

14 free states and the horde
Politics and possibly life and probably everything are a struggle between power and anti-power; anti-power makes power stronger until it overrides it. Then it kills it. With the historic healthcare vote this week, the forces of anti-power have overwhelmed and conquered the American impulse to power. That is a good thing, as we won’t be nuking the Russians now. It is a bad thing because we won’t be doing anything else of consequence. It is a marker, like Waterloo to Napoleon, like Lenin’s black train to Nicholas and Alexandra’s Russia. Change has come.
Life in America as we have known it since 1946 is finished. Something else will
happen. What is interesting is that this yielding was to internal American
forces and not to external threats. It is possible to envision America ahead to
be not unlike England in the 1950s, broke and broken, with cheap rents in
Liverpool and Manchester, and the men with the “right stuff” on the docks of
Liverpool who conquered the world in ships 200 years before, idled and impotent
but with full healthcare. And desperately seeking passage to America. They had
no where to turn but to America. Possibly we have no where to turn now but to
China, begging for mercy and sponsorship. Signals from Copenhagen suggest it
will not be forthcoming. As with Victoria’s England and the Romanov’s Russia,
neighbors and opponents begin sharpening their swords when they sense mortal
weakness.
At a high school honors ceremony last week a student said that character is not
just knowing what to do. Everyone knows that. Character is having the courage
to do it. Out of the 30-some states that have initiated states rights
legislation last year, 14 differentiate themselves by bringing a constitutional
challenge to the bill. They have found courage to challenge a bill that has
been in the works, as President Obama said, for 100 years. It is the 100-year
ride of the philosophy of the anti-hero he refers to; the agent and agency of
the horde.
The horde has won. The horde always wins in time. Fouad Ajami writes eloquently
on the philosophy of the horde and there are a number of books about American’s
pending decline, like David Murrin’s Breaking the Code of History and William Strauss and Neil Howe’s The
Fourth Turning.
But these books and most books like this look at America as a unified economic
and cultural matrix when in fact, the agricultural center of the country is a
different America with different values than the urbanized, post-industrial
America on the edges. The center, marked by the initiative of the 14 states, is
alive and well with good values. It is the edges that are sick and dying.
The constitutional challenge will likely not hold up. Thomas Jefferson and
James Madison warned us that if the federal government became the sole and
exclusive arbiter of its own powers, those powers would continue to grow,
regardless of elections, courts, separation of powers or other much-vaunted
checks and balances, says Michael Boldin, founder of the Tenth Amendment
Center. But it too is a marker and has drawn new, original boundaries. This is
no longer about Republican and Democrat. It is about regions. And the healthy
center states must find a way now to protect themselves from the dying edges.
Incidentally, the new TV show “V” starts this month. That is what it is about:
The benign takeover of America’s political life and soul by benevolents (alien
lizards in Pelosi, Hoyer, Reid clothing), and a path to survive and defend
against it.
Visit Mr. Quigley's website at http://quigleyblog.blogspot.com.








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