THE RULERS AND THE
RULED
By Charles A. Coulombe
|
The late Malcolm Muggeridge often declared that the
modern world is based on fantasy. By this, alas, he
didn’t mean such beguiling (and ultimately true)
books as The Lord of the Rings, but rather, a refusal
to look reality in the face; that is, we are resolved
to attempt to reshape the cosmos to our liking. Since
we can’t really do this, we pretend that what
we want is so --- even though we know it isn’t.
Orwell called it “double-think.”
The title of this essay was suggested by that of an
English ghost story, “The Haunters and the Haunted;”
the implication of which being that the reader will
have a hard time figuring out just who is being appeared
to and whom the apparition. So it is with the nature
of power in the modern world --- by which, incidentally,
this writer means Europe, North America, Japan, and
Australasia. Across the rest of the globe, except for
Latin America, the Philippines, and possibly India and
a few other places (which are in various stages of transformation
--- though from what to what has yet to be ascertained),
there is rarely a question as to whom the rulers may
be, and who the ruled.
Muggeridge and Orwell had an advantage in knowing the
power of fantasy, for they lived under Constitutional
Monarchies. As they have evolved, these sorts of nations
have become showplaces of shared fiction. Not only in
Great Britain, but in Canada, Australia, New Zealand,
Spain, Japan, Scandinavia, and Benelux, the pageantry
of royalty clothes the reality of power. On state occasions,
even now, the sovereign rides by crowds of cheering
subjects in a gilded coach; laws are enacted in the
name of the Monarch; the armed forces swear their allegiance
to him, and so forth. Charities, learned bodies, schools,
and churches all treasure their connections to the Crown.
Even favored tradesmen proudly display their warrants
as purveyors to the court.
But in those countries immediate power rests with whomever
holds a majority in Parliament. If the Sovereign delivers
the speech from the throne amidst Medieval (or at least
19th century) pomp, it is the Prime Minister who writes
the speech. The laws may be executed in the name of
the Crown, but that wearer of that crown has nothing
to say about them. In practice the Monarch cannot exercise
his veto, even if he wanted to. Although in some of
these nations, it is theoretically possible that the
Sovereign might directly intervene to safeguard the
Constitution, it is unlikely to happen --- the one time
in recent years it did, in 1975, when Sir John Kerr,
Governor-General of Australia dismissed Prime Minister
Gough Whitlam, it was done without reference to Queen
Elizabeth II, the Sovereign whose representative Sir
John was. In Sweden and Japan, even this phantom power
has been taken away.
Of course, since the 1960s, much has changed with reigning
Monarchies, as with all else in Western society. The
marriage and divorce of the Prince of Wales and his
siblings, as well as various attendant scandals, have
tarnished the appearance of the House of Windsor in
the Commonwealth (the fact that in this they resemble
at least 50% of their British subjects is conveniently
ignored). But it is not just in divorce or sexual scandal
that modern royals ape modern commoners. Not a single
heir presumptive to a modern European throne has married
a fellow royal; the Crown Princes of Spain and Norway
have married, to use a quaint phrase, “women with
pasts,” in the latter case, complete with illegitimate
child. The former “Family” of royalty has
been broken.
These and kindred developments have led many in the
media and political classes to chip away at what remains
of the institution. In the name of “democracy,”
appointed positions one by one become political, rather
than royal, gifts. Royal symbols are chiseled away at,
and the lords of the media indulge in constant sniping
and ridiculing of the institution. At least one of the
major parties declares itself in favor of abolition
of the Monarchy, and keeps up a constant propaganda
on the point --- whether in power or as the “loyal
opposition.” The fact that such politicians have
sworn oaths of allegiance to the Sovereign they undermine
is of little consequence; perjury, as we proved with
the impeachment of Mr. Clinton, is not a crime.
But when the desiccated Crown is overturned, and replaced,
so to speak, with the politician’s top hat, does
the golden age at last arrive? Um, no. In parliamentary
republics such as Third and Fourth Republic France,
Germany, Italy, Portugal, Greece, and Austria, dreary
old politicians take turns replacing each other as tenants
of the former royal palace. Unable to invent new symbols
of legitimacy and authority, they must adopt the former
ones: presidential guard units --- often in uniforms
little altered from those of the King --- listlessly
protect the nominal heads of state. Small royal prerogatives
are jealously clutched: the President of Austria retains
the right to legitimize bastards, while his brother
of Germany automatically becomes Godfather to every
seventh child. Even in rigorously secular France, President
Jacques Chirac (who, in lieu of a Christmas Message
in 2003, delivered a thundering speech in favor of preserving
the French Revolution’s “tradition”
of laïcisme) joyfully fulfills religious roles
inherited from the Monarchy: Co-Prince of Andorra with
the Spanish Bishop of Urgel; canon of Rome’s Basilica
of St. John Lateran; and Protector of the Holy Places
in Israel-Palestine (exercised through the French Consul-General
of Jerusalem, who is rendered various liturgical honors
by the Catholic churches of the Holy Land as a result).
Institutions with the sort of connections earlier mentioned
to the former Monarchy continue to boast of them. A
walk through the inner city of Vienna, if confined to
looking at shop windows, would convince the average
tourist that there is still an Emperor in the Hofburg,
given the enormous number of double-eagles gracing establishments
still advertising the Imperial Warrant.
None of this hand-me-down pomp stirs up a great deal
of interest on the part of the citizenry of such countries,
however. With the exception of France (whose presidency
was invested with a great deal of power by De Gaulle
when designing the Fifth Republic), many, perhaps most,
of the citizens of such republics cannot even name their
presidents. In any case, as in the Constitutional Monarchies,
real power is exercised by the majority power in Parliament.
The only difference is that even the shadow of authority
is lacking. When a major change in the law is required
by those in power, the population is bombarded with
referenda until they give in: the introduction of divorce
in Ireland is a classic example.
Now, we Americans might smile pityingly at all this,
secure as we are in possession of the oldest and most
successful republican constitution in the world. Every
four years we vote for our President; we vote for our
representatives and senators, for our governors and
assemblymen, for our sheriffs and supervisors and district
attorneys and mayors and aldermen and on and on. In
these United States, the people rule!
Do we, indeed? This is most comforting. In common with
the citizens of the parliamentary governments just described,
we describe ourselves (save for a few hold-outs who
prefer the title “constitutional republic”)
as a “democracy.” This Greek-derived moniker
is held to mean “majority rule.” Now we
are not going to quibble with this definition, as many
Conservatives do. This writer is all too aware that
while we Americans were enjoying “representative
democracy,” the subjects of the unlamented Soviet
Bloc groaned under the yoke of “people’s
democracy” (as do those of Cuba, Vietnam, Laos,
and our “most favored nation,” China today).
Idi Amin described cannibalism as “nutritional
democracy.” But never mind, we will take the word
as read.
But if, in these States of ours, the majority rules,
why is their will (as stated through polls, for whatever
use those may be) constantly thwarted? Why is same-sex
marriage, which, despite constant propagandizing, is
opposed by a clear majority --- even in Massachusetts
--- in the process of being imposed? Why was abortion,
which was similarly opposed at the time of its imposition,
enshrined in law? Even today, a clear majority is disgusted
by partial-birth abortion, but in all likelihood the
long-awaited ban on the practice will be overturned?
A majority, similarly, oppose endorsing everything the
Israeli government chooses in Palestine: yet both the
incumbent president and his democratic opponent have
done so, the former blithely ignoring violations of
ultimata he himself has imposed upon that government.
Although Israel is, to be sure, a sovereign nation,
the 15 billion dollars a year with which our government
endows them ought to buy us a preponderant place in
their councils, one might think.
Yet this sort of thing descends from questions of high
policy to ones of mere lifestyle. Prayer in schools,
religious symbols on public property, community observance
of Christmas --- these are all things which the majority
support, provided that they are tailored to the tastes
of the local community. Yet they are ever more rigorously
being removed. Whether it be grace over meals at the
Virginia Military Institute, or the Ten Commandments
in the Alabama State Court House, or the cross in the
city seal of Redlands, California, they are ripped out
in the face of community protests.
We have arrived at the point where shop employees in
many places may be fired for saying “Merry Christmas,”
rather than “Happy Holidays.” (In the spirit
of genial acceptance, this writer himself has taken
to insisting on “Happy Holidays” for Independence
Day, Thanksgiving, Arbor Day, or any other observance).
But by far the vast majority of Americans celebrate
Christmas in some form, and most of those think it has
something or other to do with Christ. Yet more and more,
they are unable to say so. At least the authorities
are happy to import ever-larger quantities of “holiday
ornaments” from China. One can only wonder what
the inmates of the factories who produce them think
of the whole thing. Well, at least somebody is making
profits.
Now, whence come these developments? To a great degree,
from the major media, whose owners and minions have
achieved social prominence. They try their damndest,
with some success, to influence the populace’s
attitudes. But they do have their limits. The furor
over the film, The Passion of the Christ, underscores
the wide chasm between the views of the chattering classes
and the interests of the public. It also illustrates
the truth of French sociologist François Berger
that “India is the most religious nation in the
world, and Sweden the least; the United States are a
nation of Indians ruled by Swedes.” The unkind
might translate that into a nation of rednecks ruled
by effete chardonnay-swillers, but the truth of the
statement remains. Certainly, it is said here in Southern
California that the Upper Class make movies and television
programs, the Middle Class do the production work, and
the Lower Class watch them.
But the amount of damage the media can do is minimal
in the last analysis. They can ridicule, and corrupt
taste, but they cannot, by themselves, affect structural
change. No, in most of the cases cited, it was the Judiciary
who have done that. Unfettered, for the most part, by
the electoral process, they have come to manufacture
law rather than to interpret it --- and that manufacture
goes unchallenged by any prominent elected official,
political party, or citizens’ group.
But is this so bad? Would we have eliminated segregation,
for example, without an activist judiciary? Surely,
only the Warren Court had the power to, in Van Helsing-like
manner, thrust a stake into Jim Crow’s heart?
Perhaps; this writer, for one, does not mourn Jim Crow
(although he does object strongly to attacking Confederate
symbols as racist --- one might as well attack the Stars
and Stripes as a prime symbol of the evils of Reconstruction,
which in themselves created Jim Crow). But upon what
basis did the Warren Court act? Not, to be sure, on
that of majority rule. Most white southerners supported
or were indifferent to segregation; most Yankees might
be vaguely opposed, but not to the point of doing anything.
For that matter, upon what basis did their successors
in the Supreme and Lower Courts do what they have done
in the past four decades?
To get a grasp on the topic, we will leave ol’
Jim alone for a moment, and look to the phrase upon
which most of the undemocratic measures of the Courts
have been based for the last six decades: Separation
of Church and State. Although popular throughout the
Western Nations today, the notion that the religion
of the people should have nothing to do with their government
arose first in the United States, even though the term
“Separation of Church and State” appears
nowhere in our Constitution. What DOES appear is a clause
forbidding Congress to establish a single religion for
the whole nation, and proscribing loss of civil rights
to any American citizen because of his religious beliefs.
The reason for this is simple: of the 13 original states,
at independence seven of them in whole or in part recognised
the Anglican as their official church, three the Congregational,
and three no such establishment. Catholicism was illegal
in ten of them. Thus the newly sovereign State authorities
had no desire to allow Congress to intervene in what
was seen as a local question; the alliance of France
and Spain required that civil disabilities be lifted
from the Catholics, while the activities of both Catholics
and Jews on the rebel side seemed to require their being
granted civil rights. The last State to do so (Connecticut)
did not give up its established Church until 1833.
Nevertheless, although no specific form of Christianity
was thereafter established in the European sense, it
was held for a long time that the United States were
in fact a “Christian” country (whatever
that might mean). On February 29, 1892, the United States
Supreme Court, in the case of Trinity Church vs. the
United States, mentioned that
If we pass beyond these [mentioned legal] matters to
a view of American life, as expressed by its laws, its
business, its customs, and its society, we find everywhere
a clear recognition of the same truth. Among other matters
note the following: The form of oath universally prevailing,
concluding with an appeal to the Almighty; the custom
of opening sessions of all deliberative bodies and most
conventions with prayer; the prefatory words of all
wills, ‘In the name of God, amen;’ the laws
respecting the observance of the Sabbath, with the general
cessation of all secular business, and the closing of
courts, legislatures, and other similar public assemblies
on that day; the churches and church organizations which
abound in every city, town, and hamlet; the multitude
of charitable organizations existing everywhere under
Christian auspices; the gigantic missionary associations,
with general support, and aiming to establish Christian
missions in every quarter of the globe.
On this basis, the Court declared that “These
and many other matters which might be noticed, add a
volume of unofficial declarations to the mass of organic
utterances that this is a Christian nation.” What
distinguishes this decision from those of later, 20th
century courts is that is was based, not upon abstract
theory, but upon the actual way life is lived by the
citizens of these United States --- now as well as then.
In a word, it was democratic.
Now let’s pick up Jim Crow again. Using the argument
just posed, Jim Crow could never have been eliminated
through judicial action, because the fact was that he
was enshrined in law and social life, and that all interpretations
of the Constitution previous to 1954 had been favourable
to him (cf. Plessy vs. Ferguson). In a word, democracy
could not, or would not, of itself, right the wrong
of segregation. Only appeal to a higher law could do
that.
True. But what was the higher law that trumped Plessy
vs. Ferguson and Trinity Church vs. The United States
alike? What was the sheet of music the Supreme and lesser
courts would sing from? We do not know. Indeed, we know
less now than we did in 1954. The “Borking”
of Judge Bork pointed out that the doctrine of “Original
Intent” --- that is, that the ideas of the framers
of the Constitution ought to be employed in interpreting
it --- was voided. During his own confirmation hearings,
Mr. Justice Clarence Thomas had to swear that he did
not believe in what Western Civilization has always
called the “Natural Law.” Fine. So neither
Original Intent nor Natural Law guide the Judiciary.
Then what does? The answer can only boil down to: their
own whims.
What makes this particularly difficult is that the Judiciary
have arrogated to themselves the role of a third, all-powerful
house of the legislature. While they are unelected,
there is no appeal from their decisions, no higher authority
to rein them in. Whether this is good or bad may be
a matter of opinion; what is not debatable is that the
judiciary as it is currently constituted negates any
claim this nation may have to calling itself a democracy.
To be fair, one might temper one’s reaction to
this statement by meditating on the “Strange Career
of Jim Crow.”
“But wait!” you might say, “wait!
What about the elected branches? We still elect the
president and congress, the governors and legislatures!
What about them?” What about them? While one might
point out, for example, President Bush’s actions
in pushing for a Constitutional amendment banning homosexual
marriage and his successful ban on partial-birth abortions,
what do those really mean? The much vaunted amendment
reserves the name “marriage” to male-female
couples, but preserves “civil unions” intact;
in any case, it is highly unlike that Congressman David
Drier (R-CA), chairman of the House rules committee
and a “libertarian” is highly unlikely to
let it get to the floor of the House. It is to be doubted
that the president will force him to. Similarly, with
the court case surrounding the partial birth ban, the
president directed the attorney general to give up seeking
the medical information essential to the government
winning the case. Luckily, the decision will take place
after the election. In all these areas and many more,
there are in reality a lot of things the president and
governors could do to regain power from the judiciary
if they wished to: executive set-asides, interim appointments,
and the like. But they will not. Why? I do have a theory.
More important than their motivations, just for the
moment, is the reaction of the people who elect the
legislative and executive branches, pay for their salaries,
and --- whether through the active Army and the Reserve,
or else the National Guard --- send their sons and daughters
to die for them. Just how do the people react? With
apathy. In California, where the legislature are masters
of avoiding uncomfortable questions, any truly difficult
question is referred to the populace on election day.
Luckily, if the result is something the potentates of
Sacramento don’t want, it inevitably dies in the
courts. The result in the Golden State, as in most of
the country, is very low voter turnout.
It was most amusing, after Tony Blair made a great commotion
about having introduced American-style politics to Britain,
to see the lowest voter turnout in British elections
since 1918. But they were simply emulating the semi-conscious,
inarticulate response of the American electorate to
a political scene where their opinions do not matter.
It is not that either British or Americans decided that
voting is not worth the bother, it is simply that anything
else becomes more important: watching T.V., taking a
nap, or helping the neighbour’s collie with his
dental floss. Given what we have seen, who can blame
them? Are they not already disenfranchised?
How to solve this dilemma? How to bring the citizenry
back to participation in the process? Well, we really
need to dig deeper. First, we must go back to Jim Crow
and democracy. There are a number of fantasies that
our supposed democratic form of government has given
us. It is time to look at a few a realities of organized
society that transcend national and temporal boundaries.
What is about to be said would not apply to small tribes
in New Guinea. But it would apply to Medieval Rwanda,
Tang China, Feudal Europe, or 21st Century America.
The first is that there is a distinction between power
and authority. Authority is the right to say what ought
to be done; power is the ability to make things happen.
Your doctor has the authority to prescribe medicine,
but only you have the power to take it. Authority has
many sources; in pre-World War II Japan, it came to
the Emperor from his ancestress, the Sun Goddess ---
even today this affects the course of Japanese politics.
In Medieval Europe, it came to the Emperor, and to the
Kings, through the Grace of God, mediated by the Church
and her Pope. In contemporary democracies, it is said
to come through the will of the people, whatever that
may --- this is difficult, because intangible. In any
case, in older and in more primitive societies, power
is often diffuse, lodging, as in Medieval Europe, in
churchmen, guilds, nobles, cities, universities, and
the like. In this maze of institutions, the wielder
of authority is like an orchestra leader; if he is good,
or at least able, the results are more or less harmonious.
If he is the opposite, the result is not dictatorship
but anarchy and its attendant evils: civil unrest, famine,
and disease. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse were
the inevitable attendants of authority poorly used.
In modern societies, thanks to technology and other
factors, power tends to be concentrated, and authority
diffuse. Thus the holders of power have more control
over their subjects in the contemporary world than their
opposite numbers in days gone by could have dreamed
of. Those subjects, holding authority only as an abstract
whole rather than as individuals, have little ability
to supervise those who, in essence, control their lives.
Where Monarchs remain, while they have much less power
than early modern centralizers such as Henry VIII or
Louis XIV, they are about on a par with their Medieval
predecessors. But in the face of the powers of today,
that means little.
Authority always derives from or is mediated through
a state religion. Contrary to what we have just seen
regarding separation of Church and State, this rule
admits of no exceptions. Every human society requires
some animating spirituality or philosophy that embodies
faith in things unseen. In most arrangements this will
be expressed in Coronation Rites, civic liturgy, and
the like; but so universal is this requirement that
even Communist countries erected Marxism into a religion
--- “There is no God, and Marx is His Prophet.”
For all that the leaders of these countries disdained
and disdain any hint of the unseen, their declared end,
“the withering away of the state” and perfect
equality, requires as much faith as any paradise ever
dreamed of by saint or prophet. There is a reason for
this; Man will never submit to power for its own sake.
He can be compelled to do by brute force, but such a
compulsion does not produce loyalty. He will only accept
(and fight) for something that can claim links to the
transcendent, no matter how vaguely. Moreover, he will
only cheerfully obey laws that can make this same claim.
Which brings us to the next point: every society has
rulers and ruled. Regardless of how the rulers derive
their power, or the authority to use it, they are the
ones who make the decisions. Nor could it be otherwise.
Few of us have the ability or the knowledge to rule
--- much less the expertise to handle the system in
which we live. This is a separate issue as to whether
the rulers are competent. This writer knows nothing
at all about making shoes. Even if his cobbler is a
fool who doesn’t know a sneaker from an oxford,
he can make shoes; his customers can’t. So it
is with rulers.
As for the ruled --- well, we are pretty much along
for the ride. At the end of the day, we can grumble
and go along with our rulers’ program, or we can
rebel. But, inevitably, men who also have the talents
we lack as a whole lead such rebellions or revolutions.
We overthrow the old regime, and presto! A new set of
rulers emerges to bedevil us with some of the old annoyances
and (in all likelihood) new ones as well.
Lastly, every society has a class system of some sort,
whether based on invention, money, land, heredity, military
prowess, or some combination of the lot. It may be complex
or simple, but inequality is a part of life. In modern
times, it is never so quick to emerge as when attempts
are made to suppress it. Yet, oddly enough, when systems
change, it is amazing how many of the upper classes
are able to make lateral transfers into the new structure.
The other interesting point is that, in most places,
the lower the class the larger its proportion of the
general population, though there are exceptions (the
American Middle Class in the 1950s, the Untouchables
in India, for example).
History, as we have implied, shows the universal nature
of these rules. But in the United States we have steadfastly
pretended that most of them do not exist here. Those
two that we did accept, we have abolished in recent
decades. Traditionally, authority in the United States
was held to descend from Providence (whatever or whoever
that might be) to the People; the Holy Writ of this
arrangement was the Constitution. Indeed, for many,
even still, that document still holds quasi-religious
awe. But for the establishment, authority is an empty
concept, and most of the rest of us do not know what
it is. Without an authority capable of saying anything,
we are forced, when faced with what seems to be an illegitimate
use of power, to simply scratch our heads and say, “that
ain’t right!” But we would be hard put to
say why. The judiciary have, in a very real sense, made
themselves the source of authority; thus for many of
us, whatever is legal is moral. For this reason few
of us really want to fight for the losing side in, say,
a Supreme Court judgment.
The mantra of separation of Church and State, often
repeated by the swamis on the various courts, has removed
any idea of some form of Christianity (or any other
organized faith) as our state religion. Nevertheless,
we have one; even if, as in the old Soviet Union it
is felt more by its negative actions than its positive
ones. Just what is it? Alas, it is hard to put a finger
on it. We’ll need to go back a little in time
to understand it.
The famous Puritans, whom we celebrate every Thanksgiving,
in a real sense began construction of America’s
religious mind. For a number of historical reasons,
New England was, for a long time, the leading intellectual
centre of America. While Calvinist doctrines decayed,
and the descendants of the Puritans gave birth to Unitarianism,
certain attitudes were passed on, not only to them,
but also to most Americans. Some of these were the famed
Puritan Work Ethic, which gave the making of money a
sacramental patina --- the more so because riches were
one way to show one’s neighbours (and oneself)
that he was among the elect. Correspondingly, mere artistic
pursuits, which could not demonstrate profitability,
were suspicious. Conviction of one’s own righteousness
(accompanied by a complete lack of introspection) followed
from total identification with the Chosen People of
the Old Testament --- a trait, incidentally, shared
by other Calvinist peoples, like the Ulster Scots and
the Afrikaaners. From this belief came the notion of
the “shining city on the hill,” which has
remained an important part of the American self-image
ever since. But with it followed a disdain of the foreigner
and his ways, as of the Canaanite.
While most of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence
and the Constitution were Christians of one sort or
another, Washington, Jefferson, Adams, and Franklin
were Deists --- that is to say, believers in a god who
set the universe in motion and left man to puzzle his
way out. Although the first two were nominal Anglicans,
Adams was a Congregationalist, and Franklin was buried
in an Anglican Church, they had little use for the tenets
of their putative faiths. They believed their deity
to be benevolent, and in a moral code, and in good citizenship.
Above all, they held that conduct is more important
than creed; that is, that it doesn’t matter what
one believes, so long as he is a “nice person.”
This attitude was actually quite helpful, in a temporal
sense, to the infant nation. In a country where all
sorts of Protestant sects --- formerly quite inimical
to each other (the Puritans had put Baptists and Quakers
to death, as well as witches), it provided a way whereby
all could live quite peacefully together. This arrangement
was helped further by the growth of Unitarianism in
the early 19th century. Although the actual numbers
of the new faith have always been small, they have wielded
an influence out of all proportion to their numbers.
Given the importance of such men as Emerson and Thoreau
in American literature (and so in American classrooms),
the ideas of Unitarianism --- and above all, its tone
--- are implanted in most of our minds. The Unitarians
substituted a belief in temporal progress for individual
salvation, and so have pursued social change as a religious
crusade. In the 19th century it was abolitionism, in
the 21st, it is gay rights. But whatever the cause of
the moment, the Unitarians are out to further it!
At the same time, however, as the Unitarians arose,
so too did the Great Revival. In part it was a reaction
to the dryness and intellectualism of many American
Protestant churches of the time. The Revival swept much
of the country, and injected being “born again,”
“saved once and for all,” and “getting
religion” into the national consciousness.
By the time of the Civil War, these four streams ---
Calvinism, Deism, Unitarianism, and Revivalism --- had
penetrated the consciousness of the Protestant majority
pretty thoroughly. Of course, the exact proportions
differed from church to church, congregation to congregation,
and person to person. But it was a heady mix, perhaps
best typified by the Battle Hymn of the Republic.
After the war, another church began to add its input
to the national religious bloodstream. Although the
Episcopal Church was the oldest Protestant faith in
the country, it had been severely damaged by the Revolution,
due to its association with the Crown. But following
1789 it reinvented itself, and functioned after the
Civil War as a quasi-national church. Its churches became
much more ornate, its rituals more stately, and its
connection to the newer power structure which emerged
from the War became tighter. It is no coincidence that
the “National” Cathedral in Washington and
St. John’s, Lafayette Square, near the White House
(called the “Church of the Presidents”)
are both Episcopalian. The example of the Episcopal
Church influenced the other Protestant bodies as well;
Gothic Methodist, Presbyterian, and other sort of churches
rose all over the country. Stained glass made a major
comeback. As it was for Catholics, so too for Protestants,
the period between the Civil War and World War II was
the golden age of church architecture. In any case,
Episcopalian influence, as in choirs, buildings, set
prayers, and so on, gave a ritual form to the set of
ideas which had dominated the country by 1860.
This mixed faith itself began to unravel in the 1950s.
As we shall see, Catholics and Jews had already been
entering the ranks of the elite for a while, and now
the stream became a flood. Of course, both Catholics
and Jews showed a willingness (at least on the part
of their more influential members) to shed most of their
distinctive doctrines and practices as the price of
admission. Surely the great national faith could do
as much for them.
In time, Muslims, Hindus, and Buddhists would join the
upper ranks as well, and in their turn go through what
the Catholics and Jews had. This process is far from
complete. But as good an example as can ever be found
in stone of this process is the new Cathedral of Our
Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles. Although nominally
Catholics, it was a designed as a “sacred space
for all people.” Not surprisingly, the great civic
rituals, which, in eastern cities would be held in the
local Episcopal cathedral, in Los Angeles are held here.
This writer attended an interfaith memorial on September
11, 2002, for the Twin Tower victims. While there were
hymns, scriptures, and prayers from every conceivable
Protestant, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, and Buddhist group
imaginable, three things remain lodged in the brain:
Anjelica Huston’s performance as Mistress of Ceremonies,
the elite of Hollywood and the City government singing
the chorus of What the World Needs Now is Love, Sweet
Love while Burt Bacharach played on the piano, and Roger
Cardinal Mahony praying to God to “preserve us
in the unity of the faith we share.” In appearance,
this is a new face for the national religion; but in
reality, it is the same old syncretism at work.
That, then, is its ritual side, repeated in interfaith
services of all kinds around the country. But it is
its philosophical side that characterizes and “ensouls,”
so to speak, our society. It is not a dogmatic faith,
but in essence, it holds, with Calvinism, that it is
simply correct, and any who challenge it are evil; with
Unitarianism that change is progress, and progress is
salvation, and so an end in itself; with Episcopalianism
it sanctifies whatever the upper reaches of society
care to do. It is this odd, half-consciously held religion,
which animates our institutions --- especially our judiciary
--- today. It is far from monolithic, and hard to pin
down. But its works are mighty, and it is as American
as apple pie.
Now we move on to the rulers. As with our national faith,
our rulership has altered and shifted over the two centuries
of national life we have enjoyed. Like the religion
that empowers it, it is not monolithic, and very hard
to tack down --- “dominant classes” would
appear more correct than “ruling class.”
But even so, we can distinguish three basic periods
in their existence.
The first is the pre-and post-revolutionary period:
from about 1730 to somewhere in the 1830s or 40s in
the North, and 1865 in the South. These were the families
who formed the Whig oligarchy in the colonies. Merchants,
smugglers, and the like in New England and the major
cities from New York to Savannah, they were landed gentry
for the most part elsewhere. These were the gentlemen
who ran the colonial assemblies, and tangled with the
Crown over the Stamp Tax and such. Very well educated
in the various European literatures, history, and much
else, they were remarkable in many ways. But they were
also extremely diverse: in New England, where the Congregational
was the established church, rebels tended to be of that
faith, and Loyalists Anglican (although there were many
exceptions either way). But in the southern colonies,
where the Church of England was established, the Presbyterians
tended to be Loyalist and the Anglicans rebel. This
was a pattern repeated, in accordance with the local
situation, in every colony.
Of course, while they spoke of no taxation without representation,
they did not practice it; but in invoking it they paved
the way for others. So the post-war period saw such
outbreaks as Shay’s and the Whiskey Rebellion.
Both the major parties --- Federalist and Democratic-Republican
were for the most part in their hands. This is not to
minimize the differences between them, but it does explain
why, after the Federalists dissolved in 1816, the survivors
could be received by the D-R’s, ushering the “Era
of Good Feeling” under President Monroe. It was
America’s only period as a one party state, and
it did not last long!
At any rate, in the north, these folk began to be superseded
by bankers and industrialists --- a development much
mourned by Edgar Allan Poe and Washington Irving. By
the time of the Civil War, although many individuals
of this sort remained in government, and many more remained
wealthy, as a group they were partly absorbed and partly
left behind by the new money. The defeat of the Confederacy
ended the only real rival to the new dominant classes.
Men like Mellon, Carnegie, Rockefeller, Vanderbilt,
Morgan, and the like epitomized them. Through factories,
railroads, mining, newspapers, banking, oil, and much
else, these “Robber Barons” developed the
West and Florida, and laid the foundation for America’s
world economic supremacy. At the same time they were
often crude and vulgar, cared nothing for their employees,
and simply were not that nice. Mark Twain lampooned
them viciously in such works as The Gilded Age, and
Henry Adams mourned their coming to power in The Education
of Henry Adams.
But many of them were aware of their shortcomings. In
attempt to turn themselves into a sort of American aristocracy,
they built great homes staffed with many servants, importing
art from all over Europe with which to furnish them.
To turn their sons into gentlemen, they provided lucrative
incentives for the St. Grottlesex-type schools and the
Ivy League colleges to turn into imitation English public
schools on the one hand, and ersatz Oxbridge on the
other. Many of these new aristocrats embraced the Episcopal
Church in droves; in return it embraced them. Without
lavish funding from the new elite, many of the most
beautiful churches (Episcopal or otherwise) would not
have been possible. Above all, a tone was set. What
was left of the colonial aristocracy and the progeny
of the Robber Barons alike made a point of going into
public service --- whether civilian or military. Many
of the dead officers on the American side in both World
Wars came from such families.
But, of course, if years 1865-1941 saw the dominance
of this group, it also saw the rise of a new American
character, firmly based, however upon the old (or at
least an imagined version of it). If it was the golden
age of Church architecture, so it was of civil: court
houses, city and town halls, schools, public libraries
--- all the profusion of government were housed in as
elegant quarters as the public purse (often helped by
the local wealthy). This was the time when what we consider
the traditional customs of such holidays as Christmas,
Easter, Hallowe’en, Memorial Day, Thanksgiving,
Independence Day, and the like were codified. Vaudeville
was getting ready to slide into motion pictures, Tin
Pan Alley was churning out tunes; in a word, what we
today would recognize as our national identity was being
forged.
The Depression damaged the WASP elite, and World War
II broke it down further. During that latter conflict,
the Bureau of Wages and Prices specifically targeted
multi-servant households for elimination through taxation.
After the war, many big houses were sold; and a second
time a class-wide feeling of dejection set in. Debutante
Balls were thrown, and private clubs remained open.
But there was certainly a touch of autumn in the air.
At the same time, American life in the 50s and certainly
the 60s was revolutionized. In a couple of decades,
the orderly (if synthetic) lifestyle of the American
elite was turned upside down (although, to be sure,
it happened to many other Americans as well). After
the Supreme Court legalized birth control in 1964, sexual
mores flew out the window; the baby boomers became physically
mature (for many, “growing up” would never
happen), and the hippy movement emerged. Foul language
and very “informal” clothing became the
rage. They had to be them. Were they ever! Protesting
the War in Vietnam became the seminal moment for some,
drugs for others. In any case, the old patterns had
broken down, and America was ready for a new elite.
As with the last transition, the change was gradual,
and many of the old dominant classes made it --- not
surprisingly, both major presidential candidates in
2004 are members’ if Yale’s Skull and Bones
Club. While such membership still means something today,
it is not quite what it was 50 years ago. Feminism allowed
certain women to attain top roles in the hierarchy (although
most had to content themselves with acting crudely and
working like packhorses, and calling it equality). The
ever-burgeoning number of Catholics who retained the
title while rejecting their Church’s teachings
was also able to enter the elite --- a process facilitated
by bishops willing to overlook such lapses. Jews were
also able to enter the rulership in larger numbers than
ever before, although with few exceptions, however,
these were not Orthodox. The new leadership were not
united by nominal religion or by ethnicity. What served
to set them apart from their fellows were two things,
one of which was money.
The other, however, was a similar world-view. Now, to
be sure, some are called “conservatives,”
and some “liberals.” But this means little,
practically. Their differences are far outweighed by
their similarities. Just what are these? The first is
a shared experience of the cultural revolution of the
1960s. They tend to be disdainful of tradition, to a
great or lesser degree (though ready to invoke its memory
when necessary). As an example, President Clinton gave
only a single white-tie state dinner during his eight-year
reign (for the King and Queen of Spain). They much prefer
casual clothes to suits, and jeans to dresses. For political
types, being photographed without ties is very important,
as it shows them to be “natural.”
These are small things, but they are indicative of a
desire for personal comfort, for persona freedom, as
opposed to the traditional requirements of leadership.
This desire in turn betokens an unfettered pragmatism.
Ideology, as such, plays little role for them if it
gets in the way of what they want. Carried over into
public life, this manifests in a willingness to jettison
received positions in favour of immediate advantage:
thus the Republican Party does not really oppose abortion
and homosexual marriage in an effective way, and the
Democratic Party is happy to sacrifice organised labour
in the name of globalisation. Predictably, their respective
core constituencies do not notice this.
However, this ruthlessness does not make them realists.
They pursue what they believe to be their interest doggedly,
but they do not stop to consider the probable results
of their actions. The thirst of the Neo-Cons around
President Bush for a war in Iraq was palpable, because
it allowed that faction of the rulership (who themselves
for the most part avoided their generation’s blooding
in Vietnam) to accomplish the messianic goal of “democratising”
the Near East. But neither the goal nor the means employed
bore any relationship to Constitutionality, existent
reality, or anything else. In this, however, they were
patently at one with their more “liberal”
confreres, who refuse to see the havoc their population
policies have made with, for example, the tax base.
There is another trait that makes the current rulership
unique. They are completely irresponsible, in the sense
of not being accountable for their actions. Because
of the legerdemain of electoral politics, those actually
responsible for national decision making in the media,
judiciary, and elsewhere are not forced to receive the
opprobrium proper to their decisions. In this sense,
elected officials become scapegoats. They themselves
are not truly representative in any case. Most elected
politicians are like athletes and artists, in the sense
that they cheerfully sacrifice every other consideration
to being and remaining elected. Principle means nothing
to them, if it would mean their falling afoul of the
media, judiciary, etc. Generally wealthier than their
putative constituents (60% of U.S. Senators are millionaires),
they do not resemble them in the least.
Indeed, it is interesting that they themselves lead
lives quite different from the patterns they urge upon
their people: making it economically difficult for the
less fortunate to attend any other than public schools,
they send their own children to private schools. Engineering
conditions that make it imperative for both parents
of the average American family to work, they keep their
own spouses home --- and so it goes. As noted, they
certainly do not share the religious beliefs of their
subjects. It is ironic to note that, in comparison,
the late lamented hereditary peers of Britain’s
House of Lords were far more democratic than the professional
politicians of the House of Commons. Given that, as
with most people, they owed their positions in life
to chance or providence, they were far more like the
ordinary British Subject than most M.P.s could hope
to be. This was reflected in the Lords’ Hansards,
wherein the questions they asked on legislation were
very much like what the common man might ask, save that
they were generally framed in complete sentences. The
removal of such peers from the legislative process only
served to seal its control by the “professionals.”
One man who is perhaps typical of the new rulership
is the Chevalier Rupert Murdoch, K.S.G. This Presbyterian
Papal Knight is a man of little loyalty --- temporal
or religious --- save to himself and his minions. Beginning
life as an Australian press magnate, he surrendered
his native citizenship for an American passport in order
to retain his media empire in the United States. The
Chevalier nevertheless continues to exercise a dominant
role in Australia, where, for example, he funds that
country’s republican movement. Weeks after accepting
his Papal Knighthood (something arranged by his Catholic
spouse in return for his donation of millions of dollars
to Roger Cardinal Mahony of Los Angeles), he divorced
said wife and took on a much younger model. Of course,
he ordered his Australian and British papers (the latter
including the venerable Times of London and a host of
semi-pornographic tabloids) not to report on his latest
honour. While his own private life is not ideal, he
has directed his sheets in Britain to expose any possible
scandal in the royal family. But Murdoch need not fear
the spiritual results of his actions: his ongoing donations
to the Catholic Cathedral of Los Angeles have earned
him a place in the crypt, whenever he should be gathered
to his ancestors. The objection that might be raised
of his not being Catholic can be answered by saying
that his ex-wife was, and that the Church does not recognise
his divorce. The Archdiocese has sold him his “stairway
to heaven.”
The problem with this ruling class is not that it is
in power (for someone must be), but rather that it is
feckless. There are four major problems facing the West
and the United States right now: 1) The loss of Christianity
has removed any definition worth fighting for from Western
Civilisation; 2) The institutions produced by that civilisation
are dying for that reason; 3) The low birth-rate among
the native-born in Western countries jeopardises their
ultimate survival, and, more immediately, threatens
to wreak havoc on their labour force, armed services,
and tax base; and 4) External enemies (most notably
radical Islam) are gathering force and ferocity. The
heavy responsibility which the current rulership bears
for the first three dilemmas makes it unlikely that
they will deal with either them or the fourth one effectively.
What, then, is the solution? As a believing Catholic,
this writer believes that the application of the Church’s
social and political principles is the only long-term
solution for our problems. But this cannot happen unless
and until the majority of Westerners return to the Faith
that founded their culture. Until the institutional
Church regains a sense of missionary urgency, and imparts
that to her members, this is not likely to happen. Given
that many Bishops question or deny major tenets of Catholicism,
we cannot expect any movement on this front. Perhaps
a new Pontiff will address this situation, but it will
take decades for anything like the required effort to
be mounted on a large scale.
Revolution, perhaps? No. As mentioned, even if such
were possible, the new rulership would likely be no
better than the current, and quite probably worse. Moreover,
the attendant unpleasantness would surely negate any
future benefits.
No, as a beginning, it is necessary for people to begin
to see how things really are. A great deal of the dangers
which face us are attributable to the populace believing
that their leadership is somehow representative of them.
Facing the sad truth --- that most of those who rule
us are not answerable to us and do not care about us,
would paradoxically make them more accountable. Treating
voting as performance art, rather than as a sacramental
rite, would help a great deal. Voting one’s conscience
--- even if it means voting for a minor party --- is
preferable to continuing to play the game. For that
matter, not voting at all --- provided one notifies
one’s nominal party on advance --- might also
be useful. This is not throwing your vote away --- given
the few number of times that a candidate one really
supports is elected --- and even fewer times keeps the
promises that put him into office, you are no more likely
to waste your vote than by voting for the party line.
You will get as much in return. Above all, the Murdochs
of this world must be held accountable. A million letters
to the Chevalier on one issue or another might accomplish
a great deal more than writing one’s congressman.
But it is important to remember that any purely political
solutions are mere stopgaps. In 1926, in his Encyclical
Quas Primas, Pope Pius XI declared that “If, therefore,
the rulers of nations wish to preserve their authority,
to promote and increase the prosperity of their countries,
they will not neglect the public duty of reverence and
obedience to the rule of Christ.” As things stand,
any attempt to do this in the United States would be
shut down immediately by the ACLU. But Pope Pius knew
what would be the eventual result of such action, and
followed the quoted sentence with: “What We said
at the beginning of Our Pontificate concerning the decline
of public authority, and the lack of respect for the
same, is equally true at the present day. ‘With
God and Jesus Christ,’ we said, ‘excluded
from political life, with authority derived not from
God but from man, the very basis of that authority has
been taken away, because the chief reason of the distinction
between ruler and subject has been eliminated. The result
is that human society is tottering to its fall, because
it has no longer a secure and solid foundation.”
It would take someone either very blind, or else in
power, not to see the truth of the last sentence.
Of course, as Catholics we know that the end of the
West will not be the end of the Church or of her Divine
mission to spread the teachings and Kingship of Christ.
But it shall mean the end of this country, and of those
nations from whom most Americans descend. As loyal children
of the Church, we have an obligation to evangelise our
neighbours and our country; as patriotic citizens we
have an obligation to defend our country and struggle
for her spiritual and material welfare. What we dare
not forget --- as so many of our co-religionists, clerical
and lay, who have been subsumed into the power structure
have --- is that the two goals are inseparable, and,
indeed, the same.
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