Dayton Daily News

During a global pandemic, it’s every nation for itself

- Pat Buchanan

“The lamps are going out all over Europe, we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime,” said Foreign Secretary Sir Edward Grey to a friend on the eve of Britain’s entry into the First World War.

Observing from afar as the coronaviru­s pandemic ravages the Old Continent, Grey’s words return to mind. And as the Great War changed Europe forever, the COVID-19 pandemic seems to be changing the way European peoples see each other.

“All for one and one for all!” These were the words by which “The Three Musketeers” of Alexandre Dumas lived their lives.

This was the ideal upon which the EU and NATO were built. An attack against one is an attack against all. The Schengen Agreement by which citizens of Europe are as free to travel through the countries of their continent as Americans are to travel from Maryland to Virginia is rooted in that ideal.

Yet, suddenly, all that seems to belong to yesterday.

FROM THE RIGHT

Michelle Malkin Star Parker

Jonah Goldberg Walter E. Williams Pat Buchanan Marc E. Thiessen George Will

How the EU’s nation-states are reacting to the coronaviru­s crisis brings to mind another phrase, a French phrase, “Sauve qui peut,” a rough translatio­n of which is, “Every man for himself.”

The New York Times has written of the new reality: “While some European leaders, like President Emmanuel Macron of France, have called for intensifyi­ng cooperatio­n across nations, others are trying to close their countries off.”

In a few days, the Europe of open borders has become history.

Italy, hardest-hit country after China, is on lockdown. Germany is closing its borders with Austria, Denmark, France, Luxembourg and Switzerlan­d. The Czech Republic, Cyprus, Denmark, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Slovakia have announced they will close borders to all foreigners. President Donald Trump has expanded his travel ban on Europe to include two of America’s oldest friends, Britain and Ireland.

Slovenia has closed its border with Italy. Norway is on lockdown. Internatio­nal travelers who arrive in Norway risk a mandatory 14-day quarantine, regardless of their health.

What we are witnessing is the clash of the claims of human nature and of ideology.

Through history, most men have put attachment­s of family, tribe, faith, country, race and nation above the claims of liberal ideology.

But while all citizens may have the same God-given right to life and constituti­onal right to “equal protection of the laws,” all people do not have equal rights to our affections or concerns.

For most men, the claims of the heart are superior to those of the mind. Foreign folks do not have the same claims upon us as our own. In a crisis, people put families, friends and country first.

In the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, Jefferson declares that, “all men are created equal.” Yet, what truly seems to enrage him and to justify the rebellion against George III are the crimes the king had committed and that he had been “deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguin­ity.”

The king had violated the claims of our common blood while we Americans had not been “wanting in attentions to our British brethren.”

Closing borders is a grievous offense against liberalism that is supposedly rooted in the sin of xenophobia. But what government­s in Europe are saying by closing their borders, what Americans are saying by banning travel from Europe, is that while all men may be created equal, we will always put our own people first, ahead of the rest.

When a crisis comes, be it a war in which the survival of the nation is at stake or an epidemic where the health and survival of our people is at stake, we take care of our own first.

This is human nature. This is the way the world works.

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