Voters pull the emergency brake on the Globalism Express
By: Rachel Marsden
	PARIS — As America heads toward the inauguration of President-elect Donald 
	Trump, and as Britain faces its exit from the European Union in the wake of 
	a popular referendum, the backlash against globalization continues around 
	the world.
	Austria will hold a presidential election on December 4, and polls are 
	predicting a victory for far-right Freedom Party candidate Norbert Hofer 
	over his centrist rival, Alexander Van der Bellen. Recent presidential 
	elections in Bulgaria and Moldova have seen the election of anti-European 
	Union leaders.
	You’d think that global elites would be reconsidering their plans after 
	seeing the results of all these popular votes run counter to the globalist 
	worldview. It’s hard not to get the feeling that the elites have no Plan B, 
	so they’re stubbornly pushing ahead with an agenda that’s increasingly at 
	odds with public opinion. 
	Rather than admit to the popular rejection of their project, they’re 
	doubling down on the fear-mongering rhetoric they’ve been using 
	unsuccessfully. The beating of war drums over Russia’s purely hypothetical 
	future annexation of neighboring countries (such as Moldova, for instance) — 
	a scenario frequently evoked by NATO officials and think tanks — doesn’t 
	seem to faze the citizens who actually live in those countries and have cast 
	ballots supporting Russia over Europe.
	The European Parliament passed a non-binding resolution last week in an 
	attempt to counter what some parliament members consider to be Russian 
	propaganda. The resolution calls for the EU to “respond to information 
	warfare by Russia” (and also by terrorist groups such as the Islamic State) 
	by “investing in awareness raising, education, online and local media.” Only 
	304 of 691 parliament members voted for the resolution, with 179 voting 
	against and 208 abstaining.
	In a minority opinion, dissenting voters said it’s “irresponsible to place a 
	state like Russia at the same level of threat as (the Islamic State).” But, 
	hey, every threat sells better with terrorism. Just ask the U.S. Defense 
	Department, which grafted climate change onto the threat of terrorism in a 
	report published in 2014. And let’s just try to forget that the West and its 
	Persian Gulf allies sponsored the Islamic State in the first place. We 
	wouldn’t want to blunt the rhetoric promoting the need for big-government 
	protection.
	Dissenters also noted that the European Union “does not recognize its own 
	propaganda on EU democracy.” The resolution calls for the EU to flood 
	journalists with press releases (as it’s already doing) and “provide direct 
	support to independent media outlets, think tanks and NGOs.” While 
	implementation details are entirely absent from the report, it sounds an 
	awful lot like the advocacy of government-funded propaganda hiding behind 
	independent journalism and think-tank research, making it hard for consumers 
	to evaluate the source of the information.
	The EU resolution smacks of insecurity. The Europe Union doesn’t have a 
	communication problem; it has an identity problem. Supranational governance 
	that usurps the sovereignty of member states and constantly intrudes upon 
	citizens is no longer an easy sell. Rather than reform itself, the EU is 
	trying to readjust people’s thinking. That’s a hard thing to pull off in the 
	information age.
	These unusual times have made for strange bedfellows. We free-market 
	conservatives often find ourselves more closely aligned with the views of 
	anti-globalist dissenters such as WikiLeaks and nationalists such as Russian 
	President Vladimir Putin than with the powers that be in the West. Critics 
	argue that the people in this particular basket are simply the useful tools 
	of evil mastermind Putin — an offensive label to those who are willing to 
	consider viewpoints that run counter to mainstream dogma.
	American values and European values have changed. That’s why Trump was 
	elected. That’s why Brexit passed. That’s why the backlash against globalism 
	is in full effect. People are going to the polls to reclaim what has been 
	slipping from their grasp: their cultures, their national identities, their 
	livelihoods. The elites are branding people as radicals for daring to 
	reclaim what has been taken from them and refusing to accept the politically 
	correct policies foisted upon them.
	The West has been accelerating toward a “Sovietization” through the 
	corruption of its primary pillars of democracy — freedom and capitalism — to 
	the benefit of the elites. The brakes are now being applied, and that train 
	is screeching to a halt. Expect the screeching to get louder still before 
	the train finally derails.
COPYRIGHT 2016 RACHEL MARSDEN