The French have a strange thirst for authoritarianism
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — A recent poll shows that 59 percent of French citizens would support an unelected technocratic government, and 41 percent favor an "authoritarian political power."
The results of last month's Ifop poll make it hard to believe that France was
a major flashpoint in the global civil rights protests of 1968. The president
many French were rebelling against at the time, Charles de Gaulle, is now
considered the leader who "best embodies power," according to the same poll. How
interesting that the French president most strongly associated with
anti-communism and anti-leftism is now considered to have been the country's
strongest leader.
France isn't the only place where globalism -- that is, global socialism and the
systemic corruption that facilitates it -- is falling apart. Leaders critical of
it have been elected in Italy, Brazil, Austria, Hungary, Poland, the United
States and elsewhere.
Fifty years ago, the Western world reached a boiling point. Anti-establishment
protests swept across the U.S. and Europe, with protesters railing against the
conservative post-WWII establishment. Groups with extremist ideologies backed
various players on the front lines of these social divisions and used them to
push their own agendas. When the dust settled, one form of perceived tyranny had
simply been replaced by another. The state had cloaked itself in benevolence to
create the illusion of personal freedom. It was all a mirage. Many wouldn't
realize it until 50 years later.
Fast-forward to the present day. People around the world are rebelling against a
global-governance straitjacket. We didn't even have to be shoved into it. We
allowed ourselves to be wrapped up willingly. Why? Because it felt warm and
safe. Those who rebelled against this wonderful notion of government
spoon-feeding us everything that we need were treated as pariahs and regarded as
selfish people who don't care about their fellow man.
Don't want open borders? You're a bigot. Never mind the simple truth that not
every low-wage worker in the world can be employed in the West, particularly at
a time when robots are increasingly taking over low-paid tasks.
Don't care about girls in Afghanistan who can't go to school because of the
Taliban? You're unpatriotic for not wanting your kids to die for a cause in a
distant country. Never mind that the biggest beneficiaries are a small handful
of crony shareholders who profit from war.
Don't want to invade Iran? You're a terrorist sympathizer. Never mind that you
can't list a single thing that Iran has ever done to you personally.
Don't want to see a cage match between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin? You must
be a freedom-hating traitor. Never mind that Putin's economic views these days
actually hew pretty closely to Ronald Reagan's in the 1980s, and that Russia has
a 13 percent personal income tax rate.
Don't want to empty your wallet to "fight" global warming? You planet-killer!
Never mind that the universe is more self-regulating and more powerful than the
ego that would conclude it could control Earth's thermostat by tossing a few
more bucks at the problem.
Indeed, the grand illusion depends on full compliance in perpetuating these
smaller illusions. Practitioners of true freedom who think and act independently
represent a threat to the model and will always feel the pressure of
government's boot on their neck.
This isn't some kind of great government conspiracy. Only in some cases does the
government actually criminalize speech. We've been policing each other. How many
times have you been forced to watch your words for fear that you might
inadvertently express a thought that doesn't square with that of your social
environment?
The systemic tyranny has ramped up to the point that it is now beginning to
unravel.
We've come full circle from 50 years ago, when the establishment was deemed too
constrictive and replaced not by actual freedom but rather by a con job dressed
up in these values. Of course, there's always the danger of history repeating
itself, with the anti-globalists and anti-leftists using smokescreens to slip
discreetly into corruption themselves.
The only long-term solution is true freedom: from government, from systemic
corruption, and even from those who think differently from us. It's only through
the ability to exercise true diversity of deeds and thought that we can ever
hope to evolve, innovate and better reach out to help others as a result of
better helping ourselves.
COPYRIGHT 2018 RACHEL MARSDEN