July 31, 2021
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
The End of America? Hope
Amidst the Ruins
Friends,
I have a good friend who continually asks me what I think are
the prospects for sensible, conservative—that is, normal—folks in these parlous
times, what I think will happen to these United States, and particularly, what
will happen to the Southland.
In response to his questioning, I can’t give a satisfactory
answer, at least one nicely tied-up and tidy like my friend wants. But one
thing on which my friend and I agree: this weary and gravely ailing country we
call the United States seems with accelerating velocity and intensity to be hurtling into some form of ignominious and painful expiration. The unbridgeable differences,
the divisions, between segments of our population are now far too stark, far too
bitter, far too advanced to be papered over by “the next election”—or, by the
pipe-dreams that I hear some Republicans and Fox News pundits exude with
enthusiasm: “We’ll win back Congress in 2022! And then things will get right
again.”
My response to that line of thinking is to remind such
optimists that Republicans had control
of Congress—and the presidency—for several years, and essentially, despite some
line cracks in the Deep State behemoth due to Donald Trump, things continued to
get worse, the managerial government continued to grow in power, and did its
best (with many Republicans in tow), eventually successfully, to eject the
Trumpster from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. The administrative elites control
education, control immigration policy (with GOP collaboration), control our
media and entertainment, and dominate most of the levels of our government; and
their reach and control expand by the day.
I believe that assertion is self-evident, but let me offer a
few very recent headlines at random to buttress what I’m saying:
Research
Journal Publishes Article Calling ‘Whiteness’ a ‘Parasitic-Like Condition’ (June 10, 2021)
White
House ‘Domestic Extremism’ Report Puts Target on Democrats’ Political Opponents (June
17, 2021)
The
FBI’s Mafia-Style Justice: To Fight Crime, the FBI Sponsors 15 Crimes a Day (June
18, 2021)
What
this Professor just Called Proper Grammar is Absolutely Absurd (June 30, 2021)
Yale
Professor Wants Your Kid to See Sex at Pride Parades so they’re not
‘Homophobes’ (July 14, 2021)
Med
Schools Are Now Denying Biological Sex (July 27, 2021)
‘Complicit’:
Meet the 18 Republicans Who Sold Out on Radical Democrat ‘Infrastructure’ Plan
Without Reading Bill (July 28, 2021)
And these stories and accounts can be multiplied by the
hundreds, by the thousands, at every level of society. Tune in to “Tucker
Carlson Tonight” almost any day (the only program I consistently watch on Fox
News), and you’ll see what I mean.
They are examples of a pervasive sickness which afflicts large
portions of our culture. They are emblematic of profound problems and radically
irreconcilable divisions among our population. We all may live in the same
geographical entity, but we don’t speak the same language, we don’t share the
same beliefs, we don’t think in the same way; one half of us wish to “cancel,”
even suppress the other half of us, and to achieve that by any means possible,
including violence. Is that any different from the few months in Eastern
European countries right after World War II as Communist apparatchiks infiltrated
and seized absolute control and authority?
And all the while the official voices of opposition to this madness…the official conservative opposition and most national Republicans…seem like deer caught in the headlights. Irish poet William Butler Yeats’ words resound in my ears:
“The best lack all conviction, while the worst/
Are full of passionate intensity.” (“The
Second Coming,” 1919)
In the past when a Southern writer would suggest that some
form of secession or separation was desirable, he would be met with ridicule:
“The South will rise again? You’ve got to be kidding!”
Now, 160 years after the War Between the States began, such
talk of separation is no longer considered the domain of nostalgics or of the
Unreconstructed. In recent years we have seen the Calexit
movement advocating that left-leaning California leave the American union and
assert its independence. A number of conservative
counties in eastern Oregon and northern California have officially
petitioned to leave those radicalized states and either join Idaho or perhaps
form a new state. Academically,
Professor Frank H. Buckley (George Mason University) has written a cautionary
study on what he calls the “looming threat”
of secession.
Over the past few years I have written about some possible
scenarios, situations that might actually come to pass. I’ve speculated about secession, or perhaps
better expressed, some form of separation of portions of the country—and not
just states—into more philosophically and culturally homogeneous entities.
I’ve written about this several times, most notably in The
Abbeville Institute (August 2, 2019, “Is It Time for America to
Break Apart?” and also on August 19, 2019, “Is
Political Separation in Our Future?”). Indeed, I also tackled the
topic in The
Unz Review (July 26, 2019), with the essay picked up by the
widely-read LewRockwell.com
site (July 29, 2019).
I have suggested that some form of separation, including possibly
large amounts of autonomy for counties
within certain states might be the least painful, the least violent means
of resolving our unsolvable divisions. Yet, does anyone believe that our
centralized and centralizing federal government in Washington, with its
tentacles now extending dictatorially into every aspect of our lives, would let
this occur peacefully? Would not federal
troops be dispatched by Washington that would make Abraham Lincoln’s
suppression of the constitutional right to habeas corpus or Eisenhower’s
intervention in Little Rock, Arkansas, look like child’s play?
In the past one-hundred years, when civil society and its
institutions around the world have broken down or Marxist revolutionaries have
threatened to take control, it has been the armed forces that have traditionally
stepped in to restore order and some semblance of (anti-Marxist) normalcy.
Thus, General Augusto Pinochet led the Chilean army in a 1973 coup to topple
the impending Communist take-over by President Salvador Allende and restore
order in that country. And in July 1936 General Francisco Franco led a
coalition of traditionalist Carlists, conservatives, and the Church to
overthrow the violently anticlerical and Marxist Spanish republic
(unfortunately, he did not follow through to establish a traditional monarchy
after his coup).
But in America today our armed forces, since at least the
Obama years, have been coopted by the political left. Army top brass now echo the “woke-speak” of Nancy
Pelosi and Chuck Schumer. General Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, accuses former President Trump
of fomenting a “Reichstag moment” and compares him to Adolf Hitler,
while assisting to implement mandatory Critical Race Theory programs in the
armed forces. And Milley is far from being alone, as author Lt. Colonel Matthew
Lohmeir has recently documented in his study, Irresistible
Revolution: Marxism’s Goal of Conquest & the Unmaking of the American
Military. In any major civil conflict, very probably the armed
forces would be an instrument of the Deep State.
Where does that leave us? Are we indeed destined to live under
a post- or neo-Marxist authoritarian dictatorship that would make the older
Soviet Communists envious?
My friend and internationally-recognized political theorist
and historian, Paul Gottfried (editor of Chronicles
magazine) has speculated on one possible scenario, one possibility that could
occur. Revolutionary regimes that come to power often “devour their children,”
that is, the various elements that seem to triumph have a falling out and begin
to fight among themselves over direction and the spoils. Thus, it was in
Republican Spain during the Civil War when the Communists suppressed the large
Anarchist component (the FAI) in their revolutionary coalition, imprisoning and
executing thousands of them. And who can forget the purges unleashed by Lenin
and then by Stalin in the Soviet Union on those dissidents who had earlier
supported the Revolution?
Within the dominant Democratic Party and its supporters
definable factions exist. Joe Biden attempts to placate them. But the question
should be asked: How far will the Establishment Managerial Elite be prepared to
go before it must deal with its more recalcitrant elements…or will those
elements become dominant and force “woke” corporate America to fully give way
and accept in reality as well as in theory their nostrums? Will there be
violence on a large scale?
And, following Dr. Gottfried’s model, would there be enough of
us to pick up the pieces in such a conflict…and would we be prepared?
When I studied in Spain my doctoral subject was the Spanish
traditionalist Carlist philosopher and political leader, Juan Vazquez de Mella.
During his lifetime in the late Nineteenth Century and the early Twentieth, the
traditionalist movement he represented and defended both in his writings and
verbally in the Spanish parliament (the Cortes), had been essentially
sidelined, defeated earlier in three brutal civil wars, wracked by internal
division, and reduced to its strongholds in Navarra, parts of Aragon and
Catalonia. Surveying the political landscape circa 1920 hardly anyone expressed
optimism, practically-speaking, for its rebirth or revitalization.
But Mella viewed events and history in a different manner. Over his long career he developed a theory of
“catastrophism,” which, briefly, suggested that the liberal revolution of the
late eighteenth century in thinking and the capitalist revolution of the
nineteenth century in economics, would inevitably destroy the older, natural
social order. These revolutions would lead inexorably to socialist and Marxist
revolutions: to cataclysm, war, and human destruction on a vast and previously
unknown scale. After which, those–the remnant—who had continued faithful, who
had continued to maintain the Virtue of Hope and a belief in Providence,
throughout, would finally triumph. Had it not been so with the early
Christians, secreted away in catacombs and at times subject to fierce
persecution? Yet, with perseverance and faith they had triumphed.
I am put in mind of Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s poem, “Ulysses,” when Odysseus summons his followers and exhorts them:
Tho’ much is taken, much abides; and tho’
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
This was President Jefferson Davis’ confidence and hope, as it must assuredly be ours in this modern vale of despair: “Truth crushed to earth is truth still and like a seed will rise again.”