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Twilight of the Nation-State
City Journal ^ | 18 January 2008 | Bruce S. Thornton

Posted on 01/18/2008 7:12:37 PM PST by forkinsocket

European transnationalism is a utopian dream, Pierre Manent warns.

The European Union’s grand project rests on the belief that nationalism is passé, indeed pernicious. Fascism’s mystic nationalism proved, on this view, that the nation-state impedes the spread of human rights, tolerance, and the rational adjudication of disputes—all essential to global peace. The nation-state should therefore give way to organizations like the E.U.: a transnational, secular institution that can bring about peace and prosperity by practicing what French intellectual Chantal Delsol calls “techno-politics”—a rational approach superior to the atavistic passions and superstitions that fired nationalism. But as the political philosopher Pierre Manent argues in a provocative new book, the European project, at least in its current form, represents a serious threat to democratic freedom. “If our nation suddenly disappeared and its bonds were dispersed,” Manent observes, “each of us immediately would become a stranger, a monster, to himself.”

A professor at the Centre des Recherches Politiques Raymond Aron, Manent has written extensively on democracy, nationalism, and liberalism. Democracy Without Nations comprises an earlier essay of the same name; a long monograph, La raison des nations, that appeared in France in 2006; and a lecture, “What Is a Nation?” Together with translator Paul Seaton’s overview of Manent’s writings, they make an excellent introduction to the work of an important thinker, whose ideas help us understand the temptations of the E.U.’s utopian dream—and its dangers.

What troubles Manent is “the erosion—perhaps the dismantling—of the political form that for so many centuries has sheltered the endeavors of European man. I refer to the nation.” He begins by examining the present European scene, dominated by a “passion for resemblance,” which he describes as a demand that we see others as ourselves and ignore cultural differences, national ones above all. Europeans also increasingly regard their nations’ pasts as “made up of collective crimes and unjustifiable restraints.” With the past demonized and current differences ignored, legitimacy comes to reside only in a kind of “human generality.”

Yet modern democracy first arose through nation-states, Manent reminds us. These political forms united particular peoples into “communion,” binding past, present, and future. Now, though, “this unifying principle of our lives has lost its connective force,” the national communion dissolving into “predemocratic” associations lacking the democratic nation’s power to assimilate disparate groups and values. Asks Manent: “What human association, old or new, will be able to bring consent and communion together in a viable way?”

Abandoning democratic nationhood puts at risk the individual rights, equality, and freedom that the nation-state made possible in the first place. In its stead, Europeans now have a massive bureaucracy, insulated from citizen accountability—indeed, Kafkaesque in its impenetrability. Self-government gives way to a new enlightened despotism, the “sum of agencies, administrations, courts of justice, and commissions that lay down the law—or, better, rules—for us more and more meticulously.”

The consequences of this shift from sovereign state to transnational abstraction show up with particular clarity in the European opposition to the death penalty—a desire, Manent believes, to strip the state of what Max Weber called its “monopoly of legitimate violence.” The rejection of the death penalty reflects a belief that contemporary societies have left the Hobbesian state of nature behind. Yet the persistence of violent crime puts the lie to this assumption. In ending the death penalty, and “thereby protecting the murderer of the person it could not protect,” the state “severs itself from the original source of its legitimacy.” September 11 also undermined the European project in its current form, Manent believes, by exploding the myth of mankind’s inevitable elimination of differences and revealing instead “the mutual impenetrability of human communities.”

The E.U.’s hostile stance toward its Christian heritage also reveals its essentially abstract and utopian nature. “Politics and religion,” Manent writes, “always and necessarily overlap in some measure, since both are modes of ‘communion.’” Since the religious communion preceded and created the conditions for the “sacred community” of the nation, the attempt to excise all religious sentiment from the state, as the E.U. seeks, entails abandoning that older communion, again with troubling consequences: “Once the nation is abandoned as a sacred community, the lay state itself is laicized and becomes merely one of the innumerable instruments of governance,” such as those of the E.U. bureaucracy.

Manent considers in this light Europe’s troubles with its Muslim immigrants, as well as the position of the dwindling number of European Jews. Distrustful of differences—particularly religious ones, given the volatile Islamist presence—modern Europe prefers a vague “humanity,” divorced from any particular community. But as Manent observes in analyzing Europe’s dislike of Israel, “empty—hollow and vain—is any humanism that claims to detach itself wholly from all responsibility toward or for a particular people, or from any distinctive view of the human good.”

The refusal to acknowledge its Christian roots, Manent believes, has led Europe to “the verge of self-destruction.” To meet this threat, he urges Europe “to become fully aware of the original Christian character of our nations”—but not to abandon the secular state. “The neutral state,” he writes, “and the Christian nation go hand in hand.”

The American traditions of egalitarian individualism, distrust of centralized power, and the autonomy of local governments make it unlikely that we will allow some E.U.-like bureaucracy to swallow up our democracy. Yet too many Americans are willing to discard national autonomy for international courts and transnational institutions, run not by free citizens but by unaccountable technocrats. Pierre Manent’s work is a timely reminder of how much we stand to lose if we follow Europe down that road—as well as a heartening reminder that some of our cousins across the Atlantic share our concerns.

Bruce Thornton is the author of Greek Ways and Decline and Fall: Europe’s Slow-Motion Suicide (Encounter Books).


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Philosophy; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: christian; eu; europe; heritage; nationstate; sovereignty; transnationalism
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1 posted on 01/18/2008 7:12:39 PM PST by forkinsocket
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To: forkinsocket

I hope that the Europeans get exactly what they have coming to them-—good and hard, as H.L. Mencken would say.


2 posted on 01/18/2008 7:19:02 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet (Your "dirt" on Fred is about as persuasive as a Nancy Pelosi Veteran's Day Speech)
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To: forkinsocket

I propose an experiment:

Europe continues to venture mushily down the “kumbaiya” road of PC multicultural assimilation - of everyone into the one, slowly losing their communal ability to think and act rationally.

America clings unapologetically, to rugged individualism.

Let’s see what happens. :)


3 posted on 01/18/2008 7:20:03 PM PST by Cringing Negativism Network (So-called free trade advocates = "China Firsters")
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The supra nation state (which is what the EU is) is much more of a danger than the average nation state since larger polities are much harder to restrain.


4 posted on 01/18/2008 7:20:45 PM PST by Republic_of_Secession.
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I believe that a member of the Clinton administration publicly said basically the same thing about nation states and national soveriegnty.


5 posted on 01/18/2008 7:22:18 PM PST by VR-21
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To: Republic_of_Secession.

As in, the USSR as a collection of subject states, was a greater threat together - than Russia alone?...

You may be right.


6 posted on 01/18/2008 7:22:26 PM PST by Cringing Negativism Network (So-called free trade advocates = "China Firsters")
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To: Cringing Negativism Network

At the rate things are going, with declining Euro birth rates and increasing Muslim immigration, I might even live to see a day when European governments are run by Muslims who impose Sharia law. If I don’t, surely my children will.


7 posted on 01/18/2008 7:22:59 PM PST by squidly
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To: squidly

Demographics is destiny.

Even if you don’t believe abortion is morally wrong (personally, I do) it has contributed to the demise of Europe and Russia.


8 posted on 01/18/2008 7:27:36 PM PST by khnyny (Clinton and Co. are the carnies of American politics.)
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To: forkinsocket
“thereby protecting the murderer of the person it could not protect,”

TG & the Founding Fathers for the 2nd Amendment.

9 posted on 01/18/2008 7:36:02 PM PST by JoeSixPack1
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To: Republic_of_Secession.
"European transnationalism is a utopian dream,. . ."

What's the first thing the EU wants to do with "nations" of Chechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, most of the Balkins? Break them up into many "nations".

yitbos

10 posted on 01/18/2008 7:38:47 PM PST by bruinbirdman ("Those who control language control minds. - Ayn Rand")
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To: VR-21

“...a member of the Clinton administration...”

I believe that would’ve been Strobe Talbot, another Marxist rat.


11 posted on 01/18/2008 7:54:40 PM PST by beelzepug ("Your life is nothing but the sum of your decisions.")
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To: beelzepug

I believe you’re right, on both counts.


12 posted on 01/18/2008 7:55:42 PM PST by VR-21
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To: forkinsocket
The Europeans' utopian dream of transnationalism will be an easy sell to those who dream of a worldwide Islamic theocracy, but the dream of secular transnationalism is going to be a hard sell to the Muslims.

As for the Chinese, the idea of transnationalism might appeal to them but only with themselves as the world's ruling oligarchy.

I'm afraid the Europeans are bogged down in the same old hubris and denial that's plagued them since the Minoans first brought civilization to the Continent--the stuff that comes before a fall.

13 posted on 01/18/2008 9:34:56 PM PST by Savage Beast ("History is not just cruel. It is witty." ~Charles Krauthammer)
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To: forkinsocket

EUrope is the “Culture of Nothing”.


14 posted on 01/18/2008 9:48:51 PM PST by Mike Darancette (Democrat Happens!)
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To: forkinsocket

Modern bureaucrats are the descendents of communism’s soviets and fascism’s functionairies.

The end result is that citizns lose the god-given right to vote for representatives to write law and instead give that important function to those who are unelected and unaccountable. The bureaucratic state leads to tyranny and eventual war.

Bureaucracies are totalitarian and evil. They must be destroyed wherever they fester.


15 posted on 01/19/2008 6:58:39 AM PST by sergeantdave (The majority of Michigan voters are that stupid and the condition is incipient and growing.)
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Which they did all the better to control them. I have noticed that the only time secession is considered respectable & is being promoted is when an outside interest is attempting to establish their control within a region.


16 posted on 01/19/2008 7:15:27 AM PST by Republic_of_Secession.
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