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The Real Long War
The American Thinker ^ | July 31, 2007 | Christopher Chantrill

Posted on 07/31/2007 10:08:04 AM PDT by oldtimer2

The Real Long War

By Christopher Chantrill

A faction within America always denigrates our country, seeing our enemies through rose colored lenses and finding only oppression at home. The Long War we face with Radical Islam is matched by the long war against this bloc.

Color me cynical, but I think that the fix is in on Iraq. In September Gen. Petraeus will report on the surge and declare a qualified victory. Then President Bush will start drawing down the troops. Slowly.

Everyone will feel betrayed. The conservative base will feel that our steadfast support for the war was all in vain.

The netroots will continue to demand immediate withdrawal. Expect the Democrats in Congress to keep offering a Resolution of the Week to support the troops and bring them home now.

It would be easy in this situation to get discouraged, but we are conservatives and we are better than that. This is a point worth making because right now the Conservatives in Britain are having a total meltdown over a couple of minor political setbacks.

But if we are not to panic like our formerly stiff-upper-lipped cousins across the Atlantic we must "do something." I recommend we "do" some strategic thinking. As we retreat from Iraq we should think about the big picture.

The great lesson that we should learn from the first six years of the 9/11 era is this. If it weren't for our liberal friends here in the United States and in Europe, the terrorists would be nothing more than a bunch of Saudi rich kids and Iranian regime thugs out for a rumble.

What makes these Saudi rich kids and their pals world-historical is the understanding they get from the left and the publicity they get from the media. Exhibit A is the CNN-YouTube questioner who asked the Democratic presidential candidates:

"Would you be willing to meet separately, without precondition, during the first year of your administration, in Washington or anywhere else, with the leaders of Iran, Syria, Venezuela, Cuba and North Korea, in order to bridge the gap that divides our countries?" Earth to YouTube: The gap that divides us from the thug dictators is not a lack of negotiations; it is the question of power. For a dictator power isn't everything. It's the only thing.

The left always seems to be swooning over the latest gang of designer thugs. Right now university book stores are featuring dozens of earnest attempts to understand Islam. Back in the 1980s the lefty Sandalistas were flocking to Sandinista Nicaragua. In the 1970s the left was busy understanding the rage of well-born terrorists in the Weathermen, the Italian Red Brigades, and the Baader-Meinhof gang. A decade before that it was Castro and the execrable Che Guevara. All of those thugs would have got nowhere without the fawning of the luvvies on the left.

You might think that these dictator lovers are evil, and you might be right. But conservative philosopher Roger Scruton talks instead, in A Political Philosophy, of a kind of sickness: "oikophobia." It's a fancy Greek neologism for "educated derision at... national loyalty," always siding with "'them' against 'us,' and the felt need to denigrate the customs, cultures, and institutions that are demonstrably 'ours.'" In short, as Scruton writes, it is "the repudiation of inheritance and home."

Modern conservatism was founded by Edmund Burke upon the opposite idea. It regards "our liberties as an entailed inheritance derived to us from our forefathers, and to be transmitted to our posterity" without repudiation.

The great challenge for us, conservatives and libertarians, people inspired by the spirit of democratic capitalism, is the challenge of the "oikophobes." It means that the war on terror is not finally a war with Islamic terrorism, but an episode in the long war within the west that began in 1789. It is the war between the heirs of Burke and the heirs of Rousseau and Robespierre, between ordered liberty and the "oikophobic" alliance between rational experts, progressive activists, designer revolutionaries and out-and-out thugs.

The "oikophobic" alliance presents a Janus face to the world. It claims to be the very highest and best in human evolution, committed to equality, sharing and caring. In pursuit of this ideal it advocates constantly for inclusiveness and against divisiveness. Yet it conducts its politics according to the crudest techniques of the demagogue, setting worker against boss, renter against owner, woman against man, poor against wealthy, secularist against believer, black against white, gown against town.

And its institutions--the schools, universities, foundations, arts communities, and newsrooms of the world--are the most exclusive and divisive around. Conservatives and Christians need not apply.

But for all their faults you would think that the "oikophobes" would be willing to help conservatives defeat the homophobes, the racists, and the patriarchs of the Middle East.

But they won't. They are "oikophobes" and they believe in taking the side of "them" against "us."

Christopher Chantrill is a frequent contributor to American Thinker. See his roadtothemiddleclass.com and usgovernmentspending.com. His Road to the Middle Class is forthcoming.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS:
The most important point in this article is in the last four paragraphs:

The great challenge for us, conservatives and libertarians, people inspired by the spirit of democratic capitalism, is the challenge of the "oikophobes." It means that the war on terror is not finally a war with Islamic terrorism, but an episode in the long war within the west that began in 1789. It is the war between the heirs of Burke and the heirs of Rousseau and Robespierre, between ordered liberty and the "oikophobic" alliance between rational experts, progressive activists, designer revolutionaries and out-and-out thugs.

The "oikophobic" alliance presents a Janus face to the world. It claims to be the very highest and best in human evolution, committed to equality, sharing and caring. In pursuit of this ideal it advocates constantly for inclusiveness and against divisiveness. Yet it conducts its politics according to the crudest techniques of the demagogue, setting worker against boss, renter against owner, woman against man, poor against wealthy, secularist against believer, black against white, gown against town.

And its institutions--the schools, universities, foundations, arts communities, and newsrooms of the world--are the most exclusive and divisive around. Conservatives and Christians need not apply.

But for all their faults you would think that the "oikophobes" would be willing to help conservatives defeat the homophobes, the racists, and the patriarchs of the Middle East.

But they won't. They are "oikophobes" and they believe in taking the side of "them" against "us."

Making the War on Terror another battle in the fight of liberals and conservatives explains a lot of things that I have had trouble understanding.

1 posted on 07/31/2007 10:08:09 AM PDT by oldtimer2
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To: oldtimer2

Neatly sums up what I have been thinking for some time.


2 posted on 07/31/2007 10:21:00 AM PDT by rob777 (Personal Responsibility is the Price of Freedom)
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To: oldtimer2

ping


3 posted on 07/31/2007 10:28:25 AM PDT by steel_resolve (I hate Democrats almost as much as they hate America)
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To: oldtimer2
“The great lesson that we should learn from the first six years of the 9/11 era is this. If it weren’t for our liberal friends here in the United States and in Europe, the terrorists would be nothing more than a bunch of Saudi rich kids and Iranian regime thugs out for a rumble.”

I find this to be naive in the extreme.

4 posted on 07/31/2007 10:29:14 AM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: oldtimer2

Good find, I’m reading it later.


5 posted on 07/31/2007 11:00:47 AM PDT by Max in Utah (O Great and Benevolent Rulers of America: WHERE'S OUR FENCE?!)
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To: PetroniusMaximus

isn’t it “our liberal friends here in the United States and in Europe” that fund, inspire and motivate the terrorists. Without the likes of Reid, Pelosi and Murtha giving them spiritual aid and comfort they would be all but out of Iraq and we could concentrate of the remaining axis of evil.

They are the ones who continue lubricating the radical Islamic organizations in their evil efforts.


6 posted on 07/31/2007 12:44:39 PM PDT by elpadre
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To: elpadre
“isn’t it “our liberal friends here in the United States and in Europe” that fund, inspire and motivate the terrorists. “

Partially. But there would still be a motivating Koran without the red West, and plenty of funds from the Saudi’s and others.

To say that the present problem is a “creation” of liberals in the West - or is being sustained by them is not correct at all. It’s a 1,500 year old problem that’s threatened Western civilization many times. The Libs in the West just exacerbate the problem.

7 posted on 07/31/2007 1:10:34 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus
To say that the present problem is a “creation” of liberals in the West - or is being sustained by them is not correct at all. It’s a 1,500 year old problem that’s threatened Western civilization many times. The Libs in the West just exacerbate the problem.
The Soviets and the Islamists would no doubt have existed without the "oikophobes" - but to say that without the "oikophobes" they would still have been problems on the scale that they have in fact been is IMHO a fact not at all in evidence.

Without the "oikophobes" the Soviets would have faced nothing but Reaganite presidents, and would never have been able to entertain serious hopes of intimidating the West into surrender. Without the "oikophobes" we would long since have drilled ANWR and built the refineries we need to maintain our energy independence. We might even have unabashedly waged, and won, a war for oil.

Our "oikophobes" are far and away the primary reason why we have any security problems worthy of the name.


8 posted on 07/31/2007 2:41:35 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (The idea around which liberalism coheres is that NOTHING actually matters except PR.)
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To: oldtimer2; Obadiah; Mind-numbed Robot; Zacs Mom; A.Hun; johnny7; The Spirit Of Allegiance; ...
The "oikophobic" alliance . . . conducts its politics according to the crudest techniques of the demagogue, setting worker against boss, renter against owner, woman against man, poor against wealthy, secularist against believer, black against white, gown against town.

And its institutions--the schools, universities, foundations, arts communities, and newsrooms of the world--are the most exclusive and divisive around. Conservatives and Christians need not apply.

"It is not the critic who counts . . . the credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena - Theodore Roosevelt
It is obvious that the newsroom is hostile to "conservatism," for the very logical reason that In proclaiming itself to be objective, journalism declares that the rules of journalism define the public good. Since the journalism rules that matter - "If it bleeds, it leads," "'Man Bites Dog,' not 'Dog Bites Man,'" and "Always make your deadline" - address the entertainment imperative which supports the business model of journalism, journalism thereby proclaims that what is good for journalism is good for the country. But what is journalism but criticism?

The powerful leftist tendency of academia must likewise follow from the classic rules of teaching. "Them as can, does. Them as can't, teaches" points out that, like journalism, teaching is talk, and criticism of students' work, but it is not performance against a bottom line. Like journalism, teaching has a powerful tradition of putting its own interests at the top of its list of the nation's priorities.

Foundations are, perhaps, a lot like academia - strong on telling others what to do, but insulated from the risks which they recommend that others take.

Why Broadcast Journalism is
Unnecessary and Illegitimate


9 posted on 07/31/2007 5:01:30 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (The idea around which liberalism coheres is that NOTHING actually matters except PR.)
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion

BTTT!


10 posted on 08/01/2007 2:13:53 AM PDT by PGalt
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion

BTTT


11 posted on 08/01/2007 2:58:02 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion

RIGHT ON THE MONEY!!!


12 posted on 08/01/2007 7:10:25 AM PDT by rob777 (Personal Responsibility is the Price of Freedom)
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion

RIGHT ON THE MONEY!!!


13 posted on 08/01/2007 7:10:31 AM PDT by rob777 (Personal Responsibility is the Price of Freedom)
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To: oldtimer2

This essay is worth noting and promoting.


14 posted on 08/02/2007 5:18:57 AM PDT by marktwain
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To: rob777
Neatly sums up what I have been thinking for some time.

For me as well.

15 posted on 08/02/2007 5:26:37 AM PDT by Bigun (IRS sucks @getridof it.com)
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To: oldtimer2

This thread needs a BUMP!


16 posted on 08/03/2007 10:31:16 AM PDT by Bigun (IRS sucks @getridof it.com)
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