The War Against the
Nation-State (contd.)
by Peter Brimelow
Canada has invented another disease, to go
along with speech codes and multiculturalism:
the Queens University philosopher Will Kymlicka http://qsilver.queensu.ca/~philform/,
a professional liberal ideologue who spends his
time inventing rationales for political elites
to pander to ethnic minorities at the expense of
majorities. (The 3/28/00 Wall Street
Journal ran a puff piece on him - article by
G. Pascal Zachary, available to subscribers at http://interactive.wsj.com/SB954197593181775894.djm/
).
Institutionalized
pandering does pretty well describe how the
Canadian polity currently works. As the WSJ
puts it,
“…in the 1980s, Mr. Kymlicka
favored Canada’s concessions to
Quebec, which was allowed to pursue what
he calls 'asymmetric federalism,'
meaning that the French-speaking
province has powers – over
immigration, schools and language –
that other Canadian provinces don’t
have. This sort of autonomy, Mr.
Kymlicka argues, is justified because it
doesn’t unduly hurt the
English-speaking majority but helps the
French minority.”
This happy situation, of course, is not
described in its entirety. Thus (1)
English-speakers are disadvantaged –
their federal institutions are significantly
controlled by French-speaking Quebeckers, but
Quebec’s institutions are totally French; (2)
inside Quebec, the French-speakers have
legislated to suppress English; (3) “asymmetric
federalism” is not working anyway, because
Quebeckers have repeatedly elected a separatist
government and are clearly on the verge of
seceding. But “asymmetric federalism”
certainly allowed Canada’s political class to
keep its snout in the trough for a little
longer. (I discussed all this in my 1986
book The Patriot Game: Canada and the
Canadian Question Revisited.)
It can’t happen here? The Wall
Street Journal continues admiringly:
“Mr. Kymlicka thinks the U.S. could
go further to insure minority rights and
institutions – especially in areas
like New Mexico Hawaii and Alaska where
native people were incorporated into the
nation by conquest. In particular, he
thinks the U.S. could do more to support
Spanish-speaking citizens who want to be
bilingual, but also needs to heed those
who want to switch to English. 'Minority
practices are only worth preserving only
if minorities want to do so,' he
explains.”
Er - what about what the majority
wants? Or are minority rights “asymmetric”
too?
Uniting minorities and dividing the majority
has been the historic political strategy of both
the long-dominant parties in Canada and the
U.S.: the Liberals and the Democrats. (I
got into to trouble for describing the Democrats
in Alien Nation as a “black-Hispanic-Jewish-minority
white coalition.” But hey, truth is an
absolute defense).
The two countries have political
establishments that are happy with the result,
so there is a strong market for rationalizations
of the process. We will hear more about
Professor Kymlicka.
But the Wall Street Journal’s
enthusiasm for Kymlicka can probably be traced
to its prominent display of a quote from his
1995 book Multicultural Citizenship:
“Globalization has made the myth of
a culturally homogenous state even more
unrealistic, and has forced the majority
within each state to be more open to
pluralism and diversity.”
In fact, the salient event of the last decade
has been the emergence of nation-states from
within the prisons of syncretic, multinational
empires – most notably after the collapse of
the Soviet Union. Even Professor Kymlicka’s
ancestral Czechoslovakia has broken up.
Globalization and free trade makes it easier,
not harder, for small polities to survive.
But for a variety of reasons, this does not
suit the agenda of New Class bureaucrats,
international corpocrats and (it appears) the
species of neoconservative intellectuals
inhabiting the Wall Street Journal editorial
page. The war against the nation-state
continues.
Letters:
WSJ hack upset at VDARE bashing puff-piece