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IP: Damn hard reading and even stomaching -- The Ideological War Within The West by John Fonte


From: Dave Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Sat, 25 May 2002 20:18:40 -0400


------ Forwarded Message
From: "Howard Butcher, IV" <hbiv () netreach net>
Date: Sat, 25 May 2002 17:52:27 -0400
To: "David Farber" <farber () cis upenn edu>
Subject: Fw: The Ideological War Within The West by John Fonte

Dear David,  Here is a very interesting discussion that is certainly
relevant to a lot of the things IP'rs have been posting recently.  H.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Foreign Policy Research Institute" <fpri () fpri org>
To: "Howard Butcher IV" <hbiv () netreach net>
Sent: Saturday, May 25, 2002 3:22 AM
Subject: The Ideological War Within The West by John Fonte


Foreign Policy Research Institute
WATCH ON THE WEST
www.fpri.org

THE IDEOLOGICAL WAR WITHIN THE WEST
by John Fonte

Volume 3, Number 6
May 2002


John Fonte  is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. This
piece is  adapted from  his article,  "Liberal Democracy vs.
Transnational  Progressivism,"  which  will  appear  in  the
Summer 2002  issue of  Orbis, and is based on a presentation
made last  fall to  FPRI's Study  Group on  America and  the
West, chaired by James Kurth.


            THE IDEOLOGICAL WAR WITHIN THE WEST

                       by John Fonte

Nearly a  year before the September 11 attacks, news stories
provided a  preview of  the transnational  politics  of  the
future.  In   October  2000,   in  preparation  for  the  UN
Conference   Against    Racism,   about    fifty    American
nongovernmental organizations  (NGOs) called  on the  UN "to
hold the  United States  accountable for the intractable and
persistent problem of discrimination."

The NGOs  included Amnesty International-U.S.A. (AI-U.S.A.),
Human  Rights  Watch  (HRW),  the  Arab-American  Institute,
National  Council  of  Churches,  the  NAACP,  the  Mexican-
American Legal  Defense and  Educational Fund,  and  others.
Their  spokesman   stated  that   their  demands  "had  been
repeatedly raised  with federal  and state officials [in the
U.S.] but  to little  effect. In  frustration we now turn to
the United  Nations." In  other words,  the NGOs,  unable to
enact the policies they favored through the normal processes
of American  constitutional democracy--the  Congress,  state
governments, even  the federal courts--appealed to authority
outside of American democracy and its Constitution.

At the  UN Conference  against Racism,  which  was  held  in
Durban  two   weeks  before   September  11,  American  NGOs
supported  "reparations"   from  Western   nations  for  the
historic transatlantic slave trade and developed resolutions
that condemned  only the West, without mentioning the larger
traffic in  African slaves  sent to  Islamic lands. The NGOs
even endorsed a resolution denouncing free market capitalism
as a "fundamentally flawed system."

The NGOs  also insisted  that the  U.S. ratify  all major UN
human  rights   treaties  and  drop  legal  reservations  to
treaties already  ratified. For  example, in  1994 the  U.S.
ratified the  UN Convention  on the  Elimination  of  Racial
Discrimination (CERD),  but attached  reservations on treaty
requirements restricting free speech that were "incompatible
with the  Constitution." Yet  leading NGOs demanded that the
U.S. drop all reservations and "comply" with the CERD treaty
by accepting UN definitions of "free speech" and eliminating
the "vast  racial disparities_in  every aspect  of  American
life" (housing, health, welfare, justice, etc.).

HRW complained that the U.S. offered "no remedies" for these
disparities but  "simply supported  equality of opportunity"
and indicated  "no willingness  to  comply"  with  CERD.  Of
course, to  "comply" with the NGO interpretation of the CERD
treaty, the  U.S. would  have to  abandon the Constitution's
free speech  guarantees, bypass  federalism, and  ignore the
concept of  majority rule--since  practically nothing in the
NGO agenda is supported by the American electorate.

All of  this suggests  that we  have not  reached the  final
triumph of  liberal democracy proclaimed by Francis Fukuyama
in his groundbreaking 1989 essay.

POST-SEPTEMBER 11
In October  2001, Fukuyama  stated that his "end of history"
thesis remained  valid: that  after the  defeat of communism
and fascism,  no serious  ideological competitor to Western-
style liberal  democracy was likely to emerge in the future.
Thus, in terms of political philosophy, liberal democracy is
the end  of the evolutionary process. There will be wars and
terrorism, but  no alternative  ideology  with  a  universal
appeal will  seriously challenge  the principles  of Western
liberal democracy on a global scale.

The 9/11  attacks notwithstanding,  there is  nothing beyond
liberal democracy "towards which we could expect to evolve."
Fukuyama concluded  that there will be challenges from those
who resist progress, "but time and resources are on the side
of modernity."

Indeed, but is "modernity" on the side of liberal democracy?
Fukuyama is  very likely  right that the current crisis with
radical Islam  will be  overcome and  that there  will be no
serious ideological challenge originating outside of Western
civilization. However,  the activities  of the  NGOs suggest
that there  already is  an alternative  ideology to  liberal
democracy within  the West  that has  been steadily evolving
for years.

Thus, it  is entirely  possible  that  modernity--thirty  or
forty years  hence--will witness  not the  final triumph  of
liberal democracy,  but the emergence of a new transnational
hybrid regime  that is  post-liberal democratic,  and in the
American  context,  post-Constitutional  and  post-American.
This alternative  ideology,  "transnational  progressivism,"
constitutes a universal and modern worldview that challenges
both the  liberal democratic nation-state in general and the
American regime in particular.

TRANSNATIONAL PROGRESSIVISM
The key  concepts of  transnational progressivism  could  be
described as follows:

The ascribed  group over  the individual  citizen.  The  key
political unit  is not  the individual  citizen,  who  forms
voluntary  associations   and  works  with  fellow  citizens
regardless  of  race,  sex,  or  national  origin,  but  the
ascriptive group  (racial, ethnic, or gender) into which one
is born.

A dichotomy  of groups:  Oppressor vs.  victim groups,  with
immigrant  groups   designated  as   victims.  Transnational
ideologists  have   incorporated  the  essentially  Hegelian
Marxist "privileged vs. marginalized" dichotomy.

Group   proportionalism   as   the   goal   of   "fairness."
Transnational progressivism  assumes  that  "victim"  groups
should   be   represented   in   all   professions   roughly
proportionate to their percentage of the population. If not,
there is a problem of "underrepresentation."

The values  of all  dominant institutions  to be  changed to
reflect the perspectives of the victim groups. Transnational
progressives  insist   that  it   is  not   enough  to  have
proportional   representation   of   minorities   in   major
institutions if  these institutions  continue to reflect the
worldview of  the "dominant"  culture. Instead, the distinct
worldviews of ethnic, gender, and linguistic minorities must
be represented within these institutions.

The "demographic  imperative."  The  demographic  imperative
tells us that major demographic changes are occurring in the
U.S. as millions of new immigrants from non-Western cultures
enter American  life. The  traditional paradigm based on the
assimilation of  immigrants into  an existing American civic
culture is  obsolete and must be changed to a framework that
promotes "diversity," defined as group proportionalism.

The  redefinition  of  democracy  and  "democratic  ideals."
Transnational progressives have been altering the definition
of "democracy"  from that of a system of majority rule among
equal citizens  to one  of power sharing among ethnic groups
composed of both citizens and non-citizens. James Banks, one
of American  education's leading  textbook writers, noted in
1994 that "to create an authentic democratic Unum with moral
authority and  perceived legitimacy,  the pluribus  (diverse
peoples) must  negotiate and  share power."  Hence, American
democracy is  not authentic;  real democracy  will come when
the different  "peoples" that  live  within  America  "share
power" as groups.

Deconstruction of  national narratives  and national symbols
of democratic  nation-states in the West. In October 2000, a
UK government  report denounced the concept of "Britishness"
and declared  that British  history needed  to be  "revised,
rethought,  or   jettisoned."  In  the  U.S.,  the  proposed
"National  History   Standards,"  recommended  altering  the
traditional historical narrative. Instead of emphasizing the
story of  European settlers,  American civilization would be
redefined  as   a  multicultural   "convergence"  of   three
civilizations-Amerindian, West  African,  and  European.  In
Israel, a  "post-Zionist" intelligentsia  has proposed  that
Israel consider  itself multicultural  and  deconstruct  its
identity as  a Jewish  state. Even  Israeli foreign minister
Shimon Peres  sounded the  post-Zionist trumpet  in his 1993
book , in which he deemphasized "sovereignty" and called for
regional "elected  central bodies," a type of Middle Eastern
EU.

Promotion of  the concept of postnational citizenship. In an
important  academic   paper,  Rutgers  Law  Professor  Linda
Bosniak  asks   hopefully  "Can  advocates  of  postnational
citizenship ultimately  succeed in decoupling the concept of
citizenship from  the nation-state  in prevailing  political
thought?"

(9) The idea of transnationalism as a major conceptual tool.
Transnationalism  is   the  next   stage  of   multicultural
ideology.  Like   multiculturalism,  transnationalism  is  a
concept that  provides elites with both an empirical tool (a
plausible analysis  of what is) and an ideological framework
(a vision  of what should be). Transnational advocates argue
that globalization requires some form of "global governance"
because they  believe that  the nation-state and the idea of
national citizenship  are ill suited to deal with the global
problems of the future.

The same scholars who touted multiculturalism now herald the
coming  transnational   age.  Thus,   Alejandro  Portes   of
Princeton University  argues that transnationalism, combined
with large-scale  immigration, will  redefine the meaning of
American citizenship.

The promotion  of transnationalism  is an  attempt to  shape
this crucial  intellectual struggle  over globalization. Its
adherents  imply   that  one   is  either   in   step   with
globalization,  and   thus  forward-looking,  or  one  is  a
backward   antiglobalist.   Liberal   democrats   (who   are
internationalists  and   support  free   trade  and   market
economics) must  reply that  this is a false dichotomy--that
the  critical   argument  is   not  between  globalists  and
antiglobalists, but  instead over the form global engagement
should  take   in   the   coming   decades:   will   it   be
transnationalist or internationalist?

TRANSNATIONAL PROGRESSIVISM'S  SOCIAL BASE:  A POST-NATIONAL
INTELLIGENTSIA
The social base of transnational progressivism constitutes a
rising  postnational   intelligentsia   (international   law
professors,   NGO   activists,   foundation   officers,   UN
bureaucrats, EU  administrators, corporate  executives,  and
politicians.)    When     social    movements     such    as
"transnationalism" and  "global governance"  are depicted as
the result  of social  forces or  the movement of history, a
certain impersonal inevitability is implied. However, in the
twentieth century  the Bolshevik  Revolution,  the  National
Socialist revolution,  the New  Deal, the Reagan Revolution,
the Gaullist  national reconstruction  in  France,  and  the
creation of  the EU were not inevitable, but were the result
of the exercise of political will by elites.

Similarly, transnationalism,  multiculturalism,  and  global
governance,  like   "diversity,"   are   ideological   tools
championed by  activist elites,  not  impersonal  forces  of
history.  The  success  or  failure  of  these  values-laden
concepts will  ultimately depend upon the political will and
effectiveness of these elites.

HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVISTS
A good part of the energy for transnational progressivism is
provided by  human rights  activists, who consistently evoke
"evolving  norms  of  international  law."  The  main  legal
conflict between  traditional American liberal democrats and
transnational progressives  is ultimately  the  question  of
whether the  U.S. Constitution  trumps international  law or
vice versa.

Before the  mid-twentieth century, traditional international
law referred  to relations  among  nation-states.  The  "new
international   law"   has   increasingly   penetrated   the
sovereignty of  democratic nation-states.  It is  in reality
"transnational  law."   Human  rights   activists  work   to
establish  norms   for   this   "new   international   [i.e.
transnational] law"  and then attempt to bring the U.S. into
conformity with  a legal  regime whose  reach often  extends
beyond democratic politics.

Transnational progressives  excoriate American political and
legal practices  in virulent  language, as  if the  American
liberal  democratic   nation-state   was   an   illegitimate
authoritarian regime.  Thus, AI-U.S.A. charged the U.S. in a
1998 report  with "a  persistent and  widespread pattern  of
human rights  violations," naming the U.S. the "world leader
in high  tech repression."  Meanwhile, HRW issued a 450-page
report excoriating  the U.S.  for all types of "human rights
violations," even  complaining that  "the U.S. Border Patrol
continued to grow at an alarming pace."

ANTI-ASSIMILATION ON THE HOME FRONT
Many of  the same  lawyers who  advocate transnational legal
concepts are  active in  U.S. immigration law. Louis Henkin,
one of  the most  prominent scholars  of international  law,
calls for  largely eliminating  "the  difference  between  a
citizen and  a  non-citizen  permanent  resident."  Columbia
University  international  law  professor  Stephen  Legomsky
argues that  dual nationals holding influential positions in
the U.S.  should not  be required to give "greater weight to
U.S. interests, in the event of a conflict" between the U.S.
and the  other country in which the American citizen is also
a dual national.

Two leading  law professors  (Peter Spiro  from Hofstra  and
Peter Schuck  from Yale)  complain that  immigrants  seeking
American  citizenship   are  required   to   "renounce   all
allegiance" to  their old  nations." Spiro  and Schuck  even
reject the  concept of  the hyphenated  American and endorse
what they  call the  "ampersand" citizen.  Thus, instead  of
traditional "Mexican-Americans"  who are  loyal citizens but
proud  of  their  ethnic  roots,  they  prefer  postnational
citizens, who  are both  "Mexican &  American,"  who  retain
"loyalties" to  their "original  homeland" and  vote in both
countries.

University professor  Robert  Bach  authored  a  major  Ford
Foundation report  on new  and "established  residents" (the
word "citizen"  was assiduously  avoided) that advocated the
"maintenance" of  ethnic immigrant  identities and  attacked
assimilation as  the "problem in America." Bach later became
deputy director  for  policy  at  the  INS  in  the  Clinton
administration.

The financial backing for this anti-assimilationist campaign
has come  primarily from  the Ford  Foundation, which made a
conscious decision to fund a Latino rights movement based on
advocacy-litigation   and    group   rights.    The   global
progressives have  been aided--if  not  always  consciously,
certainly in objective terms--by a "transnational right." It
was a  determined Right-Left  coalition led  by  libertarian
Stuart Anderson,  who currently holds Bach's old position at
the INS, that killed a high-tech tracking system for foreign
students that  might  have  saved  lives  on  September  11.
Whatever their ideological or commercial motives, the demand
for "open  borders" (not  simply  free  trade,  which  is  a
different matter  altogether) by  the libertarian  right has
strengthened the Left's anti-assimilationist agenda.

THE EU AS A STRONGHOLD OF TRANSNATIONAL PROGRESSIVISM
The EU  is a  large  supranational  macro-organization  that
embodies  transnational   progressivism.  Its   governmental
structure is  post-democratic. Power  in the  EU principally
resides in  the European  Commission (EC)  and to  a  lesser
extent the European Court of Justice (ECJ). The EC, the EU's
executive body,  initiates  legislative  action,  implements
common policy,  and controls  a  large  bureaucracy.  It  is
composed of a rotating presidency and nineteen commissioners
chosen by  the member-states  and approved  by the  European
Parliament.  It   is  unelected  and,  for  the  most  part,
unaccountable.

A  white   paper  issued   by  the  EC  suggests  that  this
unaccountability  is   one  reason  for  its  success:"[the]
"essential source  of the success of European integration is
that [it]  is_independent from  national, sectoral, or other
influences." This  "democracy deficit"  represents  a  moral
challenge to EU legitimacy.

The substantive  polices advanced  by EU  leaders on  issues
such as "hate speech," "hate crimes," "comparable worth" for
women's pay,  and group  preferences are  considerably  more
"progressive" in  the EU  than in  the  U.S..  The  ECJ  has
overruled national parliaments and public opinion in nation-
states by  ordering the  British to incorporate gays and the
Germans to  incorporate  women  in  combat  units  in  their
respective military  services. The  ECJ even  struck down  a
British law  on corporal punishment, declaring that parental
spanking is  internationally recognized as an abuse of human
rights

Two Washington  lawyers, Lee  Casey and  David Rivkin,  have
argued that  the  EU  ideology  that  "denies  the  ultimate
authority of  the nation-state"  and transfers policy making
from elected  representatives  to  bureaucrats  "suggests  a
dramatic  divergence"  with  "basic  principles  of  popular
sovereignty once shared by both Europe's democracies and the
United States."

In international  politics, in  the period immediately prior
to 9/11,  the EU  opposed the  U.S.  on  some  of  the  most
important   global    issues,   including   the   ICC,   the
Comprehensive Test  Ban Treaty,  the Land  Mine Treaty,  the
Kyoto Global  Warming Treaty,  and  policy  towards  missile
defense, Iran,  Iraq, Israel,  China, Cuba, North Korea, and
the death  penalty. On  most of  these issues, transnational
progressives in  the U.S.--including  politicians--supported
the EU position and attempted to leverage this transnational
influence in  the domestic  debate. At  the same,  the  Bush
administration on  some  of  these  issues  has  support  in
Europe, particularly  from parts  of the  British  political
class and  public, and  elements of European popular opinion
(e.g., on the death penalty.)

After 9/11, while some European nation-states sent forces to
support the  U.S. in Afganhistan, many European leaders have
continued to  snipe at American policies and hamper American
interests in  the war  on terrorism.  In December  2001  the
European Parliament  condemned the  U.S.  Patriot  Act  (the
bipartisan antiterrorist  legislation that  passed the  U.S.
Congress overwhelmingly)  as "contrary to the principles" of
human rights because the legislation "discriminates" against
non-citizens.  Leading  European  politicians  have  opposed
extraditing  terrorist   suspects  to   the  U.S.  if  those
terrorists would  be subjected  to the death penalty. Even a
long-time Atlanticist,  like the  Berlin  Aspin  Institute's
Jeffrey Gedmin,  questions  the  "basis  for  a  functioning
alliance" between the U.S. and Western Europe.

Both, realists  and neoconservatives  have argued  that some
EU, UN,  and NGO  thinking threatens  to limit both American
democracy at  home and  American power  overseas. As  Jeanne
Kirkpatrick puts it, "foreign governments and their leaders,
and more  than  a  few  activists  here  at  home,  seek  to
constrain and  control American  power by means of elaborate
multilateral processes, global arrangements, and UN treaties
that limit  both our  capacity to  govern ourselves  and act
abroad."

CONCLUSION
Talk in  the West of a "culture war" is somewhat misleading,
because  the   arguments  over  transnational  vs.  national
citizenship, multiculturalism  vs. assimilation,  and global
governance vs. national sovereignty are not simply cultural,
but ideological  and philosophical.  They  pose  Aristotle's
question: "What kind of government is best?"

In America,  there is an elemental argument about whether to
preserve, improve,  and  transmit  the  American  regime  to
future generations  or  to  transform  it  into  a  new  and
different type  of polity.  We  are  arguing  about  "regime
maintenance" vs. "regime transformation."

The   challenge    from   transnational   progressivism   to
traditional American  concepts of  citizenship,  patriotism,
assimilation,  and   the  meaning  of  democracy  itself  is
fundamental. If our system is based not on individual rights
(as  defined   by  the   U.S.  Constitution)  but  on  group
consciousness (as  defined by  international  law);  not  on
equality of  citizenship but  on group  preferences for non-
citizens (including  illegal  immigrants)  and  for  certain
categories  of   citizens;  not   on  majority  rule  within
constitutional limits  but  on  power-sharing  by  different
ethnic,  racial,  gender,  and  linguistic  groups;  not  on
constitutional  law,   but  on  transnational  law;  not  on
immigrants  becoming   Americans,  but  on  migrants  linked
between transnational  communities;  then  the  regime  will
cease to  be "constitutional,"  "liberal," "democratic," and
"American," in the understood sense of those terms, but will
become in  reality  a  new  hybrid  system  that  is  "post-
constitutional,"  "post-liberal,"   "post-democratic,"   and
"post-American."

This intracivilizational  Western conflict  between  liberal
democracy and  transnational progressivism accelerated after
the Cold  War and should continue well into the twenty-first
century. Indeed,  from the fall of the Berlin Wall until the
attacks of September 11, the transnational progressives were
on the offensive.

Since September  11,  however,  the  forces  supporting  the
liberal-democratic nation  state have rallied throughout the
West.  In   the  post-9/11  milieu  there  is  a  window  of
opportunity for  those who  favor  a  reaffirmation  of  the
traditional norms  of liberal-democratic  patriotism. It  is
unclear whether  that segment of the American intelligentsia
committed to  liberal democracy  as it has been practiced on
these  shores   has  the   political  will   to  seize  this
opportunity. In  Europe, given  elite opinion,  the case for
liberal democracy will be harder to make. Key areas to watch
in both the U.S. and Europe include immigration-assimilation
policy; arguments  over international law; and the influence
of a civic-patriotic narrative in public schools and popular
culture.

FOURTH DIMENSION?
I suggest  that we  add a  fourth dimension  to a conceptual
framework of  international politics.  Three dimensions  are
currently  recognizable.   First,   there   is   traditional
realpolitik, the  competition  and  conflict  among  nation-
states (and  supranational states such as the EU). Second is
the competition  of civilizations,  conceptualized by Samuel
Huntington.  Third,   there  is  the  conflict  between  the
democratic world  and the  undemocratic world.  My suggested
fourth dimension is the conflict within the democratic world
between the  forces of  liberal democracy  and the forces of
transnational progressivism,  between  democrats  and  post-
democrats.

The  conflicts  and  tensions  within  each  of  these  four
dimensions   of   international   politics   are   unfolding
simultaneously and  affected by  each other, and so they all
belong in  a comprehensive understanding of the world of the
twenty-first century.  In hindsight,  Fukuyama is  wrong  to
suggest that  liberal democracy is inevitably the final form
of  political   governance,  the  evolutionary  endpoint  of
political philosophy,  because it  has become  unclear  that
liberal democracy  will defeat  transnational progressivism.
During the  twentieth  century,  Western  liberal  democracy
finally triumphed militarily and ideologically over National
Socialism and  communism, powerful  anti-democratic  forces,
that were,  in a  sense, Western ideological heresies. After
defeating its  current antidemocratic,  non-Western enemy in
what will  essentially be  a material-physical  struggle, it
will continue  to face an ideological-metaphysical challenge
from powerful  post-liberal democratic forces, whose origins
are Western,  but, which  could be  in the  words  of  James
Kurth, called "post-Western."


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