The Denver Post

The end of the New World Order

- By Ross Douthat

It’s a mistake to believe most conspiracy theories, but it’s also a mistake to assume that they bear no relation to reality. Some are just insane emanations or deliberate misinforma­tion. But others exaggerate and misread important trends rather than denying them or offer implausibl­e explanatio­ns for mysteries that nonetheles­s linger unexplaine­d.

This is as true in the Trump era as in any other. Extraterre­strials are probably not among us, but we keep being handed new evidence that the UFO phenomenon is real. QAnon is a landscape of fantasy, but the fact that powerful sexual predators have ties to presidents, popes and princes is a hard post-Jeffrey Epstein truth.

Sometimes, though, conspiracy theories outlive the reality that once sustained them, surging in popularity just as the real world is making their anxieties irrelevant. And something like that may be happening right now with conspirato­rial thinking about the so-called New World Order. On the one hand, the coronaviru­s is inspiring a surge of NWO paranoia, a renewed fear of elite cabals that aspire to rule the world. But at the same time, the actual new world order, the dream of global integratio­n and transnatio­nal governance, is disintegra­ting before our very eyes.

The phrase “New World Order” was lifted by the conspiracy­minded from the optimistic rhetoric of George H.W. Bush, and since then the paranoia and the facts have existed symbiotica­lly. The fantasy is looming totalitari­an control, black helicopter­s descending, secret Bilderberg plots. But it’s been encouraged by various undeniable realities: the growth of transnatio­nal institutio­ns, the manifest power of a global overclass, the often undemocrat­ic expansion of the European Union, and the rise of digital surveillan­ce and the ties binding China and the U.S. into “Chimerica.”

Now it’s being given new life by the response to the coronaviru­s, which is being cast as a pretext for some sort of takeover — with Bill Gates and Anthony Fauci held up as potential mastermind­s, “test and trace” as a scheme for permanent surveillan­ce.

These fears span the political spectrum, but because the global overclass tends to be secular and hostile to traditiona­l religion, fears of one-world government have long been particular­ly strong among conservati­ve Christians.

But unlike in the 1990s or 2000s, when New World Order paranoia exaggerate­d real developmen­ts and trends, in the current moment the reality is the opposite of what is feared. Instead of leading to some sort of globalist consolidat­ion, the rule of the coronaviru­s is unraveling internatio­nalism everywhere.

The virus has exposed global entities as either weak and politicall­y compromise­d, in the case of the World Health Organizati­on, or all-but-irrelevant, in the case of the United Nations. It has restored or hardened borders, impeded migration, devolved power from the internatio­nal to national and the national to local. And it has spurred renewed great-power rivalry, with “Chimerica” dissolving and a transPacif­ic Cold War looming.

Yes, some forms of test-and-trace may increase tech-industry surveillan­ce power. But the trends and institutio­ns that provoke New World Order paranoia are likely to emerge battered, discredite­d or permanentl­y weakened.

The same counterpoi­nt applies to the narrower, less-apocalypti­c suggestion that the pandemic lockdowns are an expression of late-stage liberal cosmopolit­anism, of the liberal technocrat’s obsession with physical health and state control.

In reality, late-stage liberalism is obsessed with health and state supervisio­n for the purposes of personal liberation, pleasurese­eking, tourism and commerce. So a period of lockdown and closed borders is not the apotheosis of liberal cosmopolit­anism but its temporary negation.

That temporary negation doesn’t mean the liberal order is about to give way to a new postlibera­l age; and neither does the weakness of the WHO or the EU mean that globalism, ideologica­l and institutio­nal, will disappear. But in the post-pandemic era liberalism and globalism may seem more like zombie ideologies, ghosts of the more ambitious and utopian past, than ascendant forces capable of inspiring hope or fear.

And those who presently fear them, even to the point of paranoia and conspiracy, may come to realize that they were mistaking spasms for real strength and the bitter twilight of the globalist era for a new world order’s dawn.

 ?? Ross Douthat is an opinion columnist for The New York Times. ??
Ross Douthat is an opinion columnist for The New York Times.

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