[lit-ideas] Re: Fukuyama and the end of history

  • From: "Andreas Ramos" <andreas@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 18 Apr 2006 22:53:50 -0700

SPEAKING FREELY
Francis Fukuyama's about-face
By C Mott Woolley

In evaluating Francis Fukuyama's criticism of the US
effort in Iraq, it may be worthwhile to see what in
his earlier work has brought him to make this
about-face. In The End of History and the Last Man
(1992), Fukuyama asks: Is there some simple reason as
to how and why history unfolds? The centerpiece of
this earlier work is the collapse of the Soviet Union:
why did it happen and why was there a failure in the
West

I really regret that I don't have time to write a detailed summary of Fukuyama's book.

Woolley's article seriously misrepresents Fukuyama. Lawrence Helm also distorts 
Fukuyama.

As I wrote several weeks ago, I recently read Fukuyama's book (it has just been reissued with a new afterword).

> ... The End of History is a
remarkable book. It is the story of how liberal
democracy has developed and why it may one day come to
be the norm throughout the world.

This is completely wrong. Fukuyama is not writing that liberal democracy has triumphed. Instead, he is deploring the triumph of liberal democracy. He isn't celebrating the end of history at all; for him, it's very bad thing. He offers instead a strategy to prevent the end of history.


To understand why the Berlin Wall fell, Fukuyama broadly describes the actors in global politics.

1) For most of the 1900s, there were the realists (US govt officials, incl. the US military, State Dept, and senior persons in Congress and the White House.) Realists also included most European statesmen, incl. the Soviets and the Chinese.

These were countered by:

2) The Neo-cons (insert a trumpet blast).

There's also:

3) The American public, for whom Fukuyama has very deep scorn. "Slave mentality", "dog culture", and so on. They are irrelevant and clueless. They offer nothing of value. No ideas whatsoever.

This led to several results:

The Realists (led by Kissinger, whom Fukuyama and the neocons seriously dislike) argued that states were actors and should be considered in terms of interests and powers. The USSR was an opponent with nuclear weapons. Therefore, the USA should seek detente with the Soviets.

a) Thus the Realists were completely unable to predict the collapse of the USSR, because they did not look at the internal politics. They did not realize the USSR was a paper tiger. They expected an opponent and thus ignored the facts. They refused to attack the USSR. They accepted the existence of the USSR.

b) The Realists also ignored the moral nature of a state. If a state was a useful tool, then the US formed an alliance. Whether it was a vicious dictator (such as Saddam, or many of the dictators whom the USA supported throughout the 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s) was irrelevant. "The enemy of an enemy is my friend." US foreign policy was amoral.

The Neocons despised this understanding of the world.

The Neocon Agenda:

a) The moral nature of a state is important. Thus the neocons talk about "evil" 
countries.

b) The USA is morally good.

c) Thus the USA is morally obligated to attack and destroy evil countries.

War is good. It strengthens a society. Fukuyama calls for a war every generation. Peaceniks are defeatist whiners who drag a country down.

The American public, esp. the Christians, get the blame. Christianity is a slave morality (in the full meaning of the word: it's self-delusional story that slaves come up with to justify and accept their bad situation.) What's really bad about Christianity is that the Christian slave grovelling ethic leads to liberal democracy: everyone is equal, everyone is good, and everyone has equal rights.

Fukuyama writes people are not equal. Most people are little more than dogs (he spends quite a bit of time to make this point). A few Real Men are Natural Aristocrats, and by virtue of their heroic nature, they lead into wars.

It's very clear what Fukuyama and the neocons thought about the 3,000 who died in the WTC. They were lawyers, stocktraders, bankers, and so on, whom he despises for creating the modern egalitarian world.

Thus the Neocons (from their agenda: a, b, c, and d) feel deeply that they are called (in the religious sense) to invade Iraq, Iran, Syria, North Korea, Libya, California, China, and so on, to rid the world of immoral power groups. They are in a war to take over the world.

For Fukuyama, Liberal democracy is a Very Bad Idea. It leads to California, multiculturalism, equal rights, peace, tolerance, and such depravities.

That's the second part of his title: The Last Man. Fukuyama argues that slave morality will result in world where everyone is tolerant, Christian, and... meaningless, because they don't assert themselves in combat against others. The "Last Man" isn't a good thing. It's a horrible end-game where people have no meaning in their lives.

Thus the Neocons want perpetual war so aristocrats can be forged in the heat of battle. This is why Bush/Cheney talk about war that may last several decades.

----------------

When you read this book, you realize the Neocons invaded Iraq. Not for the oil. Not for democracy. Not for anything else. They invaded simply to prove they could start a war. That in itself is a glorious act. This is why there was no meaningful attempt to stabalize Iraq, create a nation, establish democracy, etc. Look at Afghanistan. There's no democracy there. It's a military camp. Democracy is a slave idea, and the Bushies are definitely not in Iraq to build a slave-morality society.

The neocons talk about democracy in Iraq only to shut up the whining of American civilians, who are dumb enough to support a war in Iraq for the sake of democracy.

All of this is very bad news for America and the planet. We see how Lawrence Helm denounces everyone here as "unamerican"; even US Army generals with 30-year careers are unamericans. Neocons are convinced they are entitled to run the country. Only slaves and dogs care about democracy. Thus the ideological justification is set for destroying the Constitution, getting rid of elections, and declaring a perpetual state of emergency. Both of Bush's presidential elections were marked by election fraud; what else would you expect from people who seriously dismiss elections as worthless?

This is also why they ignore treaties as quaint traditions. Warriors don't bother with treaties.

The weather forecast? Bush will attack Iraq with nuclear weapons. The neocons are convinced that the American people will stop whining and will realize their warrior values. Bush will be celebrated as the hero of the world.

yrs,
andreas
www.andreas.com


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