Welcome aboard once again to AsianSmiths! I think he’ll make a fine addition to the Optimates family.
In fact, I’d like to address one of his recent commentaries: his excellent "Amsterdamistan” post. Specifically, I’d like to talk about the causes behind the West’s seeming reluctance to, well, be
the West and offer an earnest defense of our heritage and our values.
I think the very notion of the primacy of the individual – key to modern liberalism – is the chief culprit. What else could explain it? In elevating the rights of the individual above family, society, and state, liberalism hoped to free us from the shackles of the illegitimate authority of a calcified past. This was the aim of the Enlightenment taken to its logical conclusion. While the removal of illegitimate authority is certainly a noble goal, liberalism – which I must at this point nearly conflate with individualism – has had the negative effect of weakening respect for all authority.
The central premise of liberalism –
pace John Stuart Mill – was that freeing the individual from the burdensome pressures of authority would permit his natural creative genius to blossom for the benefit of all. While I would be the first to admit that this has happened (witness our wealth and scientific progress), it’s not all that has happened. Without legitimate authority to follow, individuals have had to follow their own inner dictates. Absent any mediation, those inner dictates can be quite self-centered. In that
milieu modern, consumerist capitalism, where the highest good is the maximization of wealth and attendant creature comforts, has proved very seductive.
If there is no authority to be found in our out-of-date (and, by liberalism’s leave, harmful and oppressive) traditions of the past, and our chief aim in life is to make ourselves comfortable, is it any surprise we can’t muster a cogent intellectual defense for the existence of “The West” as a collective society?