Liberalism is dying--despite its superficial appearance of
vigor. Most of its adherents still believe it is the wave of the
future, but they are clinging to a sinking dream. So says Melvyn L.
Fein, who argues that liberalism has made countless promises,
almost none of which have come true. Under its auspices, poverty
was not eliminated, crime did not diminish, the family was not
strengthened, education was not improved, nor was universal peace
established. These failures were not accidental; they flow directly
from liberal contradictions. In Post-Liberalism, Fein demonstrates
why this is the case.
Fein contends that an "inverse force rule" dictates that small
communities are united by strong forces, such as personal
relationships and face-to-face hierarchies, while large-scale
societies are integrated by weak forces, such as technology and
social roles. As we become a more complex techno-commercial
society, the weak forces become more dominant. This necessitates
greater decentralization, in direct opposition to the
centralization that liberals celebrate. Paradoxically, this
suggests that liberalism, as an ideology, is regressive rather than
progressive. If so, it must fail.
Liberals assume that some day, under their tutelage, these
trends will be reversed, but this contradicts human nature and
history's lessons. According to Fein, we as a species are incapable
of eliminating hierarchy or of loving all other humans with equal
intensity. Neither, as per Emile Durkheim, are we able to live in
harmony without appropriate forms of social cohesion.
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