The newly elected Mayor of New York, Zohran Mamdani, said in his inaugural speech that he wanted to replace "the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism".
| Zohran Mamdani at his inauguration |
Bishop Robert Barron responded negatively, with the comment:
Collectivism in its various forms is responsible for the deaths of at least one hundred million people in the last century. Socialist and Communist forms of government around the world today - Venezuela, Cuba, North Korea etc - are disastrous. Catholic social teaching has consistently condemned socialism and has embraced the market economy , which people like Mayor Mamdani caricatures as "rugged individualism."Fr Dave McNaughton disagreed, replying:
Bishop Barron is gaslighting...Reading the full text suggests that Mamdani was advocating for a very Catholic idea, the practice of solidarity. Shame on Bishop Barron.
So, do we follow the priest or the bishop on this issue? Even though I'm not as straightforwardly in favour of the market economy as Bishop Barron (as the market needs to be regulated carefully or else it too can be dissolving of society), nonetheless I was more disappointed with Fr McNaughton's position.
It is a rookie error to think that the meaning of words used by progressive moderns is the same as how those words were once understood in pre-modern times or in church theology. Moderns did not abandon traditional concepts like freedom, equality or justice, but instead colonised them so that they could be used within a modernist framework. It is therefore a mistake to assume that when figures like Mamdani use words like "collective" that this is an endorsement of traditional notions of solidarity.
Even though I am a long-time critic of the hyper-individualism of our culture, I understand why many people blanch when hearing the word "collective". It has become associated with ideological, centralised, statist, redistributist, technocratic, impersonal, distant and authoritarian forms of social organisation. This is not a type of solidarity that most people find appealing.
Some of these features come out in the politics of Cea Weaver, a young woman whom Mamdani has appointed to oversee rent control in New York. She wants to impoverish the white middle class; block the employment of white men; and discourage the procreation of white boys:
So the concept of solidarity as espoused by Cea Weaver does not extend to whites in general and white men in particular. Why? Because it has an ideological basis, as do most forms of modern "collectivism". She believes that the power structures that prevent humans from being truly free and equal are "whiteness" and "patriarchy" and therefore she sees things through a lens of white, male systemic privilege which makes her want to abolish white men rather than extend a hand of solidarity to them.
This is surely a long way from a genuinely Catholic understanding of solidarity.
Her viewpoint is also, predictably, redistributist (wanting to make the white middle class poor) and statist.
Ironically, the modernist view of solidarity is also, in its own way, individualistic. It seeks to "liberate" the individual from traditional forms of community, such as families, and instead provide a "socialised" care that is provided in an impersonal and detached way by a centralised, bureaucratically run welfare state.
We have travelled a considerable distance already toward this aim. Consider that in 1932, Leon Trotsky praised the efforts of the Bolsheviks to abolish the family in these terms:
The revolution made a heroic effort to destroy the so-called “family hearth” - that archaic, stuffy and stagnant institution ... The place of the family as a shut-in petty enterprise was to be occupied, according to the plans, by a finished system of social care and accommodation: maternity houses, creches, kindergartens, schools, social dining rooms, social laundries, first-aid stations, hospitals, sanatoria, athletic organizations, moving-picture theaters, etc.Note that Trotsky describes the family as a "shut-in petty enterprise". It was too local for him, too enclosed within itself, it was too much its own little world.
The priests think it's still some sort of principled Chesterton vs Shaw debate, but when Mamdami talks about frigid rugged individualism, it's not as a philosophical concept but as a caricature of John Wayne Marlboro Man historical Americana, and when he's talking about collectivism he's talking about his co-ethnics and other ethnic collectives, their determination not to give up their ethnic primary loyalties, not to assimilate to Americana, but to asset strip whites and distribute the loot based on which ethnic gangs show up in numbers.
ReplyDeleteAs you point out, mass Marxist collectivism is the other side of the coin of classic liberal individualism, and the only recourse available to its deracinated proles. But Mamdami's ethnic constituencies aren't Marxist collectivists, they're traditional collectivists bonded by family, race, religion rather than abstract universal sentiments.
There was a news item about Tadjik taxi drivers in Moscow, who were operating under Yandex, which like Uber is somebody's ideal of a frictionless classic liberal market of unattached individuals moving their little units of capital and labor to where there's an extra penny to be earned. But the Tadjiks work it in groups that provide startup capital, share cars and accommodation, support their sick and injured, and bond in communal lamb-roasts (look how warm and authentic and collective, the news item invited us to perceive). The Tadjik drivers have an emergency button on a Whatsapp group that can summon every Tadjik within 10 miles if one off their members is threatened - as one of the drivers explained it to the reverent white female reporter, we Tadjiks have a saying that one finger is weak but fingers together make a fist. Does such vigilantism and its supporting metaphor raise any alarm bells among reporters? No, Tadjiks aren't white so their ethnic collectivism is to be encouraged and celebrated. Whites aren't permitted ethnic collectivism - they're allowed to have precarious individualism and universalist collectivism, or whatever is left of the latter after it's been plundered by Somali day cares.
That's a bracing dose of realism, well-expressed, thank you.
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