This state of affairs is serious enough that it has been slowly dawning on parts of the “uninformed and disorganized majority”, to use Gaetano Mosca’s expression. It has happened in a large part thanks to the abundance of uncensored information and unbiased analysis on the internet that has accelerated the loss of credibility of mainstream news and the loss of trust in political leaders. Not surprisingly, exceptional measures are being taken by the Western ruling minority to rein in and muzzle free speech.
This tightening of the screws by a globalist elite seemingly
hellbent on implementing its authoritarian agenda
of control, is both a cause and a consequence of the gradual realization by
populations in the West that their already eroded rights are at risk, perhaps irreversibly.
In other words, because part of the Western majority is waking up to these additional
attempts to coerce it, the ruling minority is doubling down. More transparently
than ever, it is trying to speed up the realization of its objectives. This is in
turn reinforcing the reaction among the majority, causing a feedback loop and rising
tensions.
It is becoming clear that a radical political change is urgently
needed in the West, in order to loosen the globalist grip on the international political
agenda and national interventionist policies. What should be hoped for, at a minimum,
is an eventual return to the 19th century style concert of nation-states
with smallish governments, which were far more respectful of individual rights.
Political Violence Is
Unlikely to Work
When such radical political change is evoked, the “classic” revolution
comes to mind; the violent government overthrow leading to deep political and
social changes. But this is unlikely today in the West, as it requires people that
are determined, desperate, and idealistic enough to risk their lives for a Cause.
An aging and relatively well-to-do population is unlikely to turn to political
violence when their rights to property and free speech are being trampled upon.
Further, not only does successful armed revolts often lead
to a reduction in freedom, but they usually
happen in times when the arms at the disposable of the “people” are equivalent
to those used by the state, as was theorized by the historian Carroll Quigley.
Today, the hyper-armed state has such superiority in the use of violence that
such an avenue for radical political change seems unlikely also for this reason.
Yet, radical political change does inevitably require strong
societal dissent. Though political violence is sometimes a trigger of such
change, it is usually the graphic, superficial expression of a deeper
non-violent opposition to the existing ruling minority.
Public Opinion Matters,
Not Elections
The parliamentary democratic process cannot be counted on in
order to reverse the coercive policies that are being imposed top-down. Firstly,
the current zealous ruling minority is mostly unelected and non-partisan. Secondly,
though parliamentary elections do sometimes allow a radical anti-establishment
party to slip through the corporate media watchdogs, to gain a majority or form
a government, this is rare and such a party then tends to quickly fall in line
with the ruling establishment.
Democracy has been used by the ruling minority as a tool to
give their politicians an aura of legitimacy. As Mosca noted, the few have
historically sought to justify their rule over the many with a “political
formula”. In a parliamentary democracy, this formula is “democracy” itself, the
idealized but largely fictive “rule of the people”. As Mosca wrote in his
masterpiece, The Ruling Class: “the participation of the people in elections
does not mean that they have control over the government and that the governed
class actually chooses the members of the governing class.”
More important than suffrage for political change is public
opinion, something many past thinkers
have recognized. As Ludwig von Mises wrote in Human Action, “the
rulers, who are always a minority, cannot lastingly remain in office if not
supported by the consent of the majority of those ruled “. All political power,
even the most tyrannical, rests on the passive support of majority opinion, as the
young Etienne de la
Boëtie
recognized long ago in his famous work from 1577, “On Voluntary Servitude”. He wrote
that “there is no need to fight [the tyrant], nor even to defend oneself from
him; he is defeated by himself provided that the country does not consent to
servitude. It is not a question of taking anything from him, but only of giving
him nothing.”
Draining the Ruling
Minority of Support
The current minority in power in the West also requires the
continued passive support of the majority over which it rules with such a sense
of impunity and entitlement. But this support could ebb away if the majority understood
that it has been hoodwinked and fleeced for decades by this morally decadent
and statist minority. As Mosca aptly wrote: “a ruling class that can get away
with anything and can do anything in the name of a “sovereign” undergoes real
moral degeneration. It is this degeneration, common to all men whose actions
are exempt from constraints and controls, which usually imposes on them the
opinion and conscience of their fellow men.”
What Mosca meant is that inherent in every society is a
counterintuitive but self-regulating mechanism towards moderation of political
power. Tyrannies don’t last. If the ruling minority is wise enough to temper
its will to power, its rule over the majority can continue but within limits. However,
if it goes too far and tries to impose coercive policies that drastically reduce
individual freedom, it can soon become a victim of its own “success”, by turning
public opinion. When that happens, the ruling minority loses that “voluntary
servitude”, which it requires in order to stay in power.
Considering the authoritarian agenda that is being aggressively
imposed – even somewhat desperately and foolhardily - on Western populations
today, the current Western oligarchic elite has arguably lost much of the restraining
wisdom and self-imposed moderation it may have once had. At the same time, what
David Hume called the “implicit
submission” of the Western majority is now in question, thanks to the
unprecedented access to independent information and analysis. This is of course
a significant threat to a ruling minority that used to control and even mold public
opinion.
Thus, radical political change takes place when the ruling
minority is drained of the passive support of the majority. When public opinion
starts to significantly distance itself from existing leaders and established institutions,
a new minority is empowered as per Pareto’s concept of the Circulation of Elites;
one which is more respectful of the rights of the majority. That is the idea behind
the following sentence in the US Declaration
of Independence: « whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive
of these ends [of freedom], it is the Right of the People to alter or to
abolish it.”
It is high time to put these words into practice in the West,
in order to urgently reverse the current authoritarian agenda. This goal may
not be as far-fetched as it seems, since at
least in
the USA the majority now largely rejects the values and policies coming
from the ruling minority. And the current period of unprecedented economic and
geopolitical decline for the West in world affairs may open a window of opportunity.
The Western ruling minority, responsible for the current decadent and illiberal
times, should be discredited and disempowered by a radical political change towards
freedom.
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