<thecom2005@hotmail.com> skrev i en meddelelse
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>
http://amconmag.com/2005_02_28/article.html
>
> Mvh
>
> TheCom
>
> Radical Son
>
> Bush may not have read Dostoyevsky-but his speechwriters have.
>
> by Justin Raimondo
>
> In a world aflame with war and terrorism, George W. Bush's second
> inaugural address was a match flung onto an oil slick. By the time his
> 17-minute peroration reached midpoint, it was clear that was his
> intention:
>
> Because we have acted in the great liberating tradition of this
> nation, tens of millions have achieved their freedom. And as hope
> kindles hope, millions more will find it. By our efforts we have lit a
> fire as well, a fire in the minds of men. It warms those who feel its
> power; it burns those who fight its progress. And one day this untamed
> fire of freedom will reach the darkest corners of our world.
>
> "A fire in the mind"-such a felicitous phrase. It aptly and
> succinctly describes the feverish mental state of our neoconservative
> policymakers, who set out to build an empire in the Middle East and
> now, with this speech, clearly envision much more. It also describes
> the mental state of some of the characters in Dostoyevsky's The
> Possessed (or The Devils), from which the fiery metaphor is taken.
> Michael Barone pointed out the allusion in his U.S. News column,
> wherein he described Dostoyevsky's work as "a novel about a
> provincial town inspired by new revolutionary ideas. After a turbulent
> literary evening, a fire breaks out, and one townsman says, 'The fire
> is in the minds of men, not in the roofs of buildings.'"
>
> Well, not quite. The novel is about a group of revolutionaries who plot
> the destruction of a small provincial town-and, by extension, the
> whole of Russia and of human civilization. The intricate plot involves
> the governor of the province, who is continually beset by his wife and
> her liberal intellectual friends: they take up fashionably radical
> ideas almost, it seems, just to show him up as a bore. Members of this
> devilish clique have insinuated themselves into the higher social
> circles and, Rasputin-like, have bewitched the governor's wife and
> high society in general, all the while plotting and scheming behind the
> scenes. The governor is subtly provoked into cracking down on
> rebellious workers, the rabble rises up in the midst of a bizarre fete
> given by the governor's vacuous wife, and the town is burned to the
> ground. The scene from which Bush's fiery call to arms is taken finds
> the narrator discovering the governor in the midst of this chaotic
> scene, gesticulating and shouting at a building consumed by the blaze:
>
> 'It's all incendiarism! It's nihilism! If anything is
> burning, it's nihilism!' I heard almost with horror; and though
> there was nothing to be surprised at, yet actual madness, when one sees
> it, always gives one a shock.
>
> Ignoring the pleas of his subordinates to get to safety, the half-mad
> governor continues on with his soliloquy:
>
> 'They will wipe away the tears of the people whose houses have
> been burnt, but they will burn down the town. It's all the work of
> four scoundrels, four and a half! Arrest the scoundrel! He worms
> himself into the honor of families. ...It's vile, vile!' Suddenly
> noticing a fireman at the top of the burning lodge, he asks: 'What is
> he doing there?'
>
> 'He is putting the fire out, your Excellency.'
>
> 'Not likely. The fire is in the minds of men and not in the roofs
> of houses. Pull him down and give it up! Better give it up, much
> better! Let it put itself out.'
>
> The fire does not break out as a result of spontaneous combustion, as
> Barone seems to imply: it is deliberately set by disgruntled workers
> acting under the influence of a nihilistic cabal. This is meant to
> dramatize Dostoyevsky's view of the Russian revolutionaries of his
> time, whom he saw as possessed by a desire to destroy and little else.
>
> In any case, the borrowed imagery is far from obscure. Fire in the
> Minds of Men: Origins of the Revolutionary Faith is the title of a
> classic study of 19th-century radicalism by James H. Billington, now
> the Librarian of Congress. Certainly none of this was unknown to the
> men who shaped this speech -not counting the man who delivered it.
> The Los Angeles Times reported:
>
> White House political aide Karl Rove and chief speechwriter Michael
> Gerson held a two-hour seminar with a panel of foreign policy scholars,
> including several leading neocons-newspaper columnist Charles
> Krauthammer, Fouad Ajami of Johns Hopkins University and Victor Davis
> Hanson of Stanford's Hoover Institution-according to a person who
> was present.
>
> The Washington Post reported that Bill Kristol also coached Bush on the
> speech.
>
> These four neoconservative ideologues, presided over by Rove, are the
> 21st-century equivalent of Dostoyevsky's revolutionary devils-and,
> what's more, they seem to know it. As Dostoyevsky put it: "It's
> all the work of four scoundrels, four and a half!" A prophetic
> sentence, that.
>
> Bush's peroration was suffused with fire, it burned with the
> steely-eyed fanaticism of the ideologues who forged it, full of phrases
> that soared so far above the real world that a good many listeners had
> trouble believing their ears. Does the president seriously believe
> "the survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the
> success of liberty in other lands"? Surely he didn't really mean to
> explain away the exponential expansion of big government in America as
> due to the lack of civil liberties in, say, the former Soviet Union or
> the oppression of women in Saudi Arabia? The war-weary wondered, at
> home and abroad, as they listened to the most powerful man on earth
> enunciate his militant doctrine: what new conflict will erupt as a
> result of a crusade to accelerate "the expansion of freedom in all
> the world"? What else could be the meaning of a pledge "to seek and
> support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every
> nation and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our
> world"?
>
> In a vain attempt to reassure the panicked, Bush senior made a rare
> intervention. "People want to read a lot into it," he said, "that
> this means new aggression or newly assertive military forces. That's
> not what that speech is about. It's about freedom."
>
> In other words, it's all talk and no action. But there is already
> plenty of action going on in Iraq and good reason to expect more.
> Rumors of war with Iran are persistent and credible. Seymour Hersh,
> whose record has been pretty good so far, reports that U.S. operatives
> are already penetrating Iranian territory in search of Tehran's
> elusive nukes. And in Eastern Europe, on the far frontier of what used
> to be the heartland of the old Russian empire, a Western-financed
> "orange revolution" is engineered by a coalition of the U.S. and an
> expansionist European super-state, while NATO edges closer to the gates
> of Moscow.
>
> In Dostoyevsky's day, urban radicals influenced by Marx and
> emboldened by Bakunin went out into the countryside proclaiming the
> doctrines of socialism and syndicalist anarchism, to little effect.
> They committed sporadic acts of spectacular violence and functioned
> roughly. Such groups as the Narodnaya Volya (Peoples' Will), whose
> militants assassinated two Russian czars, were 19th-century versions of
> al-Qaeda. Dostoyevsky's novel is a dark chronicle of the psychology
> that energized their terroristic brand of nihilism.
>
> The "fire in the minds of men" eventually engulfed all Russia; The
> Possessed bitterly foreshadowed the red inferno of the 1917 revolution.
> That a phrase torn from its entrails should augur a new worldwide
> revolutionary movement seems almost like payback for the author's
> notoriously "reactionary" views. Yet it does seem as if the new
> militants are following in the footsteps of Dostoyevsky's original
> models, venturing out from the Western metropolis into the countryside
> of the world, bent on "liberating" poor oppressed peasants who
> languish in premodernity. That they would meet with the same overt
> hostility that greeted the Narodniks of yesteryear was all too
> predictable. As Russell Kirk warned in a 1990 speech:
>
> A politicized American army operating abroad would be no more
> popular ... than the Red Army has been. An imposed or induced abstract
> democracy thrust upon peoples unprepared for it would produce at first
> anarchy, and then-as in nearly all of 'emergent' Africa, over the
> past four decades -rule by force and a master.
>
> The neocons, who revile Kirk's memory on account of this scolding,
> threw their hats in the air as Bush embraced their core agenda. "This
> is real neoconservatism," Robert Kagan exulted to the Los Angeles
> Times. "It would be hard to express it more clearly. If people were
> expecting Bush to rein in his ambitions and enthusiasms after the first
> term, they are discovering that they were wrong."
>
> Others were not so ebullient. "If Bush means it literally, then it
> means we have an extremist in the White House," said Nixon Center
> president Dimitri Simes. "I hope and pray that he didn't mean it
> ... [and] that it was merely an inspirational speech, not practical
> guidance for the conduct of foreign policy."
>
> William F. Buckley Jr. pronounced the speech "confusing." Aside
> from being "an improvisation," it was also embarrassingly
> ungrammatical: "Mr. Bush said that 'whole regions of the world
> simmer in resentment and tyranny.' You can simmer in resentment, but
> not in tyranny." The speech was, in Buckley's view, bad policy as
> well as execrable grammar: "What about China? Is it U.S. policy to
> importune Chinese dissidents 'to start on this journey of progress
> and justice'? How will we manifest our readiness to 'walk at
> [their] side?'"
>
> If the National Endowment for Democracy isn't already on the job, the
> president's recent pronouncements are bound to direct their efforts
> in China's direction. Professor Claes Ryn saw where all this was
> leading, and he put it quite well in his 2004 address to the
> Philadelphia Society:
>
> The notion that America knows better than all other nations and has
> a right to dictate terms to them betrays a monumental conceit. It also
> guarantees that other nations will see a need to arm themselves just to
> have some protection against American bullying. ... China, which has
> long found Western hegemony intolerable and is already strongly prone
> to nationalism, can be expected to respond to American assertiveness by
> greatly expanding its military power. If present trends continue, the
> time should soon be ripe-in 50 years perhaps?-for a horrendous
> Sino-American confrontation.
>
> Nothing is "too massive a challenge to our liberationist policy"
> that it dwarfs the monumental edifice of the liberationists' conceit.
> Yes, but "what about Saudi Arabia?" asks Buckley. "Will we refuse
> to buy Saudi oil?" I would think that the real objective is to seize
> it.
>
> Peggy Noonan found the speech "startling," and confessed it left
> her "with a bad feeling, and reluctant dislike" evoked by such
> grandiose phrases as "we are ready for the greatest achievements in
> the history of freedom." This, she averred "is the kind of sentence
> that makes you wonder if this White House did not... have a case of
> what I have called in the past 'mission inebriation.' A sense that
> there are few legitimate boundaries to the desires born in the goodness
> of their good hearts."
>
> Drunk with power, flush with Pyrrhic victories, and convinced that they
> are on the right side of history, the "mission inebriation" that
> bedevils this administration is Ms. Noonan's polite way of describing
> megalomania. The defining characteristic of what Ryn calls the
> "imperialistic personality" is a monumental conceit: it is the same
> will to dominate that drove the Jacobins, the Bolsheviks, and the
> 19th-century followers of the nihilist Sergei Nechaev, upon whom the
> author of The Possessed modeled his characters. That American
> policymakers will likely end up like Dostoyevsky's revolutionary
> conspirators -increasingly committed to state terrorism in pursuit of
> some utopian vision-seems horribly and tragically inevitable.
> ______________________________________________________
>
> Justin Raimondo is editorial director of Antiwar.com and author of An
> Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbard.
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Kim Larsen
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