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TRUDEAUPIATE: Anarchy in N.O. is a Warning
The Roadkill Diaries ^ | 9-2-05 | Kate

Posted on 09/04/2005 11:21:51 AM PDT by cgk

September 02, 2005

Trudeaupiate

The President of the Czech Republic Václav Klaus has a blunt, and timely message for Europe, and by extension, for all western governments and those who elect them.

The question is what kind of ideas is favoured by the intellectuals. The question is whether the intellectuals are neutral in their choice of ideas with which they are ready to deal with. Hayek argued that they are not. They do not hold or try to spread all kinds of ideas. They have very clear and, in some respect, very understandable preferences for some of them. They prefer ideas, which give them jobs and income and which enhance their power and prestige.

They, therefore, look for ideas with specific characteristics. They look for ideas, which enhance the role of the state because the state is usually their main employer, sponsor or donator. That is not all. According to Hayek "the power of ideas grows in proportion to their generality, abstractness, and even vagueness". Hence it is not surprising that the intellectuals are mostly interested in abstract, not directly implementable ideas. This is also the way of thinking, in which they have comparative advantage. They are not good at details. They do not have ambitions to solve a problem. They are not interested in dealing with the everyday's affairs of common citizens. Hayek put it clearly: "the intellectual, by his whole disposition, is uninterested in technical details or practical difficulties." He is interested in visions and utopias and because "socialist thought owes its appeal largely to its visionary character" (and I would add lack of realism and utopian nature), the intellectual tends to become a socialist.

In a similar way, Raymond Aron, in his famous essay "The Opium of Intellectuals", analyzed not only the well-known difference between the revolutionary and reformist way of thinking but also - and this is more relevant in this context - the difference between "prosaic" and "poetry". Whereas "the prosaic model of thinking lacks the grandeur of utopia" (Roger Kimball), the socialist approach is - in the words of Aron - based "on the poetry of the unknown, of the future, of the absolute". As I understand it, this is exactly the realm of intellectuals. Some of us want to immediately add that "the poetry of the absolute is an inhuman poetry".

[...]

Fifteen years after the collapse of communism I am afraid, more than at the beginning of its softer (or weaker) version, of social-democratism, which has become - under different names, e.g. the welfare state or the soziale Marktwirtschaft - the dominant model of the economic and social system of current Western civilization. It is based on big and patronizing government, on extensive regulating of human behavior, and on large-scale income redistribution.


In Canada, the "poets of soziale Trudeapia" are running amok.
Health Canada is calling for a change to the law that prevents peers and nurses in the city's sanctioned safe injection site from helping people inject.

Health care workers can only supervise and offer medical assistance if a user hurts themselves and gets sick or overdoses.

If nurses help an addict shoot up, they could be charged with possession or trafficking.

"We need them to help," said Ms. Tobin.

"And we need more places like the safe injection site. It's so busy now, it's being used all the time and people are sitting on the street, getting people who don't know what they're doing to inject them."


In today's modern, increasingly socialist democracies, nanny-state legislation (if it saves one life!) and cradle-to-grave "social safety nets" are the opiate of the middle class, while the politics of race and identity, envy, and "social justice" are the stock and trade of the economic underclass.

The net result is a society of entitlement that absolves the individual of personal responsibility and creates an illusion that consequences are made to be avoided. There is always "failure of society", a previous generation, or corporate dynasty at whose feet the blame for personal failure lies, always someone else with more "ability to pay" to pick up the tab.

"They owe you" .

Consider a city built, unwisely, below sea level, protected by massive levies and powerful pumps provided by the state, maintained by the state, with all the apparent permanence of the state.

In the unthinkable event that those fail, experts and engineers plot strategies for worst case scenerios. They conduct disaster drills, with fake victims and fake blood. The state provides modern highways and mass transit, and communications systems and weather satellites.

Then, when the day comes that the unthinkable becomes possible, the planning and technology move into high gear. Government officials, with the assistance of private and public media, warn of a tremendous hurricane as it grows in strength. The images are available world wide as satellites track its path, and local TV records the destruction of those it has already battered.

Government officials and elected leaders urge the citizens to evacuate to save their lives. They warn of the scope of the impending storm and the potential of devastation. They mobilize and priorize. Hospital staff stay on duty to care for the sick and infirm. The doors to the largest facility available that may withstand the storm are opened in hopes that those who had no way of escaping, or somehow learned of them too late, can find refuge.

And tens of thousands ignore them and remain in their homes.

Many of them have cars parked in their driveways. Many who don't are able-bodied and capable of walking. They ignore the warning and simply remain where they are, though they have children and elderly in their care.

With the storm passed, the waters rising faster than the heat, electricity failed and supplies running out, when the truth begins to dawn on the survivors - that the state is not all-powerful, that the mere human beings charged with coming to their aid,are, in fact, mere human beings who cannot come sweeping to their rescue like the cavalry over a Hollywood hill, that there are so many to rescue, because like they, so many have ignored the warnings - do they pool their resources?

Do they find strength in human dignity and sanctity of life? Do the strong come to the aid of the weak? Do they summon patience and resolve in the knowledge that help is on the way, if only they can find the courage to help themselves a little longer?

What is their response to this consequence that has befallen them, a consequence largely of their own making?

"You owe us" .

They take what others have failed to provide, those things required to sustain life - jewelry and television sets. And when taking isn't enough (it never is), they devolve into predation and anarchy, abandon the weak, turn upon the innocent and each other - and all in a matter of days.

In former times entire nations found the strength to rise to the occasion, ordinary people understood that survival depended on their shared common decency and respect for their fellow citizen. That, by co-operating and persevering, they might create coping mechanisms through pooling skills and resources, and to be sure, the majority of those trapped in New Orleans will have done just that.

But, in former times, whole nations were not living in a time of entitlement, where all and any are provided for by an all-encompassing "social safety net", funded by those faceless others with more, who have life easier, whom we have been trained to envy.

Those human failings, irresponsible and anti-social behaviors that once brought consequences in the community - shame, ostracization, and deserved personal deprivation - are today excused, assigned new and neutral nomenclature (all the better for medical diagnosis), prescribed "tolerance", and if possible, assigned the politics of race or class, so that collective guilt may be mined to ensure that self-destructive behavior gains not only acceptance, but state funding.

The predatory violence and anarchy befalling New Orleans is not the result of a freak convergence of forces brought on by unnatural disaster.

It's a warning.


TOPICS: Government; Military/Veterans; Politics; Society; Weather
KEYWORDS: anarchy; katrina; neworleans; nola
Credit to FReeper tentmaker, who posted an excerpt and link on the Live Thread. Thought this merited its own thread/discussion.
1 posted on 09/04/2005 11:21:52 AM PDT by cgk
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To: tentmaker; Travis McGee; archy; mariabush

Ping. (CW II?)


2 posted on 09/04/2005 11:22:43 AM PDT by cgk (We'll have to deal w/ the networks. One way to do that is to drain the swamp they live in - Rumsfeld)
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Whoops. Missed the link at the bottom of the article:


See also: The American Spectator: Masques of Death
3 posted on 09/04/2005 11:26:08 AM PDT by cgk (We'll have to deal w/ the networks. One way to do that is to drain the swamp they live in - Rumsfeld)
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To: cgk

Extremely thoughtful article.

The realities of modern democracy have created a society that is antagonistic to the concept of hanging together to overcome adversity.

The Democrat is a parasite that has been led to believe that selfishness and stealing is a virtue while serving and producing are the traits of those others for whom they need to hate so as to continue belief in the virtuousness of their parasitic nature.

This guarantees that half of society will work against cooperation in times of distress where cooperation is required for the survival of that society.


4 posted on 09/04/2005 11:49:35 AM PDT by Jim_Curtis
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To: Jim_Curtis

I thought it was a sound article as well, and important. I suppose I should have excerpted only the meat & potatoes portion of it so people would read it through. 95 views, 1 reply. Maybe I'll wait a week and repost it. :)


5 posted on 09/04/2005 9:35:35 PM PDT by cgk (We'll have to deal w/ the networks. One way to do that is to drain the swamp they live in - Rumsfeld)
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