Rebane's Ruminations
October 2010
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George Rebane

Chancellor Merkel’s very public admission that Germany’s multiculturalism experiment has “utterly failed” is an opportunity, widely taken, to reconsider the various meanings and functions of culture and multiculturalism.  Over the last week the thoughtful and thoughtless media have covered the subject from its many sides with the possible exception of what I will attempt to explore here.  Specifically, no one wants to penetrate that last layer of political correctness and ask what kind of ‘rights’ should people have to monocultural environments of their choice.

SwissLangMap I covered much of the dynamics of multicultural societies and the problems of their governance in ‘Liberty’s Twilight’, and here I build on those arguments with which I assume the reader is familiar.  But now we address monoculturalism.

The prime function and possible benefit of a culture to its adherents is a stable social life that may range from a stasis of creativity to creative liberalism (in the classical sense).  A strong culture allows effective and broad-based prediction of behavior, and maximally uses such widely applied social expedients as shame and shunning to enforce its behavioral norms.  The requirements for institutional policing are minimized in such a monocultural society because in essence each member is a natural and ubiquitous enforcer of such norms.

In collectivist societies a state imposed monoculture is the order of the day that requires the operation of an extensive ‘justice’ system to coerce, corral, and control its citizens to behave within the dictated norms.  The intent of such governance is to break down the individual cultures that the regime inherited in its ascendancy, and wind up again with a new and politically correct monoculture.  But here, as was in the former USSR, Yugoslavia, and Iron Curtain countries, the resulting monoculture is foreign and repugnant to all but the ruling elite – who among themselves practice their own private culture that is still different from the enforced public one.

As history shows, whenever given the opportunity, people immediately revert to their traditional cultures and seek to gain control of territories, ancestral or otherwise, wherein they would be free to reestablish a more current form of their monoculture.  Humans have considered such monocultural environments to be of unequalled value, enough to fight and risk all, even from the most desperate of situations and vantage.  Humans have always considered it most important to live and raise their children among other people like themselves.


None of this implies that people with these primal urges necessarily reject or do not value and celebrate the dynamism and diversity of other cultures.  As we have seen for several centuries now, such people have no inhibition to visit, study, and immerse themselves in other cultures at the time and conditions of their own choosing.  For example, things Turkish and even more oriental were an affected fashion in Europe during much of the 18th and 19th centuries, but always in the context of their own individual cultures.

In the 20th century and with the maturing of the progressive form of socialist ideologies, the so-beholden elites sought to start the road to globalism by attempting to create state synthesized mono-cultural societies.  At the minimum, the fault of this strategy has been that it has always attempted to bring too much change in a single step.  In communist countries the regimes had to exterminate resistance to their plans in the most horrific of ways, in the process killing millions.

In this more enlightened age, the gentler approach of attempting to first educate and then practice assimilative multiculturalism is not working.  Merkel’s admission shines a light on what most of us knew, but were silenced by our political betters as they prattled on about the joys of multicultural societies.  Since the Great Society, to not accept the prattle would immediately brand you by the ruling class and their progressive acolytes as a bigot and racist.  And the years passed.

Until today, when the unasked question that has suddenly started begging is ‘Should I not have a protected right to immerse myself in the culture of my choosing, and not be forced by the state to expose myself to cultures that I and others like me consider foreign and subtractive from our quality of life?’  Most likely, this would be the historical mono-culture of the person’s sovereign nation-state.

By the 1830s America had more or less distilled such a culture that was distinct, resilient, yet sufficiently pliant to welcome succeeding waves of immigrants and give them a definite social target for acceptance as new Americans.  It is clear that this culture changed over the decades, but it has never hid its character from newcomers and residents alike.  And it changed from the bottom up in the popular direction and pace determined at the grassroots.  With all its warts, this dynamic worked well until the mid 1960s and included in its accomplishments the signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

It is not within the scope of this piece to go into the means and methods of how our state-imposed ‘multiculture’ grew so rapidly during the last 50 years or so.  But today our economic, group, and individual behaviors are under constant institutional scrutiny, and the acceptable norms are becoming more and more narrow.  NPR’s recent firing of liberal journalist/commentator Juan Williams is just a highlight in the national torrent of such public ‘corrections’.

I believe that the state’s mandated multiculture is hastening the break-up of our Union, and the broadly felt truth of this proposition is within the growing anti-Obama groundswell.  In his hubris (and ignorance?) Barack Obama has attempted to take a too big of a step to re-establish a state monoculture that can pass itself off to the unthinking and inert as a ‘this time we’ll get it right’ social order, but that is not to be.

An attractive and unexamined alternative has always stared us in the face in Switzerland, and to a lesser extent in India – both sovereign nation-states that allow and even promote regionally based cultures (down to their own languages) with little or no agitation for fragmentation.  If we cannot re-establish the popular American mono-culture, is it at least possible for America to examine a version of the Swiss model?  And to also approach such notions without state sanctioned vilification, vitriol, and accusations that such are the efforts of people who are racial supremacists and hate mongers who dismiss the value of other cultures.

But none of these nation saving stratagems can even be examined in a public forum unless and until we can openly ask the unasked question, ‘Can I live, work, and raise my children among people who are like me?’

[24oct10 update]  The question of being allowed to live free ‘with your own kind’ is perhaps the most condensed and clear statement of what motivates social behavior in the world today.  The dominant propositions here are –

1. A considerable level of cultural cohesion is required if a group of people is to live in peace and prosper within a geographical region.
2. Synthesized cultures based on political ideologies and implemented by the state’s power of the bayonet have been an unmitigated disaster for people swept into such social regimens.
3. In order to not fragment (e.g. as the US in 1860 and the USSR and Yugoslavia in 1991), a sovereign nation-state should permit and support culturally cohesive communities within its borders (e.g. as in Switzerland) when due to, say, immigration, the previously common culture no longer serves.
4. None of the above have anything to do with inter-cultural intolerance or relative valuations.

Predictably, the progressives of the far left have a pat answer – NO!  All citizens should be coerced through economic and physical sanctions into the one-size-fits-all state approved culture.  And people who even dare to ask about alternative solutions are identified as pariahs, and the discussion subject is changed to the nature and magnitude of the pariah’s deviancy from politically correct norms.  (If the deviancy needs to be dressed up to make a stronger case, then the deviant’s ‘real meanings’, along with appropriately modified quotes, are fashioned on the spot and become the focus of the progressives’ righteous reprisal.  The evidence for this is ample enough in these pages.)

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65 responses to “Multikulti and ‘… people like me’ (updated 24oct2010)”

  1. Mikey McD Avatar

    Religion of Peace…?!?!!!
    GAZA (Reuters) – Tens of thousands of supporters of the militant Islamic Jihad movement rallied in the streets of Gaza on Friday, chanting “Death to America” and “Death to Israel.”
    Senior leaders of the ruling Islamist group, Hamas, joined the open-air gathering, the largest for years in honor of Islamic Jihad with up to 100,000 attending according to its organizers.”
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20101029/wl_nm/us_palestinians_israel_militants;_ylt=Avppb6lD7xAg6D6lmt4tf2JvaA8F;_ylu=X3oDMTMxbGRsYjJhBGFzc2V0A25tLzIwMTAxMDI5L3VzX3BhbGVzdGluaWFuc19pc3JhZWxfbWlsaXRhbnRzBGNwb3MDMwRwb3MDOARzZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNiaWdyYWxseWJ5aXM-

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  2. George Rebane Avatar
    George Rebane

    Thanks Mikey, these kinds of reports are eschewed by the progressive elite. It does not fit their well-ordered worldview (or weltanschauung as they would have it).

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  3. Mikey McD Avatar

    To get our progressives hot and bothered ‘they’ would need to shout something more horrific than “Death to America”… something like “health care is not a right” or “Keynes is wrong” or “Who is John Galt?” might do the trick. :).

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  4. RL Crabb Avatar

    Hamas has been feeding on the plight of the Palestinians for a long time, but the Zionists share the blame. How would you react if one day a Maidu showed up on your doorstep and told you that the Great Spirit promised your property to him, and to reinforce the claim, burned your house and crops?

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  5. George Rebane Avatar
    George Rebane

    Bob, primacy of ownership has always been the problem for all peoples for all of time. And the solution has always been ‘the greater force’ prevails. Upon closer inspection we find that it was the desired solution that drove the rationalization of some form of primacy as being the just cause for the use of force. Social Darwinism? It was ever thus.

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  6. Mikey McD Avatar

    Sore losers.
    Crabb, are you suggesting that my children (and me/you for that matter) are guilty enough to die at the hands of the ‘convert or kill’ crowd because of a 60+ year old real estate battle which is (thankfully) thousands of miles away?

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  7. RL Crabb Avatar

    “Sore losers”…As I recall, twas the Jews who were driven from Palestine a few thousand years ago. It took a World War and a UN mandate to get their foot back in the door.
    It’s a complicated mess, for sure. Too complicated to hash out in a few paragraphs. I prefer the Jews over the Arabs, because they have a sense of humor. But that doesn’t mean I’m blind to the injustice that is at the heart of all the religious squabbling today.
    I may have some libertarian leanings, but I don’t endorse the kind of dog eat dog philosophy you seem to enjoy, Mikey.

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  8. Mikey McD Avatar
    Mikey McD

    “sore losers” should not imply my applause for any of the hateful actions/plunders/wars in the Middle East (regardless of religion or infidel status). I was simply affirming (though not as eloquently as Rebane’s 9:35am comment) that the stronger side has prevailed. And in summary, I don’t think the under 60 yr old crowd in America should be targeted (“death to america”) for the actions of others 60+ years ago.

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  9. RL Crabb Avatar

    As stated here many times, I have no love for the jihadist/sharia faction of the muslim community. I certainly don’t claim any responsibility for their attitude toward our past foreign policy since I either hadn’t been born, was too young to vote, or didn’t vote for Nixon. Unfortunately, our predessors chose to sweep our lofty principles under the rug when it was more convenient to overthrow an elected government and install ruthless dictators to further our aims. They haven’t forgotten about it.

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  10. George Rebane Avatar
    George Rebane

    Admitted Bob, that we have helped overthrow legitimate governments that didn’t want to play ball with us as we thought they should. (I think installing/maintaining Batista in Cuba was one of the first.) But I don’t know where one goes with that. Is it a preamble to a prescription for a period of penance?
    Given a desire to pull back from the world and still look after our national interests, how do we proceed? To suggest that we can achieve our international aims through the use of naked diplomacy, is naive beyond Jimmy Carter. History shows that the pen is mightier than the sword only to the extent that it can invoke a bigger sword (else the scribbler’s head winds up on a pike).
    Should we try to implement that most famous and effective strategy for co-operation called ‘tit for tat’? Who do you tit if the tat comes from a putatively nationless source that is sponsored by, perhaps, a consortium of nations? Every alternative response is either vicious and/or vilifiable.
    But again, there must be a purpose for recounting America’s modest history of destabilizing other governments – what is it?

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  11. Dixon Cruickshank Avatar
    Dixon Cruickshank

    Hey guys since were on the mideast – I also thought Gaza was a miserable dirt pit of dispair – per the MSM – ran across this tidbit and it blew me away.
    http://www.tomgrossmedia.com/mideastdispatches/archives/001127.html

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  12. George Rebane Avatar
    George Rebane

    Good piece Dixon, we have to remember that to the ruling class we are just sheeple.

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  13. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    George, Mikey, Bob, et al…
    People around the world just want peace and to raise their families, food on the table, roof over the head, maybe the kids will have a better life.
    It’s in the human genetic makeup. Sure, some .002 per cent are wack job sociopaths and will create havoc with everything they do. But everyone else is just trying to get along. However, once you kill a member of their family? You now have an enemy for life. That enemy will assume the behavior of an inchoate sociopath.
    This was the tragedy of the George Bush years, and Vietnam for that matter. Our fed. gov’t remains totally clueless on how this all works. And I am not talking about anything so craven as “It Takes a Village to Raise a Child,” or whatever.
    Extreme religion comes from deprivation, caused by outside forces removing access to basic needs (not wants). Then these deprivations carry over to the next generations–remember, the Saudis who performed 9-11 were well-off spoiled brats settling so-called past debts.
    War is asynchronous now. The more hardware you throw at the problem, the bigger chance you have at losing a big city to nuke or chem.
    Everything you know is wrong. Stop trying to win this war with Maginot strategies from the ancient past. You will either work the hard lines around the edges and come up with a solution that satisfies no one, or you will achieve pockets of annihilation. This is how the 21st century will play out.
    Game on.

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  14. George Rebane Avatar
    George Rebane

    Not to disagree Michael, but the point of my post is that even before the problems of hunger and shelter are solved, people have and always will want to build and live in an environment of trust and potential so that they can reliably get their next meal and stay sheltered. Humans seem to have minimal specifications for such environments. But as we have seen, these are not very negotiable.

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  15. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    As soon as people have a full stomach and a roof over their heads, they then begin coveting their neighbors possessions and wives. Humans are too predictable.

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