For any who really are interested in helping New England, the South, or any other theod (nation)
under the sway of heterodox Western Godlore
(theology) and governlore (politics), here is something to consider at the very
outset. From a crucial essay by Mr
Daniel Spaulding:
It’s
a common refrain among self-described conservatives and libertarians in America
that both the modern bureaucratic managerial state and mass culture have veered
wildly out of control, headed in an ever increasing totalitarian direction, and
must some how be reined in. Their prescription is almost always a return to the
Constitution, along with the supposed values of the Founding Fathers, and some
form of classical liberalism; as one constitutionalist slogan declares, the
answer to 1984 is 1776. What is often absent from sloganeering is any
meaningful analysis of how society
developed from the original republic to the current
oligarchic, Leviathan surveillance state.
Certainly
assorted bogeyman figures and political movements are blamed in passing
(just think back to Glenn Beck’s schizophrenic chalk board scribblings), but
very few mainline conservatives and libertarians would dare entertain the
notion that classical liberalism, which the American Constitution is an
expression of, may itself be the mother of all the problems they now bemoan. Or
to put it another way, either the Constitution is inherently too weak to stop
its increasing irrelevance and the expansion of the Leviathan state, or
totalitarianism is the natural, if not entirely foreseeable, progression
of the original constitutional order.
One
American, the Orthodox monk Fr. Seraphim Rose (1934-1982), was willing to
entertain such notions, and boldly exposed classical liberalism as the
first stage of unfolding revolutionary nihilism in his careful
and prophetic study of the nihilistic dialectic. Through Rose’s
clear-eyed vision, liberalism has always been a faulty compromise
between traditional authority and what he called the Revolution, that is
the drive to uproot and overthrow traditional authority:
The
Liberal view of government, as one might suspect, is an attempt at compromise
between these two irreconcilable ideas. In the nineteenth century this
compromise took the form of “constitutional monarchies,” an attempt-again-to
wed an old form to a new content; today the chief representatives of the
Liberal idea are the “republics” and “democracies” of Western Europe and
America, most of which preserve a rather precarious balance between the forces
of authority and Revolution, while professing to believe in both.
Yet such
a mixture is unnatural and ultimately one element must give way to the other.
As Rose noted, the Revolution “cannot be stopped halfway, it is a force that,
once awakened, will not rest until its ends in a totalitarian Kingdom of this
world.” That is to say, returned an earlier mentioned slogan, 1984 was
conceived in the womb of 1776. . . .
. . .
So
to return to the “spirit of 1776” is not the return of some lost golden age of
constitutional justice, but rather a mad attempt to play out the entire fiasco
all over again. The answer to the later stages of the nihilistic dialectic,
careening in our age toward total destruction, is not solved by a return to one
of the early stages, the nihilism of liberalism.
Source: ‘Classical Nihilism’, http://souloftheeast.org/2015/08/14/classical-liberalism-nihilism/
, posted 14 Aug. 2015, accessed 17 Aug. 2015
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