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Entries in Left-Liberalism (1)

Friday
Oct232009

The Strange Death of Left-Liberal Britain

The Griffin business in the UK raises some interesting questions about the position of nationalism at the heart of the junior partner in the Atlantic system.

Apologetic Post-Imperialism

Republican Americans seem to have little problem with espousing a fairly militaristic national patriotism. Tony Judt in his 'Reappraisals' (2008) of the dangers of forgetting recent history put this down to the fact that modern Americans had never experienced the horrors of war on their own territory.

European anti-nationalist ideology can be deduced from the opposite - the obvious trauma of the European Civil War from 1914 to 1945 (some would say 1989). But the British seem to have been crushed by their withdrawal from empire.

One side of the political equation seems to be lost in a world of liberal guilt for slavery and colonisation and even for a holocaust for which no Briton was responsible.

This apologetic culture is compounded by the fact that the United Kingdom contains an English heartland, from which empire sprang, that is in tension with its smaller Celtic partners, not sure whether they are the victims or the beneficiaries of imperial history.

Given that all the significant parties of the Right (Conservative, UKIP and BNP) refuse to recognise this tension and the centre-Left parties (New Labour and the Liberal Democrats) pander to it, no wonder those most consciously English, from which the BNP takes its support, are confused and depressed,

Bear-Baiting on the BBC

What we saw over the past week was a remarkable baiting of a fairly small force in British politics by an entire establishment. The BBC kept to its liberal duty of allowing Griffin a platform on the premier popular political programme and it played it fair despite immense pressure from the official Liberal-Left.

But the discussion was not one of the usual four separate positions (the three main parties and some often clueless intellectual fluff) debating against each other, scoring cheap points and providing more heat than light on the great issues of the day.

No, on this occasion, the aim was to get Griffin to 'show his true face' to the British public while a baying mob outside the studio and a fairly aggressive studio audience put him in the position of a bear in a bear pit surrounded by snapping dogs.

This is not to imply any sympathy for Griffin or the BNP as a political ideology. Even though his party does represent some serious and legitimate discontent, partly cultural but mostly socio-economic, and in a serious recession at that, he poses three fundamental threats to the country.

First, his opportunistic Islamophobia is the stalking horse for an irrational and primitive view of human relations that is a-historical and fuelled by a fundamental ignorance of how individuals and communities develop organically. It is essentialist in a world where essentialism tends to exclusion and repression.

Second, his party is authoritarian in a way that goes far beyond any interest in corporatist economic planning - its sentiments are anti-democratic in a very profound way. Combined with the essentialist world view, this authoritarianism must mean a sclerotic rule by the few of the many.

Third, the BNP has a very confused vision of national identity where a particular authoritarian vision of the people is merged with the real authority of the Crown in a way that would reproduce the fascism of the 1930s: a national security state without even the limited restraints of New Labour's version.

Left-Liberal Self-Indulgence

But the problem with the liberal-Left is that it refuses to parse out the real meaning of this programme or understand why it is beginning to catch on in the darkest corners of the country.

The liberal-Left response is self-indulgent and moralistic. It presents its position as self-evidently right to the extent that (as we reported in our last posting) it is quite prepared to use illiberal methods along European lines to preserve the liberal consensus.

Unfortunately for that liberal consensus, the British are not Europeans. Some of the population will see the judicial warfare, the bear-baiting by a discredited elite (in the context of administrative incompetence and the expenses scandal) and street protests as bullying.

The British do not like bullies so we have the paradox that a party of potential bullies is going to be seen by some as the victim of bullies - they may have a 'point'.

The New Public Squalor

Certainly, metropolitan intellectuals do not get out and about much. They are missing a reality that has nothing to do with race and everything to do with failed economics - the growing islands of public squalor that co-exist with the comfort of the private homes of the majority of most of the population.

This recession has not hurt the bulk of the middle class (yet) but it is hurting those who are marginal. The slow-down in public spending (with more to come) and the strains of migration in specific areas are creating a sense of desperation about community and order that is not wholly irrational.

It is interesting that the news that the police would be carrying some serious weaponry into key London council estates arrived after Griffin's performance.

He would have had a field day with it - the estates are black and yet we have had twelve years of multicultural expenditure. Guns are historically one tool that consensual British policing has never had to use. The implication is that community has collapsed, much as many have been privately predicting.

The liberal establishment is in denial. We covered some of this in our last posting but the Generals are in denial about their squaddies, the Home Office about the police, the media about the underclass (with the exception of the BBC) and the politicians about the country.

Even as we look at the 'dark side' of the BNP, we have to recognise that it gets votes. The demonisation of its voters is on the edge of the demonisation of minority groups by the fascists themselves. The BNP-voting underclass and peite-bourgeoisie are regarded as if they were vermin to be exterminated.

The Refusal To Engage

And yet ... they have some cause for grievance. There are questions to be asked about the social sustainability of migration, ostensibly based on humanitarian asylum claims but actually about cheap labour and economics. There are serious questions about relative allocation of resources.

Sir Andrew Green has been called a racist for raising migration issues. He has threatened to sue anyone who does. He is not. Migration Watch may or may not be right but the level of vituperation directed at him for raising important issues of sustainability shows that these concerns are not being addressed.

Many of the most aggressive liberals scarcely hide their belief that borders should be open as recompense for Britain's imperialist past without understanding that those 'native' communities that are in the front line in terms of pressure on services are precisely those that stayed and did not colonise.

And then there is the attitude to identity? In the US, half the population are assertively proud of being American. In Russia, the figure is probably 90% and includes the young who celebrate their own anthem in rock versions. But, in the UK, national pride is more than diminished, it is treated with contempt.

Even the Generals, in their attack on the BNP, have emphasised the role of the Army in an international liberal and humanitarian context which largely misses the point to those many Britons who thought that the Army existed to defend their country and that was that.

Defeating the BNP

The dangerous aspects of the BNP are truly there - this is a dark and potentially vicious organisation that would pauperise our culture and our people - but it is moving into a vacuum of the liberal establishment's own making. They are the flip side to left-liberal arrogance.

The probable truth is that the country itself is largely liberal, probably libertarian, broadly happy with multiculturalism and globalisation - but it is not happy with public squalor nor to risks to personal security and it is not happy with foreign wars and growing 'liberal' authoritarianism.

Into a culture dominated by 'oughts' from ideological liberals, the public sees what 'is' - the first signs of serious social collapse spreading from the inner cities outwards as recession takes hold.

And this is where, to the great discomfort of left-liberals, some harsh truths about a significant minority of British people need to be accommodated. The light side of the move towards the BNP is the desire for community security, a sense of respect for identity and a democracy that works.

It is not that individuals do not feel secure but they feel that their communities are crumbling before their eyes. It is not that they do not respect others but that they feel that they are not respected. And they have decreasing faith in the political classes' ability to restore prosperity and social order.

We do not take the BNP too seriously but we do take this mood of concern very seriously indeed. It is what will probably fuel the arrival of a Tory Administration in 2010 and guide the future shape of its policies, fortunately still within a fundamentally liberal, even libertarian, framework.

When the history of the strange death of New Labour is written, it won't be the Iraq War or possibly the credit crunch that did for it ... it will be the attempt to impose from above an alien ideology that opened the gates to the arrival of a right-wing hegemony that may now last a generation.