2025/09/06

"Merkel’s calamitous decision": Whether in Europe or America, mass migration without express legislative consent is politically intolerable; and migrants ought to be expected to accept, not reject, the values of the host country


It’s been 10 years since Angela Merkel, as German chancellor, memorably declared “Wir schaffen das” — “We can do this” — in the face of the mass migration crisis sweeping Europe.

Will America's Democrat Party ("the world’s most clueless of all major political parties today") listen? Will Europe's élites? Over at the New York Times, one of its rare columnists who does not seem to be a far-left liberal lunatic has written Mass Migration and Liberalism’s Fall.  goes on to refer to his discussion of liberal democracy's two half-siblings, postliberal democracy and preliberal democracy. 

Last week The Wall Street Journal reported, “For the first time, populist or far-right parties are leading the polls in the U.K., France and Germany.” Similar parties are already in power or in government in Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands and Sweden, to say nothing of the United States.

To say the West’s turn to the anti-immigrant right was the predictable result of Merkel’s calamitous decision to open Germany’s borders does not mean there aren’t still lessons to be learned from it — not least by the world’s most clueless of all major political parties today, the Democratic Party.

 … [In contrast to preliberal democracy,] Postliberal democracy … embraces the values of liberalism but tries to insulate itself from the will of the people. The European Union, with its vast architecture of transnational legislation, is one example of postliberalism; international courts, issuing rulings where they have no jurisdiction, are another; global environmental accords, like the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement (signed by the Obama administration but never ratified by Congress), are a third.

 … Merkel never sought the approval of German voters to relax the country’s immigration laws and take in nearly a million people over the space of a year. Americans didn’t elect President Joe Biden on any promise to let in millions of migrants over the southern border [*]. Post-Brexit Britons never thought they’d bring in an astounding 4.5 million immigrants to a country of just 69 million between 2021 and 2024 — under Tory leaders, no less.

No wonder the reaction to years of postliberal governance has been a broad turn to its preliberal opposite. Not all right-wing populist parties are the same, and there are meaningful differences between, say, the ill-disguised fascism of the Alternative for Germany and the pragmatic conservatism of Giorgia Meloni, Italy’s prime minister. But all of them have risen on the same core complaint: that postliberal governments used obscure legal mechanisms or simply ignored the law to attempt a social transformation without society’s explicit consent. In America, it’s called replacement theory.

Liberals and progressives typically dismiss replacement theory as antisemitic, racist demagoguery, and no doubt there are plenty of bigots who believe it. But maybe some measure of understanding ought to be extended to ordinary voters who merely wonder why they should be made to feel like unwelcome outsiders in parts of their own country or asked to pay a share of their taxes for the benefit of newcomers they never agreed to welcome in the first place or extend tolerance to those who don’t always show tolerance in return or be told to shut their mouths over some of the more shocking instances of migrant criminality.

What most of these voters are feeling isn’t racism. It’s indignation at having their normal and appropriate political concerns dismissed as racism. And as long as politicians and pundits of the traditional political establishment treat them as racists, the far right is going to continue to rise and flourish.

There’s something partisans of the center-right and center-left could do: Instead of discreetly murmuring that, say, Merkel or Biden got immigration policy wrong or that it was morally and economically right but politically foolish, they can grasp the point that control over borders is a sine qua non of national sovereignty, that mass migration without express legislative consent is politically intolerable, that migrants ought to be expected to accept, not reject, the values of the host country and that hosts should not be expected to adapt themselves to values at odds with a liberal society.

* If indeed, they, or a majority of them, did vote for Sleepy Joe in the 2020 election at all.

2025/09/02

BE TANK MAN! Join the Fight to "Restore No Pasarán" to the Blogosphere


Following the publication of the post "DEAR READERS — A Request To Help Spread The Word On Google Banning the Blog No Pasarán", I am — deeply — indebted to our ol' pal Damian Bennett who did just that — investing more than any other person that I know of — spending countless hours (days?) creating posters over at Behance in support of No Pasarán in the wake of the blog's outrageous treatment by Google. (Thanks for the Instalink, Sarah,and for the bump, Glenn.)

There are three posters at the moment, of which Beijing's Tien An Men Square one can be seen above. By all means, check out the two other posters

While asking that you click the (blue) appreciation button in the right marginDamian Bennett — who was instrumental in penning A Request To Help Spread The Word On Google Banning the Blog "No Pasarán" in the first place — adds the following suggestion:

  • Consider sending the Bēhance link (https://www.behance.net/gallery/232690889/Restore-No-Pasaran) for this post to 5 friends or acquaintances who might have an interest and, if appropriate, asking they pass it along. Kind of late 90s chain-letter fun.
  • If you are on Truth Social, X (scil., Twitter), or FB, please consider a post about ¡NP!'s situation and include the Bēhance link. 
  • More background details of the whole kerfuffle here: 
    • Google: It Is Time to Restore a Blog — and its 14,000 Posts — That You Have Harbored Without Problems for Over Two Decades
    • Bill Maher suggests left-wing censorship is dead — except it isn't when leftists gratuitously destroy a blog of 20 years and 14,000 posts
    • Google's Blogger Ban of "No Pasarán" — Six Weeks After the Behemoth Eviscerated the Conservative Blog
    • The Blog "No Pasarán" Has Been Locked and Removed; Google: Put an End to the Censorship 
    • Censorship: "NO PASARÁN" VS BLOGGER ET AL.
    • DEAR READERS — A Request To Help Spread The Word On Google Banning the Blog "No Pasarán" 

    Here are Damian Bennett's comments for the Tienanmen photo:

    TIME TO PICK A SIDE
    ...Be TANK MAN!​​​​​​​
    Picture credit: Jeff Widener/Associated Press

    A FREE ZIP of these RESTORE ¡NO PASARÁN! posters can be downloaded by clicking the download button at right. Please use and share posters to inform and raise awareness of ¡NO PASARÁN!’s plight. Posters (11"x17") are saved as JPGs at 300dpi. Need something smaller? A folder of half-size thumbs is included. Posters can only be used ‛as is’ and may NOT be altered with a political or organization affiliation or otherwise changed in any way. (Please read the ‘plain English’ usage license accompanying the files.)

    Why not start by going to X and re-posting the Behance call to arms?

    2025/08/31

    The politics of AI, writes Sébastien Laye, are quickly becoming a contest over regulation

    The politics of artificial intelligence are quickly becoming a contest over regulation, with lawmakers and agencies competing to demonstrate vigilance rather than focusing on enabling innovation.

    In The high price of regulating AI, Sébastien Laye publishes his latest op ed for Washington Examiner:

    The Senate’s decision to strip a decadelong federal moratorium on state AI rules from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act was a case in point. In one day, Washington, D.C., abandoned a pause that might have prevented a patchwork of 50 AI codes. The vote was to remove the moratorium provision after a late campaign against it; whatever one thinks of preemption, the “snafu” has left firms facing a thicket of overlapping mandates.

    Two economic lessons follow. 

    First, regulatory fragmentation is a tax on experimentation. The internet’s ascent owed much to a permissive, light-touch posture — anchored by policy choices like Section 230 and a general reluctance to pre-clear new services. That climate did not eliminate harm, but it lowered the fixed costs of entry so innovators could discover value before being strangled by procedure.

    The political economy of AI is now tilting the other way. …