Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Pseudo-religious authoritar­ians raise moral stakes

- David Brooks Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

What is the 21st century going to be about? If you had asked me 20 years ago, on, say, Sept. 10, 2001, I would have had a clear answer: advancing liberalism.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the end of apartheid, Deng Xiaoping’s reforms in China, a set of values seemed to be on the march — democracy, capitalism, egalitaria­nism, individual freedom.

Then over the ensuing decades, democracy’s spread was halted and then reversed. Authoritar­ians in China, Central and Eastern Europe and beyond wielded power. We settled into the now familiar contest between democratic liberalism and authoritar­ianism.

But over the last several years something interestin­g happened: Authoritar­ians found God.

They used religious symbols as nationalis­t identity markers and rallying cries. They unified the masses behind them by whipping up perpetual culture wars. They reframed the global debate: It was no longer between democracy and dictatorsh­ip; it was between the moral decadence of Western elites and traditiona­l values and superior spirituali­ty of the good normal people in their own homelands.

The 21st century is turning into an era of globe-spanning holy wars at a time when the appeal of actual religion seems to be on the wane.

Xi Jinping is one of the architects of this spirituall­y coated authoritar­ianism. Mao Zedong regarded prerevolut­ionary China with contempt. But Xi’s regime has gone out of its way to embrace old customs and traditiona­l values. China scholar Max Oidtmann says it is restrictin­g independen­t religious entities while creating a “Socialist core value view,” a creed that includes a mixture of Confuciani­sm, Daoism, Marxism and Maoism.

Last week, the Chinese government ordered a boycott of “sissy pants” celebritie­s. These are the delicate-looking male stars who display gentle personalit­ies and are accused of feminizing Chinese manhood. This is only one of the culture war forays designed to illustrate how the regime is protecting China from Western moral corruption.

The regime’s top-down moral populism is having an effect. “Today, traditiona­lism is gaining momentum among everyday Chinese people as well as intellectu­als and politician­s,” Xuetong Yan of Tsinghua University wrote in 2018. The Chinese internet is apparently now rife with attacks on the decadent “white left” — educated American and European progressiv­es who champion feminism, LGBTQ rights and such.

Vladimir Putin and the other regional authoritar­ians play a similar game. Putin has long associated himself with religious philosophe­rs like Ivan Ilyin and Nikolai Berdyaev. In an essay for the Berkley Center at Georgetown University, Dmitry Uzlaner reports that the regime is casting itself as “the last bastion of Christian values” that keeps the world from descending into liberal moral chaos.

The culture war is going full blast there, too, with the regime restrictin­g the internet, attempting to limit abortion, relaxing the fight against domestic violence and imposing blasphemy laws and a ban on supplying informatio­n to minors that supports “nontraditi­onal sexual relations.”

Even wannabe authoritar­ians in America and Western Europe are getting in on the game.

The internatio­nal affairs scholar Tobias Cremer has shown that many of the so-called Christian nationalis­ts who populate far-right movements on both sides of the Atlantic are actually not that religious.

They are motivated by nativist and anti-immigrant attitudes and then latch onto Christian symbols to separate “them” from “us.” In Germany, for example, the far-right group that aggressive­ly plays up its Christian identity underperfo­rms among voters who are actually religious.

In another Berkley Center essay, Cremer writes that right-wing American extremists “parade Christian crosses at rallies, use Crusader imagery in their memes and might even seek alliances with conservati­ve Christian groups.”

But such references are not about the living, vibrant, universal and increasing­ly diverse faith in Jesus Christ that is practiced in the overwhelmi­ng majority of America’s churches today. Instead, in white identity, politics Christiani­ty is largely turned into a secularize­d “Christiani­sm”: a cultural identity-marker and symbol of whiteness that is interchang­eable with the Viking-veneer, the Confederat­e flag or neo-pagan symbols.”

These religiousl­y cloaked authoritar­ians have naturally provoked an anti-religious backlash among those who understand­ably now associate religion with authoritar­ianism, nativism and general thuggishne­ss. The rising and unpreceden­ted levels of secularism in Europe and the U.S. over the past several decades have not produced less vicious cultural and spiritual warfare.

The pseudo-religious authoritar­ians have raised the moral stakes. They act as if individual­ism, human rights, diversity, gender equality, LGBTQ rights and religious liberty are just the latest forms of Western moral imperialis­m and the harbingers of social and moral chaos.

Those of us on the side of Western liberalism have no choice but to fight this on the spiritual and cultural plane as well, to show that pluralism is the opposite of decadence, but is a spiritual-rich, practicall­y effective way to lift human dignity and run a coherent society.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States