Posted: 20 Feb 2014 12:14 PM PST
Putin's little fingers
in the Ukraine, Cuban agents in Venezuela and the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt
all remind us how uniquely vulnerable democracy is totalitarianism. In the
United States, cities aren't burning and streets aren't filling up with
bloodied bodies, but the government of phone and pen also shows us that we
are always one election away from losing our freedom.
When
a political system becomes polarized between the forces of freedom and the
forces of totalitarianism, then the forces of freedom have to win every
single election. Meanwhile the totalitarians only have to win one election
and then spend the rest of time reconstructing civic institutions, mobilizing
thugs and making it structurally impossible for the other side to compete.
Even if the other side occasionally wins elections, the totalitarian process
continues chugging along because the totalitarian side follows no rules while
holding its opponents to above and beyond the letter of the law. The law
constrains the ability of the law-abiding party to undo the work of the
totalitarian party, but not the ability of the totalitarian party to pursue
its agenda and undo the work of its opponents.
When one side is on a long march through the institutions while the other
seeks consensus, the long marchers will win.
A democratic political system in which a leading political faction is
totalitarian cannot endure.
We understand the practical lessons of that in Egypt, but less so in the
United States. A political process that included the Muslim Brotherhood could
not continue. Everyone except Obama Inc. prattling on about inclusive
politics understood that. The rightfully elected status of Morsi did not
matter. What did matter was that the Muslim Brotherhood could not and would
not work together with anyone. It did not want an open political process, it
wanted absolute power.
If the Democratic Party continues to function as a radical leftist party,
abiding by no laws, imposing radical change unilaterally, and using its media
to cover for its corruption and political sins, the United States will face a
Venezuelan or Egyptian scenario.
The United States is a fairly civilized place. Its people, despite the
recession, are doing fairly well. It may not seem like that when we look at
the unemployment rates, but unlike the Egyptians, we can afford bread and
unlike the Venezuelans, our stores still have milk and toilet paper. There
are still enough job prospects out there, that people haven't given up. At
least not all of them.
That's why the Tea Party, America's Orange Revolution or Arab Spring, was
fairly muted by comparison. Its participants were older, educated and prosperous.
If they actually were the illiterate violent armed rabble that the left has
done its best to portray them as, the scenes in Cairo and Caracas would be
replaying themselves in the United States.
The Tea Party was a political protest on the right by the small businessman
and the established professional. It was and is an effort by a threatened
middle class to salvage its position that for all its moments of anger lacked
the violent desperation that we see in Venezuela. But the differences lie in
political culture and desperation. The political culture has been polarized
and degraded to its lowest points. The rising left is angrier and more
militant than ever and the right is coming to feel that the political process
is useless and its gatekeepers are biased against them.
Combine that perception with more economic hammer blows against the middle
class by the redistributionists, add a sense of hopelessness and contrast
that with growing arrogance by the powers of the left and things will get
very ugly.
America's Two Party system has worked because both parties, for the most
part, were not absolutists. The exceptions, like FDR, did a great deal of
damage, but their sway was limited. What has changed is the level of
mobilization, coordination and integration on the left. Social institutions,
major corporations, the media, unions, non-profits and the educational system
have been knitted together into a totalitarian entity with an agenda. This
state of affairs transcends democracy and cannot be remedied by democratic
elections.
Even if Republicans were to win the White House and dominate the
House and the Senate, they would still face a totalitarian entity whose
judges would make laws, whose media would subvert democracy, whose
educational institutions and entertainment industry would reprogram the
people and whose bureaucracy would undermine any decision that it did not
like.
Every area of life is being politicized and this politicization did not take
place as a result of elections and cannot be stopped with mere elections. The
politicization of everything is the indication of a totalitarian movement at
work. To politicize a thing is to claim ownership over it. Universal
politicization means absolute power for the politicizers.
Political conflicts with totalitarians are a cultural war. The totalitarians
employ every cultural, political and economic element that they can against
their enemies. They follow only those laws that are convenient meanwhile they
multiply laws to pin down their opponents. They define entire elements of the
population that they hope to dismpower or destroy, whether it's the Copts in
Egypt or the private sector middle class in the United States, and execute
their plans.
Resisting totalitarians cannot simply be an electoral activity. In a system
of democratic political elections, the ballot box becomes the weakest element
in defying totalitarians who can always find ways to buy elections, steal
elections or convince the people that if they don't vote the wrong way then
the sky will fall and the oceans will rise. Those who follow no laws have
many options; those who follow them have only a few.
The electoral wars matter, but the totalitarians have to be fought for
control of every institutions and defied at every point of control. It's not
enough to win an election, their ideas have to be discredited. It's not
enough to swap out politicians when entire institutions have to be swapped
out. The core solution isn't political; it's personal. It's in how we live.
Totalitarians politicize everything. And that really means everything from
the food you eat to the books you watch to the way you heat your home and
drive to work. Individually we can all make choices that neutralize the
politicization even in matters as simple as choosing the movies we watch or
leaving products with environmentalist tripe on the packaging on the shelf.
Local battles are also bigger battles as Common Core demonstrates. And the
synagogue or church you attend is also a statement of support for the left or
a rejection of the left.
The first stage of a culture war is to cease supporting the enemy. The second
stage is to push back by building up your institutions that make your way of
life possible. The third stage is to use those institutions against the
enemy.
Anyone
can engage in the first stage of the culture war by making more
conservative choices. The second stage requires a bit more planning, but it's
a product of the first stage. And when the institutions of the second stage
become powerful enough and successful enough, then the third stage becomes
possible.
Elections alone will not defeat the left. Totalitarian movements aren't
defeated at the voting booth, but in the hearts of men and women. And if
their grip on power continues, then the scenes of violence and terror that we
see on the evening news will come to our streets and cities.
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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