Posted by: zanshin, 2009-06-12 01:15

Story

The state despotic -- On our gradual slide into servitude

Mark Steyn, 2009-06-01 (Monday), New Criterion
A review of Soft Despotism, Democracy's Drift: Montesquieu, Rousseau, Tocqueville, and the Modern Prospect by Paul Anthony Rahe

~~

Driving north out of New York the other day, I heard a caller to Mark Levin’s show discuss his excellent book Liberty and Tyranny. The word she kept using was “inevitable”: The republic felt exhausted, and there was an “inevitability” to what was happening. A quarter-millennium of liberty seemed to be about the best you could expect, and its waning was—again—“inevitable.” As she spoke, the rich farmland of Columbia County rolled past my window. To many of its residents, the caller would have sounded slightly kooky. Were any of the county’s first families suddenly to rematerialize from their centuries of slumber, they would recognize the general landscape, the settlements, the principal roads, and indeed many of the weathered farmhouses. And they would be struck by the comfort and prosperity of their successors in this land. So what’s all this talk about decay and decline?

Ah, but I wonder if those early settlers would recognize the people, and their assumptions about the role of government. Mr. Levin’s listener was trying to articulate something profound but elusive. It’s not something you can sell the film rights for —there are no aliens vaporizing the White House, as in Independence Day; no God- zilla rampaging down Fifth Avenue and hurling the Empire State Building into the East River. No bangs, just the whimper of the same old same old civilizational ennui, as it gradually dawns that Admiral Yamamoto’s sleeping giant may be merely a supersized version of Monty Python’s dead parrot.

Paul A. Rahe’s new book on the subject is called Soft Despotism, Democracy’s Drift, which nicely captures how soothing and beguiling the process is.[1] Today, the animating principles of the American idea are entirely absent from public discourse. To the new Administration, American exceptionalism means an exceptional effort to harness an exceptionally big government in the cause of exceptionally massive spending. The can-do spirit means Ty’Sheoma Bethea can do with some government money: A high-school student in Dillon, South Carolina, Miss Bethea wrote to the President to ask him to do something about the peeling paint in her classroom. He read the letter out approvingly in a televised address to Congress. Imagine if Miss Bethea gets her way, and the national bureaucracy in Washington becomes responsible for grade- school paint jobs from Maine to Hawaii. What size of government would be required for such a project? And is it compatible with a constitutional republic?

Professor Rahe knows the answer to that. The first three-quarters of his book are about Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Tocqueville, which is to say they’re really about us. Montesquieu’s prediction that “in Europe the last sigh of liberty will be heaved by an Englishman” seemed self-evident after the totalitarian enthusiasms of the Continent in the twentieth century. Today? The last sigh will be heaved by England’s progeny, in the United States, or perhaps, given the galloping ambition of twenty-first-century American statism, in Australia. Is “the last sigh of liberty” inevitable? A progressivist would scoff at the utter codswallop of such a fancy. Why, modern man would not tolerate for a moment the encroachments his forebears took for granted! And so in the face of the careless assumption that social progress is like the internal combustion engine—once invented, it can never be uninvented—it is left to a trio of dead French blokes to anticipate the long-term temptations of a republic none had ever lived in, and which at that point was technologically all but impossible.

The professor opens his study with a famous passage from M. de Tocqueville. Or, rather, it would be famous were he still widely read. For he knows us far better than we know him: “I would like to imagine with what new traits despotism could be produced in the world,” he wrote the best part of two centuries ago. He and his family had been on the sharp end of France’s violent convulsions, but he considered that, to a democratic republic, there were slyer seductions:

I see an innumerable crowd of like and equal men who revolve on themselves without repose, procuring the small and vulgar pleasures with which they fill their souls.
He didn’t foresee “Dancing with the Stars” or “American Idol” but, details aside, that’s pretty much on the money. He continues:

Over these is elevated an immense, tutelary power, which takes sole charge of assuring their enjoyment and of watching over their fate. It is absolute, attentive to detail, regular, provident, and gentle. It would resemble the paternal power if, like that power, it had as its object to prepare men for manhood, but it seeks, to the contrary, to keep them irrevocably fixed in childhood … it provides for their security, foresees and supplies their needs, guides them in their principal affairs…
The sovereign extends its arms about the society as a whole; it covers its surface with a network of petty regulations—complicated, minute, and uniform—through which even the most original minds and the most vigorous souls know not how to make their way… it does not break wills; it softens them, bends them, and directs them; rarely does it force one to act, but it constantly opposes itself to one’s acting on one’s own … it does not tyrannize, it gets in the way: it curtails, it enervates, it extinguishes, it stupefies, and finally reduces each nation to being nothing more than a herd of timid and industrious animals, of which the government is the shepherd.

Welcome to the twenty-first century.

“It does not tyrannize, it gets in the way.” The all-pervasive micro-regulatory state “enervates,” but nicely, gradually, so after a while you don’t even notice. And in exchange for liberty it offers security: the “right” to health care; the “right” to housing; the “right” to a job—although who needs that once you’ve got all the others? The proposed European Constitution extends the laundry list: the constitutional right to clean water and environmental protection. Every right you could ever want, except the right to be free from undue intrusions by the state. M. Giscard d’Estaing, the former French president and chairman of the European constitutional convention, told me at the time that he had bought a copy of the U.S. Constitution at a bookstore in Washington and carried it around with him in his pocket. Try doing that with his Euro-constitution, and you’ll be walking with a limp after ten minutes and calling for a sedan chair after twenty: As Professor Rahe notes, it’s 450 pages long. And, when your “constitution” is that big, imagine how swollen the attendant bureaucracy and regulation is. The author points out that, in France, “80 per cent of the legislation passed by the National Assembly in Paris originates in Brussels”—that is, at the European Union’s civil service. Who drafts it? Who approves it? Who do you call to complain? Who do you run against and in what election? And where do you go to escape it? Not to the next town, not to the next county, not to the next country.

In The Spirit of the Laws (1748), “the celebrated Montesquieu” (as both Madison and Hamilton called him) concluded that England had developed, in Professor Rahe’s summation, “a new form of government more conducive to liberty and graced with greater staying power than any polity theretofore even imagined.” The key words here, and the theme of Professor Rahe’s book, are “staying power.” Anyone can start a republic. The challenge that remains was posed by Ben Franklin: Can you “keep it”?

Examining England’s “crowned republic” in the wake of Montesquieu and Rousseau, Tocqueville wrote that, from the seventeenth century on, you could find “the classes mixed up with one another … wealth become power, equality before the law, equality in taxation, freedom of the press, public debate—all new principles that the society of the Middle Ages did not know. But these are precisely the new things which, introduced little by little and with art into the old body, reanimated it without risking its dissolution.” Monarchies do not always evolve, and republics seek to put their theoretical perfection into practice too instantly. If you abolish, wrote Montesquieu, “the prerogatives of the lords, the clergy, the nobility & the towns,” you’re on a fast track to “a state popular—or, indeed, a state despotic.”

Thus, Tocqueville’s great insight—that what prevents the “state popular” from declining into a “state despotic” is the strength of the intermediary institutions between the sovereign and the individual. The French revolution abolished everything and subordinated all institutions to the rule of central authority. The New World was more fortunate: “The principle and lifeblood of American liberty” was, according to Tocqueville, municipal independence. “With the state government, they had limited contact; with the national government, they had almost none,” writes Professor Rahe:

In New England, their world was the township; in the South, it was the county; and elsewhere it was one or the other or both… . Self-government was the liberty that they had fought the War of Independence to retain, and this was a liberty that in considerable measure Americans in the age of Andrew Jackson still enjoyed.
For Tocqueville, this is a critical distinction between America and the faux republics of his own continent. “It is in the township that the strengths of free peoples resides,” he wrote. “Municipal institutions are for liberty what primary schools are for science; they place it within reach of the people.” In America, democracy is supposed to be a participatory sport not a spectator one: In Europe, every five years you put an X on a piece of paper and subsequently discover which of the party candidates on the list at central office has been delegated to represent you in fast-tracking all those E.U. micro-regulations through the rubber-stamp legislature. By contrast, American democracy is a game to be played, not watched: You go to Town Meeting, you denounce the School Board budget, you vote to close a road, you run for cemetery commissioner.

Does that distinction still hold? As Professor Rahe argues, in the twentieth century the intermediary institutions were belatedly hacked away—not just self-government at town, county, and state level, but other independent outposts: church, family, civic associations. Today, very little stands between the individual and the sovereign, which is why schoolgirls in Dillon, South Carolina think it entirely normal to beseech Good King Barack the Hopeychanger to do something about classroom maintenance.

I say “Good King Barack,” but truly that does an injustice to ye medieval tyrants of yore. As Tocqueville wrote: “There was a time in Europe in which the law, as well as the consent of the people, clothed kings with a power almost without limits. But almost never did it happen that they made use of it.” His Majesty was an absolute tyrant—in theory. But in practice he was in his palace hundreds of miles away. A pantalooned emissary might come prancing into your dooryard once every half-decade and give you a hard time, but for the most part you got on with your life relatively undisturbed. “The details of social life and of individual existence ordinarily escaped his control,” wrote Tocqueville. But what would happen if administrative capability were to evolve to make it possible “to subject all of his subjects to the details of a uniform set of regulations”?

That moment has now arrived. And administrative despotism turns out to be very popular: Why, we need more standardized rules, from coast to coast—and on to the next coast. After all, if Europe can harmonize every trivial imposition on the citizen, why can’t the world?

Would it even be possible to hold the American revolution today? The Boston Tea Party? Imagine if George III had been able to sit in his palace across the ocean, look at the security-camera footage, press a button, and freeze the bank accounts of everyone there. Oh, well, we won’t be needing another revolt, will we? But the consequence of funding the metastasization of government through the confiscation of the fruits of the citizen’s labor is the remorseless shriveling of liberty.

Is it, as Mark Levin’s caller said, “inevitable”? No, not quite. But it seems like the way to bet. When President Bush used to promote the notion of democracy in the Muslim world, there was a line he liked to fall back on: “Freedom is the desire of every human heart.” Are you quite sure? It’s doubtful whether that’s actually the case in Gaza and Waziristan, but we know for absolute certain that it’s not in Paris and Stockholm, London and Toronto, Buffalo and New Orleans. The story of the Western world since 1945 is that, invited to choose between freedom and government “security,” large numbers of people vote to dump freedom every time—the freedom to make their own decisions about health care, education, property rights, and eventually (as we already see in Europe, Canada, American campuses, and the disgusting U.N. Human Rights Council) what you’re permitted to say and think.

I’m often struck by how much of our language has become metaphorical: A few years ago, a Fleet Street colleague accidentally booked himself into a conference on “building bridges” assuming it would be some multiculti community outreach yakfest. It turned out to be a panel of engineers discussing bridge construction. Yet in an important sense the ability to build real bridges is indeed an attribute of community. A friend of mine is a New Hampshire “selectman,” one of those municipal offices Tocqueville found so admirable. In 2003, a state highway inspector rode through and condemned one of the town’s bridges, on a dirt road that serves maybe a dozen houses.

That’s the bad news. The good news was the 80/20 state/town funding plan, under which, if you applied to Concord for a new bridge, the state would pay 80 percent of the cost, the town 20. So they did. The state estimated the cost at $320,000, so the town’s share would be $64,000. Great. So the town threw up a temporary bridge just down river from the condemned one, and waited for the state to get going. Six years later, the temporary bridge has worn out, and the latest revised estimate is $655,000, such that the town’s share would be $131,000.

That’s the bad news. The good news is that, under the “stimulus” bill, they can put in for the 60/40 federal/state bridge funding plan, under which the feds pay 60 percent, and the state pays 40, and thus the town would be on the hook for 20 percent of the 40 percent, if you follow. If they applied for the program now, the bridge might be built by, oh, 2015, 2020, and it’ll only be $1.2 million, or $4 million, or $12 million, or whatever the estimate’ll be by then.

But who knows? By 2015, there might be some 70/30 UN/federal bridge plan, under which the UN pays 70 percent, and the feds pay 30, and thus the town would only be liable for 20 percent of the state’s 40 percent of the feds’ 30 percent. And the estimate for the bridge will be a mere $2.7 billion.

While the Select Board was pondering this, another bridge was condemned. The state’s estimate was $415,000, and, given that the previous bridge had been on the to-do list for six years, they weren’t ready to pencil this second one in on the schedule just yet. So instead the town put in a new bridge from a local contractor. Cost: $30,000. Don’t worry; it’s all up to code—and a lot safer than the worn-out temporary bridge still waiting for the 80/20/60/40/70/30 deal to kick in. As my friend said at the meet- ing: “Screw the state. Let’s do it ourselves.”

“Screw the state” is not a Tocquevillian formulation, but he would have certainly agreed with the latter sentiment. When something goes wrong, a European demands to know what the government’s going to do about it. An American does it himself. Or he used to—in the Jacksonian America a farsighted Frenchman understood so well. “Human dignity,” writes Professor Rahe, “is bound up with taking responsibility for conducting one’s own affairs.” When the state annexes that responsibility, the citizenry are indeed mere sheep to the government shepherd. Paul Rahe concludes his brisk and trenchant examination of republican “staying power” with specific proposals to reclaim state and local power from Washington, and with a choice: “We can be what once we were, or we can settle for a gradual, gentle descent into servitude.” I wish I were more sanguine about how that vote would go.

~~

Soft Despotism, Democracy’s Drift: Montesquieu, Rousseau, Tocqueville, and the Modern Prospect, by Paul A. Rahe; Yale University Press, 400 pages, $38

Comments


No comments yet.

Please login to post your comment.













All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.
Stories, Arguments and Comments are owned by the Poster.
The Rest copyright © 2007 Argumentations.com. All rights reserved. Argumentations.com provides material for research or educational purposes only. We do not warrant the correctness of its contents. The risk from using it lies entirely with the user. While using this site, you agree to have read and accepted our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Argumentations.com is far from perfect so if you have any critiques, questions, comments or problems about this site please tell us. Click here to send your feedback. And if you like Argumentations.com please link to this site. It will really help a lot.
   

Tags

Australia,   Bush,   Canada,   democracy,   education,   empire,   EU,   Europe,   France,   Gaza,   Health,   Mark Steyn,   Muslims,   United Nations,   USA,   War,   Waziristan,  

Related statements

No results

View other suggested stories

Date added 
2006-10-09The Anglo-American War of Terror: An Overview
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 5 -- Terrorist Safe Havens (7120 Report)
2008-10-24The World Around Russia: 2017 -- An Outlook for the Midterm Future
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 --
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 6 -- Terrorist Organizations
2007-05-15The New Demographic Balance in Europe and its Consequences
2007-09-09It's the Demography, Stupid
2008-08-11Rethinking the National Interest -- American Realism for a New World
2008-11-14Towards a Grand Strategy for an Uncertain World -- Renewing Transatlantic Partnership
2008-11-30EU2020 essay Willing and able? -- EU defence in 2020
2007-01-14Natural Resources are Fuelling a New Cold War
2007-01-25Arafat Timeline
2007-02-19Hating America
2007-04-17Human Rights Council Discusses Reports On Health, Right To Food And Human Rights Defenders
2008-04-07Famine, food and fertilizer
2007-12-14The Origin of the Palestine-Israel Conflict -- complete text
2009-01-16The Joint Operating Environment (JOE)
2007-04-16Germany should be the locomotive
2007-04-05"Promoting Democracy: A Progressive Foreign Policy Agenda".
2007-01-25MIDDLE EAST - Timeline of recent developments
2006-04-20The Next Iraqi War? Sectarianism and Civil Conflict
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Europe and Eurasia Overview
2007-06-06Nato’s Islamists
2007-06-16African Gothic
2007-07-15“Two States Or One State” -- Debate by Uri Avnery & Ilan Pappe
2007-07-24Highlights in the History of U.S. Relations With Russia, 1780-June 2006
2007-08-06The Global Drug Meta-Group: Drugs, Managed Violence, and the Russian 9/11
2007-11-11In the Wake of War: Geo-strategy, Terrorism, Oil Markets, and Domestic Politics
2007-11-13The Deadly Embrace
2008-06-11The History of the House of Rothschild
2008-08-25Securitarism, reproduction of disorder and erosion of democratic rule of law
2008-09-18US Genocide in Iraq
2008-09-26Copenhagen Consensus 2008 Challenge Paper Terrorism
2008-11-2321st Century Strategies For Sustainability
2008-10-18Enoch Powell and the Rise of Political Correctness in Britain
2008-11-07Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Europe and Eurasia Overview
2009-05-08The Trilateral Commission -- Membership 2008
2007-07-01Democratic Realism -- An American Foreign Policy for a Unipolar World
2007-05-27Infiltrating Bilderberg 2005
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: East Asia and Pacific Overview
2006-09-12The Nation That Fell to Earth
2006-09-17Triple-pronged Jihad -- Military, Economic and Cultural
2006-09-29China -- PART 2: Tequila trap beckons China
2006-11-07TURKEY AND THE AZERBAIJANI OIL CONTROVERSIES: LOOKING FOR A LIGHT AT THE END OF THE PIPELINE
2006-12-03The Way Out of War - A blueprint for leaving Iraq now
2007-02-13Israel: The Alternative
2007-03-01President Bush Discusses Progress in Afghanistan, Global War on Terror
2006-12-18“Bush’s Dream”
2007-04-04Breaking Ranks -- What turned Brent Scowcroft against the Bush Administration?
2007-04-12The Eurabia Code
2007-04-17Commission Adopts Resolutions On Combating Defamation Of Religions; Right To Development
2007-04-23France Looks Ahead, and It Doesn’t Look Good
2007-04-27The Dutch-Muslim Culture War
2007-03-13The Demography of Europe
2008-10-12Operation Sarkozy : how the CIA placed one of its agents at the presidency of the French Republic
2008-09-13TERRORISM, HUMAN RIGHTS, SOCIAL JUSTICE, FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY: SOME CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE LEGAL AND JUSTICE PROFESSIONALS OF THE ‘COALITION OF THE WILLING’
2008-08-09Chasing a Mirage
2008-04-10Imperial Israel: The Nile-to-Euphrates Calumny
2008-04-13Holistic Integrative Analysis of International Change: A Commentary on Teaching Emergent Futures
2008-04-18Choosing War: The Decision to Invade Iraq and Its Aftermath
2008-04-24Revamping American Grand Strategy
2008-03-23Future Human Evolution -- Eugenics in the Twenty-First Century
2008-04-05The Turkish Experiment with Westernization
2008-05-17The world health report 2007 : a safer future : global public health security in the 21st century.
2008-06-04A Peaceful Resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
2007-11-20The Neoconservative Moment
2007-10-17Iran: Nuclear programme
2007-10-03Why the United States Invaded Iraq and is Now Thinking About Invading Iran
2007-12-13Bilderberg 2007 - Towards a One World Empire?
2007-12-13Crisis of Faith in the Muslim World
2007-12-07Timeline: Chad
2007-12-18Turkey's EU Membership's Possible Impacts on the Middle East
2008-01-21Stabilization and Democratization: Renewing the Transatlantic Alliance
2008-01-30The two faces of Amis
2008-02-12Third report on the Netherlands -- CRI(2008)3
2008-02-24Strategy and the Limitation of War
2008-02-26Fitzgerald: Islam for Infidels, Part Two
2009-05-08A Leadership Review of the Barack Obama Administration
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: Middle East and North Africa Overview
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 4: The Global Challenge of WMD Terrorism
2009-06-13Remarks By The President On A New Beginning
2008-11-07Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Middle East and North Africa Overview
2008-11-12Bulgarian corruption troubling the European Union
2008-10-29Sarkozy, France, and Nato -- Will Sarkozy’s Rapprochement To Nato Be Sustainable?
2008-12-13Getting Away with Torture?
2008-12-14Use of the Veto on United Nations Resolutions by the USA
2007-03-14Timeline of events in the Cold War
2007-03-14Sweden: Restrictive Immigration Policy and Multiculturalism
2007-03-18Between Europe And The Middle East: The Transformation Of Turkish Policy
2007-03-19Made in USA
2007-03-21Chris Hedges: The Christian Right’s War on America
2007-03-22Will Muslim Immigration Trigger Wars in Europe?
2007-04-26The Crisis in Zimbabwe: How the U.S. Should Respond
2007-04-25Gravy Train: Feeding The Pentagon By Feeding Somalia
2007-04-16Iraq One Year Later
2007-04-15Europe's Future
2007-04-02Reaction From Around the World
2007-04-06It Doesn't Stay in Vegas
2006-12-31The Dutch news in 2006
2006-12-06Transcript - The Nomination Hearing for Robert M. Gates
2007-01-24President Bush’s State of the Union Address
2007-01-09Despite their shoddy track record on Iraq analysis, O'Reilly trusts only "my military analysts
2007-03-01The “White” al-Qaeda and the Future of Europe
2007-03-01ARAB COUNTRIES - GENERAL ANALYSIS
2007-03-04Enlightenment fundamentalism or racism of the anti-racists?
2007-01-30The Proliferation Security Initiative: Coming in from the Cold
2007-02-18After Neoconservatism
2007-02-20Transformational Diplomacy
2007-02-26Legal Issues in the War on Terrorism
2006-12-04Opening up Fortress Europe - On immigration as the key to European unity
2006-11-07MAGHREB REGIME SCENARIOS
2006-10-07What do you do with all the farmers?
2006-10-21Western Terror: From Potosi To Baghdad
2006-05-01Political Islam -- Forty shades of green
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: South and Central Asia Overview
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: Western Hemisphere Overview
2007-05-15The Tony Blair story
2007-06-07The Global Weapons of Mass Destruction Threat: A Counter- Argument to the Western Interdisciplinary Viewpoint
2007-06-12Current Problems in American Foreign Policy - A Talk Given to the Mount Holyoke Alumnae
2007-06-13Resource Wars - Can We Survive Them?
2007-07-03Our Second Biggest Mistake in the Middle East
2007-07-04Rising to a New Generation of Global Challenges
2007-06-29Courting Politics: A Supreme Moment in American History
2007-06-17Tough being a superpower
2007-06-16The Osama Files
2007-06-17General Tommy Franks -- An exclusive interview with America's top general in the war on terrorism
2007-06-17More Smoke on the Horizon in the Middle East War Theater
2007-06-18A PACKAGE DEAL FOR THE MIDDLE EAST
2007-06-22Al Qaeda Strikes Back
2007-06-22Symposium: Strategies of Death
2007-07-22Fisk Interview with President Khatami
2007-07-12House Armed Services Committee Global Security Assessment Statement For The Record
2007-07-31The American Empire is Failing – A Good Thing for America and the World -- An Interview with Terry Paupp
2007-08-08The Global War on Terrorism -- The First 100 Days
2008-02-21The demographics of bad politics
2008-02-18The Next Christianity
2008-02-21'America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It' -- A review
2008-03-01Principle Confronting Power
2008-03-03President Addresses Joint Armed Forces Officers' Wives' Luncheon
2008-03-03Us and Them -- The Enduring Power of Ethnic Nationalism
2008-03-05The radical dawa in transition -- The rise of Islamic neoradicalism in the Netherlands
2008-03-19The new liberal imperialism
2008-02-06The Rage, the Pride and the Doubt -- Thoughts on the eve of battle in Iraq
2008-02-08The Fallacy of Grievance-based Terrorism
2008-02-02A Statesman Without Borders
2008-02-04Going bankrupt: The US's greatest threat
2008-01-19A Political-Risk Outlook for 2008
2007-12-16Afghan Mission Is Reviewed as Concerns Rise
2008-01-02Turkish accession to the European union: challenges and opportunities
2008-01-04Why Iraq? Oil and U.S. Foreign Policy
2008-01-06Press Conference by the President
2008-01-11Turkey Talk
2007-10-04Open Fire
2007-09-25Distorting Desire
2007-09-27Rice vows US is committed to tackling global warming
2007-09-21Why Can't the U.S. Have the Debate about Naomi Klein's Book That Europe Has?
2007-09-24Ahmadinejad a hero for Arabs
2007-10-18Bringing Rancor to a Swiss Election
2007-10-24CNN Larry King Live -- Interview with Vicente Fox
2007-11-06President Bush Discusses Global War on Terror
2007-11-22The United States’ new backyard
2007-11-28Does the Future Belong to China?
2008-06-10Impeach George W. Bush Resolution
2008-06-03Some European Perspectives on Terrorism
2008-05-14Resisting the Empire
2008-05-05Global Neo-Liberalism, the Deformation of Education and Resistance
2008-05-27Palestinian, Iraqi, Afghan, Biofuel and Climate Genocides – Silence Kills and Silence is Complicity
2008-04-04Interview: Lee Kuan Yew -- Part 1
2008-04-05The Coming of Eurabia
2008-04-01Seattle Turning Point. Fixing or Nixing the WTO
2008-04-25Planning For Planetary Interrogation — Cradle To Grave For Perfect Slave
2008-04-23Is Europe Dying? -- Notes on a Crisis of Civilizational Morale
2008-08-12'Hope of the wicked'
2008-08-01The Democrats & National Security
2008-07-28Rome Diary: Italy's Leap Into The Dark
2008-06-18The Future of American Power -- How America Can Survive the Rise of the Rest
2008-07-07Wrestling for influence
2008-09-02Can The War On Terror Be Won? -- How To Fight The Right War
2008-08-21The Gaza concentration camp: ancient colonialism through a Nazi filter
2008-09-17Le Feyt Declaration - Peace in Iraq is an option
2008-10-02The Statesman
2008-12-06Slow-Motion Genocide in Occupied Palestine
2008-11-20The Cold Peace
2008-11-21A Conversation with Vicente Fox Quesada
2008-10-27The Rape of Palestine -- Hope Destroyed, Justice Denied
2008-11-09Blueprint for Change -- Obama and Biden’s Plan for America
2008-11-10The Eurabian Revolution
2008-11-07Confronting Global Challenges
2009-05-22The Revenge of Geography
2009-06-10How the Chicago Boys Wrecked the Economy -- An Interview with Michael Hudson
2009-07-07President Barack Obama???s Moscow speech
2007-08-12World’s Best Medical Care?
2007-08-14The virtues of the Mediterranean union
2007-07-31Franco – Arab Ties Could Yet Survive Sarkozy’s U-Turn
2007-08-07Transcript: Bush news conference
2007-08-19On Israel, America and AIPAC
2007-08-24The Human Bomb -- The Sarkozy regime begins
2007-08-26Tomgram: Juan Cole, The Republic Militant at War, Then and Now
2007-07-10Tariq Ramadan Has an Identity Issue
2007-07-22Interview with Israel Shahak
2007-07-27To Check Syria, U.S. Explores Bond With Muslim Brothers
2007-06-18Israel-Lebanon conflict - timeline of events
2007-06-19Vanishing Christians of the Mideast -- The Silent Exodus
2007-06-19George Soros – Bush America needs de-Nazification
2007-06-19CNN LATE EDITION WITH WOLF BLITZER
2007-06-29Reply to Dalrymple
2007-06-29Dalrymple on Decadence, Europe, America and Islam -- An interview with Theodore Dalrymple
2007-06-26Empire strikes back
2007-07-02Zionist Plan for the Middle East
2007-06-13The Muslim Marshall Plan
2007-06-13John Perkins on "The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth about Global Corruption"
2007-06-14Abbas declares state of emergency as Hamas overrruns Gaza
2007-06-14Why America always picks at China?
2007-06-07US missiles hit Russia where it hurts
2007-06-05President Bush Visits Prague, Czech Republic, Discusses Freedom
2007-06-08Remarks at the Centennial Dinner for the Economic Club of New York
2007-06-08Political Islam
2007-05-27When oil and water mix
2007-05-27Commentary: Islamic deja vu
2007-05-31The Case for Bombing Iran
2007-06-01A Life in Violent Motion
2007-06-01The Importance of Being Lucid
2007-06-02'High priests of globalization' in Istanbul
2007-05-17Us And Them -- Chapter One -- "that's Our Biggest Difference"
2007-05-14Timeline: Nato
2007-05-17300: Proto-Fascism and Manufacturing of Complicity
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 4 -- The Global Challenge of WMD Terrorism
2007-05-10A Reporter At Large: In The Party Of God (Part II)
2007-05-10Bystanders to Genocide
2007-05-10Hezbollah, Illegal Immigration, and the Next 9/11
2007-05-11Waning Chances for Stability -- Least Bad Options in a Failed, War-Torn State
2006-08-21Ask the expert: Bush’s foreign policy
2006-09-18Tales from Eurabia
2006-09-19THE AGITATOR
2006-09-23A Guided Tour of Class in America -- A Tomdispatch Interview with Barbara Ehrenreich
2006-09-12New Glory
2006-09-03Transcript - President Bush's Speech
2006-10-25US: world empire of chaos
2006-10-09The Emerging Russian Giant Plays its Cards Strategically
2006-10-10World Conquest : The Heartland Theory of Halford J. Mackinder
2006-10-02Full text of Tony Blair's speech to the TUC
2006-11-06SCHRÖDER ON IRAQ - "The Mother of all Misjudgements"
2006-11-05Empire Falls
2006-12-04Afghanistan: No blood for oil - this time
2006-12-02We are only two weeks from an existential explosion
2006-11-29Islamic Revolution
2006-11-22Full text: Vladimir Putin interview
2007-02-26Christian Fascism: The Jesus Gestapo of St. Orwell
2007-02-20Misplaying North Korea and Losing Friends and Influence in Northeast Asia
2007-02-19Chomsky on Iran, Iraq, and the Rest of the World
2007-02-20Russia's hudna with the Muslim world
2007-01-27My Worst Moment As a Lawyer
2007-02-10Q&A: Neocon power examined
2007-03-04Freedom cannot be decreed
2007-03-02Australia: the new 51st state
2007-03-01Heineken N.V. -- Encyclopedia Of Company Histories
2007-03-04Taking the fight to Islam
2007-03-09Assembly, Opening Debate On Question Of Palestine, Hears Call For Enhanced UN Involvement In Current Middle East Situation
2007-03-10AN INTERVIEW WITH QUEEN NOOR
2006-12-31The Dutch news in 2006 - Part II
2006-12-16Revamping Us Foreign Policy, Part 1 - Full speed ahead, with menace
2007-04-05Constructing a New Europe
2007-04-06Britain's Humiliation -- and Europe's
2007-04-09Where Plan A left Ahmad Chalabi
2007-04-10Six Crises in Search of an Author
2007-04-10Downsizing -- WHAT THE ‘SURGE’ REALLY MEANS
2007-04-12The Other September 11th
2007-04-12A Conversation With Vladimir Bukovsky
2007-04-14War? You must be joking
2007-04-14Islamic Europe?
2007-04-15Trade and American National Security: The Case Of China's WTO Accession
2007-04-16Politicus : Spain talks new game to the United States
2007-04-18U.S. Missile Deals Bypass, and Annoy, European Union
2007-04-23Boris Yeltsin, Russia’s First Post-Soviet Leader, Is Dead
2007-04-25Economic Hit Men -- An interview with John Perkins
2007-04-25The Crime of War: From Nuremberg to Fallujah
2007-03-15Stripped of Their Humanity
2007-03-15Mohammedanism
2007-03-16President Bush Calls for New Palestinian Leadership
2007-03-17Europe is not the sum of its parts
2007-03-17The Laach Maria monster
2007-03-24Is the American Empire on the Brink of Collapse?
2007-03-31Iran crisis is Blair's true legacy
2007-03-31The Second Lebanon War -- It probably won't be the last
2008-10-02U.S. Not Winning War on Terror -- Special Report
2008-09-25Power, Politics & Scholarship
2008-10-13Letter to Chairman Rockefeller and Vice Chairman Bond
2008-10-11What Went Wrong? Western Impact and Middle Eastern Response
2008-10-11Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam
2008-10-07Russia, Georgia And The European Union – The Creeping Finlandization Of Europe
2008-08-24Are You Ready for Nuclear War? -- The Mindlessness is Total
2008-09-11International Migration Outlook 2008
2008-07-05Symposium: Israel's Test
2008-06-20An impression of the political use of anti-Semitism, Nazism, and the Holocaust in the Netherlands
2008-06-21Jimmy Carter and Apartheid
2008-06-24Chomsky Speaks -- On Iraq, Iran and Norman Finkelstein
2008-06-25Shackled Warrior -- Israel in bondage -- An NRO Q&A
2008-06-16The Fall of France and the Multicultural World War
2008-06-16Not an island -- Europe and the Middle East
2008-07-28"A Decent Respect to the Opinions of [Human]kind":
2008-07-28Reflections on Leadership
2008-07-31Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre delivers speech at Harvard University
2008-07-31The Med’s moment comes
2008-07-30THE BIG LIE ABOUT `ISLAMIC FASCISM’
2008-04-16A Review of the Seminar ‘the Security of Energy Supplies: the Role of NATO and Other International Organisations’
2008-04-22The March to War: Israel Prepares for War against Lebanon and Syria
2008-04-15No Child Left Behind and the Imperial Project -- Cutting the Schools-to-War Pipeline
2008-05-03An Anatomy of Surrender
2008-04-07Timeline of Social Events Related to Social Cohesion
2008-03-24Globalization And The Development Of Underdevelopment Of The Third World
2008-03-23Dissecting the Danish Cartoon Controversy
2008-03-24It Wasn't On Oprah or Fox News -- How Could Hillary Have Known?
2008-05-05Educational Geopolitics and the Settler University in Ariel
2008-05-14The Other Guantanamo
2008-05-14NATO at a Crossroads
2008-06-03The Much Too Promised Land: America’s Elusive Search for Arab-Israeli Peace
2008-05-29Advice for the Nuclear Abolitionists
2008-05-31The Palestinian Refugee Issue: Rhetoric vs. Reality
2008-06-06Between the Rule of Power and the Power of Rule: In Search of an Effective World Order
2007-11-28Reply to Dalrymple
2007-12-03Sudan: Humanitarian Crisis, Peace Talks, Terrorism, and U.S. Policy
2007-12-03France stunned by rioters’ savagery
2007-11-16The Crisis Of Pakistan: A Dangerously Weak State
2007-11-16The Threat of Maritime Terrorism to Israel
2007-11-12Stabbed in the back! The past and future of a right-wing myth
2007-10-30Michael Ledeen discusses the Iranian Time Bomb
2007-10-21Iran tops agenda as Olmert visits Europe
2007-09-06Excerpts from an interview with Lee Kuan Yew
2007-09-12Suddenly, the old world looks younger
2007-10-08The many battles for Turkey’s soul
2007-10-12'The Trouble Is the West'
2008-01-11After Iraq
2008-01-10Daughter of the West
2008-01-09Why I Believe Bush Must Go -- Nixon Was Bad. These Guys Are Worse
2008-01-14Belgo-British Conference 2005 -- 2020 – a new horizon for Europe
2008-01-03Is “Brotherhood” with America Possible?*
2007-12-28The Kurdish Policy Imperative
2007-12-29His Toughness Problem — and Ours
2007-12-15Why We Should Oppose an Independent Kosovo
2007-12-17Donor conference politically oriented
2007-12-22Iran - Nuclear Chronology - 2005
2007-12-27Fatah leaders conspire to unseat Salam Fayyad Palestinian PM and pre-empt his control of donated $7.4 bn
2007-12-07A new Chinese red line over Iran
2007-12-14Bush Administration Says Prominent Muslim Scholar Can’t Teach in the US Because He Donated to Palestinian Charity
2007-12-10Timeline: the al-Qaida tapes
2008-01-21Strategic Communication
2008-01-21More Instruments and Broader Goals: Moving Toward the Post-Washington Consensus
2008-01-30THE COURAGE AND WISDOM OF ORIANA FALLACI
2008-01-24In Books, a Clash of Europe and Islam
2008-01-24A Moral Core for U.S. Foreign Policy
2008-02-05Banana Republic, Without the Bananas…or the Republic
2008-02-06How Bush Created a Theocracy in Iraq
2008-01-30Did Di Die for Prada Islam?
2008-01-31The North American Union and the Larger Plan
2008-01-31THE NEW WORLD ORDER' -- A Critique and Chronology
2008-02-01Global Banking: The Bank for International Settlements
2008-02-01Iraq: The Way Out -- Transcript
2008-02-07Danger woman
2008-03-11Manifesto for a new “WE” -- AN APPEAL TO THE WESTERN MUSLIMS, AND THEIR FELLOW CITIZENS
2008-03-11Citizenship in European Thought: An Overview
2008-03-14Aims and Methods of Europe's Muslim Brotherhood
2008-03-16Bush is an idiot, but he was right about Saddam
2008-02-29Islamist Bubbles -- Beware the light at the end of the Islamist tunnel
2008-02-17Kosovo Declares Its Independence From Serbia
2008-02-18Europe must embrace Islam too
2008-02-17Melanie Phillips on the Archbishop of Canterbury and Islamic Sharia law in Britain
2008-02-14The Much Exaggerated Death of Europe
2009-07-08So This Is What Victory Looks Like?
2009-07-16Why we must win in Afghanistan
2009-07-06Rewards of Syrian diplomacy
2009-06-20The Secret Wars Of The Cia -- Part 2
2009-06-22Do you believe in a New World Order?
2009-06-20The Waning Power of Truth
2009-06-12Obama calls for new beginning between US, Muslims
2009-05-22The Historical Roots of the Anti-Israel Positions of Liberal Protestant Churches -- Interview with Hans Jansen
2009-05-22Averting Abuse of Universal Jurisdiction
2009-06-17The narrow strategic thinking of pro-Ahmadinejad Israelis
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: South and Central Asia Overview
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: Western Hemisphere Overview
2009-05-092000 Bank For International Settlements Report
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: Europe and Eurasia Overview
2009-07-20Transcript of President Barack Obama's speech at the National Archives
2009-08-10The Sound Of Silence -- The Antithesis Of Freedom
2008-11-06Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: East Asia and Pacific Overview
2008-11-05"The Nation-State Is Now Transcendent, You Are Now Global Slaves And Interdependent, The Rise Of Dominion, The Death Of The Nation, Welcome To The Global Plantation"
2008-11-03U.N. plans aid convoy into east Congo rebel zone
2008-11-05Post cold war Indian foreign policy
2008-11-11The Case for Restraint -- Foreign policy after George W. Bush
2008-11-10Mackinder’s World
2008-11-11'What's Looming in Ukraine Is more Threatening than Georgia'
2008-10-24Don't Expand NATO: The Case Against Membership for Georgia and Ukraine
2008-11-20A Fascist Philosopher Helps Us Understand Contemporary Politics
2008-11-20The Will to Undemocratic Power
2008-11-20Defining the “Post-Soviet Space”
2008-11-24Why Obama Missed Bretton Woods II
2008-11-24Global Trends 2025: A Transformed World -- Executive Summary
2008-11-242025: the end of US dominance
2008-11-23The American Mission?
2008-11-17Meanwhile, somewhere out in the Empire...
2008-11-26Pipelines, politics and power -- The future of EU-Russia energy relations -- Energy geopolitics in Russia-EU relations
2008-11-26Understanding the Beijing Consensus
2009-01-11An inside story of how the US magnified Palestinian suffering
2009-01-26Land Of The Free Speakers
2008-12-16Slouching toward a Palestinian Holocaust
2008-12-30May We No Longer Be Silent -- America's Crimes "Never Happened"
2008-12-30‘A Dubai on the Mediterranean’ -- Sara Roy on Gaza’s future
2009-01-28A Performance-Based Roadmap to a Permanent Two-State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict