Has
the Bell Begun To Toll for China?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
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by Patrick J. Buchanan: Infantile
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"Why did the
Soviet Union disintegrate? Why did the Soviet Communist Party collapse?
An important reason was that their ideals and convictions wavered,"
China's new leader, Xi Jinping, told a closed meeting of party elite
in Guangdong province.
"Finally all
it took was one quiet word from Gorbachev to declare the dissolution
of the Soviet Communist Party, and a great party was gone," said
Xi, according to notes obtained by The New York Times.
"Everyone
is talking about reform, but in fact everyone has a fear of reform,"
said Chinese historian Ma Jong. "The question is: Can society be
kept under control while you go forward? That is the test." That
is indeed the test.
What is it
that gives a party its legitimacy, its right to rule? What holds
a nation together when its cradle faith, its founding ideology,
has been abandoned by both elites and the people? That is China's
coming crisis.
With victory
in the civil war with the Nationalists in 1949, Mao claimed to have
liberated China from both Japanese imperialists and Western colonialists,
and restored her dignity. "China has stood up!" he said.
His party's
claim to absolute power was rooted in what it had done, and also
what it must do. Only a party with total power could lead a world
revolution. Only an all-powerful party could abolish inequality
in a way that made the French Revolution look like a rebellion at
Berkeley.
Xi Jinping's
problem? The Cold War is over. China is herself in the capitalist
camp, a member of the G-8, and inequality in the People's Republic
resembles that of America in the Gilded Age.
How does the
Chinese Communist Party justify control of all of China's institutions
today – economic, political, military and cultural?
If Marxism
is mocked behind closed doors by a new economic elite and tens of
millions of Chinese young, what can cause the nation to continue
to respect and obey a Communist Party and its leaders, besides the
gun?
The answer
of Europe in the 1930s is China's answer today.
Nationalism,
tribalism, patriotic war if necessary, will bring the masses back.
If the Chinese nation is being insulted, if ancestral lands are
occupied by foreigners as in olden times, the people will rally
around a regime that stands up for China. Nationalism will keep
Chinese society "under control while you go forward."
Japan's Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe traces the aggressiveness of Beijing in the
Senkaku Islands dispute to a "deeply ingrained" need to appeal to
Chinese nationalism in the form of anti-Japanese sentiment dating
to the Sino-Japanese War of 1937-1945.
Chinese nationalism,
says Abe, is also behind China's quarrels with Vietnam and other
nations over islands of the South China Sea.
If Beijing
is unable to deliver economic growth, "it will not be able to control
the 1.3 billion people ... under the one-party rule," Abe told The
Washington Post. He is now denying those quotes.
But China is
not alone in stoking the flames of nationalism to maintain legitimacy.
Abe has himself
taken a firm stand against China in the Senkakus and is moving rightward
on patriotism, security and a defense of Japan's history in the
20th century, and he is rising in the polls. The apologetic and
pacifist Japan of yesterday is no more.
In Russia,
a nation that saw its Orthodox faith ripped up by the roots by Josef
Stalin, then saw its Marxist-Leninist ideology and a Communist Party
that was its Vatican collapse, is searching to locate the ancient
sources of Russian patriotism and nationhood. Vladimir Putin seeks
to knit back together the empire of the Romanovs and revive the
old church.
In the Muslim
world, the secularism of Gamal Abdel Nasser and Saddam Hussein and
Bashar Assad are yielding to forces that look all the way back to
Muhammad and the Quran as infallible guides to politics, law and
national greatness. The Sunni-Shia split recalls our Catholic-Protestant
split in the time of Luther, Calvin, Henry VIII, the Council of
Trent and the Thirty Years War.
Nor should
America be smug about this search for legitimacy.
Our British-Protestant
then European-Christian identity has gone the way of the Cheshire
Cat. In the age of Obama, Jefferson's Declaration and Madison's
Constitution are invoked to justify societal mandates that would
have had the Founding Fathers loading muskets.
What is our
guiding light now that the philosophical, cultural, religious and
political roots of the old republic are being systematically severed?
What
gives legitimacy to the American government? Elections, majority
rule through universal suffrage of a people, ever-larger shares
of whom are ignorant of the faith, culture and civilization whence
we came?
If our economy
should sink like Southern Europe's, if the great god Progress no
longer smiles upon us, what do we fall back on?
One day, Americans
will begin to ask themselves such questions, if they have not already
begun to do so.
March
2, 2013
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
© 2013 Creators Syndicate
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