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Claustrophilia's avatar

This is an intelligent, well-argued piece, nothing less than what one has come to expect from Frank Fukuyama. Yet, something about it left me feeling uncomfortable -- or at least vaguely dissatisfied. I am a product of a (largely) European background and education, though I have lived in the US for over 40 years. The words "Western" or "West" were hardly ever used in those years -- the 1970s and early 80s -- both at the English boarding school I attended and the university where I spent many years as an undergraduate and research (graduate) student.

Both the school and the college (within the collegiate university system) of which I was a member were Anglican foundations. We talked of an European civilization and of a Christian belief and the two were often equated.

Yet, interestingly, the European civilization of which we were heirs was always seen to have "Mediterranean" roots. It was Graeco-Roman and avowedly classical. The Christian identity was without a doubt that which drew from the New Testament. The Old Testament might have been seen a source of inspiration for great Baroque music that we heard in chapel or many of the paintings of the Old Masters from the Renaissance. But the notion of a Judeo-Christian civilization (or heritage) would have been risible. The idea of Christendom, on the other hand, would have sounded archaic but would at least have been recognizable. Somehow, this synthesis of a Graeco-Roman secular culture and a pre-Religious Wars Christian belief system was made coherent and it was called European.

Once again, the background I'm describing is High Anglican without an iota of non-conformism or evangelicalism to it. And therein lies the answer to the rantings of Vance and Rubio. The idea of the "West" is a very American one (notwithstanding Spengler) and that too is about 50 years old. Even a racial and cultural supremacist like Tom Buchanan in the Great Gatsby would talk about the European races and those that did not belong to that group, included Jews, blacks, Mexicans, Asians, and whichever other group came within his range of sight.

Why Marco Rubio had to launch into an encomium to the plundering, rampaging "West" is a mystery. He invented his own background, claiming he was of Spanish and Italian heritage, from Seville and Casale Monferrato, Kingdom of Piedmont. In the show "Finding Your Roots", the host Henry Louis Gates Jr. told Marco Rubio that his mother's side has indigenous ancestry traceable to Cuba going back around 4,000 years, saying "your family on your mother's side has been there a long, long time." (Vance too has lied about his own background, but I won't go into that here.) What is shameless was the conduct of the Europeans (the Ruttes, the Merzs and others, descendants of Mitteleuropa middle class) who were just relieved to hear that Rubio had pointed to enemies that did not include them.

Harley "Griff" Lofton's avatar

I am somewhat amused by the people who think they can take on Francis Fukuyama as if he were some antisocial media influencer leaking methane into the atmosphere. What he has written here needs no defense.

The same buzzwords that rang for Professor Fukuyama rang for me when I heard Rubio say them in Munich. Shared faith, heritage and ancestry coming from the mouth of an American seemed ludicrous. It might have made sense in the 18th century but not in the context of the 21st. I am sure he believes those cultural attributes belong to him and therefore makes him one of JD Vance's "legacy Americans."

Maybe I am lapsing into cultural Marxism here but I think the whole concept of "The West" and "Western Civilisation" (Kenneth Clark's spelling) while a convenient part of a larger classification system (like the Dewey Decimal System) really is not a "thing" at all. At least it is not an autonomous, organic or unified being that can be defended by launching a crusade, ethnic cleansing or kept pure from distinctly alien influences. Civilization is a tree and Western Civilization a branch of that tree. DNA has no borders just proximity and opportunity.

I am sure that Marco Rubio had some discomfort in realizing that his distinctly European ancestry was mixed with indigenous blood. Latin American Eurotrash are just as racist as North American Eurotrash can be.

The Enlightenment was the intellectual decision to choose reason over irrationality. Not to displace religion so much as to perfect what was ethically significant in religion. The ethics of religion were universal not because they came from a revealed source but because they were inherently rational. The Golden Rule is not true because Jesus (or any number of sages in many times and places) said so but because it was completely rational. Now the rabbis and theologians could argue about what it means and how that is lived out and come up with various answers. Jesus had one and Buddha had another and Confucius another but the rational truth remains unchanged.

For centuries Christianity had only ever embraced the liberal notion of equality as something that can exist only in the afterlife. The only right a human being has in Christianity has is the right to accept Jesus as their Lord and Savior and join the "right" established or orthodox church. Until the enlightenment Christians did not have the language, or rational justification for equality, the abolition of chattel slavery, the enfranchisement of women or all those things about which the Scriptures are silent, ambivalent or even opposed. Christians (using Christian Scriptures) justified slavery, then segregation and now voter disenfranchisement.

The Enlightenment has given us so much culturally, economically and politicly. It has tamed the fires of irrational religion and given us the flowering of speech and thought. It has given us market capitalism and prosperity (for some) the world has never seen before. It has given us the tools to govern ourselves with fewer civil wars and fewer autocrats and dictators. Sure it is has not given us an earthly paradise and never will.

Liberal democracy is "the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time". We have the Enlightenment to thank for that not faith, heritage and ancestry.

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