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Anti-Americanism is Racist Envy
Forbes Magazine ^ | 7-03 | Paul Johnson

Posted on 07/13/2003 7:18:28 AM PDT by Pappy Smear

Anti-Americanism is the prevailing disease of intellectuals today. Like other diseases, it doesn't have to be logical or rational. But, like other diseases, it has a syndrome--a concurrent set of underlying symptoms that are also causes.

• First, an unadmitted contempt for democracy. The U.S. is the world's most successful democracy. The right of voters to elect more than 80,000 public officials, the length and thoroughness of electoral campaigns, the pervasiveness of the media and the almost daily reports by opinion polls ensure that government and electorate do not diverge for long and that Washington generally reflects the majority opinion in its actions.

It is this feature that intellectuals--especially in Europe--find embittering. They know they must genuflect to democracy as a system. They cannot openly admit that an entire people--especially one comprising nearly 300 million, who enjoy all the freedoms--can be mistaken.

But in their hearts these intellectuals do not accept the principle of one person, one vote. They scornfully, if privately, reject the notion that a farmer in Kansas, a miner in Pennsylvania or an auto assembler in Michigan can carry as much social and moral weight as they do. In fact, they have a special derogatory word for anyone who acts on this assumption: "populist." A populist is someone who accepts the people's verdict, even--and especially--when it runs counter to the intellectual consensus (as with capital punishment, for example).

In the jargon of intellectual persiflage, populism is almost as bad as fascism--indeed, it's a step toward it. Hence, the argument goes, the U.S. is not so much an "educated democracy" as it is a media-swayed and interest-group-controlled populist regime.

The truth is, on the European Continent there is little experience of working democracy. Italy and Germany have had democracy only since the late 1940s; Spain, since the 1960s. France is not a democracy; it is a republic run by bureaucratic and party elites, whose errors are dealt with by strikes, street riots and blockades instead of by votes. Elements of the French system are being imposed throughout the EU, even in countries such as Denmark and Sweden that have long practiced democracy with success. In a French-style pseudodemocracy, intellectuals have considerable influence, at both government and street levels. In a true democracy, intellectuals are no more powerful than their arguments.

• Second, anti-Americanism is a function of cultural racism. An astonishingly high proportion of European elites know very little about U.S. history or culture and even deny that they have a separate existence apart from their European roots. It is strange that those seeking to bring about a European federal state or union have at no stage sought to study the lessons Americans learned during the creation of the U.S. in the 1780s. After all, the U.S. Constitution (suitably amended) has lasted for more than 200 years, and within its framework the country has emerged as the richest and most powerful society in world history. You might think, therefore, that European elites would seek to learn something from such a successful process. Not at all: The view is that sophisticated, civilized Europe has nothing to learn from "adolescent" America.

What these Euro-elites particularly abhor is the way in which the framers of the Constitution made every effort to involve the population through the process of public debates, town meetings and ratification votes--and this at a time when Europe was still governed (for the most part) by the absolute sovereigns of the ancien régime.

This cultural racism is particularly directed at the supposedly "know-nothing" President George W. Bush and his "gung ho" Texas background. The European intelligentsia gets its notion of America chiefly from Hollywood, TV soaps like Dallas and fiction. Few of them have any experience of America, outside of three or four big cities. Middle America is unexplored territory.

The fact that the U.S. has proved a highly efficient crucible for melding different peoples into a human sum greater than its constituent parts is seen as a misfortune in Europe because it produces a cultural stew that lacks purity of any kind and is therefore at the mercy of commercial forces.

• Third, European elites tend to look at Americans as a subcivilized mass, whose function is to be obedient consumers in a system run by big business. The role of competition in U.S. economic life--and in every other aspect of life--is ignored, because competition is something Continental Europeans like to keep to a minimum and under careful control.

Although Americans are seen as highly materialistic consumers, they are also despised and feared for their spiritual interests, their participation in religious worship and their subscription to creeds of morality. Europeans see no inconsistency in their condemnation of the U.S. for being at one and the same time paganly unethical and morally zealous.

The truth is, any accusation that comes to hand is used without scruple by the Old World intelligentsia. Anti-Americanism is factually absurd, contradictory, racist, crude, childish, self-defeating and, at bottom, nonsensical. It is based on the powerful but irrational impulse of envy--an envy of American wealth, power, success and determination. It is an envy made all the more poisonous because of a fearful European conviction that America's strength is rising while Europe's is falling.

Paul Johnson, eminent British historian and author


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: antiamericanism; envy; europe; pauljohnson
I thought this was a pretty well written article.
1 posted on 07/13/2003 7:18:28 AM PDT by Pappy Smear
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2 posted on 07/13/2003 7:20:01 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: Pappy Smear
I think so too. Paul Johnson is one of my favorite historians.

His comments here about the nature of French governance are especially insightful and informative.

3 posted on 07/13/2003 7:29:13 AM PDT by happygrl
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To: Pappy Smear
Paul Johnson bump.
4 posted on 07/13/2003 7:31:18 AM PDT by Tijeras_Slim (The Preview button is for wimps!)
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To: Pappy Smear
Communism was started by literature. It's tenets filled in those places in the heart and mind that used to be filled by religion. For many that thought they were "too smart" for religion (i.e., book smart, but no real sense) it filled up their thoughts, and became a solopsistic cause celebre.

The dirty little secret, though, is the thuggism that underlies its enforcement and spread.

5 posted on 07/13/2003 7:38:51 AM PDT by P.O.E.
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To: Pappy Smear
A very good article, I believe that every word applies to Canadian Anti-Americanism and the pseudo intellectuals that support it. It would be nice if Canada could whine less and emulate more.
6 posted on 07/13/2003 7:49:55 AM PDT by Cdnexpat (Next time Bush should just refuse to take the call.)
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To: Cdnexpat
Power afforded individuals purely on the basis of academic credentials and connections is rare in history, for good reason.

I wonder why the elitist rule of the EU does not cause more friction than it appears to. My feeling is that most people there are apathetic. They don't dig in when their way of life is threatened the way we do here.

I wince now when I see expressions of disgust for American commercialism. It's not that I love every bit of consumer culture, but I take the bad with the good since by and large it reflects The Free Market which I see as hugely beneficient.

I see the rising activism of the courts in the USA as elitist rule getting a foothold.

7 posted on 07/13/2003 8:28:13 AM PDT by NutCrackerBoy
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