Is
America Disintegrating?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: A.D.
2041 – End of White America?
In Federalist
2, John Jay looks out at a nation of a common blood, faith, language,
history, customs and culture.
"Providence,"
he writes, "has been pleased to give this one connected country
to one united people – a people descended from the same ancestors,
speaking the same language, professing the same religion ... very
similar in their manners and customs ..."
Are we still
that "one united people" today? Or has America become what Klemens
von Metternich called Italy: "a mere geographical expression"?
In "Suicide
of a Superpower," out this week, I argue that the America we grew
up in is disintegrating, breaking apart along the fault lines of
politics, race, ethnicity, culture and faith; that the centrifugal
forces in society have now become the dominant forces.
Our politics
are as poisonous as they have been in our lifetimes.
Sarah Palin
was maligned as morally complicit in the murder attempt on Rep.
Gabrielle Giffords. Terms like "terrorists" and "hostage-takers"
are routinely used on Tea Party members who one congressman said
want to see blacks "hanging on a tree."
Half a century
after the civil rights revolution triumphed, the terms "racist"
and "racism" are in daily use. We remain, said Eric Holder in calling
us a "nation of cowards," as socially segregated as ever.
"Outside the
workplace, the situation is even more bleak in that there is almost
no significant interaction between us. On Saturdays and Sundays,
America ... does not, in some ways, differ significantly from the
country that existed some 50 years ago."
He is not altogether
wrong in that. In California's prisons and among her proliferating
ethnic gangs, a black-brown civil war has broken out.
Yet, by 2042,
there will be 66 million black folks and 135 million Hispanics here,
the latter concentrated in the states bordering Mexico.
What holds
us together, then?
We are not
now and will not then be "descended from common ancestors." We will
consist of all the races, cultures, tribes and creeds of Earth –
a multiracial, multicultural, multiethnic, multilingual stew of
a nation that has never before existed, or survived. The parallels
that come to mind are the Habsburg Empire that flew apart after
World War I, and the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia that disintegrated
after the Cold War.
No more will
we all speak the same language. We will be bilingual and bi-national.
Spanish radio and TV stations are already the fastest growing. In
Los Angeles, half the people speak a language other than English
in their own homes.
As for "professing
the same religion," where 85 percent of Americans were Christians
in 1990, that is down to 75 percent and plummeting. The old Christian
churches – Presbyterian, Methodist, Lutheran and especially Episcopalian
– are splitting, shrinking and dying.
Where three
in four Catholics attended Sunday Mass in 1960, it is now one in
four. One in three cradle Catholics has lost the faith. The numbers
of priests and nuns are plummeting; religious orders are dying;
Catholics schools are closing.
The moral consensus
and moral code Christianity gave to us has collapsed. Since the
great cultural-social revolution of the 1960s, there has occurred
what Nietzsche called the "transvaluation of all values."
What was morally
repellent – promiscuity, homosexuality, abortion – is now seen by
perhaps half the nation as natural, normal, healthy and progressive.
Socially, too,
America is breaking down.
Where out-of-wedlock
births in the 1950s were rare, today, 41 percent of all American
children are born out of wedlock. Among Hispanics, it is 51 percent;
among blacks, 71 percent. And the correlation between the illegitimacy
rate, the drug rate, the dropout rate, the crime rate and the incarceration
rate is absolute.
This helps
to explain the four decades of plunging test scores of American
children and the quadrupling of the prison population.
And while all
this is happening, the state is failing.
We cannot control
our borders, win our wars or balance our budgets. In three consecutive
national elections – 2006, 2008 and 2010 – the incumbents have been
repudiated. Confidence in politics, politicians and the future of
the country has never been so low in our lifetimes.
There was a
time not so long ago when the nation was united on a common faith,
morality, history, heroes, holidays, holy days, language and literature.
Now we fight over them all.
Neocons says
not to worry, the Constitution holds us together.
Does
it? Do we all agree on what the First Amendment says about the freedom
to pray in school and celebrate Christmas and Easter? How can we
be the "one nation, under God" of the Pledge of Allegiance, or the
people "endowed by their Creator" with inalienable rights, if we
cannot even identify or discuss or mention that God and that Creator
in the schools of America?
Do we agree
on what the Ninth Amendment says about right to life? What about
what the 14th Amendment says about affirmative action? What the
Second Amendment says about the right to carry a concealed gun?
The new secession
that is coming, Rick Perry notwithstanding, is not like the secession
of 1861. It is a secession of the heart from one another.
October
21, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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