Posted by
Edwin Loftus on Sunday, November 23, 2008 5:26:05 PM
Through long practice Western Civilization has developed a standard template for the maturation into adulthood of its people.
A child growing up in a family begins with no knowledge of the world. They depend upon their parents for guidance. To a young child the reassurance that they are loved by their parents is critical, in no small part because they depend upon their parent’s good will.
As a child grows older it learns more and becomes larger and stronger developing toward the day when it will be able to support and protect itself. The dependence on the parents decreases and the child eventually goes out in the world to make their own living.
Children may or may not separate themselves from the parents. Both routes are common. Some find that, as they mature, they are either given or take on, more and more responsibility, eventually establishing the potential for independence without actually severing the bonds of authority. Others find that they must at some point assert their ability to make decisions that contradict those of their parents. In either case a time usually comes when the child ceases to be ruled over by the parent and becomes the ruler of their own destiny.
In the evolution of systems of government a similar drama is taking place, though this one occurs on a multi-generational, even multi-millennial stage.
In some dim past monarchy was invented and to monarchs were given the powers to govern their kingdoms. Good monarchs looked out for the prosperity and welfare of their people, like good parents look out for the welfare and prosperity of their children. This is the parallel you need to focus on in order to understand the phenomena of Left-wing hatred. As parents rule the home and their children, the monarchs ruled their kingdoms and their people. As good parents must plan and provide for their children, good monarchs were expected to plan and provide for their subjects, defending the kingdom’s resources and people, shaping its laws to make life more possible and providing for the needy in times of hardship. The family and monarchy are fashioned on the same model of top-down authority and responsibility.
The examples of this similarity and of cross-over terms and concepts are legion. For the sake of brevity I’m going to assume that the reader knows enough about these things to understand that, though family and social authority models may vary over time and around the world, the simplified descriptions I’ve given are almost universally true.
The American Revolution and the success of the Federalists in shaping the new Constitution led to a circumstance in which American citizens became like the children that grow up and leave their families behind in order to seek their fortune as adults and succeed or fail as adults responsible for their own destinies.
In contrast, the subsequent revolutions and wars that overthrew or reduced to a symbolic status most of the remaining kings of the world did not eliminate the role of government in acting like the parent to their citizens/“children.” In those nations they changed who the ruler would be, how they would be chosen and sometimes placed limits on their power that could only be overturned under unusual conditions. Their circumstance is comparable to the family meeting that sets new rules but leaves the parent in charge. The citizens of those nations said, “We want to remain as children, protected and guided by a parent, but we want a say in what decisions you make.” This is very different from the American decision to leave the home of their parent and trust in their own labors and ingenuity to get bye.
But there was a problem for these pioneers on the frontier of social-adulthood. Their children grew up and had children of their own. Those descendants encountered hardships and yearned for the times when they were protected children in their parent’s home. They were not part of the American Revolution. They did not choose to let go of this long tradition of secondary parentage. They did not choose this system, they were born into it and unfortunately, too many of them are not ready to stand on their own two feet. Some yearned to restore the state to the role of super-parent, a powerful force that would guide them, protect them and catch them if they stumbled.
Today, deluding themselves that they are marching boldly forward into a more compassionate system of government, they seek to restore the parental authority of the state. It’s a big, scary world we live in and they yearn for this consolation. This desire to be parented, to be cradled in powerful arms, to know that they cannot truly fail because their parents are there to support them is an instinctively visceral motivation.
Imagine telling an eight year-old that their parents no longer love them, their parents won’t support them anymore, and they must fend for themselves. Worse, imagine that they’ve tried it on their own, they’ve struggled in the world and found it hard and cold and they’ve given up and returned to their parental home for comfort and support. Their parents, (the democratic-socialists) stand at the door, arms extended in greeting, ready to take them in, but you stand blocking the gateway, telling them they cannot return to their parents, they must go back into the world on their own and either triumph or die.
We who believe in and fight to preserve the Constitution in which the federal government is too weak and too restricted to become our dictator, stand in the way of those that long to return to the comfort of the parental state and they hate us for it. In the core of their guts they hate us. Ask how you would have felt as a child about anyone who threatened to take you from your parents. This is why they hate us.