Dinesh D'Souza - America: Imagine a World without Her

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by Dinesh D'Souza




  Copyright © 2014 by Dinesh D’Souza

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper, website, or broadcast.

  First ebook edition ©2012

  eISBN 978-1-62157-228-2

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:

  D’Souza, Dinesh, 1961-

  America / Dinesh D’Souza.

  pages cm

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  1. Political culture—United States. 2. United States—Politics and government—Moral and ethical aspects. 3. Civilization, Modern—American influences. 4. National characteristics, American. 5. United States—Relations. I. Title.

  JK1726.D76 2014

  973—dc23

  Published in the United States by

  Regnery Publishing

  A Salem Communications Company

  300 New Jersey Avenue NW

  Washington, DC 20001

  www.Regnery.com

  For Gerald Molen,

  whose life embodies the spirit of America

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER 1: SUICIDE OF A NATION

  CHAPTER 2: A TALE OF TWO FRENCHMEN

  CHAPTER 3: NOVUS ORDO SECLORUM

  CHAPTER 4: AMERICA THE INEXCUSABLE

  CHAPTER 5: THE PLAN

  CHAPTER 6: THE RED MAN’S BURDEN

  CHAPTER 7: THE MYTH OF AZTLAN

  CHAPTER 8: THEIR FOURTH OF JULY

  CHAPTER 9: “THANK YOU, MISTER JEFFERSON”

  CHAPTER 10: THE VIRTUE OF PROSPERITY

  CHAPTER 11: WHO’S EXPLOITING WHOM?

  CHAPTER 12: A GLOBAL SUCCESS STORY

  CHAPTER 13: EMPIRE OF LIBERTY

  CHAPTER 14: THE BIGGEST THIEF OF ALL

  CHAPTER 15: AMERICAN PANOPTICON

  CHAPTER 16: DECLINE IS A CHOICE

  CONNECT WITH DINESH D’SOUZA

  NOTES

  INDEX

  CHAPTER 1

  SUICIDE OF A NATION

  With him the love of country means Blowing it all to smithereens And having it all made over new.1

  ROBERT FROST

  Writing in the mid-twentieth century, the French existentialist writer Albert Camus posed for human beings a central question: to exist or not to exist. In Camus’s words, “There is but one truly serious philosophical problem, and that is suicide.” In a sense, this was Hamlet’s question: “To be or not to be.” For Camus, human beings had lived for millennia in a meaningful universe, a universe created by God, and one that gave significance and purpose to human life. But now, Camus wrote, we have discovered through science and reason that the universe is pointless, merely a constellation of flashing and spinning orbs and objects. God is absent from the world, which is another way of saying he does not exist for us. Consequently humans have to find ultimate meaning elsewhere, and there is nowhere else to look. So life becomes, in Shakespeare’s words, “a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.” Drawing on ancient myth, Camus likened the human predicament to that of Sisyphus endlessly rolling the rock up the hill, only to see it roll back down.

  For Camus, the problem wasn’t merely that the universe lacks meaning; it was that man desires meaning and there is no meaning to be had. Consequently our situation is kind of absurd. “The absurd is born of this confrontation between the human need and the unreasonable silence of the world.” Most people, according to Camus, ignore this tragic reality. They deflect the meaninglessness of their lives by engaging in various trivial pursuits. But for morally serious people, Camus says, this deflection is not an option. He proposes that humans must take the absurdity of their lives seriously, and in doing so, they must consider whether to live in tragic absurdity or voluntarily end their lives. Suicide, for Camus, was an ethical choice.2

  Of course people since ancient times have considered, and even committed, suicide. Typically, however, they did so out of personal despair, because life for them ceased to matter, or because they were in too much pain. Camus was original in that he raised existential despair to a universal human level—we are all in the same predicament—and because he considered suicide as not just something people do, but something we ought to regard as a moral option, perhaps even a moral imperative. Strange though this may seem, it is a view taken up, to an extent, by the most radical of environmentalists who see human beings as a blight on the planet.

  As it is with humans, so it may be with nations. Nations, of course, rarely attempt suicide. I cannot think of a single country that has tried to destroy itself. Presumably this is because nations, like humans, have a survival instinct. The survival instinct of nations is the collective survival instinct of the people in those nations. Why, then, would a nation attempt to destroy itself or commit suicide? Nations sometimes are conquered by other nations, or they collapse from within, but they never seek self-destruction. Yet Abraham Lincoln observed, a century and a half ago, that if America were ever to fall, it would not be by external means or even by internal collapse. Rather, it would be by the actions of Americans themselves. In his Lyceum Address, Lincoln said:

  Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant to step the Ocean and crush us at a blow? Never! All the armies of Europe, Asia and Africa combined, with all the treasure of the earth, our own excepted, in their military chest, with a Bonaparte for a commander, could not by force take a drink from the Ohio, or make a track on the Blue Ridge, in a trial of a thousand years. At what point then is the approach of danger to be expected? I answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide.3

  Surely Lincoln is not suggesting that America—or Americans—might voluntarily seek destruction. Undoubtedly Lincoln believed that such an outcome would be the unforeseen consequence of calamitous misjudgment and folly. Yet I intend to show in this book that the American era is ending in part because a powerful group of Americans wants it to end. The American dream is shrinking because some of our leaders want it to shrink. Decline, in other words, has become a policy objective. And if this decline continues at the current pace, America as we know it will cease to exist. In effect, we will have committed national suicide.

  America’s suicide, it turns out, is the result of a plan. The plan is not simply one of destruction but also one of reconstruction—it seeks the rebuilding of a different type of country, what President Obama terms “the work of remaking America.”4 While Obama acknowledges the existence of the plan, he is not responsible for the plan; it would be more accurate to say that it is responsible for him. The plan preceded Obama, and it will outlast him. Obama is simply part of a fifty-year scheme for the undoing and remaking of America, and when he is gone there are others who are ready to continue the job. What makes the plan especially chilling is that most Americans are simply unaware of what’s going on. Their ignorance, as we shall see, is part of the plan.

  It should be emphasized at the outset that the domestic champions of American decline are not traitors or America-haters. They are bringing down America because they genuinely believe that America deserves to be brought down. Their actions are the result of a powerful moral critique of America, one that has never been eff
ectively answered. Nor is it easy to answer. Most people, confronted with the critique, go mute. Some respond with bluster; others want to change the topic. The ineffectiveness of these rebuttals makes independent observers believe this critique cannot be answered.

  Consequently, the critique is widely taught in our schools and universities, and accepted as valid by the ruling powers in Washington, D.C. The critique leads to the conclusion that America must go down so that others can come up. It is now the accepted basis for America’s foreign and domestic policy. The plan for national suicide is in effect. And if it continues to be implemented, it is merely a matter of time—years rather than decades—for the American era to be finished. American lives will be diminished, and the “American dream” will be an object of past recollection and contemporary sneering. In the minds of those who brought this about, this will be a very good thing. For them, as for Camus, suicide could be regarded as the moral course of action.

  Thumb through the writings of the pundits and scholars, and talk of American decline is everywhere. “Is America Over?” reads the headline of the December 2011 issue of Foreign Affairs. Writing in Political Science Quarterly, Giacomo Chiozza warns that America, once-great, is now “facing the prospect of its final decay.” Stephen Cohen and Bradford DeLong contemplate America’s grim fate in a recent book The End of Influence. “The American standard of living will decline,” they predict, and “the United States will lose power and influence.” America can no longer dominate the world because “the other countries … will have all the money.” Once an America booster, Fareed Zakaria now chants a different tune, suggested by the title of his book The Post-American World. Across the spectrum, commentators discuss how to prevent decline, or how to cope with decline. Virtually no one is saying that decline is a myth or that America’s prospects are rising.5

  There seem to be three obvious indicators of decline. First, the American economy is stagnant and shrinking relative to the growing economies of China, Russia, India, and Brazil. In a recent article, “The End of the American Era,” Stephen Walt writes that “China is likely to overtake America in total economic output no later than 2025.” The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), based in Paris, predicts that as early as 2016—when Obama leaves office—China, not the United States, will be the world’s largest economy. When this seemingly inevitable event occurs, it will be the first time in many centuries that a non-Western, non-democratic, and non-English-speaking nation has headed the world economy. Since the American era coincides with American economic dominance, it seems fair to say that when the dominance ceases, the American era will officially have come to an end. And history shows that once nations lose their position at the top of the world, they never get it back.6

  Second, America is drowning in debt. While China is the world’s largest creditor nation, America is the world’s largest debtor nation. At $17 trillion, the national debt is now bigger than the annual gross domestic product—in other words, it is bigger than the total sum of goods and services that America produces in a year. Nearly half of this debt has been accumulated during the Obama years, at the average rate of a trillion dollars a year. At this pace, Obama will more than double the deficit in two terms. Since a substantial portion of America’s debt is owed to foreign countries, such as China and the Arab nations, debt produces a transfer of wealth away from America and toward the rest of the world. Today, instead of America owning the world, the world increasingly owns America. Moreover, if America continues to pile on debt in Obama proportions, it won’t be long before the country is bankrupt. The striking aspect of this is not that the problem is so serious, but that the president seems remarkably indifferent, as if he’s carrying on business as usual. As we will discover, he is. And the results are predictable. Rich countries, like rich people, can afford to act irresponsibly for a while, but eventually the creditors show up to take away your house and car.

  Finally, America is losing its position in the world. The Obama administration is downsizing our nuclear arsenal when other nations are building and modernizing theirs. Under the START Treaty, America has gone from several thousand nuclear warheads to a limit of 1,550. In 2013, Obama proposed cutting that number even further to around 1,000, and he has said he intends getting rid of nuclear weapons altogether. Whether America’s nuclear impotence will enhance world peace is debatable; that it will reduce America’s military dominance is certain.

  Besides nuclear hegemony, America is also relinquishing its hegemony around the world, especially in the strategically and economically vital Middle East. As political scientist Fawaz Gerges puts it in a recent book, Obama and the Middle East, “U.S. influence … is at its lowest point since the beginning of the cold war in the late 1940s… . America neither calls the shots as before nor dominates the regional scene in the way it did… . We are witnessing the end of America’s moment in the Middle East.”7 The growing power of China, Russia, and other emerging countries has also restricted America’s impact in Asia, Europe, and South America. America seems on the way to become a feeble giant, a second Canada.

  Decline has consequences, not only for America but also for Americans. We are facing the prospect of a sharp drop not merely in America’s role in the world, but also in America’s standard of living. In some respects, America is exchanging places with the emerging countries. They are getting stronger while we grow weaker. They gain the influence that we have lost or relinquished. They are growing rapidly while we are risking an economic collapse that would plunge us into second- or even third-world status.

  All this talk about America’s decline or even collapse is surprising when we recall that, just a few years ago, America seemed to be on top of the world. In fact, America was the sole superpower. America’s military might was unrivalled, its economy dominant, and its culture spreading contagiously on every continent. The American ascendancy began in 1945, after World War II. That’s when America became a superpower. But America became the sole superpower only when the Soviet Union collapsed, in 1992. Thus the triumph of America in the second half of the twentieth century is accompanied by the sober realization that the American era is merely six decades old, and America has been the undisputed world leader for only two decades. When we consider that the Roman Age lasted a thousand years, and the Ottomans and the British dominated the world for several centuries, America’s dominance seems brief, and already it is precarious.

  America’s global ascendancy was predicted and indeed choreographed by the Founders, more than two centuries ago. The Founders who gathered in Philadelphia believed that they were creating a formula for a new type of society. They called it the novus ordo seclorum, a new order for the ages, or in Tom Paine’s words, America was “the birthday of a new world.” The Founders knew they were in a unique position. Alexander Hamilton noted that, historically, countries have been founded by “accident and force” but America was an opportunity to found a nation by “reflection and choice.” In one sense the Founders were creating a universal example; thus George Washington could say that the cause of America was also the “cause of mankind.”8 At the same time, the Founders had created a specific nation they believed would become the strongest, most prosperous, and most influential society on the planet—and they have been proven right.

  What they could not have known, however, is that they were also creating the last best hope for Western civilization. For many centuries, Europe was the embodiment and defender of the West. The leadership of the West shifted from century to century—from the Portuguese in the fifteenth century to the Spanish in the sixteenth to the French in the seventeenth to the British in the eighteenth and nineteenth—but nevertheless the baton passed from one European power to another. It was only in the twentieth century that Europe itself lost its preeminence. The main reason was that World War II left all the three major European powers—Britain, France, and Germany—in ruins.

  In 1964, the political scientist James Burnham published Suicide of the
West. Burnham noted that “Western civilization has been in a period of very rapid decline, recession or ebb within the world power structure.” Burnham wasn’t talking about the Western standard of living. Rather, he meant the decline of Western power and influence. Burnham noted that early in the twentieth century the West—led by Britain—controlled approximately two-thirds of the real estate on the planet. A “galactic observer” could not fail to see that “in 1914 the domain of Western civilization was, or very nearly was, the world.” But within a few decades, Burnham said, the area under Western control had dramatically shrunk. One by one the West gave up its colonial possessions, sometimes voluntarily, sometimes after a fight. Either way, the countries of Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and South America were gaining their independence, which is to say, freeing themselves from Western control. “If the process continues over the next several decades more or less as it has gone on,” Burnham wrote, “then—this is merely mathematical extrapolation—the West will be finished.” And since historical contractions of this magnitude are seldom reversed, Burnham grimly concluded that “the West, in shrinking, is also dying.”9

  Burnham missed one critical development—the transfer of leadership from Europe to the United States. Unlike the British and the French, America was not a colonizing power. (In fact, America had once been a colony of Britain.) America sought no colonies for itself in the manner of the British and the French. Indeed, in the decades after World War II, America encouraged Britain to grant independence to its colonies. Thus America’s influence in the world, unlike Europe’s, was not based on conquest but rather on attraction to American ideals and the American way of life. Milton writes in Paradise Lost, “Who overcomes by force, hath overcome but half his foe.”10 America’s influence was greater because its institutions and values were adopted rather than imposed. Still, America’s triumph was accompanied by the sobering realization that if America fell, there would be no one left to pick up the baton. The end of the American era would seem to signal also the end of Western civilization.

 

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