Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt extends Paul Gottfried’s examination of Western managerial government’s growth in the last third of the twentieth century. Linking multiculturalism to a distinctive political and religious context, the book argues that welfare-state democracy, unlike bourgeois liberalism, has rejected the once conventional distinction between government and civil society. Gottfried argues that the West’s relentless celebrations of diversity have resulted in the downgrading of the once dominant Western culture. The moral rationale of government has become the consciousness-raising of a presumed majority population. While welfare states continue to provide entitlements and fulfill the other material programs of older welfare regimes, they have ceased to make qualitative leaps in the direction of social democracy. For the new political elite, nationalization and income redistributions have become less significant than controlling the speech and thought of democratic citizens. An escalating hostility toward the bourgeois Christian past, explicit or at least implicit in the policies undertaken by the West and urged by the media, is characteristic of what Gottfried labels an emerging “therapeutic” state. For Gottfried, acceptance of an intrusive political correctness has transformed the religious consciousness of Western, particularly Protestant, society. The casting of “true” Christianity as a religion of sensitivity only toward victims has created a precondition for extensive social engineering. Gottfried examines late-twentieth-century liberal Christianity as the promoter of the politics of guilt. Metaphysical guilt has been transformed into self-abasement in relation to the “suffering just” identified with racial, cultural, and lifestyle minorities. Unlike earlier proponents of religious liberalism, the therapeutic statists oppose anything, including empirical knowledge, that impedes the expression of social and cultural guilt in an effort to raise the self-esteem of designated victims. Equally troubling to Gottfried is the growth of an American empire that is influencing European values and fashions. Europeans have begun, he says, to embrace the multicultural movement that originated with American liberal Protestantism’s emphasis on diversity as essential for democracy. He sees Europeans bringing authoritarian zeal to enforcing ideas and behavior imported from the United States. Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt extends the arguments of the author’s earlier After Liberalism. Whether one challenges or supports Gottfried’s conclusions, all will profit from a careful reading of this latest diagnosis of the American condition.
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Economist Paul Craig Roberts has made the point that the “socialist project” suffered a theoretical setback in the 1930s, when the Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises pointed out the imponderables of social planning.
Against Inclusiveness lays the foundation for what an honest, forthright, real conversation on these matters might look like. "This critique is simply unsurpassed.
See Paul Craig Roberts, “Don't Look Now but the U.S. Ship Is Sinking,” Business Week, November 1996, 22; and Jonathan Rauch's nonpartisan appeal to reduce budgets, “Self-inflicted Budget Woes,” U.S. News and World Report, November 18, ...
This book argues that the American conservative movement, as it now exists, does not have deep roots.
This book offers an original interpretation of the achievement of Leo Strauss, stressing how his ideas and followers reshaped the American conservative movement.
This book argues that the American conservative movement, as it now exists, does not have deep roots.
This new source also provides a useful bibliography on secondary literature dealing with Carl Schmitt's work.
This book is a pioneering study of how multiculturalism interacts with multinationalism, especially within post-devolution Scotland.
Chin, Guest Worker Question, 48–49; González-Ferrer, “Process of Family Reunification,” 13. 128. Ellermann, “When Can Liberal States Avoid Unwanted Immigration?,” 524. 129. Han Entzinger, “Shifting Paradigms: An Appraisal of Immigration ...