tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post3423724968163434312..comments2024-03-28T00:11:33.489-04:00Comments on bensozia: Is Liberalism in Trouble?Johnhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01037215533094998996noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post-53283835849125402522016-04-14T11:42:39.646-04:002016-04-14T11:42:39.646-04:00Meanwhile, we're seeing liberal thought active...Meanwhile, we're seeing liberal thought actively reshaping portions of the world where it traditionally has never existed.<br /><br />Burma is right now struggling mightily to democratize and shed their military junta; Iran has just now begun allowing women to hold public office; young girls in the poorest parts of Africa and Asia, from Burundi to Afghanistan, who have traditionally been denied the right to receive an education are now being given the chance to learn; et cetera.<br /><br />One of the hidden strengths of liberalism is that it plays directly to the interests of over half the world's population - women. A return to traditional forms of rule, to "monarchy, aristocracy and thuggery" as you phrase it, would almost necessarily be based in a return to absolute patriarchy, and that is something which is going to engender fierce resistance.<br /><br />Overwhelmingly, the people who are most discontented with modern liberalism are men of the ethnic majority of their home regions. Their positions of privilege are being undermined at the same time that conditions are improving for women and minorities, and they're abjectly horrified by the notion.<br /><br />It doesn't occur to them that they've had an unfairly large share of the pie for all of written history. They view the loss of their privilege not as the natural consequence of rectifying longstanding societal inequity, but as their being robbed of what they view as their absolute birthright. To be reduced at long last to equality with the rest of the world is the worst possible offence they can imagine, because they've always believed and taken for granted that they were better than everyone else and deserved to receive the lion's share. And so they lash out in response, trying to forcibly reverse their changing fortunes.<br /><br />It won't work. Anti-rational forces couldn't undo the abolition of slavery. They couldn't undo the French Revolution. They couldn't undo the Reformation. They couldn't undo the invention of the printing press. At every step, when a major development has come along which worked to democratize and equalize the world, they struggled mightily to suppress and reverse it, and equally mightily failed.<br /><br />That's not to say they won't make the attempt today, nor that they won't inflict consider damage in doing so. But despite the backlash, the genie will continue to work its way out of the bottle, bit by bit. Because once a people taste freedom and equality, they do not readily return to the yoke.G. Verlorennoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post-6107960168188393782016-04-14T07:56:43.005-04:002016-04-14T07:56:43.005-04:00Yes, Cohen's essay is another dismal screed ri...Yes, Cohen's essay is another dismal screed richly deserving the "For I Am Old And Jaded" treatment. Cohen should remember the 1930s, if he wants a time when liberalism was genuinely in trouble.Davidhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08993570411881726772noreply@blogger.com