Author Topic: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)  (Read 4540 times)

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Religious Dick

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #15 on: May 03, 2008, 05:45:34 AM »

You know, I have said over and over again that the problem with immigrants getting benefits from social programs run by the government is a problem with the programs not the immigrants. And everyone tells me that is impractical. Oh well.


So, you're argument to the American people is that they should eliminate the welfare state that they apparently like, so they can accommodate more immigrants which they obviously don't want?

A word of advice - don't pursue a career in sales!

Actually I do have a problem with this poem (if that is even what it is). Comparing immigrants to birds who poop all over everything (try not putting laxative in the birdseed next time) seems insulting. As much as I like that the poem argues for the end of government run social programs, the nativist tone is offensive and something think the situation does not need.[/color]

Why is it that the oikophobes and alienists feel they have to use words like "nativist" and "xenophobe" to characterize those with opposing views, as if they were suffering from some form of neuroses?

Sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander!
I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
-Sir Edmund Burke

BT

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #16 on: May 03, 2008, 06:31:15 AM »
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Universe Prince

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #17 on: May 03, 2008, 10:10:57 AM »

So, you're argument to the American people is that they should eliminate the welfare state that they apparently like, so they can accommodate more immigrants which they obviously don't want?

A word of advice - don't pursue a career in sales!


Heh. No, my argument is that blaming immigrants for a problem caused by the welfare state government is addressing a symptom not a cause.


Why is it that the oikophobes and alienists feel they have to use words like "nativist" and "xenophobe" to characterize those with opposing views, as if they were suffering from some form of neuroses?

Sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander!


Oikophobes and alienists? I'm sure that is terribly clever, but what do a fear of houses and psychiatrists with legal expertise have to do with this? Anyway, I don't feel like I have to use words like nativist and xenophobe to characterize those with opposing views. On the other hand, I also don't feel I need to shy away from calling a spade a spade here. The poem (if it can be called such), imo, clearly has a nativist tone. Feel free to tell me why it does not.
Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever.
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Religious Dick

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #18 on: May 03, 2008, 03:45:03 PM »

Oikophobes and alienists? I'm sure that is terribly clever, but what do a fear of houses and psychiatrists with legal expertise have to do with this? Anyway, I don't feel like I have to use words like nativist and xenophobe to characterize those with opposing views. On the other hand, I also don't feel I need to shy away from calling a spade a spade here. The poem (if it can be called such), imo, clearly has a nativist tone. Feel free to tell me why it does not.

No, literally "fear of the home"...

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Published on The Brussels Journal (http://www.brusselsjournal.com)
Roger Scruton on Immigration, Multiculturalism and the Need to Defend the Nation State
By Paul Belien
Created 2006-06-24 08:23
roger-scruton-12.jpg
Roger Scruton
Yesterday evening Roger Scruton delivered a speech in Antwerp. He spoke at the invitation of the Vlaams Belang (VB), which is Antwerp?s, Flanders? and Belgium?s largest party. The VB strives for the independence of Flanders, the Dutch-speaking northern half of Belgium. It is also the only Eurosceptic party in Belgium, a country that prides itself on being the model of a pan-European state.

I am not a member of the VB, though my wife is a member of parliament for it. However, since Roger and I are longstanding friends, they asked me to inquire whether he would be willing to hold a lecture for the VB leadership, its local councillors and interested members, sympathizers and, in general, for anyone in Flanders interested in Roger Scruton. The VB wants to become more acquainted with conservative and libertarian thought. Last year they invited Hans-Hermann Hoppe, this year they were interested in hearing Roger.

When I passed the request on to Roger he accepted at once. As soon as the VB invitations for the evening went out, however, Roger began receiving e-mails from Belgium, warning him not to go because, the e-mails said, speaking to the VB would damage his reputation, expose him as a ?racist? and a ?fascist.? However, the more pressure they put on Roger, the more he was determined to come to Antwerp. When the Belgian magazine Humo questioned him about this he said that if the Parti Socialiste, the largest party in Wallonia, the French-speaking part of Belgium, invited him he would go too. Below is the speech Roger gave:

Speech by Roger Scruton, Antwerp, 23 June 2006

    roger-scruton-11.jpg
    When I was invited to give this talk by my old friend Paul Belien, my first reaction was one of pleasure that a political party in Belgium should be interested in my ideas. I have never been asked to address a political party in Western Europe, and I long ago concluded that a voice like mine is irrelevant to the practice of European politics, and must be regarded merely as a vague murmur in the stratosphere of thinking, with no clear application in the realm of political facts. I had heard of the Vlaams Belang, and its predecessor, the Vlaams Blok, as a controversial party, with widespread support among the Flemish population of Belgium. I knew that the party had been targeted by the liberal establishment, had been accused of ?racism and xenophobia?, and had been disbanded, in its previous incarnation, by a Belgian court. On the other hand, there were plenty of explanations of the accusations apart from their truth, and it seemed likely to me that the true offence of the Vlaams Belang had been to threaten the vested interests of the European Union.

    That suspicion was to a certain measure confirmed when e-mails began to arrive from concerned ?colleagues? in Belgium ? people who had never before shown any interest in my views, but who were now beseeching me to cancel this engagement, asking me not to give credibility to a dangerous right-wing party, and warning me of the damage to my reputation, should I be associated with a party of extremists. It became immediately clear that the controversy surrounding the Vlaams Belang is one that goes to the heart of Belgian politics, and that the opponents of the Vlaams Belang do not wish merely to defeat it in fair and free elections, but to destroy it as a political force. And because they cannot destroy it by democratic means, since it has the habit of receiving the largest number of votes in Parliamentary elections, they wish instead to destroy it through the courts, and to silence and intimidate those who might otherwise confer legitimacy on its efforts. The very suggestion that, by addressing the Vlaams Belang ? whether in tones of agreement or tones of rebuke ? I have somehow associated myself with it, indicates the intention of the Party?s opponents, which is to put it beyond the pale of  dialogue.

    Now my instinct, when it comes to intimidation, is to side with the victim. If people tell me that I must not associate with Jim because all decent people are boycotting him, then my instinct is to associate with Jim. I may discover that there are very good reasons for boycotting Jim. But if I have not made the effort to know him and to bring him back into the fold of human society, then I have failed in my duty as a Christian. And what goes for individuals goes for political parties too. I don?t deny that there are parties that should be outlawed ? as the Nazi Party was outlawed, many millions of deaths too late, as the Communist Party ought to be outlawed, and as certain Islamist parties are being outlawed in Europe today. Parties, in my view, are like people: they must conform to the categorical imperative. They must not practise or justify murder, and must not incite hatred towards any minority or towards any recognizable sub-community within the state. And if they do those things, the state has the right and the duty to disband them. And of course, that is what I shall begin by saying to you today, confident in the conviction that it does not need saying.

    It should be pointed out, however, that socialist parties have not always obeyed the ground-rule against incitement. For many years our own Labour Party existed on a diet of class hatred not entirely dissimilar to the hatred that had been a cornerstone of communist ideology between the wars. The most striking feature of the left-wing movements of the sixties ? movements to which many of today?s political ?lite belonged ? was the fervour of hatred that they expressed towards the ?bourgeoisie?, meaning anyone who owned property. Incitement is never far from the surface in politics, and we must all of us continually examine our conscience to make sure that this crime, of which it is so easy to accuse our opponents, is not one of which we too are guilty. It is only in a condition of calm deliberation, after all, that we can begin the urgent task facing Europeans today, which is that of achieving a new negotiated settlement that will embrace all the citizens, old and new, of states that have been irreversibly changed through immigration.

    That is why the charge of ?racism and xenophobia?, which has been levelled at your Party, is such a serious one. For it is designed to suggest that the Vlaams Belang cannot form part of any such negotiated settlement; that it offends not only against the ground-rules of democratic politics, but also against the primary goal of the New Europe, which is to incorporate large immigrant populations into a form of citizenship that transcends race, religion, culture and creed. If we do not establish this form of citizenship, then we can look forward to a future of conflict and disaffection, in which inter-communal strife is the norm. And if ?racism and xenophobia? stand in the way of this new form of citizenship, there are very good reasons for thinking them to be unacceptable features of any party that expresses them.

    However, reading some of the attacks on the Vlaams Belang I cannot help recalling the time, twenty years ago, when I too was accused of ?racism and xenophobia? by the left-liberal media in Britain, and was forced to run the gauntlet of disgrace by my university colleagues. My offence was to have argued, through the Salisbury Review which I edited, and through my weekly column in the London Times, that the official policy of ?multiculturalism? was a mistake, and that the future of Britain depends not on encouraging immigrants to live apart in cultural ghettoes, but on integrating them into a common culture of nationhood. The very same liberal establishment that reacted then with outrage to my arguments, has since quietly accepted them, and the received view today is that we need a culture of Britishness, in which all our citizens can share. Having been the object of this charge that I know in my own case to be false, I am bound to be sceptical towards those who make it, and who seem to make it so costlesssly and with such self-righteous contentment that it is the Other, and not the Self, who is guilty. Rather than examine your case, therefore, I propose to talk more generally about the meaning of the charge of racism and xenophobia, and about the circumstances that have led to its supreme rhetorical importance, so that it has become the equivalent of a charge of heresy in medieval Europe, of witchcraft in colonial Massachusettes, or of ?deviationism? in the Stalinist state.

    Someone who is in a state of denial regarding his mortal illness, his wife?s infidelity or his child?s delinquency will turn angrily on the one who refers to the forbidden truth. Likewise, a political culture that is in denial about a serious social problem will condemn those who seek to discuss it, and try its best to silence them. For a long time now the European political class has been in denial about the problems posed by the large-scale immigration of people who do not enter into our European way of life. It has turned angrily on those who have warned against the disruption that might follow, or who have affirmed the right of indigenous communities to refuse admission to people who cannot or will not assimilate. And one of the weapons that the ?lite has used, in order to ensure that it is never troubled by the truths that it denies, is to accuse those who wish to discuss the problem of ?racism and xenophobia?. People of my generation have been brought up in fear of this charge, just as the people of Salem were brought up in the fear of being denounced as witches. We saw what happened to Enoch Powell, as a result of a public speech that warned against the dangers. I don?t say that Powell?s speech, in which he referred to ?the river Tiber foaming with much blood?, was wise or helpful. On the contrary, it was all too easy to accuse him of scaremongering, and his quotation from the Cumean Sybil in Aeneid Bk VI ? which of course nobody recognized ? was instantly re-written as ?rivers of blood?, and he himself dismissed as a dangerous madman. That was virtually the last time that a British politician dared to warn against the effect of large-scale immigration. Since then an uneasy silence has prevailed at the political level, while discussion at every other level has been hampered by the periodic show-trials of those judged to be guilty of ?racism? ? for example, because they have argued that immigrant communities must integrate, and that separatism is intrinsically dangerous: the position adopted by The Salisbury Review under my editorship, and which was the cause of my own castigation.

    By denying a problem you prevent its discussion, until discussion is too late. Throughout the thirties the European political ?lite lived in denial over German re-armament. By the time the truth could no longer be hidden, it was impossible to deter Hitler?s seizure of Czechoslovakia. Reflecting on such examples it is surely reasonable to conclude that we have a duty now to brave the charge of ?racism and xenophobia?, and to discuss every aspect of immigration. We owe this not just to the indigenous people of Europe, but to the immigrants themselves, who have just as great an interest in peaceful coexistence as the rest of us. Here is how I see the matter:

    Every society depends on an experience of membership: a sense of who ?we? are, why we belong together, and what we share. This experience is pre-political: it precedes all political institutions, and provides our reason for accepting them. It unites left and right, blue-collar and white-collar, man and woman, parent and child. To threaten this ?first-person plural? is to open the way to atomisation, as people cease to recognize any general duty to their neighbours, and set out to pillage the accumulated resources while they can. Without membership we risk a new ?tragedy of the commons?, as our inherited social assets are seized for present use.

    Membership is defined in different ways at different times and places. For many societies, religion is an important part of it, so that the infidel is cast out or marginalized, as in traditional Islamic society. Although religion has been an important part of European identity, it was gradually, under the influence of the Enlightenment, pushed into the background by nationality, and subsequently by the rise of the nation state. And it is thanks to the nation state that we enjoy the freedoms and secular jurisdictions that are so attractive to immigrants ? and especially to those immigrants who define their pre-political membership in religious, rather than national, terms. For national loyalty is a form of neighbourliness: it is loyalty to a shared home and to the people who have built it. It makes no specific demands of a religious or ideological nature, and is content with a common obedience to a secular rule of law, and a common sense of belonging to the land, its customs and its habits of peaceful coexistence. Communities founded on a national rather than a religious conception of membership are inherently open to newcomers, in the way that religious communities are not. An immigrant to a religious community must be prepared to convert; an immigrant to a national community need only obey the law.

    The European nation states have tried to encapsulate the pre-political idea of national loyalty in legal criteria of citizenship. The relation of the citizen to the state is conceived in terms of reciprocal rights and duties. To claim the status of the citizen is to bring the power of the state to one?s aid against malefactors and also to promise one?s aid when the state is in danger. It is to enjoy state-protected rights that make one, legally speaking, the equal of all other citizens in any conflict, and as bound by the duty of obedience as they are.

    Hence we, as citizens of nation states, are bound by reciprocal obligations to all those who can claim our nationality, regardless of family, and regardless of faith. Freedom of worship, freedom of conscience, freedom of speech and opinion offer no threat, we believe, to our common loyalty. Our law applies to a definite territory, and our legislators are chosen by those whose home it is. The law therefore confirms our common destiny and attracts our common obedience. Law-abidingness becomes part of the scheme of things, part of the way in which the land is settled. Our people can quickly unite in the face of threat, since they are uniting in defence of the thing that is necessary to all of them ? their territory. The symbols of national loyalty are neither militant nor ideological, but consist in peaceful images of the homeland, of the place where we belong. National loyalties therefore aid reconciliation between classes, interests and faiths, and form the background to a political process based in consensus rather than in force. In particular, national loyalties enable people to respect the sovereignty and the rights of the individual.

    For those and similar reasons, national loyalty does not merely issue in democratic government, but is profoundly assumed by it. People bound by a national ?we? have no difficulty in accepting a government whose opinions and decisions they disagree with; they have no difficulty in accepting the legitimacy of opposition, or the free expression of outrageous-seeming views. In short, they are able to live with democracy, and to express their political aspirations through the ballot box. None of those good things are to be found in states that are founded on the ?we? of tribal identity or the ?we? of faith. And in modern conditions all such states are in a constant state of conflict and civil war, with neither a genuine rule of law nor durable democracy.

    It does not need me to tell you that the account of national loyalty that I have just offered does not fit easily to the case of Belgium. For modern Belgium is a state in which two nations are being held together, largely against the will of one of them. Belgian citizenship is not rooted in a shared national loyalty, and has become a purely legal privilege, which can be bought or sold with the passport. This buying and selling of citizenship, often to people who think of it purely as a right and never as a duty, is common throughout Europe. The political ?lite sees nothing wrong in people collecting passports as they might collect memberships of clubs. But it seems that the trafficking in Belgian passports is especially popular, perhaps because there is no pre-political loyalty which the passport represents.

    For the same reason no efforts are made to ensure that immigrants to Belgium acquire loyalty to the secular state, or respect for the customs that have shaped it: Belgian citizenship is what immigrants are seeking, and Belgian citizenship has been treated by the political class as a commodity, to be bought and sold like any other.

    Finally, the Belgian political class has fixed its sights on Europe, as the collective enterprise that will extinguish all those old national loyalties, and put a cosmopolitan indifference in their place. The European Union has meant a lot to the Belgian ?lite. It places them at the heart of the continent, transforms Brussels from a provincial town in Flanders to the capital of Europe, and provides a project that will distract attention from the growing disintegration of the country, and from the problems which they are determined in any case to deny. No wonder they are angry, when a popular party calls for the separation of Flanders, and for its re-constitution as a self-governing nation state. Even if there is no ground for the charge of ?racism and xenophobia? you can be sure that the plan is to make it stick. Just imagine what would happen to the EU, were Flanders to become a nation state! What a step backwards this would be ? a step towards loyalty, accountability, democracy and all the other superannuated things that the EU seeks to extinguish.

    Now I do not doubt that there is such a thing as racism, that it has been immensely destructive and that our governments are right to look for methods to prevent its expression. Racially motivated crime carries an added penalty in English law, and incitement to racial violence is regarded as a serious offence. However, the adoption of such provisions should not blind us to the many double standards that haunt discussion of this issue.

    First, the double standard over ?racism?: a charge constantly levelled against innocent members of the indigenous majority, and almost never levelled against guilty members of immigrant minorities. This is not a European phenomenon only. On the contrary, there is a kind of collective guilt-feeling that imbues all discussions of racial difference in the West today. I recently had cause to study an academic article in the journal of the American Psychological Association, setting forth its official policy regarding multiculturalism and the treatment of minorities. And I was stunned to come across the following sentence: ?All whites are racist, whether or not knowingly?. There you have it, endorsed by a prestigious academic and professional body: all whites are racist, whether or not knowingly.That, to my mind, is a racist remark of the lowest kind, one that attributes to people of a certain skin-colour an enormous moral fault, and one which they can do nothing to overcome, since they possess it unknowingly. And the sentence is indicative of a widespread approach to racial and cultural relations in the modern world. Racism is defined as a disease of the indigenous majority, from which incoming minorities are genetically immune, even when they bring with them the visceral anti-semitism that prevails in much of the Arab world, or the Malaysian hatred of the ethnic Chinese. Why is our political ?lite so keen to charge their own people with racism, and to turn a blind eye to the racism of immigrants? The answer is to be found in another double standard, encapsulated in the charge so frequently associated with that of racism ? the charge of xenophobia.

    I do not doubt that there is such a thing as xenophobia, though it is a very different thing from racism. Etymologically the term means fear of (and therefore aversion towards) the foreigner. Its very use implies a distinction between the one who belongs and the one who doesn?t, and in inviting us to jettison our xenophobia politicians are inviting us to extend a welcome to people other than ourselves ? a welcome predicated on a recognition of their otherness.  Now it is easy for an educated member of the liberal ?lite to discard his xenophobia: for the most part his contacts with foreigners help him to amplify his power, extend his knowledge and polish his social expertise. But it is not so easy for an uneducated worker to share this attitude, when the incoming foreigner takes away his job, brings strange customs and an army of dependents into the neighbourhood, and finally surrounds him with the excluding sights and sounds of a ghetto.

    Again, however, there is a double standard that affects the description. Members of our liberal ?lite may be immune to xenophobia, but there is an equal fault which they exhibit in abundance, which is the repudiation of, and aversion to, home. Each country exhibits this vice in its own domestic version. Nobody brought up in post-war England can fail to be aware of the educated derision that has been directed at our national loyalty by those whose freedom to criticize would have been extinguished years ago, had the English not been prepared to die for their country. The  loyalty that people need in their daily lives, and which they affirm in their unconsidered and spontaneous social actions, is now habitually ridiculed or even demonized by the dominant media and the education system. National history is taught as a tale of shame and degradation. The art, literature and religion of our nation have been more or less excised from the curriculum, and folkways, local traditions and national ceremonies are routinely rubbished.

    This repudiation of the national idea is the result of a peculiar frame of mind that has arisen throughout the Western world since the Second World War, and which is particularly prevalent among the intellectual and political elites. No adequate word exists for this attitude, though its symptoms are instantly recognized: namely, the disposition, in any conflict, to side with ?them? against ?us?, and the felt need to denigrate the customs, culture and institutions that are identifiably ?ours?. I call the attitude oikophobia ? the aversion to home ? by way of emphasizing its deep relation to xenophobia, of which it is the mirror image. Oikophobia is a stage through which the adolescent mind normally passes. But it is a stage in which intellectuals tend to become arrested. As George Orwell pointed out, intellectuals on the Left are especially prone to it, and this has often made them willing agents of foreign powers. The Cambridge spies ? educated people who penetrated our foreign service during the war and betrayed our Eastern European allies to Stalin ? offer a telling illustration of what oikophobia has meant for my country and for the Western alliance. And it is interesting to note that a recent BBC ?docudrama? constructed around the Cambridge spies neither examined the realities of their treason nor addressed the suffering of the millions of their East European victims, but merely endorsed the oikophobia that had caused them to act as they did.

    Nor is oikophobia a specifically English, still less specifically British tendency. When Sartre and Foucault draw their picture of the ?bourgeois? mentality, the mentality of the Other in his Otherness, they are describing the ordinary decent Frenchman, and expressing their contempt for his national culture. A chronic form of oikophobia has spread through the American universities, in the guise of political correctness, and loudly surfaced in the aftermath of September 11th, to pour scorn on the culture that allegedly provoked the attacks, and to side by implication with the terrorists. And oikophobia can be everywhere read in the attacks levelled against the Vlaams Belang.

    The domination of our national Parliaments and the EU machinery by oikophobes is partly responsible for the acceptance of subsidised immigration, and for the attacks on customs and institutions associated with traditional and native forms of life. The oikophobe repudiates national loyalties and defines his goals and ideals against the nation, promoting transnational institutions over national governments, accepting and endorsing laws that are imposed from on high by the EU or the UN, and defining his political vision in terms of cosmopolitan values that have been purified of all reference to the particular attachments of a real historical community. The oikophobe is, in his own eyes, a defender of enlightened universalism against local chauvinism. And it is the rise of oikophobia that has led to the growing crisis of legitimacy in the nation states of Europe. For we are seeing a massive expansion of the legislative burden on the people of Europe, and a relentless assault on the only loyalties that would enable them voluntarily to bear it. The explosive effect of this has already been felt in Holland and France, and of course it is now being felt in Belgium too.

    But there is a third double standard that can be perceived in the official policies of the EU when it comes to nationality. Where national sentiments pose a threat to the centralisation of power, the European machine is determined to extinguish them. Such is the case when it comes to Flemish nationalism, which threatens the very heart of the machine. Where, however, national sentiments serve to break down rival centres of power, the European machine gladly endorses them. It has dealt with my country as though Britain were a wholly artificial creation like Belgium, has encouraged Scottish and Welsh nationalism, and imposed on us an official map in which Scotland and Wales exists, but England is not mentioned, being merely the arbitrary sum of four independent ?regions? by which it is to be eventually replaced. Britain won the war, and established thereby its immovable place in our affections, a place that it cannot yield to a power-hungry bureaucracy situated in a once occupied country. The only way to destroy Britain, therefore, is to emphasize the rival loyalties that will blow it apart and at the same time destroy its center which is England.

    It is in the light of these double standards that the charge of ?racism and xenophobia? should be assessed. It is a charge almost invariably levelled at members of the indigenous communities of Europe, and in particular against those at the bottom of the social scale, for whom mass immigration is a cost that they have not been schooled (and through no fault of their own) to bear. It is levelled too at political parties that attempt to represent those people, and who promise them some relief from a problem that no other party seems willing to address. Those who level the charge are almost invariably in the grip of oikophobia. Their sense of belonging is fragile or non-existent. They look on the old forms of European community, and in particular on the old national identities that shaped our continent, with barely concealed distaste. And by focussing on their cosmopolitan visions of politics, they are able to turn a blind eye to the fact that European states contain a growing number of people who have neither national loyalty nor the Enlightenment ideals that have stemmed from it. It is in this way, therefore, that we should explain the charge of ?racism and xenophobia?: it issues from the bad conscience of a liberal ?lite living in denial.

    Well, you might respond, why shouldn?t they live in denial if it makes them more comfortable? In conclusion, let me say what I think is wrong with this kind of existential dishonesty. The ordinary people of Europe are now deeply anxious about their future: they are looking for someone who will represent their anxieties, and take measures to reduce them. The recent Islamist atrocities, and the general state of alert against terrorism, have done nothing to reassure them. And when people are in a state of anxiety they pose a threat, both to themselves and to those whom they fear. It is vital that the European states achieve an effective integration of their immigrant communities; but if the liberal ?lite will not discuss the matter, and continue to put all blame for the growing anxiety on the xenophobia of the indigenous population while ignoring the oikophobia which is an equal contributory cause, then the likely long-term effect will be a popular explosion, and one from which no-one will benefit, least of all the immigrant communities.

    And this returns me to my initial remarks. I came here to talk about something that is of vital interest to you, and also to me. But it seems that there are many people in this country who believe that I should not talk to you at all, and that by doing so I become tainted with the very charge that has been levelled at you: the charge of racism and xenophobia. By talking about this charge, I hope to deflect it. I am neither racist nor xenophobic; I am in the habit of assuming that the same is true of others, until they have shown evidence to the contrary; and I am glad that a Party exists that is willing to brave this charge, in order to discuss the problem that is in the minds of all ordinary Europeans today. To those who wrote to me, saying that I must boycott the Vlaams Belang, I replied: why don?t you invite me? Why don?t you initiate the discussion that we all of us so much need, if you cannot entrust it to them? And of course not one of them has responded.

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I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
-Sir Edmund Burke

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #19 on: May 03, 2008, 04:21:49 PM »
"For a long time now the European political class has been in denial about the problems posed by the large-scale immigration of people who do not enter into our European way of life"

 ;)
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #20 on: May 03, 2008, 05:50:59 PM »

No, literally "fear of the home"...


Well, that article was somewhat creepy. Anyway, I find interesting that you and others get to defend your position by assertions that people who don't agree with you are "oikophobes", are in denial and are hypocrites, but no one is supposed to say anything bad about you. If I see something obviously nativist in tone, I cannot say so, apparently, because that would be mean and judgmental, and it might hurt someone's feelings. But you, on the other hand, get to make the absurd suggestion that I have some fear/aversion/dislike of home. Talk about a double standard.

I could explain how much I love this country, living here, being here, being born here, but I doubt any of that would make a dent. The fact that I disagree with you is enough to get me labeled an "oikophobe". In point of fact, my love of "home" is one of the reasons I favor less restricted immigration. Not that I expect that to be something you're going to understand, given your current erroneous characterizations of my position. And of course I could point out that I am not in denial about the changes that could be brought by less restricted immigration. In actuality, I believe I am more aware and more accepting of the changes than those who fearfully, yes fearfully, seek to close down borders and shut out the Them of the world. That other folks have been distracted by alarmist talk and nativist rhetoric is not my fault, and pointing it out is not hateful of those other folks or of my native country.

So I'm not terribly sorry if your feelings were hurt. And while your current level of complete mischaracterization of my comments and my position leads me to conclude that you're not going to understand my arguments any time soon, I refuse to let you define for me what is and is not acceptable to say. This ersatz political correctness wherein I am supposed to never say "nativist" or "xenophobia" because its unfair to you is nonsense, and I will treat it as such.

Which leads me back to where I was at the end of my previous post of this thread. The poem (if it can be called such), imo, clearly has a nativist tone. Feel free to tell me why it does not. I notice you didn't bother with that yet. And I might be wrong about the poem, so I'm giving you, or anyone else, another chance. If I'm wrong, tell me why.

Oh, and by the way, you still haven't explained what psychiatrists with legal expertise have to do with any of this.
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Plane

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #21 on: May 04, 2008, 01:11:21 PM »

No, literally "fear of the home"...


you and others get to defend your position by assertions that people who don't agree with you are "oikophobes", are in denial and are hypocrites,


Lets proceed on the assumption that these terms do not describe you , do they describe anyone? many or few? anyone important?

There really were spys from priveledge , that is history , but is there such a thing happening now?

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #22 on: May 04, 2008, 05:29:10 PM »

No, literally "fear of the home"...


Well, that article was somewhat creepy.



Exactly, why? Because he finds his own culture, customs, language and laws worth defending?

Anyway, I find interesting that you and others get to defend your position by assertions that people who don't agree with you are "oikophobes", are in denial and are hypocrites, but no one is supposed to say anything bad about you. If I see something obviously nativist in tone, I cannot say so, apparently, because that would be mean and judgmental, and it might hurt someone's feelings. But you, on the other hand, get to make the absurd suggestion that I have some fear/aversion/dislike of home. Talk about a double standard.

Who said you "can't"? If I had a nickle for every time I heard words like xenophobe, [fac, rac, nativ,]*ist applied to people who object to getting crap-flooded with uninvited immigrants, I could've retired by now. Some people seem to think if they apply a word that ends with an "ist" to a position, they've magically de-legitimized it. Fine and dandy. But why do so strenuously object to being responded to in kind?

I could explain how much I love this country, living here, being here, being born here, but I doubt any of that would make a dent. The fact that I disagree with you is enough to get me labeled an "oikophobe". In point of fact, my love of "home" is one of the reasons I favor less restricted immigration. Not that I expect that to be something you're going to understand, given your current erroneous characterizations of my position. And of course I could point out that I am not in denial about the changes that could be brought by less restricted immigration. In actuality, I believe I am more aware and more accepting of the changes than those who fearfully, yes fearfully, seek to close down borders and shut out the Them of the world. That other folks have been distracted by alarmist talk and nativist rhetoric is not my fault, and pointing it out is not hateful of those other folks or of my native country.

Kudos on your "acceptance" of other people's cultures. Odd, though, you don't seem to think enough of your own to feel it's worth preserving. Why do others have a right to come here and demand we respect their culture, but we don't have a right to demand our own culture be respected?

So I'm not terribly sorry if your feelings were hurt. And while your current level of complete mischaracterization of my comments and my position leads me to conclude that you're not going to understand my arguments any time soon, I refuse to let you define for me what is and is not acceptable to say. This ersatz political correctness wherein I am supposed to never say "nativist" or "xenophobia" because its unfair to you is nonsense, and I will treat it as such.

My feelings aren't hurt in the least. But if you want to apply that kind of semantic mugging to people with opposing positions, I wouldn't be too terribly surprised when they respond in kind.

Which leads me back to where I was at the end of my previous post of this thread. The poem (if it can be called such), imo, clearly has a nativist tone. Feel free to tell me why it does not. I notice you didn't bother with that yet. And I might be wrong about the poem, so I'm giving you, or anyone else, another chance. If I'm wrong, tell me why.

How are you defining "nativism"? According to Wikipedia, "Nativism encompasses a range of movements or policies which favour the well being of an existing society in situations of contact with other cultures or immigration." Perhaps you'd like to explain why it's virtuous to be an advocate for the alien, but not for the native? In any event, I fail to see what's intrinsically "nativist" about complaining about people who aren't here legally in the first place abusing public services. That would seem to be a perfectly legitimate complaint to me.

Oh, and by the way, you still haven't explained what psychiatrists with legal expertise have to do with any of this.[/color]

That's not the only definition of "alienist". But I'm sure you already knew that.
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Xavier_Onassis

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #23 on: May 04, 2008, 07:47:34 PM »
Any way you look at it, there are only 12 million illegals out of 300 million in the US. If the support services are not adequate to cover what amounts to 4% of the population, then the major problem is not with the immigrants, but with the support services. The same problems would occur if there were no illegals, and probably do occur where there are very few of them.

The right wing wants illegals in the country, because the Oligarchy needs the cheap labor to make profits in such industries as food processing and constructon. The left wing doesn't want to alienate the legal and voting members of the immigrants who are related to them. The problem would not exist without powerful incentives to keep the unworking and unworkable status quo.

Both the left and the right have many people who do not wish any effective policy, and that is why we don't have one.

The analogy of the songbirds is a but silly: no one wants immigrants here for entertainment purposes. If we wanted to hear their music, we'd just but the recordings. A desire to be entertained by music is not a left or right wing issue.

Observe that we are not overrun by symphonic musicians who used to play for Deutsche Grammaphone.
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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #24 on: May 05, 2008, 12:11:28 AM »

Lets proceed on the assumption that these terms do not describe you , do they describe anyone? many or few? anyone important?


What terms? "Oikophobe"? I am not aware of anyone who advocates more open immigration policy because he hates, fears or otherwise dislikes his own country. Perhaps there are some people who do, but I don't know them or know of them.
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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #25 on: May 05, 2008, 01:14:56 AM »

Quote
Well, that article was somewhat creepy.

Exactly, why? Because he finds his own culture, customs, language and laws worth defending?


No, not at all. Because in a nicely Orwellian fashion he claims wanting to keep outsiders out is merely defending one's homeland while being accepting of immigrants is a mark of fearful hatred of one's own home. That, exactly, is why.


Quote
If I see something obviously nativist in tone, I cannot say so, apparently, because that would be mean and judgmental, and it might hurt someone's feelings.

Who said you "can't"?


I believe Paul Belien made the argument that it just wouldn't be nice. And then of course there is your sputtering objection, "Why is it that the oikophobes and alienists feel they have to use words like 'nativist' and 'xenophobe' to characterize those with opposing views, as if they were suffering from some form of neuroses?" You see, I am not to use such terms because you apparently think it's mean. Meanwhile, I'm apparently supposed to take the nonsense of "oikophobe" in stride. As I said, a double standard.


But why do so strenuously object to being responded to in kind?


I don't object to being responded to in kind. I object to someone telling me I'm blindly in denial, that I must be a whatever-ophobe if I do not agree with his position while he bitches about me expressing my opinion using a word he doesn't like. What what it you said? Oh yes, "Sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander!" Indeed it is my friend. The whole "how dare you use the word 'nativist', you oikophobe!" attitude is simply not leaving you the high ground.


Kudos on your "acceptance" of other people's cultures. Odd, though, you don't seem to think enough of your own to feel it's worth preserving.


When I said I did not expect you to understand, this is pretty much what I meant. The thing is, I do believe my own culture is worth preserving. But then, as I look back at my culture and my country's history, I can see clearly that a major part of my culture is the influx of immigrants in large numbers and that a major part of my country's history has been the benefits of that influx. Yes, I would like to preserve that.


Why do others have a right to come here and demand we respect their culture, but we don't have a right to demand our own culture be respected?


Don't we? I'd say we do. But then, there is a difference between respecting our culture and trying to make our culture into law. As I have explained before, there is a difference between a melting pot and a smelting pot. And anyway, for the most part the reasons the immigrants want to come here is because they do respect our culture and seek to benefit from the liberty and capitalism that are significant parts of that culture.


But if you want to apply that kind of semantic mugging to people with opposing positions, I wouldn't be too terribly surprised when they respond in kind.


Believe me, I'm not surprised in the least. What surprises me is that you object to my use of the term 'nativist' (and apparently 'xenophobia' as well, though I have not made use of that term in this thread until just now) but have yet to explain why my use of the term was wrong.


How are you defining "nativism"? According to Wikipedia, "Nativism encompasses a range of movements or policies which favour the well being of an existing society in situations of contact with other cultures or immigration." Perhaps you'd like to explain why it's virtuous to be an advocate for the alien, but not for the native?


Heh, if that is the definition of nativism as you understand it, then why are you complaining?

Anyway, you're good at imagining arguments you don't like and assigning them other people. I have not argued that it is virtuous to be an advocate for the alien, but not for the native. So why would I waste time explaining something I haven't said? Why don't you first ask me if that is what I think, and then I will have an excuse to explain that it is not what I think. Then, rather than talk past each other, we can attempt to understand the positions of each other as they are, rather than as you seem so eager to imagine them to be.



How are you defining "nativism"? According to Wikipedia, "Nativism encompasses a range of movements or policies which favour the well being of an existing society in situations of contact with other cultures or immigration." Perhaps you'd like to explain why it's virtuous to be an advocate for the alien, but not for the native? In any event, I fail to see what's intrinsically "nativist" about complaining about people who aren't here legally in the first place abusing public services. That would seem to be a perfectly legitimate complaint to me.


You fail to see how "complaining about people who aren't here legally in the first place abusing public services" fits with the definition of nativism you have provided? Hm.

Well, nativism, as I understand it in the context of this issue, is the notion that the nation, culture or other native traits should be protected against the influence of immigrants and outsiders. Seems to me, "complaining about people who aren't here legally in the first place abusing public services" is exactly nativist. Yes, it might be a legitimate complaint (not that I'd say it was), but that doesn't mean it is not nativist. Even so, feel free to tell me why I'm wrong.



Quote
[color=#000066Oh, and by the way, you still haven't explained what psychiatrists with legal expertise have to do with any of this.[/color]

That's not the only definition of "alienist". But I'm sure you already knew that.


Actually, I'm not familiar with that use of the word. I thought it might be something like that, but I did not want to assume.
« Last Edit: May 05, 2008, 01:17:30 AM by Universe Prince »
Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever.
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Xavier_Onassis

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #26 on: May 05, 2008, 09:12:02 AM »
Ok the advertisement at the bottom of the page just now was for hummingbird feeders , this just seems like too much of a coincidence.

Is there a program picking keywords out of our posts and matching related ads to them?

========================================================

well, duh!

See what ads this summons:

LARGER PENIS
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #27 on: May 05, 2008, 04:06:04 PM »
So no one is willing to answer the question I asked?

I saw Rich's answer. Though it is interesting, it really is no alternative to multiculturalism, it is simply another way of saying uniculturalism. Is that the ideal? If so, why is it better?

As for Mexican immigrants, I've yet to see all the so-called problems beyond massive rhetoric. If it is really a problem of having to "press one for English" then you'll get no sympathy from me. That just sounds like a whining child.
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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #28 on: May 05, 2008, 05:27:42 PM »
Ok the advertisement at the bottom of the page just now was for hummingbird feeders , this just seems like too much of a coincidence.

Is there a program picking keywords out of our posts and matching related ads to them?

========================================================

well, duh!

See what ads this summons:

LARGER PENIS

Discover Singapore

?

Universe Prince

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Re: The Bird Feeder (aka Liberalism)
« Reply #29 on: May 05, 2008, 06:20:19 PM »
There is a strange parallel, imo, to the arguments of protecting the culture, language and customs of the U.S. That is the arguments made against genetically modified foods. People and nature have been genetically modifying foods throughout history. Now that scientists can do so more directly, suddenly some people seem concerned about protecting the purity, the "naturalness" (for lack of a better word) of their food. Never mind that pretty much any edible plant food that we have is the result of crossbreeding either naturally or by humans seeking heartier plants and better yield.

So what about nativism? We here in the U.S., and the Western world generally, live in a culture that is an amalgamation of many cultures, speak a language that is an evolved amalgamation of many languages, and have customs that are an amalgamation of things borrowed from many different societies and groups. And some people are arguing that this amalgamation of amalgamations must be protected from outside influences because these outside influences are going to ruin our culture and our society.

So I'm watching people who benefit from these things say "no more, these things must stop if we are preserve our way of life." And I'm thinking, preserving our way of life would mean continuing these things, modifying foods and plants, allowing large influxes of immigrants because that is very much a part of our way of life. I'm being accused of oikophibia (aversion to one's home) and of not thinking enough of my own culture to believe it is worth preserving. These accusations are quite far from the truth. I love my country and my culture. I love the amalgamation of cultures here that enrich my country and my life. This language I speak and write with is an amazing language, broad enough to cover an infinite number of ideas, and the power to speak them with eloquence. The wide varity of customs here, from the Christian to the Jewish to the Pagan, from the European to the African to the Indian, and on and on, these all make this country an astounding and wonderfully rich place to live. Why would I want to stop any of that? Why would I want to stop the further enrichment of my country and my culture? I do want to preserve my culture and do love my "home", and these are among the reasons I support open immigration.
Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever.
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