By Dennis Prager - Aug. 11, 2020
Americans have long been proud of the fact that, unlike European countries, America never went the route of totalitarianism as embodied in communism, fascism and Nazism.
This achievement may be coming to an end.
In
order to understand why, it is first necessary to understand why
European countries embraced -- or fell victim to -- totalitarian
doctrines.
Until World War I, the primary beliefs that gave life
meaning, both on a national and personal level, were Judeo-Christian
religions and patriotism (love of one's nation). What gave people moral
guidance were Judeo-Christian values.
For most Europeans of the younger generation, World War I, with its
seemingly senseless slaughter of millions, ended belief in Christianity
and, in many cases, ended the people's faith in their nations. God was
deemed absent; religion was deemed unnecessary; and national identity
was widely seen as a cause of the war.
That left a void that was almost immediately filled by communism, fascism and Nazism.
In
Russia, World War I led directly to the Russian Revolution. Even before
the war ended, in 1917, the czar was overthrown, and later that year,
the Bolsheviks (the Russian communists) took over. As awful as the czar
was, there was far more freedom under him than there was in the Soviet
Union until the fall of communism 72 years later, not to mention the
murder of more people -- 20 to 40 million -- under the Soviet regime.
In
Italy, the rise of fascism followed World War I. And in Germany, the
Nazis came to power just 15 years after the end of the Great War. Nazism
conquered most of the European continent during WWII, and after
Germany's defeat in 1945, the Soviets imposed communism over all of
Eastern Europe.
Though there were communists, communist fellow travelers, Nazi
sympathizers, racists and anti-Semites in the United States, neither
communism nor fascism nor Nazism took root here. The primary reason was
that, unlike most Europeans, Americans did not lose their faith in
Judeo-Christian religions and values or in America after World War I. America remained so religious that, in 1954, the words "under God" were
inserted into the Pledge of Allegiance recited daily in American
schools.
However, by the 1950s, faith in America, Christianity and what we
call bourgeois middle-class values was largely limited to older
Americans. The post-World War II baby-boomer generation was already
being indoctrinated in secularism and anti-Americanism. As early as
1962, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that school prayer was
unconstitutional.
By the late 1960s, vast numbers of baby boomers
were attending demonstrations that were as much against America --
routinely characterized as an imperialist and colonialist aggressor
country with an evil military -- as they were against the war in
Vietnam. It was not uncommon to see America spelled "Amerikkka" or
"Amerika" at protests and in graffiti.
When I was in graduate
school at Columbia University in the early 1970s, I was taught that men
and women are not inherently different from one another and that the
Cold War was between two superpowers (equally at fault), not between
freedom and tyranny.
Another generation has passed, and the post-Christian, left-wing baby
boomers have come close to achieving complete success. The mainstream
print and electronic media, universities, high schools and elementary
schools, the arts and now sports have all been conquered by the left.
Except for sports, from the beginning of the 20th century, they were
almost all liberal, but now they are left.
We now have the answer
to the question: What will happen to America if Americans lose faith in
God and country as the Europeans did after World War I? What will happen
to America when Christianity dies as it did in Europe after World War
I?
The way things now look, America may have its bout with some
totalitarian doctrine -- almost surely some form of leftism. Liberty has
never been a left-wing value. From Lenin on, wherever the left has come
to power, it has suppressed liberty, beginning with free speech.
Already, despite a Republican president and a Republican Senate, America
has less free speech than at any time in its history. Exactly one year
ago, I testified before a Senate subcommittee and wrote an op-ed piece
for The Wall Street Journal about YouTube (owned by Google) placing more
than 100 Prager University, or PragerU, videos on its restricted list.
And things have gotten much worse. Last week, PragerU was
locked out of its Twitter account for retweeting a press conference of
eight physicians in Washington, D.C., which had already received 17
million views, and Facebook has just informed us that if we even cite
studies that show possible benefits of hydroxychloroquine (with zinc) in
the early stages of a patient with COVID-19, we will lose our Facebook
account.
And then there is the "cancel culture" -- which is merely a euphemism
for leftist suppression of dissent. People are booted from internet
platforms, fired from their jobs or have their reputations smeared and
their businesses ruined for differing with the left -- on anything.
We
are also undergoing a nonviolent (as of now) version of Mao Zedong's
Cultural Revolution, with individuals forced to issue humiliating public
recantations of their beliefs and attend reeducation sessions (we don't
yet have reeducation camps, but they should not be ruled out as a
possibility if the left is in control).
Another communist norm taking root in America is the rewriting
of the American past. We are living a famous Soviet dissident joke: "In
the Soviet Union, the future is known; it is the past that is always
changing."
On almost all social issues and many economic ones, the
American left is more radical than the left in Europe. Europeans across
the political spectrum are more wary of ideological fanaticism because
of the vast scale of death and suffering that resulted from communism,
fascism and Nazism.
One might say that Europe was inoculated against fanaticism.
Europeans are more preoccupied with working less, traveling more and
being taken care of than with ideological movements. But America, which
has not suffered under fanatical, irrational, liberty-depriving
ideologies, has not been inoculated.
Without such a vaccination, what replaced Christianity in Europe may well do the same in America.
Dennis
Prager is a nationally syndicated radio talk-show host and columnist.
His latest book, published by Regnery in May 2019, is "The Rational
Bible," a commentary on the book of Genesis. His film, "No Safe Spaces,"
will be released to home entertainment nationwide on September 15,
2020. He is the founder of Prager University and may be contacted at
dennisprager.com.
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