Despite the fact that Geert Wilders is constantly sucking up to the Christians, Church leaders in the Netherlands are not reciprocating. Fully 75% of Dutch ministers and church workers not only oppose Wilders, but say bluntly that "a Christian cannot vote for" him or his party, according to a poll of a cross-section of Protestant denominations (as reported at the DutchNews.nl website).
Wilders' chumminess with "Judeo-Christians" is one of the primary ways in which he reveals that he is not a true libertarian. While absolutely defending complete freedom of religion, genuine libertarianism is uncompromisingly hostile to both Protestantism and Catholicism, because regardless of whether Jesus is on or off the cross, the Church is among the deadliest foes of individual liberty.
Wilders has obviously been studying American "Libertarians", like Bob Barr. Barr is a past champion of the War On Drugs and the Patriot Act, a man who believes that extramarital oral-sex during working hours is an act of treason, and who has recently had difficulty deciding whether or not the first amendment applies to non-monotheists. At the same time he has been trying to pass himself off as a standard bearer of libertarianism, or at least of the party that bears the name "Libertarian."
You see, like better sex, "liberty" is one of those things that everyone is for, or at least claims to be for. But principled libertarianism, or anything even remotely resembling it, has very little to do with modern party politics in the U.S. Not too long ago, though, there seemed to be some hope that this might not be the case in the Netherlands. Pim Fortuyn, for example, combined his criticism of Islam with a libertarianism that was far more consistent than Wilders'.
For example, Fortuyn supported such traditional Dutch values as legalization of recreational drugs and prostitution, and, more generally (and like a good libertarian) opposed any criminalization of "victimless crimes" or any other kind of government interference in how people choose to lead their lives. This was not only a matter of principle for Fortuyn, but it was also in line with his own libertine lifestyle which was often described as "flashy", or even "flamboyant."
Fortuyn was an openly gay man, and he will always be remembered for his command performance during a nationally televised debate with a radical Muslim cleric in 2002, just months before his assassination, when he baited the Imam by flaunting his homosexuality until the cleric finally exploded in a torrent of anti-gay abuse. Fortuyn then calmly turned to the camera and, addressing the viewers directly (he was also extremely telegenic), told them that this is the kind of Trojan horse of intolerance the Dutch are inviting into their society in the name of "multiculturalism."
[That gorgeous portrait of Pim Fortuyn is by the extraordinary Dutch artist Jean Thomassen.]
A Dutch woman among the throngs of mourners outside Fortuyn's house the day after his assassination proudly pointed to her "well exposed cleavage" and told a BBC reporter, "I want to be free to walk around like this. But they come up to me [Muslim immigrants] and swear at me or even spit at me."
But Wilders is no Fortuyn. In fact, Wilders sounds just like a southern Republican when he talks about "law and order" -- he even supports adoption of draconian sentencing "guidelines" like those that have already turned the US into a literal police-state. And naturally he wants to close the coffee-shops and wage "war on drugs."
But most troublesome of all is Wilders incessant invocation of "Judeo-Christianity," which he claims must be defended against Islam along with "Humanism." Of course the rights of Christians to worship freely are menaced by Islam -- just ask any Christian living anywhere in the world in a Muslim majority culture! But it is an obscentiy to give credit to Christianity for the relative freedom that is now enjoyed in the West. But that is exactly what Wilders does. It ridiculous for people who love individual freedom to make common cause with Christians against Islam: in an ideal world they could be allowed to fight each other until they either come to their senses or they have "extirpated" each other into oblivion.
Wilders routinely declares that freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and individual liberty in general are (1) "European", (2) "Western", (3) "Judeo-Christian", (4) "our", and (5) "Humanist" values. But this is actually very reminiscent of that famed Sesame Street routine: "One of these things (is not like the others)." Europe, including Western Europe, has for nearly all of it's history been ruled by totalitarian states, usually Christian theocracies. "Humanism", on the other hand, was an intellectual movement of the Renaissance that can reasonably be seen as a precursor to modern liberal and/or libertarian conceptions of individualism and freedom.
But those who have fought for the rights of the individual over the last 500 years of modern, western history, have always been opposed by the Church -- both Catholic and Protestant alike. For example, the now famed Statue of Virginia for Religious Freedom (authored by Thomas Jefferson and also strongly supported by his friend James Madison) was opposed by Anglicans, Congregationalists, and other Protestants in Virginia who nearly defeated it. And one of the leaders of that alliance of good Christians was none other than Patrick Henry!
The Christians of Virginia wanted to "establish" approved Protestant denominations who would be officially recognized, and subsidized, by the State! This was the status that Anglicans and Congregationalists had enjoyed, under British law, prior to the Revolution. (It might also be worth noting that Jefferson, Madison and Henry were all slave owners.)
And European totalitarianism is hardly a thing of the far distant past. All of continental Europe lay in the grip of Stalin and Hitler just eight decades ago. And European nations (other than the USSR) prior to WWII were still unabashedly Christian nations where non-Christians were treated little better than non-Muslims are treated today in Muslim countries, and where anti-Semitism and "scientific racism" were virulent, and unchecked, psychic cancers. And these same European "Great Powers", had also savagely conquered and subjugated nearly the entire inhabited world with their colonialism.
So let "us" not be too self-congratulatory about how free "we" and our "values" are. Freedom should be cherished, but so must the truth. Sometimes the enemy of my enemy is no friend of mine at all.
We can learn something from those Dutch Protestant leaders who want nothing to do with Wilders. If freedom is really part of "our" values, then why don't those good Christians oppose the very real threat posed by Islam? Perhaps the idea of holding a religion responsible for a consistent track record, up to the present day, of violence and intolerance just makes them nervous?
Wilders is absolutely correct in his criticism of Islam, including his characterization of it as fascistic. And Wilders is not a far-rightist, let alone a neo-nazi or some kind of fascist himself. He strongly supports gay rights and women's rights. As was often said of Pim Fortuyn, it's accurate to say that Wilders is to the left of many members of the US Democratic Party! Not that that is saying much.
But Wilders, apparently out of a combination of his desire for political success and a lack of understanding of Western history, has decided that while Islam is an enemy of freedom, Christianity is on the side of freedom. For now I don't think that this makes Wilders himself an enemy of freedom, but it does make him an extremely unreliable friend.
A fantastic post. I really wish that Fortuyn was still alive today.
ReplyDeleteHe was quite a guy. The world would be more interesting if he were still with us!
ReplyDeleteI have to agree with everything you said here. I think Wilder's decision to embrace Christianity or "Judeo-Christian values" as the remedy for Islamist extremism is unfortunate and uninformed. Can someone please send him a book about the enlightenment?
ReplyDeleteMelanie Phillips has taken the same stance and appears equally uninformed about where the rights of a western liberal democracy derive from *sigh*.
BTW, the Italian journalist, Oriana Fallaci, also embarked on a challenge to Islam before she died of cancer. She was an atheist, but a woman of bizarre contradictions because she loved Pope Ratzinger. Nonetheless, she lived with constant threats on her life before succumbing to her illness and challenged the Ayatollah in person about the chador in a way that so infuriate him that he stood up and stormed out of the interview. She was a tough, interesting, and somewhat batty broad. Here's an interesting article about her thoughts on Islam in Europe:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.newyorker.com/archive/2006/06/05/060605fa_fact
I understand Wilders for what he beleives in the very basic essences of human rights. Nevertheless, the he should not close the door on the Muslims who are going through a primordial religious and philosophical evolution and search for enlightment. I still think they need Westerners to make a leap over the dark ages of Islam. This was the same for Judeo-Christians only that both religions are more ancient.
ReplyDeleteI understand Wilders for what he beleives in the very basic essences of human rights. Nevertheless, the he should not close the door on the Muslims who are going through a primordial religious and philosophical evolution and search for enlightment. I still think they need Westerners to make a leap over the dark ages of Islam. This was the same for Judeo-Christians only that both religions are more ancient.
ReplyDelete"...who are going through a primordial religious and philosophical evolution and search for enlightment."
ReplyDeleteDoes this translate to "don't worry, they'll grow out of it"?
>> Does this translate to "don't worry, they'll grow out of it"? <<
ReplyDeleteA lot of people seem to think that Islam will go through a liberalizing process similar to that which Christianity (supposedly) went through over the last several centuries. Personally I think that is a very naive idea for which there is no basis.
"But it is an obscentiy to give credit to Christianity for the relative freedom that is now enjoyed in the West."
ReplyDeleteI object. The Judeo-Christian worldview underpins all our dignity as human beings, along with all out inherent rights and concomitant responsibilities.
Unless there is a God Who has made us and endowed us with dignity, there is nothing in the Universe to give meaning, or to form an adequate accountability base for morals and standards of behaviour.
So humanism can't substitute as a philosophy of life sufficiently robust to withstand the attacks of totalitarianism in its varied forms. Consequently, Mamiel, the Enlightenment does not provide us with an adequate moral/ethical basis for living.