By
Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
What
is there to ‘revolt’ against in New York City, Los Angeles or Chicago?
The Hamas rallies like the BLM, environmentalist and other radical
rallies take place in cities run by mayors and city councils who support
their efforts and sometimes even show up to their events.
Even
before New York City and other municipalities paid out millions in
voluntary settlements to the BLM rioters who had assaulted police
officers, the dirty secret of the radical mobs was that the authorities
were on their side. And will continue to be on their side no matter what
they do.
The revolution is also the thing that it’s revolting against.
Democrats
secured control of the country’s major cities only to be faced with the
timeless leftist challenge of making the intensification of their rule
look like revolution rather than totalitarianism. The USSR and Cuba
directed the ‘revolution’ outward by invading, conquering and
intervening in other countries. Democrat cities nationalized their
politics, building entire campaigns around Trump, abortion and (to their
eventual regret) declaring themselves to be sanctuary cities.
As long as Republicans existed anywhere, urban Democrats could not sleep soundly at night.
Democrat
control of cities and states didn’t end bipartisan politics, just
turned it into a somewhat real and somewhat fake grudge match between
the party’s really crazy and less crazy wings. Craziness was a variable
like ‘X’ that was defined not by the common sense brakes of intellectual
diversity, but by how far the really crazy wing could push the less
crazy wing.
In 2010, open borders, freeing all the criminals, men
pretending to be women and support for Hamas were fringe positions of
the really crazy wing. By 2024, they’re Democrat positions.
The
difference between the really crazy wing and the merely crazy wing is
not that they have fundamentally different beliefs, but different
tactics and comfort zones. It didn’t take long for the next generation
to come home for winter breaks and win over the Democrat moms and dads
to police defunding, drag queen story hour and the mass murder of Jews.
But first the cultural establishment had to make these horrifying things
seem respectable and normal.
Had to fit banning cars and Hamas on a lawn sign right under “in this house, love is love”.
What
will the really crazy wing of the party normalize next? Check the
academic calendar for the next year, social media for the year after and
then the protest calendar for the next five years.
The
‘revolution’ is just about the radicals running the streets getting the
feckless ex-liberals running the actual show to adopt some horrendous
policy derived from the ravings of a 19th century philosopher and then
given a glow up by activist academics and public intellectuals.
Classic
town hall politics, limited constitutional government, and checks and
balances in a bipartisan system would have prevented American cities
from turning into the Paris Commune, but urban politics had made a rapid
transition from Tammany Hall political machines to corporate
consultants to Marxist struggle sessions with little democracy to be
found in any of it.
Cities aren’t run by voters but by
‘stakeholders’. Lifelong community activists and their community groups,
municipal unions and their members, and a few political clubs harvest
ballots, turn out votes and then end up running cities. That 1% actually
runs our lives.
A new generation of young radical activists with
dot com money backing and social media savvy like AOC found it easy
enough to harness the power of hipster grad students living in $3K a
month walkups to disrupt the system and carve out their own extremist
slice of the pie.
The new red guard, like the old, however had to find something to do besides stealing money.
The
lofty promises of universal health care require more money than is
available even if the wings of the old crazy party and the new really
crazy party stopped stealing all the money. Defunding the police by
moving money from law enforcement to their leftist activist social
allies is easier. And a good pogrom against Jewish stores and synagogues
is a great distraction.
The revolution isn’t about killing Jews
(or not just about killing Jews) but wiping out entire classes of
people, reactionaries, shopkeepers and whoever else ended up in the
killing fields of Siberia, Guangxi and Choeung Ek for the power and
profit of a rising new political elite.
The less crazy party
thinks it will never have to come to that, but as with its views on men
showering with girls or exposing schoolchildren to violent pornography,
this is subject to change.
Life as an urban/suburban bourgeoise
with regular stops at Starbucks, Crate and Barrel, and Whole Foods
before charging the Tesla in the driveway is pretty comfortable, but
being a pol commissar with a dacha in the Outer Banks and the power to
gulag your enemies might just be better. All of that will require not
just one revolution but a cycle of intermittent revolutions.
The
causes matter less than the trajectory. One day it’s the police, the
next day it’s car owners and then it’s the Jews. (Say what you will, but
the Jews are always a popular one.) The issue, as a certain Marxist
once said, is never the issue, the issue is always the revolution.
Causes
provide narratives. Berkeley professors and Wall Street personal
assistants who have no idea where the river or the sea may be are
chanting for the destruction of Israel because it’s a nice change of
pace. Like all of us, leftists like to feel that they’re growing as
people by embracing new murderous causes. Freeing all the criminals
didn’t work so well, but freeing all the terrorists to kill Jewish
people thousands of miles away feels both heroic and safe.
But the exoticism of chanting for an “intifada” boils down to a call for revolution here and now.
Students for Justice in Palestine tweeted that
the ultimate purpose of the anti-Israel BDS movement is “eradicate
America as we know it.” Eradicating America as we know it might seem a
bit off-putting to the suburban soy dads and wine moms who make up the
middle class base of the party, but they’ll come around just like they
did on turning Tim into Tammy and Tammy into Tim. What else are they
going to do anyway: become Republicans and have people sneer at them in
Whole Foods and risk their kids refusing to come home for the holidays?
The
revolution is about eradicating America as we know it. A lot of it’s
gone already, but there’s still plenty of work of destruction to be done
until we’re all on the right side of history. Or dead.
Revolution
is all about being on the right side of history. And the revolution
consists of old liberals who are terrified of being on the wrong side of
it, stammering their way through pronouns and handling popular critical
race theory texts like they were the sacred scriptures of a religion
they don’t believe in, and young radicals certain that they are on the
right side of it.
But ‘revolution’ is also just dictatorship
misspelled. As George Orwell wrote in 1984, “One does not establish a
dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the
revolution in order to establish the dictatorship.” The dictatorship in
urban and sub Democrat areas is already here.
The stream of
monthly revolutions make the deepening totalitarianism, the higher
confiscatory taxes, the daily government scrutiny of everything from
trash content to social media posts (in cities where violent muggings
earn thugs no more than a free therapy session) and the ideology tests
for employment, seem like liberation. But that’s what the Russians
called it too.
Each revolution makes us more enslaved and less
free. We are not free to walk the streets, not free to think for
ourselves and not free to even work for a living. We are however free to
protest.
But only as long as it’s for the revolution of the political machine taking away all our freedoms.
The
issue isn’t drug dealers shot while assaulting police officers. It’s
not Israel. It’s not oil or illegals. Those are just the levers which
make the dictatorships running our lives more extreme. They are also how
those dictatorships pretend that there’s a vibrant system of political
dissent.
The issue is not the issue. The issue is that the fake
revolutions are a tyranny. The issue is that we have become the slaves
of a system that keeps promising to liberate us from our freedoms.
The issue is that we cannot go on living this way.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine.Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation.
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