Posted by
Reasonsjester on Monday, November 02, 2009 1:56:52 AM
Throughout history, few great leaders have ascended to power and
fundamentally transformed their nations. The irony is that these great
leaders did not change the peoples in their charge from ignorant,
unproductive, and cowardly masses into an intelligent, vigorous, and
virtuous citizenry. Rather they presided over the death knells of once
civilized societies collapsing into tumult and ignominy.
Once a
nation demands to be fundamentally transformed by a great leader it is
already far beyond hope. Once a charismatic leader can manipulate a
population beyond the norms or laws of a people, the people are already
lost. This is because a great nation cannot be defined by a great
leader, but only by the great people who inhabit it. Truly great people
drive the economy, lead the military, and teach the people honestly and
accurately about the cultural legacy of their forefathers.
If a
charismatic leader comes to power and accrues all glory in the nation
for the successes of the people, while shirking all blame for the
nation's failures, and the people still adore him, the nation is
doomed. For this is a nation that has lost its pride, its
competitiveness, its rugged individualistic spirit. A demoralized
people look to the great leader to save them from themselves, out of
some sense of desperation or guilt, and they crave redemption - whether
it be in the eyes of a national or a global audience.
But the transformative political figure of world history cannot just arrive on the scene from the actor's gallery like a
deus ex machina,
solving the problems of a people. The destiny of a nation can be found
in the errors and misdeeds of previous generations. The positive great
leader in history is very rarely a "transformative" figure, he is a
reflection of the people; he is not only the leader that the people
"deserve," but the one that they have selected for themselves. Winston
Churchill was a great leader not because he was "above" the British
people during World War II, but because he stood with them; one might
say his steel and resolve was iconic of the British people.
Metaphorically, one might say he
was the British people.
The
transformative figure, on the other hand, is nearly always the
deliverer of doom to a failed people; his actions to save a people from
themselves inevitably results in chaos, increasing tyranny, oppression,
and if any proud people remain (be they even three percent), civil war.
For
example, Peter the Great is often held aloft as a transformative figure
in Russian history, But for all his European-style modernization, he
was still a despot when all was said and done. Catherine the Great was
little better. Though being friends with men of the Enlightenment like
Denis Diderot, the rise of the truly transformative figure Napoleon
Bonaparte shocked the lady of Holstein-Gottorp back to her monarchic
sensibilities.
Whether it be Attila the Hun transforming the
Eurasian map, one will find Gothic tribes fleeing to a crumbling Rome;
if one in turn considers the sack of Rome by Alaric the Visigoth in 410
AD, one will find a demoralized empire from rampant corruption by
elites. The key thing to remember is that the transformative political
figures of world history tend nearly always to be those who deliver
doom to an already failed people.
The notable exception to this
rule are the founding fathers of the United States. A small minority of
the British colonies of America, these men fought to lift themselves
out of oppression and tyranny, and founded a political order that would
provide the environment where men would have every opportunity to be
great, if they so chose. The Constitution they enshrined put people's
lives in their own hands under the condition of liberty; it also put
considerable political power in the hands of states and small
communities, so men to a great degree could solve their own problems.
Thus
when one thinks of the transformative figures of American history, one
cannot fail to think of men like Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson,
and George Washington. But one must recall that even as George
Washington was offered the presidency for a third term, he famously
deferred; this was as if to say that the people themselves were the
only ones who could decide if they were to remain free.
So - two
hundred years later we are graced with the presidency of one who prior
to his election declared, pompously, that "we are five days away from
fundamentally transforming the United States of America."
The
United States of America. The first nation in world history to enshrine
liberty as a mandate. The nation that adopted a Constitution that vowed
to eradicate the importation of slavery in two generations' time. The
United States that experienced one of the bloodiest wars in world
history largely over the issue of freedom for slaves. The United States
that helped win World War I, granted women's suffrage, played a role in
defeating the Nazis and the Japanese, and freed every major nation it
occupied during wartime. The United States that faced down a bloody
imperialistic police state for nearly half a century, accelerating its
implosion. The United States that became the most prosperous, most
generous, most righteous force for humanity in world history. The
United States that shed blood but asked for no oil in the wars
following the acts of September 11th.
That United States.
The
presumptuous newcomer to the world stage and the American political
scene may truly believe himself to be a transformative figure; but his
ego is vastly out of proportion to his sense of history if this is to
be the case. As he continues to delude himself that he is a historical
figure who should be imbued with dictatorial powers to undo the
problems that government itself largely created, he will find that he
is wielding a sledgehammer to swat 300 million flies. Each action by
government will be too late, too strong, or too expensive, and thus
government will unleash more anxiety, more unforeseen consequences, and
will do more damage. The president will ask for trillions in funds for
more programs to allay the masses, but he will do nothing but further
dislocate the economy and eventually, collapse it.
Obama surely
sees himself as America's first truly transformative figure. Let us do
our utmost not only to survive him, but to reverse America's course
toward greatness by re-establishing liberty as its guiding precept.
Then it will be left up to our children to decide if they are to be
great.