|
BACK TO TABLE OF CONTENTS
BOOK REVIEW-THE DEATH OF THE WEST
by Patrick J. Buchanan, 308 pages
$38.95 Cdn.,St. Martin's Press, 2002
In this hard-hitting
book, US conservative journalist, Pat Buchanan, confronts issues
which many fear to approach. He outlines the threats to western
civilization with brutal honesty. Not for the squeamish, the book
addresses the roots and methods of the cultural revolution taking
place in the West, the demographic crisis characterized by "more
coffins than cradles," global socialism and its elimination
of the need for families, and the de-Christianizing of the West.
Never shrinking
from controversy, taboo topics are fearlessly probed: He identifies
the media as evangelists of the revolution - TV, theatre, magazines,
music. He accuses business of luring women out of the home and keeping
them "out of the maternity ward" since that makes them
"no good to the company."
He notes the
end of the family wage (enough to support women and children at
home) and how trade unions were formerly opposed to the employment
of women. He calls the pill "the suicide tablet of the West."
Buchanan states: "Is it not a remarkable coincidence how global
capitalism's view of women - as units of production, liberated from
husbands, home, and family - conforms so precisely to the view of
the fathers of global communism?"
Feminist
Conformity
Shocking, revealing
quotations are woven throughout the book. Along with other anti-West
movements, raw feminism is exposed. American, Margaret Sanger, founder
of Planned Parenthood, is quoted: "The most merciful thing
a large family can do to one of its infant members is kill it."
Radical feminist,
Andrea Dworkin: Marriage is "an institution [that] developed
from rape as a practice", "the nuclear family must be
destroyed."
Radical feminist,
Catherine McKinnon, legal advisor to Canadian feminists on the rape
shield law in 1992: "Feminism stresses the indistinguishability
of prostitution, marriage and sexual harassment."
According to Babette Francis, "an immediate consequence of feminism
is what appears to be an irreversible decline in the birth rate.
Nations pursue feminist policies at their peril," she
said.
War on Religion
In the chapter
"Catechism of a Revolution," Mr. Buchanan outlines the
new faith of the revolution, its intolerant "militant spirit,"
and its two major commandments: all lifestyles are equal, and thou
shalt not be judgmental. Defiance of the new orthodoxy is hate speech.
Hate crime is a new moral crime. Buchanan chronicles the "dethronement
of God" in American society through aggressive litigation "according
to the dictates of courts imposing the agendas of the American Civil
Liberties Union and the Humanist Manifesto." He traces the
origins of the therapeutic state, where children are conditioned
to "reject their parents' social and moral beliefs as racist,
sexist and homophobic, and conditioned to embrace the new morality."
Obscene art is "but another front of the cultural revolution's
relentless war on Christianity," he writes.
In the chapter
"The Coming Great Migrations" he forecasts huge shifts
in populations as a result of collapsing birth rates in the West,
due to the triumph of secularism. He reminds us that "the culture
war is a religious war" and "when religion dies, so does
culture."
A Wake-up
Call
Buchanan claims
that core constituencies of the left understand culture war, while
many conservatives are "blissfully unaware there is even a
war." He notes: "The hearts of many on the Right are in
cutting marginal tax rates and eliminating the capital gains tax."
Trotsky is quoted: "You may not be interested in war but war
is interested in you."
Buchanan uses
colorful language to describe the crisis in the West: a society
steeped in pornography, a polluted culture, the intimidated majority,
the war against the past, racial racketeering, and the imperial
judiciary. He quotes historians and poets who grasp the essence
of historical movements and tyrannies. Buchanan lists recommendations
for families who have the will to resist the new order and its "cultural
wasteland."
With abundant
references, web site locations, case histories, statistics and quotations
from historians, philosophers, religious leaders, revolutionaries
and tyrants, The Death of the West is worth reading. The
focus is on the United States, but Canadians will find much that
is informative and applicable to our situation in this eye-opening
book, since the culture war is global.
BACK TO TABLE OF CONTENTS
|