I oppose the decline of civilization. This means, for example, that I support environmental protection, because we need civilization more than we need oil.
But civilization depends on oil, you say. It does. But
civilization can change, and it might have to change to survive. I
don't have the whole analysis worked out. But this is how it seems to me.
Civilization cannot survive if the environment goes to shit.
Opposing the decline of civilization, I also oppose things like the "universal state" and the "volkerwanderung", which Arnold J. Toynbee identified as late-stage phenomena in the life of a civilization, and part of the decline.
Opposing the
universal state means that I naturally oppose the development of the
European Union, NAFTA, and free trade pacts generally, and I oppose imposing such developments upon society. These developments are
anyway driven by the economic needs of the powerful (those of great
wealth, who want even more) and are supported among the rest of us by those who have
accepted the sales pitch that says the universal state will improve the
economy. That sales pitch is nonsense: Economic problems require
economic solutions, not political solutions.
Opposing the volkerwanderung means I am naturally uncomfortable with the ever-increasing border crossings along the southern US border.
The Dark Age, which over-civilized people insist on calling "the early middle ages", is identified by Toynbee as "an interregnum or heroic age". He writes:
Again, the Roman Empire's fall was followed by a kind of interregnum between the disappearance of the Hellenic and the emergence of the Western Society.
This interregnum is filled with the activities of two institutions: the Christian Church, established within and surviving the Roman Empire, and a number of ephemeral successor states arising on the former territory of the Empire out of the so-called Volkerwanderung of the Barbarians from the no-man's-land beyond the Imperial frontiers.
"Ephemeral
successor states" arose (after the fall of Rome) out of the
"Volkerwanderung of the Barbarians" (before, during and after the fall). Such successor states will arise again, unless we stop our own decline and fall.
I have to oppose "immigration" (which is the word we use, though Volkerwanderung would be more apt)
because it is a sign of the approaching fall of civilization. But of course, stopping the immigration won't stop the decline. We have to fix the problem that causes problems like this immigration.
And I want to
emphasize that this view has nothing to do with race or racism. I think economic
conditions are worse on the other side of our southern border than they
are on our side. And I think the difference in economic conditions drives the migration.
But conditions on our side of the border are not good, either. And this is the more pressing problem, one which underlies the immigration problem: for we cannot afford to fix the immigration problem.
And yet we cannot afford not to fix it.
The immigration problem cannot be solved by welcoming immigrants; we know that didn't work in ancient Rome. It cannot be solved by building a wall, because the problem, which continues to grow, originates on the other side. And it cannot be solved by making conditions better on the other side of the border, because we cannot afford to do that.
That is the only solution, though: to
make conditions better on the other side of the border. I don't think
very many people want to be foreigners. I think they'd prefer to live in
their own home land, as I do. But I think conditions must be so bad
for them at home that they have no choice but to come to America, where conditions
are better.
The most successful thing we do to discourage immigration is that we continue to let our own economic conditions deteriorate.
We must do better.
1 comment:
I wrote above:
"The most successful thing we do to discourage immigration is that we continue to let our own economic conditions deteriorate."
That was tongue-in-cheek. Obviously the solution is NOT to let economic conditions continue to deteriorate. The post, the whole blog, my whole life is dedicated to improving the economy.
I wrote:
"I think economic conditions are worse on the other side of our southern border than they are on our side. And I think the difference in economic conditions drives the migration."
In other words, to stop the volkerwanderung we must assure that economic conditions elsewhere are nearly as good as economic conditions here. The calculation is "homeland economic conditions" plus "preference for homeland" should equal the economic conditions of the destination country.
Note, however, that people exaggerate when they evaluate economic conditions. When conditions are improving, people rate them high; when conditions are in decline people rate them low. So we will have largely solved the immigration problem when economic conditions begin improving in the immigrants' homeland.
So, how do we improve economic conditions? The post isn't really about that. But I do say our problems are "driven by the economic needs of ... those of great wealth, who want even more".
Concentration of wealth makes conditions worse, except among the few whose wealth is concentrating. That thought reflects back on this thought:
"When wealth grows faster than it concentrates, wealth spreads. You get the upswing of an economic cycle. But when wealth concentrates faster than it grows, you get the downswing."
And on this one:
"In a world where existing accumulations are small and atomistic, setting industrious people to work is evidently the best way to increase one's accumulation. But in a world where accumulations have become large and concentrated, there are better ways. Unfortunately, those "better ways" are better for the accumulators, but worse for the society of which they are part. Mergers and acquisitions, for example, reduce rather than increase employment."
What we want is that everyone should be improving their lot. But we must continually skim the cream off the top so that there is enough milk for everyone.
That is how we fix the problem that causes problems like immigration.
I wrote above:
"The immigration problem ... cannot be solved by making conditions better on the other side of the border, because we cannot afford to do that."
But I immediately added:
"That is the only solution, though: to make conditions better on the other side of the border."
To solve the immigration problem, and the decline-of-civilization problem, we must share the cream.
Post a Comment