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| Obama as the Dying God | Remember "No New Taxes"? |
by Christopher Chantrill
August 24, 2011 at 1:24 pm
PEGGY NOONON, as usual, asks the critical question in the aftermath of the London riots and the Philadelphia flash mobs.
When the riot begins or the flash mob arrives, the best the government can do is control the streets, enforce the law, maintain the peace.
After that, then what? Britain is about to face that question. Well likely have to face it, too, in the US.
The next step, she writes, is usually: The government has to do something. We must start a program, create an agency to address juvenile delinquency. Only that seems to be a joke these days. After all, the youth of London have been programmed, agencied, and social worked to death in the last half century. And still we get riots?
The conservative answer to the failure of the authoritarian welfare state with its programs, its agencies, and its social science experts is civil society. That notion goes back to Edmund Burke and his little platoons. Berger and Neuhaus addressed it in To Empower People where they argued for mediating structures, of family, church, association between the individual and the state.
Recently I have been reading the work of Lawrence Cahoone. His Civil Society: The Conservative Meaning of Liberal Politics is a profound critique of the failure of neutralist liberalism and an argument for civil society. Of course, his book is not a font of policy prescriptions, ammo for politicians eager to do something in the present crisis. It does little more than describe civil society: What it is, what it means, and what it does.
Even in the chaos of the London riots we can see civil society at work. From the Daily Mail.
In Dalston and Hackney, north-east London, Turkish shopkeepers and their families fought back against looting youths, before spending the night standing shoulder-to-shoulder in an attempt to deter further attacks.
When the chips are down, civil society means, at a minimum, that the men get together to defend their neighborhood.
Cahoone describes civil society in two major chapters of his book. The first, Civil Society, describes civil society institutionally; the second, Civility, Neighborhood, and Culture, describes it as culture.
The key point is that civil society is informal, a quasi-independent association of households. It is not community, for it is not unified. It is not government, but it is an association that relates to government.
In detail, Cahoone describes five characteristics of civil society:
Society is autonomous, for Society gets its norms from the inside rather than from institutions outside it.
There are no subjects, only citizens. Aristocrat and commoner are united in their Frenchness or Englishness.
Civil society is a spontaneous order, not ordered up by political will. No single agency dominates social life. There are different types of institutions competing in society and many competing within each type.
Civil societies must have market economies. But civil society is not the same as the market; it abuts the market economy and the rules of civility are not the rules of the market.
At the cultural level, writes Cahoone, it is important to remember that civil society is not politics. It is primarily living-with, not talking-with; It is "membership, freedom, civility, and dignity. Dignity here means recognizable worthiness, a rough equality in which banker and laborer take care to relate as equals.
The essential core of the civil society is its dialectic of civility and culture. There cannot be a pure civility; it must be informed by some cultural tradition. But not just one tradition. Civil society implies a diversity, a competition of cultural narratives, but a competition that minimizes cultural coercion.
The modern world is a mix of market, civil society, and nationalism, writes Cahoone. These are fighting words, for when you think about it, our liberal friends are at war with all three. They want to control the market with their regulations and subsidies; they want to marginalize civil society with their political hegemony, and they want to neuter national identity with their elite cosmopolitanism.
Radio host Dennis Prager always says: I prefer clarity over agreement. The more that I learn about civil society, the more I reach clarity about what that city on a hill will look like.
When we conservatives reach clarity on civil society we will be ready to hammer out a new social contract with the American people. It will be based on the simple idea that civil society is at the heart of America. Civil society is the solvent that can soften the endless creative destruction of the market and the civil war by other means of national politics.
And it will deflate the thugs of the flash mobs.
Christopher Chantrill blogs at www.roadtothemiddleclass.com. His Road to the Middle Class is forthcoming.
[W]hen I asked a liberal longtime editor I know with a mainstream [publishing] house for a candid, shorthand version of the assumptions she and her colleagues make about conservatives, she didn't hesitate. Racist, sexist, homophobic, anti-choice fascists, she offered, smiling but meaning it.
Harry Stein, I Can't Believe I'm Sitting Next to a Republican
Families helped each other putting up homes and barns. Together, they built churches, schools, and common civic buildings. They collaborated to build roads and bridges. They took pride in being free persons, independent, and self-reliant; but the texture of their lives was cooperative and fraternal.
Michael Novak, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism
For [the left] there is only the state and the individual, nothing in between. No family to rely on, no friend to depend on, no community to call on. No neighbourhood to grow in, no faith to share in, no charities to work in. No-one but the Minister, nowhere but Whitehall, no such thing as society - just them, and their laws, and their rules, and their arrogance.
David Cameron, Conference Speech 2008
Imagining that all order is the result of design, socialists
conclude that order must be improvable by better design of some superior mind.
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit
[Every] sacrifice is an act of impurity that pays for a prior act of greater impurity... without its participants having to suffer the full consequences incurred by its predecessor. The punishment is commuted in a process that strangely combines and finesses the deep contradiction between justice and mercy.
Frederick Turner, Beauty: The Value of Values
But the only religions that have survived are those which support property and the family.
Thus the outlook for communism, which is both anti-property and anti-family, (and also anti-religion), is not promising.
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit
[T]he way to achieve a system of determining admission to the public schools on a nonracial basis,
Brown II, 349 U. S., at 300301, is to stop assigning students on a racial basis. The way to stop
discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.
Roberts, C.J., Parents Involved in Community Schools vs. Seattle School District
A writer who says that there are no truths, or that all truth is merely relative, is asking you not to believe him. So dont.
Roger Scruton, Modern Philosophy
Paul Dirac: When I was talking with Lemaître about [the expanding universe] and feeling stimulated
by the grandeur of the picture that he has given us, I told him that
I thought cosmology was the branch of science that lies closest to religion.
However [Georges] Lemaître [Catholic priest, physicist, and
inventor of the Big Bang Theory] did not agree with me. After thinking it over he
suggested psychology as lying closest to religion.
John Farrell, The Creation Myth
Within Pentecostalism the injurious hierarchies of the wider world are abrogated and replaced by a single hierarchy of faith, grace, and the empowerments of the spirit... where groups gather on rafts to take them through the turbulence of the great journey from extensive rural networks to the mega-city and the nuclear family...
David Martin, On Secularization
No lesson seems to be so deeply inculcated by the experience of life as that you should never trust experts. If you believe doctors, nothing is wholesome: if you believe the theologians, nothing is innocent: if you believe the soldiers, nothing is safe. They all require their strong wine diluted by a very large admixture of insipid common sense.
Lord Salisbury, Letter to Lord Lytton
In 1911... at least nine million of the 12 million covered by national insurance were already members of voluntary sick pay schemes. A similar proportion were also eligible for medical care.
Green, Reinventing Civil Society
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©2007 Christopher Chantrill