The Pete Quiñones Show - *Throwback* Reading Paul Gottfried's 'Liberalism vs Democracy' w/ C.Jay Engel
Episode Date: June 1, 2025110 MinutesPG-13C.Jay Engel is a writer and the host of the Contra Mundum Podcast.C.Jay joins Pete to read and comment on the "Liberalism vs. Democracy" chapter from Paul Gottfried's book, "After Libe...ralism."Contra MundumC.Jay's SubstackC.Jay's Twitter Pete and Thomas777 'At the Movies'Support Pete on His WebsitePete's PatreonPete's SubstackPete's SubscribestarPete's GUMROADPete's VenmoPete's Buy Me a CoffeePete on FacebookPete on TwitterBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-pete-quinones-show--6071361/support.
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C.J. Angle. How are you doing, C.J.?
Doing good. Thanks, Pete.
Thank you for coming and agreeing to do a reading with me.
Now, this is a longer chapter.
I don't know that we're going to get through the whole chapter,
but I think this is a really important chapter
in Paul Gottfried's book after a...
liberalism. So we were just before we started recording talking about Paul Godfrey, you actually just
finished doing a live stream with him. Talk a little bit about this book and why you were eager to
read from it. Well, anything Paul's written, I take very seriously. Paul's a very academic writer.
You know, like a lot of his commentary and stuff, it's very, you know, popular. But he's a very
dense academic writer. And the thing about Paul is he has a very wide grasp on all the various
contributions. And he has the ability to kind of sift through all the commentary over the centuries
and recognize which sources have been the most transformative. We know which ones you have to talk
about. You can't talk about liberalism in the 20th century without talking about, you know,
John Dewey or John Gray or people like that. So a lot of these more academic aspect of things,
he captures very well.
Even like a lot of us on the dissident, right, you know, we'll read people, but we don't
actually, he's, he's much more involved in the, the trajectory of the academy, you know,
over the, over the years, over the century.
So I think Paul is really good if you need to get a sense of where the, like, the basics
of officialdom came from.
So in terms of this book after liberalism, you know, he actually discusses this in chapter
one. It's impossible to define. We don't know what liberalism is. It's been used in so many different
contexts and so many different frameworks that it's hard really to pin it down. And you can't pin it down.
You have to define it every time you're going to address it. That's important to remember and
keep in mind when talking about people like James Lindsay, you know, other pro classical liberals
out there. We need to keep in mind that liberalism is incredibly difficult to define because of
its historical path. But it's also sort of one of those hegemonic phrases that you just
assume that you know because it's just part of our political discourse. But he points out that it's a
lot more difficult than that. So we'll probably get into some specifics related to that. But go ahead.
That's my take on the overall. Cool. All right. Well, let me share the screen up here.
And there we go. Very cool. All right. So we're hopping over chapter one to chapter two,
which is liberalism versus democracy.
And I think this is really where you start getting into the meat of it.
And he also does a really good job of hitting some history here.
So if you've heard me do readings before, stop me at any time to comment on anything,
even if it's mid-sentence.
I think the only person who's ever done that to me is AA, but I don't mind it at all.
Yeah, okay.
I'll see what I can do.
Liberalism versus democracy, liberal and democratic mentalities.
A process that drew attention at the turn of the century and even earlier was the movement from a bourgeois liberal into a mass democratic society.
Not all of those who observed this process made the same judgments about it.
Some including the European socialists and the founding generation of American social planners welcomed democratization.
Others, such as Max Weber, sorry, considered it to be an inevitable outcome of capitalism, technology, and the spread of,
of the electoral franchise.
Still others typified by Sir James Fitz James Stephen 1892 to 1894, prominent 1829 to 1894,
prominent jurist and a decidedly anti-egalitarian liberal protested that unseemingly haste protested
the unseemingly haste with which John Stuart Mill and his friends greeted the new Democratic age,
quoting, the waters are out and no human force can turn them back.
But I do not see why as we go with the stream, we need saying hallelujah to the river God.
Yeah, let's pause right there.
I mean, I think the idea for a lot of people, it's probably not new to your audience,
but the idea that there is this difference between democracy and liberalism, I think is new to a lot of people.
I mean, the phrase itself, liberal democracy or democratic liberalism, the two go hand in hand to so many people.
But like look at people like Victor Orban and how serious he is.
about the democratic interests of his own people require him to be illiberal.
So these two don't go hand in hand.
And we'll get, I think, a little bit more into the differences between liberalism.
But I think that right there is really important.
A lot of the original classical liberals in England were very anti-democratic.
They didn't trust the spirit of the masses and especially the ability of the new elite,
the merchant class, the capitalists, to basically use democracy.
see as a weapon for their own pursuit of, you know, material interests.
Yeah.
It was obvious to them where a lot of people now are just waking up to the fact that it can
be used as a weapon, where back then many had already seen it.
Yeah.
Or foresaw it.
The tension between liberalism and its successor ideology and between the social classes
embodying those ideas provides a recurrent theme in 19th century political debate.
Francois Guzot 1787 and 1874, the Huguenot Prime Minister under France's liberal July
monarchy and a distinguished historian of England considered democracy to be as much of a curse
as monarchical absolutism. As French Prime Minister in the 1840s, Gizot fought doggedly against the
extension of the limited franchise, the Sends, from property taxpayers to other French citizens.
Yeah, I mean, that right there is important, too.
Like, when we think of democracy, and I know it's kind of an overrated point,
a lot of people make fun of, you know, people distinguishing an American, you know,
government between, like, Republican and democracy and stuff.
And sometimes that is, like, overstated.
But there is a truth to the fact that mass democracy in the 20th century,
sort of the American 20th century model, is not the original Republican instinct.
In fact, you know, the original Republican, quote unquote, democratic instinct was very much anti-mass democracy.
They did not trust the extension of the – what he means by the franchise is the ability for everybody to vote, regardless of their class, regardless of their property status, their race, their sex, et cetera.
So the original, you know, trailblazers of liberalism were definitely not pro-mass democracy.
He distinguished sharply in his speeches and political tracks between those civil rights suitable for all citizens, such as freedom of worship and the vote.
By means of the second, Gizzo maintained the lower class could destabilize society, radically redistributing, redistributing property, and bringing resourceful demagogues to power.
he believed the bourgeoisie formed a class capacity those who would be guided by reason and their stake in society in directing the actions of government indeed yeah that's guided by reason because i've um studied a you know when you study objectivism at all right right whenever you see that like those three words together you immediately think uh you're you're
it jumps to one thing.
Right.
It's also, I mean, this is, this is sort of like, it is a contribution of like
enlightenment thinking and it affects objectivism, obviously, but it also permeates
into libertarianism, even certain trends of like Marxism and certain aspects of socialism,
just the idea that we can use reason, utilize it and guide society by our own expertise is
definitely an enlightenment, you know, holdover. Yes. Indeed, Guizot recommended the idea of creating a state
through representation, which would fully reflect the values of bourgeois electoral law, aristocracy.
Although in 1831, he fought to give representation to government functionaries and other professionals
who paid lower taxes than required for franchise eligibility, he nonetheless argued for the special
suitability of the upper middle class for political participation. Only that class combined wealth
with four with only that class combined wealth with formed intelligence. In other words,
the original liberalism was not at all interested in, you know, handing a power over to every,
you know, ghetto pop culture, you know, subsumed consumer, right? That was never the goal of
liberalism, much to probably the frustration of people like James Lindsay who think in these
absolutist individualist terms, you know, these original liberals, they never would have been interested
in, you know, sharing political power with the proletariat or the, you know, the cultural
deranged. Yeah, they certainly wouldn't be championing the Civil Rights Act. I mean, if you're,
confused about your own gender and you want to start chopping yourself to bits, maybe you shouldn't
have the vote.
The English jurist, William Leakey, who admired Gizzo, devoted his long polemical work,
Democracy and Liberty, 1896, to the polarity between liberal order and democratic equality.
Surveying England's parliamentary history in the second half of the 19th century,
Liki wrote,
Licky worried that a universal franchise was irreversibly changing both English society and
the English state.
Not surprisingly, his book appeared at a time when English socialism was becoming a political power,
and Leakey devotes more than 140 pages to analyzing the new radicalism.
In 1893, the Independent Labor Party officially came into existence in the Yorkshire Town of Bradford.
Since the elections of 1874, however, a vowed socialist had sat in the British Parliament,
and socialist labor unions had been around since the 1850s.
to the consternation of German liberals,
German socialists meeting in the Saxon town of Gotha,
had drafted a program in 1876 calling for public ownership of the means of production.
The Gotha socialists also demanded an entire battery of social programs
to be introduced by a properly democratized German state.
In France, the revolutionary socialist,
this is the, all right, here goes one,
Joel Gisde, sat in the chamber of deputies from 1893 on, and as Lucky reminded us,
Gisday in the Catechism Socialist presents the family as an odious form of property, one destined
to give away to a multiplicity of sexual relations for men and women alike.
Yeah, I think one of the points here is something that we all recognize now.
at the at the origin of these liberal or democratic movements you know there was a difference between them they didn't stem from the same impulse i guess is what i want to say here
you know they came america was sort of the first to unite these concepts in its own you know for his own purposes
but i think paul's point here is throughout the western european world germany france england etc these were very
different instincts.
Yeah.
All right.
One way to look at such social quarrels is to observe how dated they are.
These battles were supposedly waged between reactionary and democratic liberals.
Those liberals who were just in humanitarian, it has been argued, went with changing times,
while others who were not, such as the Franco, Italian economist and socialist, Vilvedo Paredo,
fell into bad company and even sometimes into fascism.
implicit in such view is the distinction that more and more modern liberals have drawn throughout
the 20th century between themselves and those they have replaced.
It is a purely strategic stance that minimizes the reality of past conflicts.
Like the mainstream New Deal liberal historiography in post-war America,
the liberal historical view stresses the natural progression of things by which the new
liberals took over from the old. Yeah, this is, this is important because like a lot of people who have
this, I mean, this is, this is classic like James Lindsay type stuff. Like everything is kind of reaching
its own conclusion. It's been onto trajectory for, you know, hundreds of years. In fact,
this was actually a sort of mentality that Murray Rothbard had early on, not later Murray Rothbard,
who recognized the function of the power elite, but early Murray Rothbard, he saw, like, if you read his
essay, you know, left right in the prospects of liberty.
It's all this, yeah.
Yeah, it's all this like this single meta narrative.
It's all like coming into fruition.
Everything's improving over time.
He definitely drops that at the end of his life.
When he talks about there's an essay on, you know, Mises's role or whatever, you know,
within Austrian economics, but he definitely drops this.
But the point is that a lot of people in the 20th century America do have this mentality
where, you know, some people took the wrong path.
but the liberal projects have been slowly improving, you know, over time.
And Gottfried's saying that actually, and this is one thing that Gottfried is really,
I wouldn't say it's unique to him, but it's something that he really is unique in terms of like overall traditional conservatives,
like who have this meta-narrative story of things.
He does emphasize discontinuity.
Paul Gottfried always recognizes that the New Deal replaced something before it.
and the post-1960s left replace the New Deal left.
And like there's all these discontinuities.
He doesn't see things in terms of this overall continuity.
That's something that Paul always emphasizes is that every historical epoch is unique to itself.
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Yeah, you're going to, you just did an episode on
the same thing, epochs, how things change, how, but it seems like it goes in cycles.
Yeah, but the current 20th century, like people who see America is sort of like the fruition
of all the best aspects of Western history and it's all culminated into America, they need
the overall narrative thing because every age has to be like an improvement.
It has to be this organic process.
And America is sort of at the top, like post-war America is like the ultimate end of history.
It's the end of man.
It's the best and most complete political system in terms of justice and wealth and inequality and all these things.
Whereas Gottfried says, you know, no, he denies the continuity there.
He says what we see in a liberal democracy in our age is basically a repudiation of, you know, historical epochs.
Yeah.
Anyone who looks at the, what the United States has become and says, oh, this is, this is the zenith.
you're insane
you're insane yeah
I mean it's just it's brainwashing
let's move on
it is possible to perceive
continuity in the movement
from a bourgeois liberal society
into a more democratic one
but that continuity is not the same
as direct continuation
as was noted by Max Weber
Joseph Schumperter
and other early 20th century
social commentators
rather we are dealing here
with a series of
points leading from a bourgeois into a post-bougeois age that is with a process of displacement
that went on for several generations. Thus, Weber focused on rationalization in analyzing the
movement from a bourgeois capitalist towards a bureaucratized socialist society. A liberal
bourgeois world created the secularist foundations and economic organization necessary for
socialist rule. Another pessimistic social commentator with liberal meetings, Joseph Schumpeter,
believed that the middle class concept of freedom encouraged the expression of critical opposition.
This tolerance undermined the belief system of an older liberal society and prepared the way
for social democracy. Yeah, so I think this is important because here we see, and Goffrey's going to get
into this more, I think, and I think he also does later in the book, but we always have to keep in mind
there's a big difference between what you might call historicist liberalism and universalist liberalism.
Historicist liberalism was the instinct that labeled itself liberalism, but within the context of a certain political paradigm.
And so the English liberals, you know, saw themselves basically as pursuing new avenues of freedom within the context of their own history, within the context of their own political, you know, horizon.
reasons. Whereas, and that's not the mentality that a lot of like objectivists, I'm, you know,
Iranians, but also like some libertarians and James Lindsay and other advocates of what they call
classical liberalism, they have a more universalist liberalism where the, the ethnicity, the cultural
context doesn't really matter. Every individual has these, you know, universal human rights.
And it doesn't really matter what the context, the political context is. These things are eternal.
and they're sort of transcended over all things.
That's universalist liberalism.
So what Gauphre is trying to say here is that, you know,
the original liberalism,
what's much more rooted within particular societies.
That's why German liberalism was different than English,
which was different than French, and so on.
Yeah.
But neither of those attempts by old-style European liberals
to find links between two distinctive social and political formations
denies the differences between them.
Both Weber and Schumpeter were looking at the condition
in which social changes took place,
and they note the overlaps as well as distinctions
between the epochsum question.
Panjatus, Condolus, I think that's correct.
That's as correct as I'm going to get it there.
Yeah, good enough.
Yeah.
A Germanophone Greek scholar,
whose work is not yet widely known,
breaks new ground in this respect.
Condolus examines the distinctions between liberal bourgeois
and mass democratically,
societies by looking at their literary and cultural artifacts.
Modern democracies differ from pre-modern ones, according to Condolus, in that they disassociate
citizenship from cultural and ethnic identities and in the way in which mass production affects
society.
Yeah, this is something I'm personally interested in.
And I think a lot of younger people might emphasize this even more than Paul does.
But we have to pay attention to how cultures, like the market, you know, the so-called free market, the capitalist space, the production of consumer goods.
They don't just respond to consumer interests.
They often direct them.
They often change the culture itself.
And they're often placed into culture with the objective of transforming them.
And so the emphasis on what has mass production done to society, I think is something that right-wingers,
need to continue to emphasize, you know, much more than liberals.
You kind of see as this neutral space, wherever the free market is,
there's like just, you know, cultural neutrality there.
But I think that Condalus is entirely correct that the entire, you know,
cultural landscape can change just by the introduction of mass production.
Well, it also seems like a lot of the economics that you see pushed from, like,
libertarians is doesn't really take into account what we've seen as far as globalism,
as far as advances in technology itself, also social engineering, things like that.
Exactly.
It exists in a vacuum.
You can make it work in a vacuum.
But when you have to introduce it to, I mean, can you imagine like all of a sudden
the United States just dropped all its regulations on trade and manufacturing and just went,
okay, go.
Yep.
I mean, that's something that Mises would have been okay with.
Rothbard probably would have wanted the state.
Rothbard would have wanted the state out of the way.
But, you know, it's still, you look at that and you're like, okay, I understand why you want
to do this because you see what government and what.
what quote unquote cronyism, that word that they love so much does, yet you're not taking
into account what Condoleus is talking about here, talking about disassociating citizenship
from cultural and ethnic identities.
Right.
What that does to what that does when you have, because if you have a free market, you
also have no borders because you're going to have free trade.
Yeah.
It also universalizes and it makes uniform world culture.
I mean, the more you extend, I mean, this is actually, this is controversial,
but this is actually a point that Lenin makes.
You know, as you extend the capitalist order, you're going to do away with old cultures.
It's inevitable that everything is going to become homogeneous culturally when you do this.
Yep.
If I can cite him.
Perfectly.
I mean, I read through all of state and records.
revolution on this show. So, yeah, there, Lenin is not a, he's not a friend of the show.
Right. He's definitely been a big part of the show. Well, he's got insights that are worth
learning from, you know. Oh, yeah. I'm not going to be autistic about it. Well, and sometimes if you
even read Rothbard, it almost seems like the dialect, like his dialectical style is Lenin's.
Yeah, yeah, for sure. For sure. Like he stole, like he bred Lenin and he decided to use that
dialectical style, which I don't think is a bad thing. Because I think Lenin was, was definitely the most
intelligent of all of them.
Right.
And what, by the way, what Lenin is critiquing is not some Messisian paradise, but he's
critiquing basically the managerial capitalism.
Right.
Yeah.
All right.
The modern as opposed to pre-modern, the modern as opposed to pre-modern Democrat is not
continually situated and has a fluid cultural identity being shaped by a consumer economy.
Yep.
That's a sentence right there, man.
It is.
Yeah.
the consumer economy shapes man.
Man doesn't shape the consumer economy.
That's important.
Yeah.
As I said social engineering, it just doesn't, it's, you're not taking that into account
when you're talking about this free, quote unquote, free market.
Yep.
He also inhabits a culture that remains hostile to the older liberal universe.
Postmodernism in literature and literary criticism, Condolus argues,
is the latest in a series of cultural strategies aimed at subverting the 19th century liberal
order. The refusal to recognize a fixed or authoritative meaning for inherited texts, which is
characteristic of postmodernism, represents an assault upon liberal education. Contrary to the world of
moral and semantic order presided over by an ethical deity, which bourgeois liberals preached,
the postmodernists exalt indeterminacy. They decry the acceptance of tradition in discourse as well as in
political matters as a fascist act of domination or as the inadmissible allowance of the past to
intrude upon the present. And I would say even the future.
The future, I agree. The other thing I want to say too, and this is kind of in passing,
but the idea of describing the older, this is what he's describing here, the older liberal
order as fascistic is something that when Gottfried wrote, when did he write this? What was this,
1990s, right? Is it 98, 99?
Yeah, 99.
So, yeah, so the idea that this would be determined fascist was probably seen by its readers as, like, dramatic.
But look at everything that's called fascist.
Everything that your grandma held just instinctually is now fascist.
I mean, Godfrey was on the cutting edge of recognizing where all this was going.
Yeah, that's why when people, that's why I tell people when they're like gushing over James Lindsay,
I'm like, Paul Gottfried gave this to you 25 years ago.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
Nowhere does Condolus call for the eradication of post-Mont.
modernism or make the facile assumption that by opposing it, the present generation can resurrect
the bourgeois world.
He contends that liberal and mass democratic societies are not only distinct but mutually antagonistic,
and that antagonism has expressed itself culturally as well as socioeconomically.
Yeah, this is where just the neoconservatives, and I say that in a time where,
when everybody hates the neoconservatives,
but I really just mean 20th century American ideal,
Americanist ideology.
They, they really, people need to recognize,
and we need to push this even harder,
that mass democracy, democracy, the, you know,
the extended vote,
and all the people that are pro-civil rights regime,
all this stuff,
these are the mechanisms by which the old liberalism are being destroyed.
So these, like a lot of people try to ballot,
like mainstream people,
they try to balance like democracy and liberalism as like these unified you know you know paths forward or whatever but they are not you know one is eating the other the old american bourgeois liberal order that existed in the 19th century is being eaten alive by mass democracy
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For over 100 years, bourgeois liberalism has been underwent.
under attack from authors and artists presenting views about human nature and the nature of existence
antithetical to bourgeois convictions.
Materialism, atheism, and pluralism have been three such worldviews, which the bourgeoisie
long viewed with justifiable suspicion.
Deconstructionism is a more recent form of cultural criticism aimed at inherited assumptions about
meaning.
By now, Condolus maintains the old liberals have been reduced to a rear-guard struggle.
While watching, I'm not going to pronounce the, the German word, while watching their opponents take over culture and education.
But the reason for this reduced liberal presence, Condolus explains, is not an insidious contamination by a cultural industry separated from the rest of society.
Cultural radicals have done well in mass democracies because they continue to target the liberal order that the Democrats deposed.
the cultural
the cultural opposition
continues to mobilize
even after the political war has ended
right this is
this is also an insight of people like
Gramsci right like he recognizes
that like they can capture power
but the cultural revolution
it has to continue going the moment
it stops it falls apart
like people think oh the you know the trans stuff
is like ridiculous and silly and goofy
it's actually not you have to come up with
something you have to continue
to advance it in some direction.
Otherwise, it stops.
And you can't have a revolution that stops.
If you have a revolution that stops,
you could, you know, that's when you get the momentum that goes to reactionaries.
You know, the second they stop creating new things to terrorize us with culturally,
that's when we'll gain our footing.
So, you know, a lot of people think, oh, when is this going to stop?
You know, why didn't it stop with the gays?
Why is it going to trade?
Why is it going to pedophiles now?
It's because there has to be a new thing.
The cultural revolution has to continue more.
mobilizing even after the political war has ended.
If you're going to have progressivism, there has to be constant progress.
That's why people concentrating too hard on the transgender thing and just concentrating on
that, they don't understand that you really should be looking at what comes next.
And I think that by reading what we've already read before, we can see that Paul, that's the genius
of Paul is he's like, he's not stuck where he is.
He's looking 20 years, 25 years down the road.
and he's like, okay, where are we going to be?
Right, right.
Victorian rigidity, social status, and elitist attitudes about education have all remained
the butts of academic and literary criticism, and the opposition points back to the conditions
of strife in which mass democracy arose.
This cultural insurgency, Condoleus observes, draws strength from a subversive source
that once served liberalism in its war against the past.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
I see liberalism was something that came about on the scene of world history because it was attacking something that came before.
You know, the political interest at the time of the rise of liberalism needed to confront it, you know, subversively, basically.
And we're talking back, we're talking back at like, you know, Oliver Cromwell and stuff and when the birth of some of these, you know, tendencies could be found.
So today, liberalism has basically, you know, come into the establishment.
It is the establishment view of things.
But now it's being opposed by something that also has to be culturally subversive.
Yep.
Here we start getting into ruffling feathers.
The Enlightenment tradition of critical rationalism was crucial for the war of ideas waged by the bourgeoisie and its defenders against the remnants of an older world.
Despite the attempt to integrate this outlook into a bourgeois vision of life, Enlightenment rationalism has played a new,
destructive role as the instrument of a war against a bourgeoisie on behalf of openness,
skepticism, and material equality.
Yeah, I mean, this is, you know, not to oversight, you know, Edmund Burke.
I mean, but this is, this is exactly what he said.
You know, the moment you start playing with society like this, it has to continue forever.
You know, so enlightenment, rationalism is going to come up with this new, you know,
like this new series of reasons why, you know, like homosexuality is, is reactionary, right?
It's always going to come with something crazier.
And it's going to be justified with, you know, quote unquote reason.
Yeah.
And this is the reason why maybe you can look to Lindsay for certain, someone like James Lindsay
for certain things, but you can't look to him for answers because this, his answer is
the Enlightenment.
His answer is continual change.
he just sees his change, the change that he desired has taken a detour.
Exactly.
He wants to go on the, you know, he sees the trans stuff and all, you know, the wokeness.
He sees that as the enemy of progress, whereas there's a certain group that sees that as the progress.
He's just, they're on, they're on the same road.
Yeah.
They're on, they've just, it's a fork in the road.
But both of those.
roads leads a destruction.
Exactly.
Yeah.
All right.
These pointed observations about the culture of mass democracy do not deny the fact that
cultural differences exist among Democrats.
Deconstructionists and liberal democratic absolutists still fight over the values to be taught
in history and literature courses.
And I don't even know if they do that anymore.
That might be one that's, I mean, do they?
Yeah, I don't know.
Yeah.
Who knows?
and some advocates what yeah go ahead and some advocates of post-war war two abstract expressionism such as hilton kramer
have now come to oppose latter schools of art as relative cultural traditionalists yeah exactly like
yeah this is this is why like like jfk and stuff is now like a right-wing traditionalist you know
nonetheless radically anti-boisgloan movements have remained powerful in our cultures as master
democracy continues to struggle against the remains of an older heritage.
In the United States, traditional liberal and agrarian democratic forces stayed alive
into the 20th century and resisted the inroads of the Democratic administrative state.
I wonder how, if you go to the nonetheless sentence there, I wonder if he would
update this to, I wonder how much of a struggle there actually is.
between the older heritage and the mass democracy.
I can't, it's, it's hard to find an institution that's fighting for something older.
Right.
You know, I think it's like mass democracy versus the new left, basically now.
Yeah, I mean, it's like who's struggling?
Chronicles.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
Yeah, there's no one fighting for the older heritage, nobody.
Mass democracy needed a cultural as well as political strategy to triumph.
and the values and concepts juggled by our literary and now media elites are keys to the emergence of a post-liberal society and politics.
Condolus also makes clear that mass democracy could not have developed without the demographic and economic revolutions that transformed Western Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Industrialization, an urban working class, the disappearance of a family-based craft economy, and the operation of a family-based craft economy, and the operation of,
assembly line production where the factors,
Condolus observes, contributing to mass democracy.
Yeah, I mean, mass democracy could not have happened if it wasn't for the industrial,
the industrial revolution, basically is what he's saying here.
Right.
And this one part here, the disappearance of the family-based craft economy.
I didn't, it wasn't until I read Werner-Sombart that I, that, it blew my mind.
It was like, yeah, that's.
That's when you once you, you can see how Walmart exists.
Once you see how the family-based craft economy, the tailor, the specialty shop,
how that just is moved out.
And now you get cheap, cheap crap from pretty much anywhere.
Right.
Exactly.
It's funny.
I know everyone talks about how everything's made in China.
But so my family, my wife's family is German.
and her mom basically came from Germany in the 90s when she got married because my father-in-law
was stationed over there.
So she goes back to her village where they've been making crafts for hundreds, maybe thousands
of years, you know, the same village, the same rural village.
And she was just absolutely dismayed to go back to the same village.
And you see all the products that they've been selling for a long time are basically
imitations of the older products.
and they all have stamps made in China.
And I know everyone recognizes it and talks about it,
but it's just it permeates every aspect of the old European world
and people pretend like consumerist capitalism is culturally neutral.
It's a complete lie.
Like the entire rural village has been transformed just by the mass production of these goods.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, hey, as long as it's cheaper, that's all that matters.
right?
As long as the line is going up, everything's fun.
Yes, exactly.
Exactly.
Although Imperial Rome experienced the concentration of uprooted proletari in its swelling,
strife-ridden cities, it could not have produced a modern political movement because
it lacked both mass production and mass consumption.
Earlier societies had to deal with perpetual scarcity and with the need to share limited
resources in a communal setting.
The modern West, by contrast, provides more and more material gratification to socially isolated individuals.
Just the way libertarians want it.
Yeah.
I mean, just as long as I have Instacart and, you know, porn on demand.
Yeah, we're good to go.
Yeah.
Its politics are therefore predicated on hedonism and individual self-actualization values that give an ethical dimension to a consumer economy.
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Yeah, the ethics, the ethics sort of justifies what's happening economically.
Yes.
Mass Democratic politics also advocates material equality as opposed to the exclusively formal
or legal equality preached by 19th century liberals.
By stressing-
Actually, sorry, keep interrupting, but it's funny.
Like there's one of the essays by Mises, and I have these examples in my head, because
you and I both came from that world, but I have this story of Mises.
I'm trying to remember what book it's in.
It might be in his interventionist book, but he basically says that, you know, we capitalists
don't disagree with the interventionists in terms of our shared desire for a material
equality is just that we have different paths to get there. So he says, you know, his view, the liberal
view is that by the capitalist free market economy, we can provide the same type of material equality
that the interventionists are also trying to do by their own means. But, you know, now becoming a right
winger, I actually don't care all that much for a material equality at all. It doesn't phase me.
It doesn't enter into my, you know, priority scale.
By stressing the ties between modern democracy and material pleasure, Condolus also
explains why modern democracy cannot appeal effectively in the long run to an ethic of austerity.
At the end of the 18th century, both American and French revolutionaries invoked classical ideals
of Republican simplicity, a practice found preeminently in the political writings of Rousseau.
Self-indulgence and luxury were viewed as aristocratic flaws and among 19th century French
Republicans as upper middle class vices.
Democratic and later socialist revolutionaries even tried to exemplify the moral conduct which they hope to enforce in a society of equals.
The Jacobin socialist Louis August Blanke lived and dressed like a priest, and the self-proclaimed Republican Senegal in Gustav Flaubert's novel, Le Education sentimentale, is made to appear eccentric.
in his extreme pursuit of virtue.
Seneca is shown embracing dietary and sexual restraints and scorning sumptuous living.
In a similar vein, Black Marxist president of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, has denounced
the homosexuals in his homeland.
Mugabe is outraged that sodomists and sexual perverts continue to be found there and scoffs
at the idea of rights for those given to bestiality.
Yeah, this is so funny to me because, I mean, I think what Paul Gottfried is trying to communicate
here is a lot of these very anti-liberal people are actually more like just instinctually
culturally conservative than today's left and today's quote unquote right you know all the people
that are you know seeking freedom and liberty against you know the democratic lip totalitarianism
or whatever they don't realize that they're all using the same far left phraseology that
were opposed by all these anti-liberals it's fascinating to me I mean I think it's hilarious
when these like Marxist revolutionaries in the third world are against like sodomy.
That's just hilarious.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, and an American, American quote unquote socialist, they don't get it.
And they have to make excuses for it.
And what do they do?
They make cultural excuses.
Oh, thank you very much.
Yeah.
It's like it's like the Republicans, like when they point out that like, you know,
Stalin was anti-LGB and you're like, oh, so Stalin was kind of based.
It's interesting.
It's like, there's something I agree with them on.
all of these revolutionary democratic or socialist appeals to public virtue hark back to
Republican models that Condolus views as incompatible with mass democracy.
What distinguishes the latter from the former, in his opinion, is the prevalence of hedonism
associated with mass production and mass consumption.
This ethos expresses itself as a ceaseless desire for consumption combined with resentment
against those who have more access to pleasure.
Yeah, see, this is like, this is how I would, right here,
this is how I would describe the uniqueness of the American situation.
You know, people always want to say that we're becoming,
this is a classic James Lindsay, right?
We're becoming like communist Russia or whatever.
We're coming like communist China.
Actually, those communist experiments were very much focused on austerity.
They were very much focused on denying material gratification,
denying pleasures to the point where you basically had a miserable life.
We're on the opposite end of the scale.
Like the entire point of the American regime is to make us just absolutely sick and disgusted with titillation, with pleasure.
Like we're living on Pinocchio's Pleasure Island and sort of like mandated prosperity.
All right.
It was the failure of liberalism.
Excuse me.
It was the failure of liberalism from the standpoint of mass democracy to move decisively enough toward material equality and individual self-expressive.
that led to its undoing.
The defenders of bourgeois liberalism
temporized when faced by the sociological evidence
of inequality in their own society.
They claim to be more interested in freedom
than in the further pursuit of equality,
but were also more committed to family cohesion
and gender distinctions than to individual freedom.
The reason for this is clear, according to Condolus,
bourgeois liberals were both economic innovators and perpetrators of an urban civilization going back to the middle ages.
In their heyday, they spoke about sweeping change, but they were never as dedicated to the social and cultural implications of a consumer economy as were those who replaced them.
Yeah, that's so, you know, that's so fascinating to me.
just drawing this distinction between old school liberalism and how much it would be opposed to James Lindsay's consumer-based liberalism.
You know, this sort of like modern democratic 20th century American liberalism has almost nothing in common with the old liberalism.
And that's, I think, what Coffrey's trying to communicate here is we live in a world that's post-industrial revolution.
The entire economic world order has changed.
And therefore, the type of liberalism that you're going to see is going to change with it.
Basic to the thesis is the recognition that liberalism is a bourgeois ideology, a set of ideas and principles indissolubly tied to the Western middle class.
This does not mean that liberal principles are reducible to material interest, nor that they should be dismissed as a pretext for economic exploitation.
In the early 1950s, John Plamanets tried to separate ideology from the pejorative association, association,
associations many Marxists had loaded onto that term.
According to Plaminat, the word ideology is not used to refer only to explicit beliefs and theories.
Those who speak of bourgeois ideology often mean by its beliefs and attitudes implicit in the bourgeois way of speaking and behaving,
and sometimes they speak of bourgeois theories and doctrines as if they did little more than explicit these beliefs and attitudes.
understood in the cultural sense and not simply as a theoretical instrument of self-justification,
liberalism exemplifies bourgeois ideology.
It designates not just liberal ideas, but also their social setting.
That is, the context without which liberalism becomes merely disembodied concepts or slogans.
Yeah, this is what I was talking about before.
You know, original bourgeois liberalism came from, like what he just said there, like a social setting.
It came from a certain context.
But when you try to rip those principles out of their context and apply them to the world today as this universalist and transcendent political principle, you transform the function of liberalism from a culturally contextual function into basically a world revolutionary project.
When Benjamin Constant and Francois Guizu argued for a political just Melu in the 1820s, in the 1820s, in the,
the form of constitutional monarchy, they were not simply advocating moderation or an Aristotelian
golden mean. They were looking at the educated hot bourgeoisie as a natural leadership class
that could maneuver between the equally disastrous shoals of absolute monarchy and democracy.
Gizot identified that class with the modern nation state. He believed that this political order
and the bourgeois and the bourgeoisie would benefit.
from their historically necessary association.
This cultural context does not mean that the French doctrinaires, as the constitutional
liberals in post-Napolianic France called themselves, had nothing to teach of our own generation.
It is, rather, to insist on the need to avoid tendacious parallels, which arrange past
figures and past movements in accordance with current appetites for a use of.
past.
Yeah, this is, I mean, yeah, we have to avoid it.
But if there's anything that describes the modern age, it's exactly this.
They're arranging all these, you know, they're lining up past figures that they consider
good and past figures that they consider bad.
And basically, like, this is what the whole thing about like everybody is, you know,
Hitler or whatever.
That's exactly what's going on here.
They're arranging them in accordance with current appetites, you know.
So that's, yeah, that's exactly what he people, Paul will say that we'll say that we
need to avoid this, but this actually deeply characterizes our ideological formulation today.
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What I am emphasizing here is the need for sexualization, the avoidance of which typifies
contemporary zealotry. Appeals to human rights as historically unbounded absolutes now resound in political
debates in which opposing sides accuse each other of relativizing values.
Wards and social policies are justified by invoking self-evident truths, even though what is
true in these truths may be different now from what seems self-evident about them 200 years ago.
Pointing this out is not the same as relativizing all truth.
It is only to question the opportunistic and decontextualized use to which the past has been
has been bent.
He's basically critiquing.
Yeah, he's critiquing historicism.
Or he's critiquing universalism from a historicist mentality.
You have to look at things in their original context.
English liberalism is not the same as American liberalism.
And to treat them as the same is basically to engage in propaganda.
Yeah.
The decontactualization of liberalism can happen in two ways.
either when we place liberalism into an eternal present going back and forth in time,
or else when we make it real history into a stepping stone to the present.
A particularly striking case of this comes up in F.G. Bratton's The Legacy of the Liberal Spirit
in 1943, a once widely esteemed defense of the liberal heritage. In his preface, Bratton
explains that liberalism is not to be viewed as a 19th century phenomena ending with the Second World War,
as an attitude towards
life, it has a history
of 2,500 years.
It goes back to the age
of reason and the
Reformation and to earlier distant
attempts to establish intellectual freedom
and the life of reasons.
In the journey that follows
from Plato through Jesus to John Dewey,
Bratton celebrates thinkers
who he believes have pointed in his
own direction. Thus, he
favorably contrasts
one North African Christian Platon,
origin with another Augustine presenting the first as a proto-liberal and the second as an obscurantist.
Yeah, basically Paul's saying that it's cheating to say that like all the good things throughout
history were liberal and anticipated our age, right?
And all the bad things were forks in the road that people went in the wrong direction.
It's it's basically part of creating an ideological hegemony in our time.
Yeah, and you see this.
This is not only with liberals, classical, everyone does this.
Right.
Everyone knows this.
In liberalism, John Gray also assigns liberal ratings to thinkers who lived long before the liberal era.
Gray praises Pericles, funeral oration, or its reconstruction by the historian Thucydides for its statement of a liberal egalitarian and individualist principles.
This is basically what the neoconservatives do.
Like if you read like Leo Strauss, Paul is really critical.
of Leo Strauss
precisely here
where he basically says
that you can find
aspects of American
liberal democracy
in the Greeks
and then he goes to the Romans
and you can just go
throughout history
and find all the good ones
and say this
America perfected
all of these tendencies
you know it's cheating
yeah
he thereby ignores
the pervasive stress
in that speech
on living for the public good
which was paradigmatic
for ancient Greek democracy
yeah
modern
modern liberal individualism
existed only insipiently, if at all, in Greek antiquity, a point documented in works by
N. D. Fustle de Colanges, I'm trying to remember how to pronounce that. I think it's DeColanger.
DeColongue. DeColongue. Yeah. Fustle de Colange, the ancient city to Paul Ra's
Republic's ancient and modern. Among the readings of liberalism, which try to
to shove its past into a triumphalist present are the academic apologetics discussed in the first
chapter. In all fairness, it should be said that even probing critics of contemporary liberalism
ascribe it to an excessively long genealogy. Christopher Lash, John P. Diggins, and the ethical
philosopher Alistair McIntyre have all written critically on the liberal heritage, which they believe
has descended more or less intact from earlier centuries.
Yeah, I think one of the things that Paul would say here is it's what you can't do in history
is reach back into specific contexts and take a phrase.
I'm someone who spent a lot of time in Christian circles.
Protestant Christians do this all the time.
They'll reach back in history and take a phrase.
Catholics do it too.
But like we'll take a phrase and they'll basically just apply.
current meanings to it in order to justify their association with that past figure.
And that's what he's describing here is you can't say because Greeks use democracy and we use
democracy.
We're basically like the Greeks who are on our side and we can cite someone from history.
That's that's ridiculous.
Yeah.
Faith and material progress as a means of solving moral problems, a buoyant skepticism about
religious questions and especially in Diggins analysis, individual autonomy at the
end of social policy are all, in their opinion, permanent aspects of the liberal worldview.
So, yeah, people who want to hold on to liberalism and are Christians, Catholics, I mean,
inherent in it, especially since the Enlightenment has been a buoyant skepticism about religious
questions.
Mm-hmm.
I mean, that anyone could deny that, dismiss it.
or try and poo-poo it away is insane to me.
It's just what it is.
Yep.
This worldview is thought to define liberalism,
whether it preaches a free market economy
or the need for social democracy.
Diggins and other perceptive commentators
contend that people would not go on for generations
speaking about a liberal heritage unless one truly existed.
Those who admired John Dewey and John Rawls
could, for the same reason,
find something in Adam Smith and John Locke to admire.
Otherwise, they would not fix the same label upon all of those.
Maiter and I don't know what that means.
I didn't look it up.
The view of a liberal heritage is, furthermore,
based on a reliable axiom and historical research
that a long-term and widely held belief in the persistence
and integrity of a movement cannot be entirely illusory.
Note that while classical liberal John Gray sees his own liberalism transformed by modern social Democrats,
he nonetheless searches for shared ground between himself and them.
But this approach raises its own methodological difficulties.
It overlooks several generations of agitated debates between liberals and Democrats.
These debates include Gizot's warnings about the sovereignty of numbers and Stevens
assaults on John Stuart Mill's faith
that all people should live in a society as equals.
Indeed, much of the political debate in Western Europe
from the second half of the 19th century
into the early decades of the 20th
testifies to the deep divisions
between old-fashioned liberals
and democratic reformers.
Yeah, I mean,
liberal democracy as this natural,
historically prevalent uniting force
is what Paul's deacon
instructing here.
Yeah.
The French anthropologist Louis Dumont in Homo Achilles treats as the unifying theme of
modern, of the modern West, the rise of individualism within the world.
Would you argue that?
Yeah.
No, I think, are you asking if I think, uh, you think he's right there?
Oh, no.
No, I don't, I don't think, I don't think that's the unifying thing with the modern rest.
I think that's an aspect of certain tendencies within the modern West.
I think it's a weapon.
I think it's a weapon that's wield it.
Well, I think what it is is it's something, it's part of the American ideology's version of things, I would say.
Okay.
Sounds good.
Unlike the ascetic ideals of medieval Christianity and Eastern contemplative religions,
Western modernity has been characterized by the belief that individual fulfillment should take place within society.
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And now this is over the hamsterer.
It's leargoal to doer gleehe and not art greeing in Aundun,
and leant to gaol to give a time of a day.
In Ergaret, we're taking tour tauchy in one-hae
with Fonivens,
the one of them
to do you know
on the English
a hundred
lecturers,
on the same time,
and people
tariff at Wendt
their own
to ask you.
There's a
cooctue
to Agen.
Follam Nis more
in Ergaret Pongahy.
This individual
consciousness,
Dumot explains,
does not require
that people withdraw
from a hierarchical
world based on
status relations.
To the contrary,
it has encouraged
an individual
seeking success
and self-expression
to find it
in a changing
and increasingly
atomized society.
Yeah, I really do think, though, that, you know, the idea of modernity being defined in
this way, I think this is actually the unique expression of the American version of the
modern age.
I don't think you can see a lot of this.
I mean, because, like, you would have to consider a lot of the reactionary movements
in France and Germany and England.
Anyone from, like, anyone from, like, Mosley to Miscellini, anyone like that, you know,
all these people were basically modernists,
and none of them had an individualist view of the world.
Right. Okay.
Yeah, I'm talking about America.
Okay.
Dumont's analysis treats the intellectual history of the Western world
as a steady movement towards expressive individualism
from the Protestant Reformation to the rise of a contractual view
of civil society in John Locke and in other early liberal theorists.
I do agree with that.
I do agree that there was a major strain of this individualism.
perhaps working itself out for sure.
Implicit in this interpretive perspective is distressed by the German sociologist Fernando
Tonis on the movement from traditional communities to functionally oriented and highly mobile
societies. Dumas focuses on the cultural and intellectual basis underlying Tony's transition
from Geimenschoft to Geiselchoft and he places that transition into a continuum of
going back to the early modern period.
Dumont's thematic stress on individualism within the world underscores a problem found
in explorations appealing to root causes.
They account for both too much and too little.
By citing a single force that is made to account for modern culture, Dumont ignores the
distinctiveness that marks specific phases of Western history from the Reformation onward.
Yeah, that's what I was saying.
it's because I was saying it accounts for too much.
So I agree here.
I agree with Paul.
Though clearly he knows that the Protestant idea of the individual experience of divine grace
has little to do with contemporary views of individual self-gratification,
Dumas' interest in cultural continuity leads him to play down such a difference.
His study of individuality in the West causes him to overlook short-term cultural changes,
even those with powerful cumulative effects.
to the extent that our own study deals with two successive epochs, which Dumas disregards, is for us significant.
Moreover, liberal democracy has accelerated some aspects of that long-range process outlined by Dumont, while making others less important.
Material redistribution as a means of individual fulfillment has become basic to our own liberal democratic age, while the cohesion of the nuclear family has grown weaker as liberalism.
has lost out to liberal democracy.
Differences and values can be perceived in short-term political transformations,
even if the general trend of modernity is what Dumont describes.
Critics of the old bourgeois liberalism are finally too hasty in linking liberal concern
about the social question to economic interests.
As Gertrude Himmelfarb has demonstrated with regards to Victorian attitudes about work
and philanthropy, questions of character formations.
and family responsibility were tied together in the Victorian middle-class mind.
Himmelfarb argues that such an association was not a threadbare defense of low factory wages
or of the lack of public works programs.
Did you know Helmelfarb was Bill Crystal's mom?
What?
Yeah, I think it's Bill Crystal's mom.
Mother.
Yeah, she married Irving Crystal.
Okay.
I'm going to look that up after this.
I hope I'm right.
I'm pretty sure I'm right.
Okay.
Rather, it came from widely shared assumptions about the social good.
The broad middle class extending from bankers and mill owners to shopkeepers and church canons
rejected a welfare state conception of government because of what they assumed were its socially destructive effects.
It's interesting here that the old liberals he's describing as being opposed to welfare and all that.
like if you ask a current day liberal like someone from the libertarian party or like james
lindsay or something you know why we should be opposed to welfare first of all james jim james
lindsay wouldn't be that opposed to welfare but generally it would say because it you know treads
on individual rights in their freedom and all this but you know these these within the social
context the socially situated situation where old liberalism found itself they were mostly
concerned to about the socially destructive effects you
you know, the effects on their ability as a family to function cohesively and continuously
throughout the generations.
I mean, this is very much, the old liberalism was very much historicist instead of
the universalist.
It's interesting to me.
Yeah.
Where did I?
Where do?
Okay.
Even if modern liberals disagree with these judgments, their disagreement does not justify
substituting their own adaptation for the liberal tradition.
Whether welfare state Democrats and.
public administrators have refined or degraded the original article is beside the point.
What they have done is changed that article in ways that would make it unrecognizable to earlier
generations. Nor will it do to speak of the failure of earlier liberals to see the world like
modern liberals. If they had seen the world differently, they would not have been liberals,
but social democratic advocates of public administration.
American historian John Kloppenberg accounts for Weber.
liberal skepticism about such concepts as the will of the people by pointing to the longer context
of German history. Weber, as interpreted by Kloppenberg, could not imagine the meaningful
practice of egalitarian politics because, quote, Germany had no tradition of popular sovereignty,
and liberals repeatedly put their faith in elites rather than democracies to accomplish their goals.
true 19th century German bourgeois thought did not produce as much radical ferment as its English and French counterparts.
But Weber's liberal doubts about the people's capacity to rule were not restricted at the turn of the century to Germanophone observers.
Kloppenberg, as a social democrat who thinks of himself as liberal, looks for larger context,
i.e. the particularities of German history for his own ideological use,
to detach the liberal tradition from traditional liberal views that he finds distasteful.
Yeah, that's that that's just a common, it's a common trick.
Right.
Yeah.
It's just a dismissal of, it's a dismissal of the opinion or belief of somebody because of a social
opinion or because they come from a different culture.
They have a different cultural background.
Simple stuff like that.
Yes.
Yeah.
Unlike today's liberals,
Well, and when you look at, it's also wrong.
I mean, Prussia had a welfare state.
Prussia, you know, so it's, but, and it seems to operate very well.
Why?
Because it was a modgamous society.
Yeah.
They thought of themselves as part of a greater community rather than a bunch of, you know,
individuals from all over the world.
Exactly.
I've been talking about that
I've been reading from Imperium Yaki
and he talks about that.
He talks about how as soon as
as you have two cultures clash
within one land,
you're going to, even
by trying to repair that rift,
it actually makes it worse.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah, it can't be done.
Yeah.
Which is like, this is why things are so
bad now, not only because we have all these, you know, cultures coming into one place to try to,
but we also have, like, hysterical experts who think that they can, they are the ones by doing
more, they have more tools at their disposal. They're the ones that can finally unite all these
cultures. And that's why it's especially bad here.
It's true. Unlike today's liberals, traditional ones entertain deep reservations about popular
a rule. A belief that democracy leads inevitably to socialism was common to French liberals of
the 1830s and 1840s, and it is equally apparent to Lakey, Pareto, Paredo, Weber, and other liberal
observers at the end of the century. Paredo and Leake feared that democracy would bring forth a trade
union approach to economic policy. Unless put under some kind of control, democratically elected
trade unionists would add to unemployment by driving up wages, which would then harm the most
expendable workers.
Democratic spokesmen would also agitate to impose tariffs on foreign goods, and this would hurt
domestic consumers while unleashing reprisals from those countries whose goods were being excluded.
Does all sound familiar to you?
Yeah.
The effects from such economic measures would then be blamed on the owners and captains of industry
and social democratic governments would cite this accusation to justify their
confiscation of the means of production.
The Fendizier Sequel prediction about trade union democracy revealed the persistent liberal
fear about a seizure of property that would take place at the urging of socialists.
Despite the French Revolution of 1848 in which bourgeois and social democrats went from being
allies to violent enemies, a liberal view did persist that democratized governments would
become radical ones. Socialism or rampant social order would accompany the advent of a universal
franchise. Thus, Fitzjames Stephen declared with finality in 1874, quoting, the substance of what I have
to say to the disadvantage of the theory and practice of universal suffrage is that it tends to
invert what I should have regarded as the true and natural relation between wisdom and folly. I think that
wise and good men ought to rule those who are foolish and bad.
To say that the sole function of the wise and good is to preach to their neighbors and that
everyone indiscriminately should be left to do what he likes should be provided with a rateable
share of the sovereign power in the shape of the vote and that the results of this will be the
direction of power by wisdom seems to me the wildest romance that ever got possession of
any considerable number of minds.
end quote.
Yeah, this is a critique of the entire 20th century American spirit.
I mean, the idea that we're going to disseminate political power to every single.
I mean, look at the people.
Like, you want to give every person the vote.
Look at the people that you're giving the power to.
I mean, and then the idea that this is going to result in a wiser, you know,
governmental direction is absolutely insane.
He calls it a wild romance.
And I think that's kind of understating it.
But this is basically the mentality that captures the republicans,
party, the Democratic Party, and all major voices and advocates within that entire regime
ideological sphere. This is the Americanist impulse in the world is to share political power with
every person. This is why the civil rights regime is so crucial to the way the American power
sees the world. But it has been proven so fundamentally wrong. I can't think of anything more
disastrous than handing out the ability to vote to all of these. All these. All these.
these groups that have been very easy to radicalize. I mean, Paul, even Paul Gottfried, who's writing
this, he talks about the fact that he would have opposed the central mandate, the national
mandate that all blacks have the vote, because he recognized that these people would, could
very easily be radicalized and they could be fueled in order to pursue, you know, various,
you know, far left objectives. And so this is exactly what's happened. We've lost wisdom in, at the
same time as we've gained the right to vote for more and more people.
Yeah.
These 10 lines on paper just perfectly describe the religion of civic nationalism in America.
Yeah, exactly.
And this is a, not only is this against like, you know, the Democratic Party, but this is
specifically against the impulses of the neoconservatives, the conservative incorporated,
not just neoconservists, but conservative establishment conservative, you know, political
commentators.
This is against them specifically.
They're the ones that are pushing for the Martin Luther King view of the world.
Yeah.
Yeah, Martin Luther King.
Yeah.
And Abraham Lincoln.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, Abraham Lincoln wouldn't have been, you know, this bad.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, he understood the differences.
Yeah, he wouldn't have given them the right to vote for sure.
Or the, well, I guess the mythological Lincoln that we hear about.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure.
Like Stephen, Lakey feared that democracy, by overwhelming and sweeping away any national
leadership, would leave to capricious and unstable government.
He predicted almost 20 years before it happened that the House of Lords would be disempowered,
and in the 1890s, he also warned that, quote,
the disassociation of the upper classes from public duty is likely to prove a danger to the community.
Yeah.
No, what is it?
Nobles de Blige?
That goes right out the window.
and it's what kept society going for centuries for millennia for millennia right liberal critics of
mass democracy offered differing but equally grim predictions about the disposition of power in a
democratic age in the 1870s stepheny Stephen could find no cohesive group of political leaders
that might create stable rule in the world as imagined by john stewart mill his his opponents
were mere dreamers who like the radicals the term by which he does
designated mill in his circle, look forward to an age in which an all-embracing love of humanity
will regenerate the human race.
Not only is it, you get this kind of egalitarian language, but you also get a theological
language thrown in there as well.
Of course.
Though the radicals complain of the petty social arrangements in Victorian England,
they lack the hardness of mind, Stephen observes, to change things for the better.
In time, they would be swept aside by better organized fanatics.
Another liberal critique of democracy, widespread among the doctrinaires of the 1820s,
was its primitive character, which made it unsuited for the 19th century.
Charles Remusat and Guizot both stressed the idea that Democratic republics were a product of
classical antiquity. Given their need for cultural homogeneity, severe public morals,
and highly restricted citizenship, popular polities did not seem destined to flourish in the
19th century. We need to read that again? Given their need for cultural homogeneity,
severe public morals, and highly restricted citizenship, popular polities did not seem destined to
flourish in the 19th century.
Why would they flourish now?
Right, exactly.
Yeah.
Unlike Guizot's democratic,
unlike Guzot's democratic critic and traveler of the new world,
Alexis de Tocqueville,
the doctrinares did not believe that the European future
belonged to democracy.
They viewed the American experience as sugenres.
According to Guizot,
Americans had established popular sovereignty because they had been
able to build a regime without an inherited class system.
Tocqueville's depiction of localism as the essence of American democracy
seemed to confirm Gizot's judgment.
It offered a political picture that Gizot and other doctriners thought had no
bearing for France or for Europe in general.
A Europe of highly centralized nation states required a stable social pillar
drawn from the educated bourgeoisie in order to maintain political stability.
Democratic primitivism, as revealed in the chaos of the French Revolution,
was the political alternative, Gisot complained,
into which his democratic critics would plunge France and the rest of Europe.
So I don't know if people caught this or read this out of it,
but, you know, getting to know Gautfried over the years,
the way I read this is basically that it's insane for America to export its own
model, which by the way, is a complete aberration from its original model, but it's insane for
America to export its own model back to Europe. These things don't work. I think localism in America
has a history, has an organic history that is just completely non-transferable to the old world.
You can't transport that. That's why nationalism in the old world in Western Europe makes
much more sense than localism does in terms of dealing with the political emergency. Whereas
nationalism in America, you know, for whatever, you know, political, whatever political advantages
we can gain from it right now, it's over the course of the last 200 years, it's tended to be
more progressive than anything. But you can't, so you can't, but you can't export the original
Tocqueville's model of local democracy back to Europe. It doesn't work like that. And the attempt
to do so is basically let in all of the radicals and it's let in all the far left movements
and allowed them to capture power.
Yeah.
The doctrinares pointed portentously
to the Jaccombein rule in 1793
as a precedent for democratizing experiments.
As Gizzo explained in the essay
De La Democracy,
that's on society modern air,
democracy is a cry.
Democracy is a cry of war.
It is a flag of the party of numbers
placed below raised against those above.
A flag,
sometimes raised in the name of the rights of men, but sometimes in the name of crude passions,
sometimes raised against the most iniquitous usurpions, but also sometimes against legitimate
superiority.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Democracy knows no higher principle, basically.
While Tockville and Gizot underlined the link between American democracy and America's
decentralized republic, a new and faithful view of the American regime surfaced in the
theorizing of George Bancroft, 18191.
Jacksonian Democrat career,
Jacksonian Democrat, career diplomat,
an author of the 10-volume history of the United States,
Bankroft admired German idealist philosophy,
which he popularized in the United States.
As a young man, he had studied in Gottengen, Berlin, and Heidelberg,
and while in Germany,
he had become intimately familiar with the historical speculation of Hegel.
His own work,
incorporated several unmistakable Hegelian themes,
that history showed the progressive unfolding of the divine personality,
that this process was reflected in the advance of human liberty,
and that liberty had developed most fully in the Protestant Germanic world.
For Bancroft, unlike Hegel, however, this progress toward liberty
reached its culmination on American soil.
Bankroft presents the American people as the ultimate bearers of divine,
divinely ordered liberty and makes this point explicit at the end of his history of the
formation of the Constitution of the United States 1882. Quote, a new people has arisen without kings
or princes or nobles. They were more sincerely religious, better educated, and of nobler minds
and of purer morals than the men of any former republic. By calm meditation and friendly councils,
they had prepared a constitution which, in the Union of Freedom with Strength and Order,
sold everyone known before, unquote.
It's interesting.
It's a fantasy.
That's a fantasy.
It's a fantasy, but, you know, it's funny to me that people can take the American
situation in the 19th century, 18th century, or the 18th century, or even earlier.
And in disregard the ethnic and cultural roots of that society and basically universalize it
bringing tons of people and expect it to remain the same.
You know,
so the idea that that you can take this, you know,
fantastical situation and just universalize it
has been the foundation for all sorts of,
you know, egalitarian terror in the Western world.
A discussion I've been having privately with a friend of mine recently
is whether the United States as a colony
could even transport the culture,
the high culture of,
the home country to the colony.
Right.
It proved,
it proved,
you proved that you couldn't do that.
Yeah.
It couldn't outlast the first generation
that had,
you know,
absorbed it firsthand.
You know,
the longer those things are separated,
and the more,
you know,
foreign elements you interjected to something,
you can't,
you can't keep that up.
Well,
you also have to take into consideration
that while this,
uh,
while this new,
colony is growing,
it's the
enlightenment injected into it.
You're getting all of these ideas injected into it,
which are going to clash with its original high culture.
So I don't know.
The conversation goes on.
All right.
The spirit of the people thus described
was held to be democratic and Bancroft described
to Americans, a collective wisdom,
which found expression,
in their political architecture.
The American Federal Union, as he saw it,
was no mere convenient state,
but the only hope for renovating the life of the civilized world.
The political institutions fashioned and inspirited
by America's democratic people assumed in Bankroft's writing
a mystical quality and his insistence that the voice of the people
is the voice of God led Tocqueville to remark that pantheism
is the religion most characteristic of democracies.
Yeah.
The American capacity for self-government that Bancroft exalted was not in the end the American propensity for local self-rule.
Bankroft glorified a national democratic will and his history of the United States ends appropriately with the topic consolidating the union.
According to Bancroft, an American people and an American national government were both incoately present, even before the colonies
formed a nation state.
Quote,
for all the one of government,
their solemn pledge to one another
and mutual citizenship
and perpetual union
made them one people.
And that people was superior
to its institutions,
possessing the vital form
which goes before organization
and gives its strength.
Yeah, this is sort of the foundation
of like propositional nationhood.
Right?
Like it's these things,
we're formed independent
of our own past.
You know,
and anyone can,
anyone can jump
in and be part of it, be part of the people.
Yeah.
That, all right, I'm going to go on because he starts talking about, okay.
One does not have the strain to find here a Jacobin imagination hidden behind Higalian language.
A consolidated American national government, a powerful executive representing the popular
will, and a global civilizing mission are the visionary exceptions that one can read into
Bankroft's patriotic scholarship.
Although his history of the United States deals predominantly with the colonial period,
it points more toward the American future than back to the 18th century.
Bankroft is celebrating the progress of the democratic spirit as embodied in the American nation.
In the process, he replaces an older American liberal constitutional identity
with one that Gizot and Tocqueville might have associated with their own 18th century French Revolution.
Yeah.
the original vision of the American situation was basically replaced by neo-jacobinism, for sure.
While Bankroff celebrated the triumphant course of democracy in America, others, among them European liberals, grew increasingly agitated about the inevitability of popular rule.
This thing, actually, we're starting a new, and we only have a few pages left, so we're just going to, you know, mind going to the end.
I'm good. I'm good.
Okay. All right. This new section,
is entitled liberal pessimists.
While Bankroft celebrated the triumphant course of democracy in America,
others among them European liberals grew increasingly agitated about the inevitability of popular
rule.
This anxiety in some cases became more pronounced as the 20th century began to unfold than
social problems in Europe appeared to be worsening.
The most detailed critical treatment of democratic rule produced by European liberal was
transformation of the democracy by the, I'm just translating that from me, by the sociologist
economist Pareto. Paredo's example, as John Gray remarks, makes dramatically clear how the pre-1914
liberal mind was placed irreversibly at a crossroads. In the face of a democratic franchise,
riotous trade union strikes and the intrusive presence of public administration, some liberals embraced
authoritarian solutions.
Of those, Pareto was perhaps the best known and the most deliberate, as can be judged
from his social writings.
It's funny.
It's funny that today's liberals, you know, you self-describe liberals, they'll never talk
about that.
The importance of an authoritarian solution in the midst of a crisis or emergency.
You know, it's really interesting how they never bring that up.
In transformation, he outlines the characteristics.
of the democratic epoch and its relationship to the period that had preceded it.
In the 19th century, a parliamentary regime had come to Italy as a result of a fateful
alliance between a demagogic plutocracy and the popular classes.
Both had opposed to rule of landed wealth and the ecclesiastical establishment,
but drew apart after a liberal, constitutional, and unified Italy had come into existence.
thereafter the laboring class had worked to seize the wealth of the liberal middle class
and by the 20th century hit it also turned against the parliamentary institutions on which
the plutocracy had built its political legitimacy.
In the aftermath of the First World War from which Italy had emerged on the side of the victors
but financially crushed, unions took over the railroads, ironworks, and factories in Milan
and throughout the industrialized north. Red Guard units were formed to police the worker,
occupied areas, and though these units carried out the summary executions of the enemies of the
working class, the national government then under revolving premierships avoided military force.
There was political calculation behind this hesitancy. The largest block in the post-war Italian
parliament was a socialist, who in 1919 had voted to nationalize key industries. They and the
Catholic Social Democrat Popolari held enough votes to bring down any government.
and both were afraid of estranging their constituents by releasing armed forces against the syndicalists.
Meanwhile, land peasants, landless peasants, do you know what that word means?
Bracianti?
I think it's just the landless, the peasants.
Like, okay.
We're grabbing land from large estates as a paralyzed national government conferred on these expropriations ex post-factual.
approval. Paredo vented particular contempt on Giovanni Gialiti, the aged prime minister who formed
his fifth and most disastrous government amid these trials. Paredo mocked Giolytis cowardice when he
responded to Red Guard violence with the statement that intervention would be tantamount to
capital punishment, which would be inappropriate at the present time. Paredo contested Gialiti to those
fascist squadrons who in the fall of 1919 moved against the red baronies in Bologna and Po Valley.
For Pareto, the plutocracy had become timorous and moronic.
And the only groups which now seemed capable of exercising power were nationalist and union
leaders.
Quote, among the property class, the sentiments of self-defense and property are largely spent and
have begun to transform themselves into a nebulous uncertain social responsibility, which
others call social duty used interchangeably with work now defined as a right.
In some parts of Italy, workers invade the land and perform useless tasks thereafter claiming the right
to receive wages, which the owner has a duty to pay them.
I guess that's the labor theory of value, huh?
Right.
The response of many bourgeois is approval.
Elsewhere, Paredo notes that the hatred and combativeness manifested by the unionists
towards the property in class no longer elicited resistance.
Quote, on one side of the class divide,
one sounds the trumpet and moves on to the assault.
On the other one, on the other, one bows one's head, capitulates,
or better yet, joins the enemy and sells one property for 30 pieces of silver.
In two political commentaries published in 1923,
following the fascist advent of power in October 1920,
Paredo expressed the hope that Mussolini's regime would restore
economic and political order.
In January 1923, he perceived as the major difference between past and present governments
that one ignored economic issues, paying attention to demagogic sentiments and particular
interests, while the new government is seeking to reestablish an equilibrium between
social forces.
At the same time, Pareto warned against the danger of taxing heavily those who were salaried
or small landowners, and he recommended that moderate unionists be consoled.
in setting economic policy.
In September 1923, he also suggested how the fascist regime might best reform the structure of government.
Paredo urged Mussolini to maintain a free press.
Let the crow's caw but be indefatigable in repressing rebellious deeds.
Experience demonstrates that leaders who embark upon this path of censorship find headaches rather than benefits.
it may help to imitate ancient Rome, not occupy oneself with theology, but attend only to actions.
Predo also advocated the putting into place of a new parliament, which would express popular sentiments without crippling the executive.
Though he readily admitted the failure of Italy's earlier parliamentary experience,
he nonetheless thought that the new regime should not operate without elected institutions.
He believes such institutions necessary to stabilize and legitimate the,
fascist order.
So, Paul here's going on a long-winded example of, you know, the tendencies of the democratic
tendencies of, you know, the fascist experiment.
Basically, I think he's trying to demonstrate that democracy and liberalism are not always
mutual, they're not always like, you can have aspects of liberalism and democracy
within non-liberal democratic political orders.
Yeah, that's exactly what I'm reading here.
In assessing these comments written shortly before Pareto's death,
that is important to keep in mind two critical factors.
First, there was no reason for Pareto and others to believe in 1922
that the Italian fascist regime would later go berserk and ally itself
ideologically and politically when Nazi Germany.
In the early 20s, the Italian fascists expressed neither racist nor anti-Semitic ideas,
and they were willing to offer leadership in a country,
that had broken down economically and was on the verge of political collapse.
I actually personally did agree with this part.
I think that Italian fascists, I think like so many regular Europeans over a thousand
years, had racial prejudices.
Yeah.
Yeah. Well, you know, and when you...
I mean, maybe they didn't consider it as like official part of like, you know, a political
agenda or anything.
But like they were aware within their own context of, you know,
the dangers of multiculturalism, multiracialism, and also, you know, the Jewish threat.
You know, to say that the Jewish threat is a post-1930s or 1940s European phenomenon, I think, is
overstating it.
Yeah, to say that Italians were not aware of the Jewish question.
Right, exactly.
It is, yeah.
Second, Paredo saw his own class to bourgeoisie as spent and demoralized.
And though he hoped to preserve some of its creation,
particularly a free market, a free press, and religious liberty,
he did not believe that his own social class would be able to do so.
He therefore thought it was necessary to turn to what he, like Machiavelli,
designated as the Lions, bold warrior forces,
to save what had been devised by those who had become foxes,
parliamentary schemers, and finessing plutocrats.
What Pareto saw happening in Italy seemed to belong to a broader civilizational context,
Throughout his writing, he used the concept of uniformities, which he applied to both economic and social affairs and which he claimed to have derived from an experimental research method.
The long-term invariability of the income curve and the equivalent advantages to producers of a perfectly organized monopoly and of an unimpeded free market are two such laws that are worked out in Pareto's major economic works.
In Trasado de Socializogia General, he developed a theory of psychological predispositions to explain social behavior.
In this analysis, we find six such predispositions, which Pareto called Residues,
and associated with changing movements and ideologies, also known as derivations.
The six residues underlying group behavior are the instinct for combination,
the persistence of aggregates, the desire to manifest one's beliefs,
sociality and the integrity of the individual, the integrity of the individual and the sexual drive.
It is the instinct for combination and related residues three and four that actuate groups on the rise,
while the persistence of aggregates and the concern about individual interests are most characteristic of established elites.
Freda discussed those residues operating within Italian society in the context of his social observations.
He believed that the waning of liberalism, conspicuous in his own country, was taking place
throughout the industrialized West. The liberal bourgeoisie had lost its assertiveness in the face of its
insurgent working class and of other Democratic forces expressing instincts for combination
and group solidarity. In the First World War, according to Pareto, the parliamentary plutocrats
had triumphed over the German military aristocracy, but had succumbed to the democratic classes
without which they could not have hoped to win the war.
The only force now able to resist a revolutionary socialist
were the nationalists who drew upon the same residues prevalent among the socialists.
Socialism and nationalism seemed to be related derivations,
both resulting from residues leading to collective action.
Among his last published remarks were those on Italian constitutional reform
addressed to the new fascist government on September 25th, 1923.
Under a democratic ideology runs the current of fascism, which overflows at the surface,
but beneath that runs a countercurrent. Beware less that countercurrent overflow.
Beware lest you bestow upon it power by trying to close it off completely.
Paredo believed that the fascists and their socialist enemies were harnessing the same democratic
enthusiasm that a now declining liberal society had given up trying to oppose. He felt that the
fascist would have to coexist with social democracy, but hoped they would do so on their own terms.
Paredo's appeal to some aspects of liberal heritage occurred in the face of what he took to be an irrevericable
political change. The march towards democracy would continue no matter what, and the decadence
of the Roman plutocracy was only a portent of the debt.
destiny towering above our own plutocrats.
An activist and redistributionist democratic government was about to arrive, and unlike
Liki, a generation earlier, Paredo had no doubt that a corresponding elite was arising to take
charge of modern democracy.
Political upheavals did not transpire randomly, but were the work of purposeful elites
who took advantage of their consequences.
Yeah, elite.
I mean, it's just classic elite theory.
Yeah.
Faced by the Italian nationalists and the pre-suit of the social proletariat,
Pareto opted for what he considered to be the more moderate democratic leadership.
In fact, he chose what turned out to be less far-sighted of the two aspiring democratic elites.
In the 20th century, it was the exponents of working-class democracy, not of democratic nationalism,
who made the more compelling claim to represent liberal democracy.
significantly social democratic planners took over a form of discourse more closely akin to paredos than to that of Italian fascism fascists.
In Scandinavia, England, and the United States, they appeared to experimental scientific methods in education and public policy,
and they presented their takeover of civil society as an act of liberating individuals and upholding their rights.
But they also appealed effectively for several generations to do it.
democratic legitimacy, unlike the Italian fascists who were forced to manufacture popular endorsements
for their plans. It is not surprising that by the end of the century, social democratic planning
had given rise to what Charles Krauthammer calls reactionary liberalism, holding fast to the structures
and constituencies of the welfare state come what may. More interesting is the fact that this
liberal democracy held up for more than half a century.
in the most prosperous and literate areas of the world with popular approval.
This result indicates that some European liberals read the political future with clearer eyes than others.
Despite his demonstrated polemical skills, Fitzjames Steven underestimated J.S. Mill's capacity to plan a popular regime.
Mill did not intend to leave the uninstructed masses to do it as they please.
Maurice Cowling notes that Mill staked his democratic hope on a religion of humanity,
quote, a better religion than any of those which are ordinarily called by that title, unquote,
and on a new cleracy, which would work to instill a universal faith in rationality.
Unlike the Anglican clergy and most of the English professoriate,
mill's clarisy would propagate scientific method and political sociology seen as the true science of
society this elite would arise in response to social need and to the spread of secular rationalism
it would train citizens to emulate its own rationality and bring them into fellowship with the
advocates of social progress everywhere yeah like he's described he's describing the rise of like
the managerial state, you know, the ability for the reasoned experts using rationality and their
own training to basically create something ongoing and something that was more stable.
Caling further argues that Mill's devotion to intellectual freedom was conditioned by his
concern about great minds being crushed by mediocrity. Mill was less of a libertarian than
someone looking out for the highest nature's noblest minds and the advancement of scientific
truth. Note that Mill favored extensive state intervention in the economy and the ongoing
redistribution of incomes. He also hoped that his own elite would take charge of the general
culture. It would thereby become possible to teach and apply his own utilitarian ethic,
which Mill assumed would bring forth a new social morality. All enlightened citizens would
eventually accept the utilitarian notion that the good is that which maximizes general
happiness. But as Kowling perceives, the highest end that men here were imagined to pursue
in quest of pleasure was whatever Mill and his confrers desired for themselves. They never
doubted that their own social preferences would come to prevail in a democratic age.
Clearly, James Stephen and his younger brother, Leslie Stephen, though both sagacious critics of Mill
did not see fully his authoritarian side.
They did not grasp the inquisitorial certainty,
which Cally exposes at the core of his method of inquiry.
Nor did they appreciate the dogmatic way in which Mill generalized about subjects he never studied.
Mill knew little in detail about the history of British society
and the 250 years before he was born.
His denigration of its polity and religion was based neither on close observation,
nor on exact historical knowledge.
Boy, if that doesn't describe the current liberal spirit,
like they have no bearing in history,
they have no idea what happened.
They just have the solutions,
which of course include much worse solutions than Mill ever put forth.
Well, and to know what happened,
they'd have to understand why.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
And that's one question no one wants to ask anymore.
It's like, oh, this happened.
Well, why did it happen?
Well, because people are mean.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay.
You can't look at specific political dynamics.
You just have to rely on generalities like that.
Yeah.
Finally, Mill's liberal critics underestimated the power of his vision of a new
clarity, crafting and directing in democratic order.
However weak may have been his grasp of the past,
Mill evoked a society of democratic planners, which would arise after his death.
His twisting of historical data and fudging of laws of human progress
were of less significance than Mill's ability to foresee.
mass democracy at work. No other mid-19th century figure, including Tocqueville,
exhibited such understanding of the dawning democratic age, even if that understanding in Mills case
was ideologically colored. And only one European liberal, Max Weber, revealed comparable insight
in plotting the likely course of modern democracy. Unlike those liberals who trembled over the fate
of property and parliamentary civility,
Weber associated democratic life with the iron case of,
iron cage of bureaucracy.
Like Pareto,
he was willing to entrust democratic government
to plebiscatory leaders,
not because of the fear of anarchy,
but because of his dread of bureaucratic despotism.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Very.
In an off-quoted letter from Weber to the associate,
sociologist of elites, Robert Michelle's, at the end of the First World War, Weber questions the
intelligence or honesty of those who exalt the will of the people. He goes on to admit that genuine
wills of the people have ceased to exist for me. They are fictitious. All ideas aiming and abolishing the
dominance of man over man are utopian. In 1918, Weber observed even more incisively,
in large states everywhere.
Modern democracy is becoming a bureaucratized democracy,
and it must be so,
for it is replacing the aristocratic
or other titular officials
by a paid civil service.
It is the same everywhere.
It is the same within parties too.
It is inevitable,
despite the attempt by Weber's critics
to attribute such remarks to the anemia of German liberalism,
what they indicate is Weber's deep perception
of a secular trend, the intertwining of mass democracy and public administration as the shape of
things to come. Yeah, this is such a powerful narrative. I mean, the entire ethos of conservative
incorporated and the liberal establishment is that America represents the triumph of individual
freedom. And I think Weber is much more perceptive to the fact that actually what it represents
is the triumph of the managerial state, the triumph of the administration, the triumph of bureaucratized
or whatever, you know, bureaucrats basically just running people's life and trying to arrange the
world in the way that they see fit. And that's exactly this spawn, this administrative state that
Weber had his sights on, basically spawned the multiculturalism in which we exist. We don't exist
in a world of increased individual freedom. We exist in the world of mandated cultural degradation.
know, that's what we existed. And it's handed down. It's politically derived. I mean, I think the people
that say, like Aaron McIntyre and others who say that culture is downstream from politics,
recognize the fact that the administrative state, the thing that Max Weber warned about,
is characteristic of the American function in world affairs. You know, everything, our culture,
everything is handed down from politics. Everything is handed down from above. And it comes from
not individual freedom, but from bureaucracy.
Yeah. And in order, it has to be that way. If you understand that the managerial state,
it's one purpose is to perpetuate itself. It has to control everything. It has to control the culture. It has to guide everything.
Yeah. And that's why was Jonathan Bowden famously saying the only way you change this is to clear it all out.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah. So I think the overall lesson here for Paul is that liberalism and democracy
are not the same,
but their unity
is the particular characteristic
of American totalitarianism.
The attempt at unifying these two themes
has created an ideological hegemony
that people don't know how to oppose,
that the dissident right is only now figuring out
how to oppose.
But this is one of the sacred cows
of the American ideology
is the union of democracy and liberalism.
And the real genius of it
is the fact that you
you have this left-right paradigm, this Democrat-Republican paradigm, let's call it,
where they do not realize that they're both operating within the same system and that all
conservatives are working to do is to conserve this system.
Exactly.
If they're working to conserve, to keep any of it, they're perpetuating the system.
So there's a certain genius to its design in that you have, if you only have two factions that
that are allowed to genuinely fight within it,
they're both working to keep the system going.
Yeah, this is why like people, I mean, people,
as they're becoming more radicalized on the right,
you know, they're recognizing that something more substantial needs to be done,
but I've never found,
I've never found the solution really in Republican politics,
you know, Republican Party politics.
I mean, sometimes it's fun,
but really that's not where change has to happen
because both of these parties are reinforcement mechanisms for this regime.
And it have to be.
It's built into the cake like that.
You have to clear it out.
Yep.
So. All right, man.
Promote whatever you want.
Thank you.
Well, first of all, thank you for this.
This is great.
And I didn't know it was going to go this long, but thank you for.
Yeah, Paul is such a dense, a dense writer.
So it's really hard to get through sometimes.
But at Contra Mordor is my Twitter.
And then my name, C.J. ingle.
dot substack, you can find me there.
And that's basically, I also do the Chronicles magazine,
which is small now and we're making some changes
for next year, so that'll be fun.
We always have-
Chronicles magazine podcast, right?
Yeah, Chronicles Magazine podcast.
And so we're doing some more stuff next year for that.
But in anticipation of that,
you can always check it out on YouTube, et cetera.
All right, I'll link to it.
Thanks a lot, CJ.
Yeah, I appreciate it.
