By Kurt Schlichter
Monday, July 20, 2015
When traveling through Europe accompanied by a copy of
Martin Gilbert’s magisterial one-volume biography, “Churchill: A Life,” you
cannot ignore the parallels between today and the 1930s. With the enemies of
freedom prowling along on the periphery of civilization and the economy
wobbling, the West once again finds itself at an existential crossroads. This
time, there is no Winston Churchill to set us upon the road toward victory.
Europe is different from when I first lived there in the
late 1980s and early 1990s. It was not as superficially wealthy then, although
this time I rarely wandered far from where the tourists congregate. On the
outside, at least, you would hardly see the rot of debt and welfare-state
mismanagement even in Italy and Spain. The people were well dressed. The cafés
were expensive but still packed. The cars are fairly new and have shockingly
little body damage, when you consider the insanity that overtakes Europeans
when they slide behind a steering wheel.
But that’s on the surface. Once you get behind the walls
and into interior of the homes, the old cramped shabbiness is still there. All
their money goes to clothes, food, and drink, because there’s no room in
European apartments for the stuff Americans pack into theirs.
Spending Their Money on Frivolity
Like a cheesy disaster movie foreshadowing the apocalypse
during Act I, the TVs in the bars where the locals drink wine and gobble pricey
tapas cover the looming Greek default 24/7. The coming collapse is background
noise to a cacophony of people chattering into iPhones. The revolution is being
televised, and no one’s watching.
Countless stores will dress women in the latest, most
expensive fashions, but few supply the woman who wishes to dress her children.
The merchants know their markets, and you need babies to support baby clothes
stores. When you walk the streets, you notice the couples with kids—they stand
out, and it’s always just one kid. Even the cabbies sigh that the birth rate is
below replacement level. Children are the ultimate luxury item. Most Italians
don’t move out of their families’ apartments until they’re in their 30s.
There’s no room for kids—not in the tiny apartments and not in young people’s
social lives. Moreover, children represent an investment in the future, but
it’s a buyer’s market.
There are fewer immigrants than you might think from what
we read here in America, although this time I wandered primarily through the
more affluent neighborhoods. On the continent, the immigrants are largely kept
out of sight and, for the moment, out of mind—at least those not engaged in
trying to sell you selfie sticks outside the Sagrada Familia.
Not so in England. When you go to a restaurant or a store
in or around London, you almost certainly won’t be served by a native Englishman.
Often, it’s an Eastern European. Our most frustrating language challenges took
place in the United Kingdom. The immigrants do the work, while working-class
Londoners apparently stay home and collect dole checks.
Europe, Once Again Threatened with Violence
You do not see many cops with submachine guns, a fixture
in Europe in the late 1980s. Perhaps they now rely on the closed-circuit
television cameras bolted to every building and pole in every big city. There
were a few policemen in Barcelona, but you get the impression they were there
mostly to keep the Catalan separatists in line.
Yet the threat of violence is hangs over the continent.
When an ISIS sympathizer decapitated his coworker and stuck his head on a
factory gate in Grenoble, France, I was about 100 miles away. I would have been
in Tunis the day before nearly five dozen European tourists were machine-gunned
on the beach, except that stop had been cancelled after the last time ISIS
machine-gunned several dozen tourists there.
These atrocities seemed to create barely a stir,
certainly nothing like the kind of groundswell for vengeance upon the savages
that Churchill would have demanded. Winston, veteran of battles on the Indian
frontier, Omdurman, the Boers War, and the trenches, would have made the
savages pay for their perfidy in blood. Current British Prime Minister David Cameron
can’t even work up a lather sufficient to convincingly commit to few tentative
airstrikes somewhere down the road. Of course, no one else did, either. Maybe
the electronic dance music was too loud and no one in Europe was able to hear
the bells tolling for them over the dope beats.
Then there are the looming threats of less-intimate
violence. The Russian bear stalks back and forth in the East, temporarily
restrained by arbitrary lines on maps. When people realize that this time no
one in Europe will die for a line on a map, Russia will cross them. And, of
course, thanks to the surrender of President Obama and the rest of the West,
Iran will soon have the bomb. It’s little mitigation that the initial
generation of Iran’s ballistic missiles will only be able to hit Europe and we
will have to wait until they deploy their second generation before they can
unleash the Twelfth Iman’s vengeance on Los Angeles.
The world is preparing for war, but not in Europe, where
Daft Punk’s beat goes on.
Eat, Drink, and Be Merry
The blood of the likes of Charles Martel no longer runs
in the veins of today’s café-dwelling Europeans. They sip coffee and their
(excellent) wine and, in Spain, drink their bizarre cerveza/lemonade and
rioja/Coca-Cola combinations, oblivious to what’s coming. Perhaps it’s mere
ignorance, perhaps it’s a choice. It will end the same way regardless—in blood.
When the time comes to choose between picking up a rifle and dying, we’ll find
out if the human instinct for self-preservation has successfully been bred out
of the men of Europe. I know where I’m putting my money.
In the mid-1930s, Churchill was out of power and out of
favor, exiled from the cabinet after years in key positions. His voice was
unwelcome, but insistent. The Nazi threat was growing. It would could not be
reasoned with, it could not be appeased; it must be confronted with arms backed
by blood. And Churchill stood up for the Jews.
No one wanted to hear any of that. The Oxford Union had
resolved that under no circumstances would its members fight for king and
country. After the bloody reaping of European manhood in Flanders Fields, one
could at least understand the sentiment, misguided as it was. But one would
think that today pacifism would be utterly repudiated by what followed, and one
would be wrong.
When Chamberlain’s craven appeasement failed and France
and the Low Countries fell under the Nazi jackboot heel, when Britain itself
was threatened with invasion, they came crawling to Churchill. He had been
right all along through his Wilderness Years. But who has been right all
through these New Wilderness Years?
Unwilling to Stand, Let Alone See
Who in Europe today is crying, “To arms, to arms”? Who in
Europe has been urging its people to take their own side in this fight? Who has
been standing up against the new anti-Semitism? Instead of fighting, they
choose to toss the Jews to the wolves, hoping this means they will be eaten
last. In Europe today, Chamberlain II is a best-case scenario.
Assuming they even realize their danger, are they
counting on America? On Barack Obama? Better they should simply pray—and there
are plenty of churches, all empty except for tourists clicking photos of past
glories, in which to do so.
Human nature hasn’t changed one iota. Thugs like Vladimir
Putin and Islamofascists like ISIS understand the bloody mathematics of power
in the way the espresso-sippers refuse to. Ukraine will fall. The Baltics will
fall. Turkey will fall. The Balkans will fall. Europe will fall.
This is the fiesta before the storm, and Europe is busy
partying like it’s 1939. These are the New Wilderness Years, except this time
the bad guys are going to win.
No comments:
Post a Comment