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Posted: 16 Jun 2013 11:03 PM PDT
How does one define a nation? That is truly the fundamental
question of amnesty.
The libertarian argument in favor of amnesty comes down to the question of
whether nations even necessary at all. If the only characteristic that
matters is freedom then borders and the other vestiges of nationhood only
interfere with the flow of the free market.
America
then becomes a set of ideas and its only usefulness is as a space for
harboring those ideas. This ideological definition of a nation demands that
it sacrifice its survival to its ideas.
This notion is found most strongly among liberals for whom the actual
physical survival of the country ranks a distant second to its duty to live
up to its ideals. That is why liberals can argue that torture is wrong even
in a ticking nuclear bomb scenario.
In the real world countries don't do well as vehicles for ideology. A country
is a practical entity that encompasses the real life needs and challenges of
people, while an ideology tends toward rigid self-righteous fantasies.
Countries need ideologies to define them, but becoming prisoners to rigid
ideological ideals can destroy them.
Any ideology whose logic is followed to its final conclusion leads to a
horrifying and unlivable society.
The logic of libertarian amnesty would fill the voting rolls full of
supporters of big government and the welfare state in the name of economic
freedom. It's not the worst illustration of how ideologies commit suicide
through following the siren song of their logic to the farthest north. It's
not even the worst such example involving immigration. That honor belongs to
the European left whose immigration policies have doomed the survival of
every value it claims to care for. But it is typical of the destruction
wrought by dismissing people and their nations as interchangeable cogs in a
machine of ideas.
The multicultural left is not entirely wrong about cultural relativism; it is
only wrong in assuming that its existence demonstrates the lack of any absolute
values or truths.
To a tribal society, America is a land forever in contention and American
leaders are mere tyrants who represent no one. In a tribal society where
legitimacy stems from family, the President of the United States is no more
than a bandit with a large army and a heap of weapons. Not only does he have
no tribe, but he boasts of his confusing tribelessness in his books, at times
pretending to be a member of different tribes.
America is a power to tribals, not a tribe. An empire that fills its land
with tribes and imagines that it can rule over them. A land in which their
tribe may rise supreme.
What happens when an identity based on economic regulation or deregulation
meets one based on family? The expansion of the welfare state is only one of
the minor consequences of this collision. Democrats and Republicans have come
to think of themselves as regulators and deregulators, but for all the
flowery prose that gets trotted out at conventions, this is less an identity
than an engineering philosophy of government that has little meaning to
tribals who view government as either "mine" or "yours",
as a source of patronage, money and power to their tribe or to their rivals.
Family is largely immune to the clash of ideas. Ideas are for introverted
societies exploring their own depths while families are for extroverted
societies bound on missions of conquest. While the introverted society
explores inner space, the extroverted society explores the outer space at its
borders.
While the ideologues study to see how the tribals will fit into their plans,
the tribals are checking out the real estate. That is how it happened in the
Roman Empire. That is how it happening in the clumsy new Rome of the EU.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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