Christmas Column, 2017
Dear Donors, thank you for your support in 2017. Although you have
kept me working yet another year, I find it encouraging that there are
some Americans who can think independently and who want to know. As
Margaret Mead said, it only takes a few determined people to change the
world. Perhaps some of you will be those people.
My traditional Christmas column goes back to sometime in the 1990s
when I was a newspaper columnist. It has been widely reprinted at home
and abroad. Every year two or three readers write to educate me that
religion is the source of wars and persecutions. These readers confuse
religion with mankind’s abuse of institutions, religious or otherwise.
The United States has democratic institutions and legal institutions to
protect civil liberties. Nevertheless, we now have a police state. Shall
I argue that democracy and civil liberty are the causes of police
states?
Some readers also are confused about hypocrisy. There is a vast
difference between proclaiming moral principles that one might fail to
live up to and proclaiming immoral principles that are all too easy to
keep.
Liberty is a human achievement. We have it, or had it, because those
who believed in it fought to achieve it. As I explain in my Christmas
column, people were able to fight for liberty because Christianity
empowered the individual.
The other cornerstone of our culture is the Constitution. Indeed, the
United States is the Constitution. Without the Constitution, the United
States is a different country, and Americans a different people. This
is why assaults on the Constitution by the regimes in Washington are
assaults on America that are far worse than any assaults by terrorists.
There is not much that we can do about these assaults, but we should not
through ignorance enable the assaults or believe the government’s claim
that safety requires the curtailment of civil liberty.
In a spirit of goodwill, I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a successful New Year.
Paul Craig Roberts
The Greatest Gift For All
Christmas is a time of traditions. If you have found time in the rush
before Christmas to decorate a tree, you are sharing in a relatively
new tradition. Although the Christmas tree has ancient roots, at the
beginning of the 20th century only 1 in 5 American families put up a
tree. It was 1920 before the Christmas tree became the hallmark of the
season. Calvin Coolidge was the first President to light a national
Christmas tree on the White House lawn.
Gifts are another shared custom. This tradition comes from the wise
men or three kings who brought gifts to baby Jesus. When I was a kid,
gifts were more modest than they are now, but even then people were
complaining about the commercialization of Christmas. We have grown
accustomed to the commercialization. Christmas sales are the backbone of
many businesses. Gift giving causes us to remember others and to take
time from our harried lives to give them thought.
The decorations and gifts of Christmas are one of our connections to a
Christian culture that has held Western civilization together for 2,000
years.
In our culture the individual counts. This permits an individual
person to put his or her foot down, to take a stand on principle, to
become a reformer and to take on injustice.
This empowerment of the individual is unique to Western civilization.
It has made the individual a citizen equal in rights to all other
citizens, protected from tyrannical government by the rule of law and
free speech. These achievements are the products of centuries of
struggle, but they all flow from the teaching that God so values the
individual’s soul that he sent his son to die so we might live. By so
elevating the individual, Christianity gave him a voice.
Formerly only those with power had a voice. But in Western
civilization people with integrity have a voice. So do people with a
sense of justice, of honor, of duty, of fair play. Reformers can reform,
investors can invest, and entrepreneurs can create commercial
enterprises, new products and new occupations.
The result was a land of opportunity. The United States attracted
immigrants who shared our values and reflected them in their own lives.
Our culture was absorbed by a diverse people who became one.
In recent decades we have lost sight of the historic achievement that
empowered the individual. The religious, legal and political roots of
this great achievement are no longer reverently taught in high schools,
colleges and universities or respected by our government. The voices
that reach us through the millennia and connect us to our culture are
being silenced by “Identity Politics,” “political correctness” and “the
war on terror.” Prayer has been driven from schools and Christian
religious symbols from public life. Constitutional protections have been
diminished by hegemonic political ambitions. Indefinite detention,
torture, and murder are now acknowledged practices of the United States
government. The historic achievement of due process has been rolled
back. Tyranny has re-emerged.
Diversity at home and hegemony abroad are consuming values and are
dismantling the culture and the rule of law. There is plenty of room for
cultural diversity in the world, but not within a single country. A
Tower of Babel has no culture. A person cannot be a Christian one day, a
pagan the next and a Muslim the day after. A hodgepodge of cultural and
religious values provides no basis for law – except the raw power of
the pre-Christian past.
All Americans have a huge stake in Christianity. Whether or not we
are individually believers in Christ, we are beneficiaries of the moral
doctrine that has curbed power and protected the weak.
Power is the horse ridden by evil. In the 20th century the horse was
ridden hard, and the 21st century shows an increase in pace. Millions of
people were exterminated in the 20th century by National Socialists in
Germany and by Soviet and Chinese communists simply because they were
members of a race or class that had been demonized by intellectuals and
political authority. In the beginning years of the 21st century,
hundreds of thousands of Muslims in seven countries have been murdered
and millions displaced in order to extend Washington’s hegemony.
Power that is secularized and cut free of civilizing traditions is
not limited by moral and religious scruples. V.I. Lenin made this clear
when he defined the meaning of his dictatorship as “unlimited power,
resting directly on force, not limited by anything.” Washington’s drive
for hegemony over US citizens and the rest of the world is based
entirely on the exercise of force and is resurrecting unaccountable
power.
Christianity’s emphasis on the worth of the individual makes such
power as Lenin claimed, and Washington now claims, unthinkable. Be we
religious or be we not, our celebration of Christ’s birthday celebrates a
religion that made us masters of our souls and of our political life on
Earth. Such a religion as this is worth holding on to even by atheists.
As we enter into 2018, Western civilization, the product of thousands
of years of striving, is in decline. Degeneracy is everywhere before
our eyes. As the West sinks into tyranny, will Western peoples defend
their liberty and their souls, or will they sink into the tyranny, which
again has raised its ugly and all devouring head?
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