Egypt is Where History Goes to Die
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
One of the biggest differences between
conservatives and liberals is that while
conservatives believe that history is an expression
of human nature, liberals don't believe in history,
they believe in historical processes.
The shortage of conservatives explains why so
many politicians and pundits glowingly endorsed the
Arab Spring as the "end of history" because the
historical processes had been achieved, the check
boxes were ticked and Egypt, Tunisia and the rest of
the Arab Spring countries would shortly reach the
same historical terminus that Sweden, France and the
United Kingdom had achieved.
It also explains why so many politicians are
frantically trying to "fix" Egypt by putting it on
the right historical track.
The liberal understanding of history is so
hopelessly dominant that it never occurs to most of
them that countries can't be fixed. They aren't
leaky sinks, but systems emerging from a national
culture. Egypt can't be fixed by calling the
plumbers of democracy to tighten a few valves and
bully the natives into holding another election.
The last election didn't fix Egypt. There's no
reason to believe that another one will. Elections
did not fix a single Arab Spring country. They
didn't fix Russia. They won't fix China.
The men and women studiously examining their map of
historical processes and urging Egypt to go left and
then right and then left again don't understand
Egypt or history.
They don't understand much of anything else either.
To the liberal misreading of history, a failed state
is like an overweight fellow. Map out a diet and
exercise regimen for him based on historical
processes, things that he must do and mustn't do and
he'll get better. If he isn't following orders, make
him run through the right historical processes. If
the whole thing backfires, refuse to admit it,
because progressive policies never fail.
Push that logic forward and there is no reason to
think that the past is relevant to a nation at all.
Not when historical processes break away the present
from the past and the future from the present.
There is no real need to understand Egypt or the
Muslim Brotherhood in any great depth. Not when they
are about to be transformed by the magic of
democracy. The Muslim Brotherhood may have been a
terrorist organization in the past, its branches may
still engage in terrorism, but that stops mattering
once the Brotherhood bows to the historical process
of democracy. Egypt's history also vanishes once it
is transmuted through the magic of elections.
Democracy didn't actually change Egypt. Egypt is
still the same country it was before Obama's Cairo
speech. It's poorer, more unstable and more
dangerous. But it hasn't really changed.
Historical processes are progressive. They are a
sort of school for nations. You pass one class and
then another. Sometimes you might flunk a class, but
then you retake it and move forward. Follow the
historical processes and you continue moving
forward.
The assumption that historical processes align with
a forward motion, that the liberalization of a
society moves it forward, are so innate that it goes
unquestioned. It is why democracy is held to be a
good, entirely apart from its outcome. Even if
democratic elections lead to a takeover by a junta
of fanatical cannibals, the very act of holding an
election moves a society forward through one hoop in
the great circus of historical processes. The
immediate result may be cannibalism, but in the long
run, as Arab Spring advocates remind us from the
editorial pages, the society moves forward.
The liberal understanding of history made it
impossible to see the Muslim Brotherhood for what it
was because its victory did not fit the march of
progress. The victory of the Muslim Brotherhood in a
democratic election meant that it was progressive.
Because that is how the forward motion of history is
meant to work. And its overthrow had to be
considered reactionary, regardless of the issues.
This blinkered view discarded the issues and nature
of the participants. It traded the contents of the
system, for the addiction of process. It made the
same mistakes as in Iraq and Afghanistan, drifting
on a democracy high without paying attention to who
was actually winning the elections and what their
plans for the future were. The conviction that
Afghanistan or Iraq or Egypt were moving forward was
not borne out by anything except the spectacle of
process and the conviction that everything was bound
to keep moving forward, especially if we gave it a
push or two.
The conservative understanding of Iraq,
Afghanistan and Egypt was that these places were
backward because the culture of the people, their
occupations, the way that they chose to live, kept
it that way. But in the liberal understanding of
history, they were backward because they had been
denied access to modern processes for upgrading
their societies. Give them democracy and they'll be
Europe in no time at all.
It did not occur to them that the reason Egypt
wasn't England had nothing to do with elections and
everything to do with the culture of a broken
country that hasn't gotten all that far past
feudalism, and whose "modern" face was slapped
together by European colonialism and local dictators
borrowing European ideas and applying thin layers of
them across the surface of a much older culture.
Processes don't move a society forward. The striving
to learn and grow, to push beyond the next horizon
and find out what is over the next hill. That innate
organic expansionism, that creative dissatisfaction,
cannot be transplanted or imposed externally. It
either grows out of the soul of a culture or it does
not. The historical processes that matter are a
byproduct of such strivings.
The liberal puts structures before people while the
conservative puts people before structures. Men are
not numbers and there is no innate historical
destiny to their processes that can exist apart from
their whims, needs, urges, frustrations, rages,
loves and unsettled ambitions. When we look into the
structures of history we find that they, like the
Trojan Horse, are filled with people.
We are not bound to move forward. It is quite
possible that we are moving back. And even that
sense of direction is a matter of opinion. To the
Islamists of the Muslim Brotherhood, backward is
forward, as they push on toward the 7th century.
The sense of historical direction in Cairo or New
York is not an abstract, but a function of culture,
a product of the things we value and strive toward.
It is possible to distinguish the healthy and
unhealthy cultures through the outcome of these
products, but it is not possible to make a culture
want not only the things we want, but to want them
in the same way and through the same means.
Egypt is where history goes to die. Beneath its
sands, there are ages and ages of lost time, lost
civilizations and lost pasts that might have been.
They lie there untouched by the mantra of historical
processes. They simple were and are no more.
The Arab Spring is nothing but another one of those
many sedimentary layers of history that fall into
the sands and crunch under the sandals of the
cultures that take each other's place. There was a
time when Egypt moved forward, but those were
ancient times and ancient days.
The modern Egypt is a jumble of crushed histories
and broken pasts, its people combine the conquerors
and the conquered, their histories lost and the
futures unsought. Islam has cloaked them in its
characteristic darkness that teaches its followers
to strive for nothing except the subjugation of
others to its will.
Egypt has not been an empire for a very long time.
It is a colony of colonies, settled by foreigners,
ruled by foreigners, surrounded by ancient history
and detached from it. It is full of history and yet
it has no history. It has no true past or future.
Only the tedium of a present that never changes
because the spirit that once moved the men of these
sands forward has dried up. There is anger, fear and
hate that follow the old familiar paths through the
sand to the same destinations.
There is no future here. There is no history here.
Egypt is where history goes to die, buried in its
tombs with its ancient kings, lying in wait for
another time when the sands will shift, the stones
will fall and time will begin moving again.