A FACEBOOK FRIEND WHO’S TOO MODEST TO WANT CREDIT HERE POSTED THIS:
Let’s accept, arguendo, that the outgoing DIA chief is right, and
that we are now in an era of danger similar to the mid-1930s. How did we
get here? It’s worth looking back into the mists of time — an entire
year, to Labor Day weekend 2013. What had not happened then? It’s quite a
list, actually: the Chinese ADIZ, the Russian annexation of Crimea, the
rise of ISIS, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the fall of Mosul, the
end of Hungarian liberal democracy, the Central American refugee crisis,
the Egyptian-UAE attacks on Libya, the extermination of Iraqi
Christians, the Yazidi genocide, the scramble to revise NATO’s
eastern-frontier defenses, the Kristallnacht-style pogroms in European
cities, the reemergence of mainstream anti-Semitism, the third (or
fourth, perhaps) American war in Iraq, racial riots in middle America,
et cetera and ad nauseam.
All that was in the future just one year ago.
What is happening now is basically America’s version of “It’s a
Wonderful Life.” The President of the United States — supported to an
exceptional extent by an electorate both uncomprehending and untrusting
of the outside world — is Clarence the Angel, and he’s showing us what
the world would be like if we’d never been born, Unsurprisingly, Bedford
Falls is now Pottersville, and it’s a terrible place. Unfortunately we
do not get to revert to the tolerable if modest status quo at the end of
the lesson: George Bailey will eventually have to shell the town and
retake it street by street from Old Man Potter’s Spetsnaz.
But the larger point here is not what’s happening, because what’s
happening is obvious. Things are falling apart. The point is how fast
it’s come. It takes the blood and labor of generations to build a
general peace, and that peace is sustained by two pillars: a common
moral vision, and force majeure. We spent a quarter-century chipping
away at the latter, and finally discarded the former, and now that peace
is gone. All this was the work of decades.
Look back, again, to Labor Day weekend 2013, and understand one thing: its undoing was the work of mere months.
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