Surviving the Fall of the State
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
The
Discarded Image is
the title of C.S. Lewis’s last book, and perhaps his best. On the
surface, it is a discussion of medieval cosmology and the Ptolemaic
universe. In reality it is about very much more, including the medieval
refutation of the modern notion of "equality," which decrees
that people are interchangeable. That vast error lies at the heart
of many of the ideologies which made the 20th century
such a horror and which still gnaw at the vitals of Western civilization.
Lewis recognized that on many matters, our medieval ancestors were
wiser than ourselves.
Lewis’s
book was brought to mind by a letter from a reader of this column,
who asked a difficult question:
…having
read all I could lay my hands on about 4th generation
warfare (including your books), something is missing. You are
still discussing 4th generation warfare at the state
level…What can individuals do to prepare for 4th
generation warfare? What can my family do?
My
correspondent has grasped the most difficult point about Fourth
Generation war. In its ultimate form, it is not something we face
"over there," in places such as Afghanistan and Iraq.
Nor is it an import, like 9/11. Fourth Generation theory says that
the state here, in the good old USA, is also likely to break
apart as Americans too transfer their primary loyalty away from
the state to a wide variety of other things. The conflicts among
these new loyalties will in many cases be sharp enough to generate
fighting.
In
the face of this possibility, or maybe probability, what indeed
are individuals and families to do? I think the answer, if there
is one, begins with my friend David Kline’s farm.
David
Kline is an Amishman. He farms about 200 acres in Holmes County,
Ohio, good land that supports a herd of forty to fifty dairy cows.
He has some modern equipment, such as milking machines, but his
life does not depend on any of it. In today’s world, his farm provides
him a good living. In a Fourth Generation world, his farm would
still provide well for him and his family.
I
am not talking about "survivalism" here. The Kline farm
represents much more than that. As I have said to David more than
once, what he and other Amish are doing is preserving an understanding
of how to live in reality for the time when all the virtual realities
collapse.
Virtual
realities lie at the heart of Brave New World, aka the New World
Order, "globalism," "democratic capitalism"
(as the neo-cons define it), etc. The bargain Brave New World offers
is this: if you will only do as Marcuse advises and trade the Reality
Principle for the Pleasure Principle, we will enmesh you in virtual
realities that will make you happy. True, you will lose your free
will, because our virtual realities will condition you to think
as we want you to. But they will also give you anything and everything
you want. So what if none of it is real? All that matters is that
you feel happy, right now.
As
our medieval forefathers would quickly recognize, this is Hell speaking.
Hell has always loathed reality, because in reality, Christ is king.
Wiser than we, the medievals were interested not in felicitas
but in beautitudine – not in being happy but in
being saved. Had they been given a television or a video game, they
would have smelled brimstone.
Not
only do virtual realities lead to Hell, they have another drawback,
one that a Fourth Generation world will soon bring to the fore:
all of them, without exception, eventually collapse. The complex
structures and vast resources required to sustain them are evanescent.
The realities of the Fourth Generation are hard and sharp, and they
will slice and dice virtual realities like, well – dare I say the
Scimitar of Islam? Many Islamics, unlike most Christians, seem to
recognize Brave New World for what it is.
Which
brings me back to David Kline’s farm. Is the answer to my reader’s
question that we should all become Amish? No, because in the end
some of us will have to fight or the world will have no place for
the Amish. Should we all live like Amish farmers? Here the answer
is closer to "yes." At the least, even if we do not farm,
we need to separate our lives and the lives of our families from
the virtual realities and live in reality itself. The small family
farm may not be the only way to do that, but it is a good way.
David
Kline’s farm is itself a discarded image. But it is an image America
discarded not very long ago. As David says, "I just farm the
way everybody did fifty years ago." David edits Farming
Magazine, a thoughtful and literate quarterly dedicated to teaching
others, Amish and non-Amish, how they too can make a good living
from a small farm, farmed the old way. His discarded image is one
we can find, still living, perhaps not too far down the road.
My
correspondent concluded, "How do you apply non-state warfare
to family protection? Give me only those practical items that can
be implemented on the individual and family level." Well, I
don’t know many things more practical than an Amish farm, nor better
at protecting families. And I do know that answers to the Fourth
Generation and to Brave New World, false images both, can only be
found at the individual and family level, because that is where
the decision to live by the Reality Principle must be made.
January
28, 2004
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation.
Copyright
© 2004 William S. Lind
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