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by PATRICK J. BUCHANAN
February 5, 1999 Browsing through Reason magazine recently, I
stumbled on an article by a free-trade True Believer, who was profoundly perplexed over
the inroads being made by economic nationalists.
"In a time of unrivaled prosperity," wailed Brink Lindsey, "what has made
trade liberalization so bitterly controversial?" At which point, the author announced
that he had discovered why it is that "free traders ... (had) wound up in the present
mess."
Was it the Asian contagion raging through the Global Economy that threw the free traders
on the defensive, or the huge International Monetary Fund bailouts, or the reports of U.S.
plants closing down? By no means. "The answer lies," says Lindsay, "in an
emerging nervous disorder called 'globalphobia,'" a "fear" and
"anxiety" that "affects both right and left."
In short, the economic nationalism that has taken such forms as British mercantilism, the
"American System" of Alexander Hamilton and Henry Clay, Republican protectionism
from Abe Lincoln to Theodore Roosevelt - -- is the result of a "nervous
disorder," a phobia.
Lindsay's discovery is not without its humorous aspect. But the argument is reflective of
a deeply corrupted political dialogue, in which traditional stands are routinely dismissed
as the byproducts of bigotry or mental disease.
In most traditional faiths, for example, homosexuality is said to be unnatural and
immoral. That view was uncontroversial. But any who express such opinions today are
"homophobes" whose views must have come out of a mental disorder or a hateful
bigotry.
Conservative scholar Paul Gottfried describes this method of argumentation as the
"dehumanization of dissent." Brand a person a hater or mentally ill, and you can
ignore what he has to say.
Consider how commonplace the practice has become.
Though 80 percent of Americans seek a return to the stricter immigration policies that
existed from the 1920s to LBJ, those who champion such changes are now written off as
"nativists" who hate foreign peoples or "xenophobes" who are terrified
of them.
Oppose racial preferences in hiring and promotion, and it is you who will be called a
"racist." That term, once set aside for race-baiting politicians such as the
late Theodore Bilbo of Mississippi, is now regularly used on conservatives and
Republicans.
In the 1950s, abortion was a felony, universally condemned as an abomination. No
self-respecting doctor would do one; those who did were pariahs. If you forcefully argue
that traditional view today -- that an abortion is the taking of innocent life, and thus
wrong, a view held by John Paul II, Billy Graham and Mother Teresa -- you are an
"extremist."
Do you believe that God created man and woman different, with differing natural roles in
the family and society? So did we all, not so long ago. Now, only a "sexist"
believes that.
In the 1950s, proprietors of "no-tell motels" who rented rooms to unmarried
couples were considered sleazy. Now, if you refuse to rent to an unmarried couple, you can
be fined for, yep, bigotry.
What is taking place is something far more serious than the emergence of some new
tolerance. Beliefs and values integral to our Judeo-Christian ethic and Western
civilization are not only being displaced but adjudged to have been medieval and wicked.
Those in the 1960s who argued that the West was corrupt, colonialist, racist and rotten at
its core, that the "white race was the cancer of human history," as one
intellectual put it, are now about the deconstruction of that detested civilization. And
the strides they have made are as disheartening as they are impressive.
Like any fighting faith, this militant anti-Western ideology does not seek compromise with
older faiths but their extirpation. It wants a new morality and a new history to replace
the old, and the old to be seen for what it was -- hateful and reactionary.
The gods of post-modern secularism are jealous gods; they will tolerate no other. And the
inquisition of this new dispensation will bring before it -- to be branded and burned at
some symbolic stake or made to recant -- all who stubbornly persist in the heresy that the
old faith was true and righteous altogether.
After all, what are these terms -- homophobe, racist, sexist, xenophobe, nativist -- but
anathemas hurled by the disciples of modernity at those who reject the new faith?
By the dehumanization of dissent and the demonization of the right as either sick or
bigoted, our cultural elite has gone a long way toward establishing a new orthodoxy that
few are willing to resist.
(c) 1999 Patrick J. Buchanan
http://www.theamericancause.org
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