My
Master’s Voice
by
William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
Yesterday
I placed my annual call to my All-Highest War Lord and Sovereign
Master, Kaiser Wilhelm II, to offer my usual felicitations on his
birthday. His Majesty was laughing when he picked up the receiver,
so after congratulating him I took the liberty of inquiring what
Heaven found so funny.
"Democracy,"
His Majesty replied.
"I
take it you are watching this year’s Presidential election in the
U.S.," I said.
"The
flea circus? That’s part of it," said the Kaiser. "It
nicely illustrates one of democracy’s contradictions, namely that
no one who is willing to crawl and grub for votes can be worthy
of the office to which he aspires. There’s no place for the nolo
episcopari in democratic politics, it seems, nor for anyone
with the slightest shred of character. Your Giulianis and McCains,
Clintons and Obamas are happy to eat every toad in the public garden."
"I
think the American public is no happier with their options this
year than is Your Majesty," I replied.
"Thereby
illustrating another funny aspect of democracy," the Kaiser
shot back. "Who do they think is responsible? They are, of
course. No candidate who told them the truth could get above 10%
in the polls. They want nostrums, bromides, comforting lies, and
they won’t tolerate anything else. America speaks of citizens, but
all it has are consumers whose heads are as fat as their bottoms.
That too is where democracy leads, to an ever-declining lowest common
denominator. It cannot do anything else."
"The
funniest aspect of the whole business," His Majesty continued,
"is that the lower America sinks, the more determined its politicians
are to force democracy on everyone else. All but one of your Presidential
candidates has pledged to continue crusading for democracy, despite
the lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan. By comparison, even the late
Spanish Hapsburgs were models of realism."
"The
democracy advocates – and I trust Your Majesty knows I am not one
– would reply that democracy is necessary to freedom," I suggested.
"Another
contradiction," said the Kaiser. "Prussia in my day was
far more free than America is today, because Prussians understood
what freedom is. Freedom is not doing whatever you feel like. Freedom
is replacing imposed discipline with self-discipline. No democratic
office-seeker would dare say that, because the voters would not
like it. They want to be told that they can do whatever they please
– spend without saving, live immoral lives without degenerating,
vote without thinking – and suffer no unfortunate consequences.
If the public wants to square the circle, Presto!, a hundred politicians
promise to do it."
"I
trust that Your Majesty’s preferred alternative to democracy is
monarchy, as is mine," I said.
"Yours,
mine and Heaven’s," the Kaiser replied. "As I have said
before, Heaven is not a republic. Though there are, I think, two
countries God intends should be republics."
"And
those are?", I asked.
"Switzerland,
to show that it can be made to work, and America, to serve as a
warning to everyone else."
"Were
America to wake up to the virtues of monarchy – and God knows our
current election campaign should wake us up – who would you recommend
for the American throne?", I inquired.
"An
Austrian Hapsburg, I should think," said the Kaiser. "They
are accustomed to ruling over ramshackle, polyglot, decaying empires.
My old friend Emperor Franz Josef did so remarkably well."
"One
last question, if I may," I said. "Should America continue
on the unhappy road of democracy, what lies in our future?"
"Let’s
just say that the combination of military defeat and economic depression
is not a happy one," the Kaiser answered. "And now I must
ring off. I hear the band of the Garde du Corps playing,
which means it is time to review the troops. I think the tune is,
‘And the World Turned Upside Down.’"
February
1, 2008
William
Lind is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2008 William S. Lind
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