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Title : If you use these words, you will help democracy die
link : If you use these words, you will help democracy die
If you use these words, you will help democracy die
Words matter.Newt Gingrich, understanding this truism, once sent out a list of phrases for conservatives to use in discourse, especially when characterizing enemies. We should follow his example.
Read the following passage (from this article on Steve Bannon and Cambridge Analytica) and see if you can spot the writer's deadly error in word choice:
Steve Bannon has made no effort to disguise his intention to bring down liberal democracy and replace it with white nationalism. He’s currently on a European tour, where he’s cheered on fascism at every stop and praised Mussolini’s fashion sense—all those fetching black shirts and sharp uniforms.The ruinous phrase is, of course, "liberal democracy," a term which has allowed the right to do incalculable damage. Perhaps sensing this fact, or perhaps for reasons of style, the writer switches to the simpler word "democracy" in the second paragraph.
Cambridge Analytica was the tool that Bannon and the Mercers built to enable their fascist utopia. Their instrument for taking everything that marketing firms has learned about selling shoes or getting people to “click here,” and putting it to use as a landmine for democracy.
No doubt you are now dying to inform me that the term "liberal democracy" is academically defensible. Indeed it is. I am quite aware that the "liberal" part of this phrase refers not to the liberal/conservative dichotomy currently besetting American politics, but to classical liberalism -- that is, to capitalism.
Bannon's belief system would be less popular on the right if more people understood that an attack on liberal democracy is, arguably, an attack on the free market.
The term "liberal democracy" is based on the presumption that capitalism works best in a system of universal suffrage, secret ballots and freedom of expression -- a system in which the elected representatives must obey the rule of law. What rankles Bannon most may not be capitalism so much as the very concept of democracy. He believes in "Traditionalism" -- the system in place before democracy took hold.
All of which brings us to the main problem.
Many Americans have never been to college, and many of those who have attended college did not study history or political science. Most Americans do not read books. Most Americans can't name the three branches of government and seem to have little understanding of what the president actually does. More than forty percent the citizenry believe in Creationism. They are easily swayed by demagogues using emotive language. These people did not mind voting for a man unfamiliar with the concept of the nuclear triad, because they themselves were unfamiliar with that concept.
Many Americans are worse than uneducated: They are ineducable. Amusingly, they might not take offense if you called them "ineducable" to their faces, because they do not know the meaning of the word and lack the ability to glean meaning from context.
However, they do know the meaning of the word "liberal" -- or at least they think they know.
"Liberal" means those awful, fiendish elitists that Fox News keeps warning us about. In their minds, "liberalism" means taking money from virtuous white working people and giving it to lazy unemployed blacks. "Liberalism" means Hollywood actors who rape children and worship Satan." "Liberalism" means high taxes. "Liberalism" does not mean capitalism; it means anti-capitalism. "Liberalism" means socialism.
These are the images and the associations which fill most minds whenever the word "liberal" appears on paper or on screen.
You cannot make an argument which will ever dislodge those images and associations. Don't kid yourself: Even if you you speak with the tongues of angels, you do not possess -- you will never possess -- the ability to dislodge these ingrained perceptions. You are playing a loser's game if you try to explain that language changes over time, and that the word "liberalism" has had more than one meaning (just as the word "run" can refer to something your feet do and to something your nose does).
Go ahead: Try telling most red state Americans that the phrase "liberal democracy" really means "capitalist democracy." You won't get far. Your hearers will consider you a con artist. These people have been taught since childhood that a liberal and a capitalist are two very different things -- things which usually stand in opposition to each other.
When someone like Bannon attacks "liberal democracy," most Americans presume that the target is some form of socialism.
Russia's answer to Steve Bannon is the neo-fascist philosopher Aleksandr Dugin. A right clever one, Dugin is: He often replaces the term "liberal democracy" with a single word: "Liberalism." A careless reader stumbling across one of his posts might conclude that what Dugin means by "liberalism" is the same thing that (say) Ronald Reagan or Walter Mondale might have meant by that term. But that's not the case. Dugin wants to see the end of concepts like equal rights, pluralism, social mobility, and the voting booth. He likes the system in Russia, where the oligarchs are chosen from "on high," as opposed to devoting oneself to a chosen line of endeavor.
Newt was right. We must define the enemy through proper word choice.
So strike the term "liberal democracy" from your discourse (except when speaking to an educated audience). Make sure your readers and listeners understand that what Steve Bannon seeks to destroy is an idea called democracy. What Cambridge Analytica seeks to destroy is an idea called democracy. What the Alt Right seeks to destroy is an idea called democracy.
Cut out the L-word. It just confuses the issue.
When you employ the proper phrasing, you force yeven the most thoroughly-brainwashed Fox News watchers to ask themselves: Am I really willing to give up on the concept of democracy? Do I have a better replacement?
Some of them will answer yes. They believe in despotism because they have puerile, arrogant dreams of becoming the Dude-In-Charge, or at least a key courtier to the Dude-In-Charge.
The intellectuals among them will attack democracy with abstruse rationalizations, with essays filled with historical references and impressive polysyllables. They will list the very real failings of American democracy -- slavery, war, exploitation, unwise foreign interventions and so forth. These failings of democracy will be presented as reasons to give up on the concept. (Of course, these failings are invariably worse in non-democratic systems.)
Though these arguments can be provocative and tempting on an abstract level, most Americans -- perhaps even many among the Charlottesville tiki-torchers -- will not want to give up on their right to vote. Even the most crimson among the red staters can comprehend the dangers of that course of action. They understand that it is better to attain change through the ballot than through armed revolution, especially in an age when drones and digital eavesdropping makes revolution almost impossible. Most of us know in our hearts that, if the ballot be compromised, the solution is to improve the system of voting, not to give up on voting altogether.
So do not use the term "liberal democracy." Always replace with a simpler term: "democracy."
Here's another forbidden term: "Traditionalism."
We've allowed Bannon and other Alt Right "intellectuals" to mislead millions by using this word without offering a proper definition. I've already done so: "Traditionalism" means scrapping democracy and replacing it with what came before -- feudalism and theocracy.
Most people don't understand this fact -- and in that misunderstanding, mischief finds a nest.
When Alt Rightists use the T-word, most eople think that the reference goes to the old-fashioned values like Mom and apple pie and keeping your word and watching old John Wayne movies. They think of opening doors for ladies, of younger folk addressing older folk as "ma'am" and "sir." They think of Tevye's opening number in Fiddler on the Roof.
No. This is not that.
Traditionalism, as used by Julius Evola (Bannon's ideological mentor), actually refers to the system that kept Tevye in a ghetto -- and which ultimately put Tevye's relatives in a concentration camp. Traditionalist philosophers festoon their ideology with all sorts of metaphysical goop, including the use of terms borrowed from Hinduism. Metaphysical goop can be seductive and enchanting. I myself am not immune to its charms, if the mood is right and I feel the need for an intellectual stretching exercise.
But the most important thing you have to know about the Traditionalists is that they consider the Enlightenment to be the ultimate evil.
The left-wing analogues to the Traditionalists are the post-modernist philosophers, who still have enormous influence in certain European universities. They, too, consider the Enlightenment to be the ultimate evil. This essay is not the place to explain how the post-modernists and the apostles of Evola arrived the same destination by differing (but parallel) paths; our present purpose is simply to remove the veils and reveal the beast.
Democracy was the finest creation of the Enlightenment. The founders of this country were proud creatures of the Enlightenment. All anti-Enlightenment philosophies are conspiracies to seduce the common man into giving up his right to choose his own destiny. All anti-Enlightenment movements are conspiracies to eradicate equality as an ideal and to make social stratification hereditary and inviolate -- to keep each peasant mired in peasant-hood for the next thousand years. All anti-Enlightenment writers intend to return us to the dark ages -- and in furtherance of that goal, they will tell any lie and employ any strategy.
What Bannon and his kind call "Traditionalism," we should call fascism.
The F-word is always imprecise and hard-to-define. But in the current crisis, no other term will serve as well. Nationalism? No. Authoritarianism? No. Populism? No no no. Do not fear to call your enemy by his proper name: Fascism. If the enemy acts offended by that term, good. You're not going to defeat fascism if you are afraid to offend fascists.
Ultimately, I do not stand with those who consider Trumpism a manifestation of Putinism. Putin himself is but one victim -- or carrier -- of a virus which has given rise to a pandemic: The fascist resurgence.
Thus Article If you use these words, you will help democracy die
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