Posted: 13 Jun 2013 12:19 AM PDT
When the big things
start getting out of control, we start focusing on the little ones instead.
Tackling small problems we can't solve is a good way to feel good about the
big ones that we can't.
Can't
do anything about the nice young men from Nigeria, Somalia and Bangladesh who
occasionally stop maxing out social welfare and working odd jobs to set off
bombs in the London Underground or butcher a soldier within sight of his
base?
Just arrest an 85-year-old woman who shouts at Muslims that they should go
back to their own country. At 85, she probably won't put up much of a fight.
Then send out 1,200 police officers to protect Muslims from the wrath of a
few dozen angry Brits who might conceivably hurt their feelings. And follow
that up with some interfaith sessions with community leaders and you're all
set.
Can't do anything about Muslims rioting and burning cars in Stockholm? Just
send them out to leave parking tickets on the charred wrecks afterward. The
owners probably won't do more than mutter a few obscenities and then
recollect that they are lucky to be living in such a progressive country that
stays out of both foreign and domestic conflicts while providing the best in
social welfare.
Most multicultural urban utopias are sliding downhill under a new generation
of technocrats who can juggle the numbers and focus on what really matters.
Salt in food. Bike shares. Toy gun buybacks. Plastic bag bans. Composting.
Obesity programs. Diversity programs. Bullying programs. And forty other
mostly irrelevant things.
The city is being segmented into unlivable welfare ghettos where there is no
law and gentrified areas inhabited by hipster technocrats who want a thousand
regulations that will make everything come out exactly their way. Both the
ghetto and the gentro are expanding and squeezing out a working middle class
baffled to wake up one morning and find out that they are the enemy of the
new state.
In the modern city, you can walk two blocks or drive two miles and cross from
a graffiti streaked strip of subsidized housing where the only law is don't
talk to the police to an oasis of renovated homes where there are roughly
four million regulations covering every little thing.
On one side, the police are out in force responding to shootings, stabbings
and domestic violence complaints. On the other, the community board or local
council is constantly under pressure from "community activists" to
pass new Green regulations on energy efficiency or a ban on displaying toy
guns in store windows.
The big effort to salvage the cities lay with courting a new elite of top
grads by catering to their proclivities for bike zones, artisanal fusion
cupcakes and just enough multiculturalism to make them feel good about sending
Sierra or Madrigal to a private school that reserves 10 spots for diversity.
That made trendy companies more comfortable about setting up shop in the city
and the new burst of gentrification ticked out numbers that made it seem like
the city was on the way up. Growing populations of hipster yuppies were
displacing the ghettos to the suburbs, helped along by diversity lending
mandates from banks, and ushering in a new clueless incarnation of the nanny
state.
The old city was liberal. The new one is retarded. It's chock full of all the
insane regulatory treehouse agendas of the college campus and just as tightly
controlled. Its livable areas are hideously expensive post-college hangouts
for grads with big money and big debts looking for hip places to live and its
unlivable places are kept to a dull roar with lots of freebies. That worked
in the 90s when cities were full of tech and finance sector money and were
happy enough to pass it down to the ghettos or to even export the ghettos to
the suburbs. But now the money is tight and the violence is up.
Progressive technocracy failed at all the big stuff, but it's focusing on all
the small stuff. Set foot in a modern college campus and you'll be leafletted
by a dozen activists pushing their petty agendas. That is now the state of
the city where no one talks about mass riots and unsustainable pensions,
instead the agenda is dominated by the petty fascism of environmental
activists and diversity activists. The areas of every city not inhabited by
the hipster yuppies and their dog parks could burn to the ground and the very
next day the big agenda would still be LGBT school bullying or plastic bag
bans.
Bloomberg isn't some kind of outlier. He just happens to be more obnoxious
than the rest. The truth is that in policy, he is no worse than dozens of
other mayors, who eagerly sign on to all his initiatives. And the other truth
is that this petty control freakery is a convenient way to avoid dealing with
the big issues. The worse the big problems get, the more focused the entire
policy apparatus becomes on the minutia of liberalism. It's not big brother
anymore. It's his obnoxious little brat of a sibling.

Forget burning cars. If anyone can smell a waft of cigarette
smoke, Little Brother will be on you. Bombings and beheadings are taken in
stride. But sensitivity violations bring out the cops, who always know whom
they can take a club to and whom they can't. Fighting Morlocks is dangerous,
but abusing an Eloi who didn't use the proper verbal form for a protected
group or didn't put something recyclable in the right trash bin is fun for
the whole government family.
What we have is not quite fascism. It's a selective fascism. It's stuff white
people like fascism. It's fascism for enclaves of hipster yuppies who still
believe in initiatives advocating perfecting the community through petty
tyranny while around them the world burns. It's not Reichstag fascism, it's a
compartmentalized fascism in which the sheep prey on the sheepish while
pretending that the wolves don't exist. It's the fascism of the Eloi who
don't just sit around helplessly, but oppress other Eloi.
Little Brother and Little Sister never grew up, and instead of a family
album, they have photos of their favorite meals in their social media. They
would only wear jackboots ironically, but they have painstakingly exact
tastes in everything from food to fonts to politics and they want everything
to be exactly the way that they think it should. They believe in freedom and
in reporting their neighbors to the authorities. They believe in personal
choice for everyone who thinks the way that they do. They are, it goes
without saying, Obama voters.
In Little Brother's state, the police don't enforce the law. They enforce the
whims of Little Brother and Little Sister. They are there to see that all the
children play with Little Brother and Little Sister the way that they want
them to. They don't believe in fighting crime or terrorism, except briefly
when it happens to them, and they let go of it once their Facebook friends
tell them to check their privilege, but they do believe in enforcing the
million petty regulations of utopia.
Little Brother doesn't want anything done about crime. He wants something
done about the rude people who drive cars to work or carry food home in
plastic bags without caring about the impact on the environment. Little
Sister doesn't care about Islamic terrorism. Islam is like spiritual and part
of the great fabric of diversity. She wants something done about the
unenlightened people who just don't get that.
Little Brother and Little Sister are the new elite. They are the unthinkingly
glib products of an educational system that teaches little, but indoctrinates
a lot. Their knowledge comes from Wikipedia. Their actual education taught
them little except about how many people the United States managed to oppress
in such a short time and how we need to feel connected to the environment to
truly be alive.
Every age has its elites. Our age is burdened with idiot elites dedicated to
destroying the "elites". We have a 1 percent that inveighs against
the power of the 1 percent and then throws around its weight to get its way.
We have people who work for corporations denouncing corporate power only to
make use of it anyway. Our elites offer a torrent of contradictory pieties
that are undone by their actions.
And the people who actually run all this, negotiating between the idiot
elites and the violent classes, are only too happy to focus on the small
stuff because the big stuff is officially hopeless. The real problems are a
tangled Gordian knot that can be cut through, but not unwound individually
the way the technocrats would like to do. And the little problems devolve
into petty fascism that makes everyone but the people being stepped on feel
better.
The angry mobs get to torch, behead and bomb. And the remnants of the middle
class get a boot in the teeth. And Little Brother and Little Sister get to
turn another street into a bike path or to insert calorie counts or
environmental warnings or some other treehousery into daily life so that they
can pretend that they have power, when the territory that they have power
over is actually shrinking.
The center of power is always the last to feel the sensation of deadening
chaos outside. It takes tyrants, even petty ones, a while to figure out that
the system is over. The power that insulates them from that knowledge becomes
petty. Instead of controlling nations, they control capital cities and
eventually only their own courts. That micromanagement gives them the
illusion of being in charge.
The Little Brothers have pushed the West to the edge, but they laugh at the
very idea of danger. By all their metrics, everything is better than it was
before. There are more jobs developing apps and more bikes being ridden and
fewer people saying insensitive things and more little boys being taught not
to play with guns and more diversity everywhere. It's progress. It's the
future. It's forward and onward.
They're winning all the arguments and controlling the debate, but yet somehow
everything is slipping through their fingers. Every initiative of their
agenda passes, but it never works out the way that they think it should.
Little
Brother, that poor sad imitation of Uncle Joe or Fidel, is a child playing
with toys. All his experiences have taught him that he can control whatever
he wants to, from his parents to his electronics to other children, but his
societies, cities and countries are slipping out of his grasp and into a dark
territory of anarchy.
The new power isn't an entitled brat with a government, but a gang leader
with a hundred men or a kid who figures out how to bypass some onerous aspect
of the system and tells other about it. Civilization is coming apart at the
seams and it is the destroyers who have the power, not the petty liberal
fascists who can dictate the ingredients of every meal, but not whether they
will be beaten to death while biking home.
Liberal has wrecked cities and nations. And what rises out of the wreckage is
not some progressive utopia, but oases of petty progressive fascism
surrounded by a growing darkness of unmanageable and ungovernable territories
and people.
The dark age isn't coming. It's already here.
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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