Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Progressives, Fascism, and the Will to Power

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

So-called progressives are feeling pretty cocky nowadays, which is not surprising after they achieved a decisive victory on one of their key policy goals when the United States Supreme Court mandated that every state must adjust its laws to pretend that people of the same sex can marry one another.  Of course, it is the case and will always be the case that a man cannot marry another man any more than he can marry his left shoe.  Marriage is not an infinitely malleable concept; it has an irreducible essence, and that essence is defined by the mutually complementary design of male and female bodies.  Now the Supreme Court tells us we must, insofar as our civil laws are concerned, pretend that relationships that do not partake of that essence in fact do.  Far from tainting the victory, however, the in-the-teeth-of-objective-reality quality of it all serves to emphasize the vast scope of the progressives’ triumph.  They have forced every state in the union to pretend to deny reality itself.  That is an impressive political victory.

Understandably, many progressives must feel their power is ascendant and will remain so, and some are succumbing to the temptation of ascendancy – the temptation to speak and act as if one’s political opponents are powerless and their concerns are therefore irrelevant and need not be acknowledged, far less taken seriously.  Progressives are beginning to drop all pretense that to them the ideals of Enlightenment liberalism such as the right to free speech and freedom of conscious were ever anything but useful tools for accomplishing their goals when classical liberals (who, ironically, are called “conservatives” in the United States) were ascendant.  They have played according to the formula Frank Herbert described in Children of Dune:

When I am weaker than you, I ask you for freedom because that is according to your principles; when I am stronger than you, I take away your freedom because that is according to my principles.

The progressive call for “tolerance” for the “other” we heard for so many years was their way of asking for freedom according to the principles of classical liberals.  But now that progressives are politically ascendant, they are no longer calling for tolerance for the other.  Instead they are determined to quash all dissent and destroy those who refuse to conform, because progressives are fascists at bottom, and arraying the coercive force of government against their political opponents to enforce conformity is according to their fascist principles.  When they were weak, “tolerance and diversity!”  Now that they are strong, “Conform or be crushed under the heel of government.”  See here, here and here as merely the latest examples.

What does this have to do with origins?  Everything of course.  Classical liberalism was based on the premises and conclusions of natural law philosophy, as perhaps most famously articulated in the United States’ Declaration of Independence:

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.  We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

It should be obvious that the superstructure of natural law rested on a theistic, specifically a Christian, foundation.  [Yes, a handful of the founders were Deists; the overwhelming majority of them were orthodox Christians.]  Classical liberals believed in God; they believed in a transcendent morality instituted by God; they believed that rights are not given by men to other men, but each man, as an image bearer of God, is endowed with inalienable rights by God.

These ideas have logical consequences.  Among these consequences are the belief that every human being has inherent dignity as an image bearer of God; that all persons have equal moral standing and thus a right to the twin freedoms of expression and conscience.  On the other side of the ledger, classical liberals had a keen sense of the doctrine of original sin, the fallenness of man, and his propensity for error, all of which led them to tolerate divergent political views and place their trust in the marketplace of ideas instead of a perpetual official political orthodoxy.

Progressives, on the other hand, are overwhelmingly secular and materialist in their outlook.  These ideas also have consequences, including (1) God does not exist; (2) good and evil do not exist as objective transcendent ontological categories; (3) God, who does not exist, cannot endow men with inalienable rights; and (4) men are not image bearers of a non-existent God; they are jumped up hairless apes with delusions of superiority over other animals.

If there is no good and evil and no God-endowed rights, by what standard does the progressive define the eponymous “progress” they claim to want to achieve?  Certainly there is no transcendent standard.  “We have to give up on the idea that there are unconditional, transcultural moral obligations, obligations rooted in an unchanging, ahistorical human nature,” says progressive hero Richard Rorty.

What then?  The answer is that progressives want what that want.  Theirs is a political philosophy bound by nothing and defined by their unbounded will to power.  Of course, none of this is new.  In Book X of The Laws Plato describes them:

In the first place, my dear friend, these people would say that the Gods exist not by nature, but by art, and by the laws of states, which are different in different places, according to the agreement of those who make them; and that the honourable is one thing by nature and another thing by law, and that the principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that mankind are always disputing about them and altering them; and that the alterations which are made by art and by law have no basis in nature, but are of authority for the moment and at the time at which they are made.-These, my friends, are the sayings of wise men, poets and prose writers, which find a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that the highest right is might, and in this way the young fall into impieties, under the idea that the Gods are not such as the law bids them imagine; and hence arise factions, these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is, to live in real dominion over others, and not in legal subjection to them.

Might makes right.  Progressives want what they want, and they will crush those who oppose their will to power.  And it is not enough to achieve their policy objectives.  Dissent is not allowed.  Progressive Tanya Cohen writes:

it’s just common sense that freedom of speech doesn’t give anyone the right to offend, insult, humiliate, intimidate, vilify, incite hatred or violence, be impolite or uncivil, disrespect, oppose human rights, spread lies or misinformation, argue against the common good, or promote ideas which have no place in society.

And who decides what is the “common good” and “ideas that have no place in society”?  Why Tanya Cohen and her friends of course.

Countless times on these pages Progressives have argued that good and evil do not exist as objective categories.  Instead, they insist that good is defined by the consensus of a society.  Yet even this limit is a dodge.  Every time the people have voted on the “right” to same-sex marriage they have rejected it by fairly wide margins.  It is not the law because there is a societal consensus that it is right.  It is the law because five members of a nine-member committee of lawyers decided they have the power to impose it on the rest of us and by God they are going to use that power.  This is about as anti-democratic as it is possible to be.  Yet progressives celebrate the decision.  Why?  Not because the outcome is “legitimate” even by their own standards of legitimacy (i.e., societal consensus), but because that is what they want, and they don’t care how they get what they want so long as they get it.

What is to be done?  I am not sure.  It seems to me that the clash of worldviews has reached a point where further attempts to reason with one another may be useless.  The two camps no longer speak or even understand the other camp’s moral language.  How can I reason with someone who thinks it is morally acceptable violently to dismember a baby and sell her body parts to the highest bidder?  If that is not self-evidently monstrous and evil, what can I say that would make its monstrousness and evilness apparent?  I have no idea.

When Justice Kennedy says that the conception of marriage that was accepted by everyone everywhere in the history of the world until ten minutes ago is based on nothing but bigotry and prejudice, what can be said to dissuade him from such an absurd idea?  Again, I have no idea.

I do have an idea, however, that perhaps it is time to read more deeply into the Declaration:

That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

Comments
Don’t be a twit. They just shared common interests…Heartlander
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
02:02 PM
2
02
02
PM
PDT
Heartlander: Hitler. Because Sanger killed millions of people when she provided women access to birth control.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
01:46 PM
1
01
46
PM
PDT
Nowadays, it’s easier for Germans to drive around their country* *Thanks, in part, to the efforts of Adolf Hitler.** **Who shared common interests in eugenics with Margaret Sanger.Heartlander
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
01:36 PM
1
01
36
PM
PDT
Z: Nowadays, it’s easier to avoid unwanted pregnancy * * Thanks, in part, to the efforts of Margaret Sanger.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
12:12 PM
12
12
12
PM
PDT
Heartlander: Was she wrong to oppose abortion as performed by Planned Parenthood Nowadays, it's easier to avoid unwanted pregnancy, and there are more options for mothers who don't want children, at least in the West. Abortion is nearly always a bad choice, but sometimes a least bad choice. The other question, of course, is who is to make the decision.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
10:15 AM
10
10
15
AM
PDT
Was she wrong to oppose abortion as performed by Planned Parenthood – not just a last resort?Heartlander
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
10:11 AM
10
10
11
AM
PDT
Heartlander: You have stated that Sanger was against abortion – was she on the wrong side of the abortion issue? Sanger was right that contraception was the most practical way to prevent abortion. She was right to allow for abortion as a last resort.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
10:03 AM
10
10
03
AM
PDT
Let’s try that again… You have no problem stating that Sanger was on the wrong side of the eugenics movement. You have stated that Sanger was against abortion – was she on the wrong side of the abortion issue?Heartlander
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
08:56 AM
8
08
56
AM
PDT
Cf: https://uncommondescent.com/creationism/on-good-government-justice-origins-issues-and-the-alleged-right-wing-creationist-christo-fascist-theocratic-threat/ PS: Mung that's a great point on extremes meeting not in the centre but in tyrannykairosfocus
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
08:38 AM
8
08
38
AM
PDT
Heartlander: You have stated that Sanger was against abortion – was she on the wrong side of the abortion issue? She was right that contraception was the most practical way to prevent abortion. She did allow for abortion as a last resort. See Baker, Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion, 2011.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
08:30 AM
8
08
30
AM
PDT
Zac@237 ”Yes, Sanger was on the wrong side of that issue, as were many people of the time.” You have stated that Sanger was against abortion – was she on the wrong side of the abortion issue?Heartlander
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
08:22 AM
8
08
22
AM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: That is admirable but it didn’t come across that way — given she deserves quite a lot of scorn. Criticizing her for her failures is reasonable. Taking quotes out of context to misrepresent her views is not.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
08:07 AM
8
08
07
AM
PDT
Heartlander: Sanger was a major player in the eugenics movement Yes, Sanger was on the wrong side of that issue, as were many people of the time. While she supported autonomy for the able-minded, the idea was that people with diminished capacity couldn't make responsible reproductive decisions. However, the actual process was subject to widespread abuse, including racial discrimination. Nowadays, if an individual is not responsible, then it is up to their guardian to make such decisions, taking it out of the hands of the government.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
08:03 AM
8
08
03
AM
PDT
Z
We don’t defend Sanger when she was wrong, but we reject unmerited “scorn and abuse”.
That is admirable but it didn't come across that way -- given she deserves quite a lot of scorn.Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
08:03 AM
8
08
03
AM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: But the fact that Margaret Sanger was guilty of both hasn’t prevented you from defending her. We don't defend Sanger when she was wrong, but we reject unmerited "scorn and abuse".Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:53 AM
7
07
53
AM
PDT
Zac@210 “Forced segregation or sterilization is beyond reasonable government authority — even for those who are profoundly mentally disabled.” Sanger was a major player in the eugenics movement – a movement that caused the compulsory sterilization laws in 30 U.S. states that resulted in more than 60,000 sterilizations of disabled people – some considered “feeble-minded,” “idiots” and “morons.” Fortunately these laws are no longer in place and you are safe – for nowHeartlander
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:49 AM
7
07
49
AM
PDT
Zach
King’s support concerned increasing access to contraception, which was considered immoral by many, even illegal in many areas of the country.
Lots of people still consider racism and eugenics immoral. But the fact that Margaret Sanger was guilty of both hasn't prevented you from defending her. MLK's support is basically irrelevant since there are many African American leaders today who believe Sanger's project was aimed at reducing the black population. "The mass of ignorant Negroes still breed carelessly and disastrously, so that the increase among Negroes, even more than the increase among whites, is from that portion of the population least intelligent and fit, and least able to rear their children properly."Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:35 AM
7
07
35
AM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: A Sanger biographer, David M. Kennedy ... The biographer also points out that abstinence to prevent pregnancy in married women led to unhappiness for the woman and the marriage.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:27 AM
7
07
27
AM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: You cited King’s support for this and his own “increased quantity of sexual relationships” indicates a reason for his support. Please don't misrepresent our views. King's support concerned increasing access to contraception, which was considered immoral by many, even illegal in many areas of the country.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:20 AM
7
07
20
AM
PDT
Sanger saw contraception as a means of sexual liberation. You cited King's support for this and his own "increased quantity of sexual relationships" indicates a reason for his support.Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:18 AM
7
07
18
AM
PDT
I see you quickly tried to cover your tracks.Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:14 AM
7
07
14
AM
PDT
Zach
That’s not inconsistent with increasing the quantity and quality of sex.
But your statement is inconsistent with what was said. “increase the quantity … of sexual relationships” It gives a good insight on how you respond.Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:14 AM
7
07
14
AM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: I believe in monogamy within the context of marriage. That's not inconsistent with increasing the quantity and quality of sexual relations, as in Edward Carpenter's declaration, "a more complete soul-union." - Edited for clarity.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:11 AM
7
07
11
AM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: He was your choice for an authority on sexual liberation. That's odd. Didn't know King was an authority on sexual liberation. He's usually known for his work on civil rights. Rather, we cited King as approving of Sanger's work providing contraceptive services to minority communities in the face of constant vilification by conservatives.Zachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:09 AM
7
07
09
AM
PDT
V "increase the quantity ... of sexual relationships"
You have a problem with this?
I believe in monogamy within the context of marriage. I guess you don't.Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:09 AM
7
07
09
AM
PDT
King
Yes, best stay away from that King fellow
He was your choice for an authority on sexual liberation.Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:05 AM
7
07
05
AM
PDT
SA: " A Sanger biographer, David M. Kennedy, said her primary goal was to “increase the quantity and quality of sexual relationships.” The birth control movement, she said, freed the mind from “sexual prejudice and taboo, by demanding the frankest and most unflinching re-examination of sex in its relation to human nature and the basis of human society". You have a problem with this?velikovskys
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
07:00 AM
7
07
00
AM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: Glad you liked it Yes, best stay away from that King fellow, and his so-called "civil" "rights" "movement". Nothing good can come of it. http://ww1.hdnux.com/photos/34/12/32/7382676/5/622x350.jpgZachriel
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
06:48 AM
6
06
48
AM
PDT
Wikipedia
"As part of her efforts to promote birth control, Sanger found common cause with proponents of eugenics, believing that they both sought to "assist the race toward the elimination of the unfit."[94] Sanger was a proponent of negative eugenics, which aims to improve human hereditary traits through social intervention by reducing the reproduction of those who were considered unfit."
Eugenics. I see why she is praised by certain people. Andre's summary stands: Andre: It takes a special kind of stupid to defend Margaret Sanger.Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
06:46 AM
6
06
46
AM
PDT
Glad you liked it, Zach. The linkage between sex addiction and wider use of birth control shouldn't be hard to understand.
A Sanger biographer, David M. Kennedy, said her primary goal was to "increase the quantity and quality of sexual relationships." The birth control movement, she said, freed the mind from "sexual prejudice and taboo, by demanding the frankest and most unflinching re-examination of sex in its relation to human nature and the basis of human society.
Silver Asiatic
August 4, 2015
August
08
Aug
4
04
2015
06:38 AM
6
06
38
AM
PDT
1 2 3 4 5 11

Leave a Reply