Now this is the more interesting line with Kurth. But let's start from the basics: Francis Fukuyama was (and still is) an idiot, so let's forget the "End of History" bullshit. Samuel Huntington captured the moment thanks to 9/11 with the argument that it's going to be "The West against the Rest". Kurth argues that the real fight will be inside America with "multiculturalism vs conservatism". Of coures that Conservatism isn't said to be conservatism, but "Western culture". I would argue that "conservatism" is far better name here to what "Western culture" is for Kurth. Especially if we understand that "conservatism" can be thinking of old ideas and not just what is on the political right.His view then was that one of the main factors undermining the US's status as a cohesive nation is media enterprises that turned the American society into a multicultural audience. — frank
1. Doesn't need a large conventional army, but rather defends through deterrence, and attacks via high tech stealth weapons. — frank
Does not engage in mass production for a national market. It's economy is characterized by an economic divide. There's a "high economy" which is comprised of financial institutions and managers of multi-nationals which are focused on a global market, and a "low economy" made up of low-skilled service workers. — frank
Does not contain a cohesive political class, but has a somewhat stalemated government running a multicultural regime. — frank
but the last two decades have shown something else. Americans loosing the war in Afghanistan shows the obvious limits of the tech approach to war and it's obvious perils, how it can all go wrong. — ssu
Now this is the more interesting line with Kurth. But let's start from the basics: Francis Fukuyama was (and still is) an idiot, so let's forget the "End of History" bullshit. — ssu
Kurth argues that the real fight will be inside America with "multiculturalism vs conservatism". — ssu
As of the modern day, the United States aggressively uses its military for regime change as well as deterrence. Iraq and Afghanistan were not acts of deterrence. — Philosophim
would re-read the history of the founding of America. America was so divided and multi-cultural that we initially had the articles of confederation which granted extreme power to the states with an incredibly weak federal government. The reason for this was the identities between the states, (And the political elections within the states) were so different from one another. America has always been a multi-cultural and non-cohesive political entity. If you read history, there are constant struggles and debates on how the country should be run over time. — Philosophim
Sure. He would say the ever-waning commitment of Americans to foreign wars is a side effect of diminished national cohesion. — frank
You're basically agreeing with Kurth that the US is an example of federalism. It's not much of a nation-state. — frank
The USA was a functioning nation-state from the end of the Civil War until sometime after WW2, when it began to evolve into a post-modern state — frank
Sure. He would say the ever-waning commitment of Americans to foreign wars is a side effect of diminished national cohesion.
— frank
Wouldn't that be due to an increased national cohesion? If a broken up cohesion, there would be too many counter parties that would disagree with foreign interventions. Its expensive and costly to the citizens. We were in Afghanistan for 20 years. I'm not sure a nation with low cohesion could continue to support such a foreign war with the changes in elected officials — Philosophim
I'm quite sure I'm missing something or not understanding the full context. — Philosophim
I remember everybody poking holes at Fukuyama's ideas even when they were stated. And when 9/11 happened, Fukuyama admitted that his view of the World wasn't happening. And later Fukuyama backed down from being in the neocon camp.Why do you think that? — frank
Well, at least he himself in The Real Clash makes the juxtaposition between Western culture and Post-Western culture (that is multiculturalism, feminism etc.)I don't think that's what he meant. I think he was saying that acting as a nation-state (so having a cohesive political class) has always been a challenge for America because it's so big and it's basically the world in microcosm.
He's saying the US was only a nation-state for a few decades, and it ended with WW2. Since then, he's saying it's been post-modern, which is clearly not a good thing in his view. He ends with the conclusion that the American education system needs to be improved to keep America from sinking further into illiteracy. — frank
I think he was ultimately just whining about American education. I love patterns, though, and the one he provided was intriguing. — frank
The USA was a functioning nation-state from the end of the Civil War until sometime after WW2, when it began to evolve into a post-modern state (not to be confused with postmodern, although it's that too.) — frank
The main features of a nation-state are: mass education which establishes the literacy required for national identity, a cohesive political class which reinforces the power of the bureaucracy, a centrally controlled military which reinforces the nation's sense of place, and mass industry which, among other things, supplies the military. — frank
Americans just assumed that this new prosperity would transform China also, just like the Fukuyama's argument wen — ssu
We have a highly cohesive political class which reinforces the power of the bureaucracy — Bitter Crank
It not only takes time to judge events, it takes time for events to happen. — Bitter Crank
And so there's an inevitable clash between a culture that isn't good at being a nation-state vs. cultures that know a kind of nationalism that Americans don't really have for lack of the religious, ethnic, or even linguistic unity to pass for a nation.
Is any of that true? — frank
Maybe it depends on how you assess Trump. Is he an anomaly? — frank
Well this is one of various 'official stories' available about geopolitics that you can accept or reject, — Tom Storm
Wasn't Trump ultimately good for corporations? — Tom Storm
Maybe it depends on how you assess Trump. Is he an anomaly? — frank
baby eating alien reptiles — frank
The radical right isn't new. They have phased in and out of importance ever since Reconstruction. Think of the KKK and the late 19th century authors of the Jim Crow laws; think of the violent reaction to the labor movement; think of Father Coughlin (an odd-ball fascist in the 1930s), think of Joseph McCarthy, the John Birch Society, and so on and so forth. They tend to be hateful bastards, and they have a much larger base than the sad left, which might fill up a good sized church if they all got together in one place. — Bitter Crank
I think there's a link here which is quite an American phenomenon, which then is copied in other places. It's what I'd call a populist right, which sees that the conservative foundations that the US was built on are under an attack by a leftist liberal elite which has forgotten them. This idea that a leftist elite is in control makes it populist. (Of course actual leftist liberals don't see it that way and likely emphasize how much the conservatives rule, but this is besides the point.)The radical right isn't new. They have phased in and out of importance ever since Reconstruction. Think of the KKK and the late 19th century authors of the Jim Crow laws; think of the violent reaction to the labor movement; think of Father Coughlin (an odd-ball fascist in the 1930s), think of Joseph McCarthy, the John Birch Society, and so on and so forth. They tend to be hateful bastards, and they have a much larger base than the sad left, which might fill up a good sized church if they all got together in one place. — Bitter Crank
I also found this interesting in Kurt's article:
"Liberalism can provide a common ground, a least common denominator, for many states in one international organization in a way that nationalism, by its nature, cannot.“
Liberalism creates a motive for reaching out to the rest of the world with organizations like the UN and the IMF. Plus there's a moral imperative to spreading democracy from an American point of view. To admit that people in the middle east don't want or need democracy seems either insulting or it's a betrayal of middle eastern women, gays, etc. — frank
I think in this World many countries can be "nationalist", but yet participate in international cooperation. It doesn't have to go in hand in hand with American liberalism (free markets, individual freedom etc.) — ssu
:grin: :100:I have read that we are now post racial, post industrial, post modern, post colonial, post binary, post brick and mortar retail, post feminist, post Christian, post-human, post de jour.
Unfortunately we are not post bullshit yet. — Bitter Crank
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