The intellectual colossus and academic demigod who wrote the preface to my first book, and who commended my second book by calling me a “prophet”, John Milbank, writes:
The populist voter insurgencies of 2016 are complex, but
one important aspect of them is the rejection of a seamless liberal order and
worldview.
Despite its unbearable claims to be the only possible worldview,
liberalism has been rejected because it does not work for the majority of
people.
And just as liberal economics are now being questioned, so are
liberalism’s cultural and ethical assumptions – in a way that the highly
intelligent liberal Richard Rorty prophesied 20
years ago.
The
backlash against liberalism
Liberals have too casually spoken as if being white, male and heterosexual were in itself a cause for suspicion, rather than a condition that white heterosexual males cannot help.
Liberals have too casually spoken as if being white, male and heterosexual were in itself a cause for suspicion, rather than a condition that white heterosexual males cannot help.
So liberals
should not be surprised if they now face a backlash from ordinary, not very
successful WHMs who have dangerously started to think of themselves as a
threatened “identity”.
This “whitelash” may well sometimes
take on unpleasant forms of racial prejudice, misogyny, dislike of all Muslims,
nationalism, even anti-Semitism and so forth.
But more commonly it is a
reaction to liberals’ tendency to obsess over their favourite issues to the
neglect of what the majority needs: family, community and work security along
with a sense of cultural identity.
An identity that is all the more precious
to the less-privileged, and often the key to their survival.
Too often
liberals can sound not just as if they do not care about these things, but even
as if they should be disparaged.
What is more, it is possible that
liberals have too easily assumed that there exists a new consensus over
abortion rights, euthanasia rights, gay marriage, transgender issues and
positive discrimination (as opposed to formal equal access) for women and
racial minorities.
In reality, it may well be that a large number of people
either reject or have doubts about these things, but feel that it is no longer
acceptable to say so.
Their real views perhaps emerged anonymously as one
aspect of the votes for Brexit and for Trump.
In the face of all this, one can well feel a divided
reaction.
On the one hand, a fear of mass tyranny and new reasons to feel
hesitant about the undiluted virtues of pure democracy.
See my new book The Politics of
Virtue, co-written with Adrian Pabst.
On the other hand, a certain
sense that the voters have grasped several truths.
Last year’s votes showed an
inchoate popular recognition that liberalism has become a violent and elitist
global tyranny, that economic and cultural liberalism are really at one (Blair,
the Clintons, Cameron) and that we may have modified or abandoned ultimately
Christian norms about sex and gender all too casually and with no serious
debate.
These popular instincts may all be far more intellectually cogent than
the vapid conclusions of a thousand postmodern academic seminars.
This point was for me well
illustrated by a recent radio phone-in programme where an academic rightly said
that “race” was a mere European ideological construction, but a listener then
asked why, in that case, the academic wanted to validate “black history” and
“black studies” in isolation?
“Would that not just reinforce the ideological
delusion?”, she naively but perceptively asked.
The academic had no serious
answer, illustrating the dialectical illiteracy of so many supposed
intellectuals today.
Gender
assumptions
In what follows I am not denying that there are some
people with confused bodies who deserve our every help towards a viable
individual solution.
Nor that there are others with unfathomable psychological
conditions estranging them from their own corporeal manifestation.
Perhaps, in extremis, surgery
is the only solution for them.
But many people rightly sense
that the liberal obsession with the transgender issue has gone beyond merely
wanting to help this minority.
It has become a whole movement to change our
notions of gender.
And its preoccupations come across as irrelevant to most
people, unjustified in its conclusions, and apparently condemnatory of the
normal with which most people identify.
As with the new post-liberalism
in general (in both nasty and wise variants), the point is not “conservatism”
versus “progressivism”.
It is rather a question of essentially liberal
novelties tied to an individualist, positivist philosophy which recognises only
“facts” and “choice” as real.
To reject this philosophy does not make you a
reactionary.
The contemporary liberal
worldview, influenced especially by Judith Butler, sharply divides the mere
“fact” of given bodily sex from the “chosen” cultural construction of gender.
Bodily appearances of engenderment are no longer seen as manifestations of a
psychic-bodily unity, but as meaningless physical circumstances.
Real gender is
seen as something that our culture has collectively fantasised.
However, more sophisticated
exponents of cultural theory, including many feminists, have asked whether
nature and culture can be so easily divided.
And in reality, liberals cannot
sustain an account which denies so much of our experience.
Instead, they end up
shamelessly muddling nature and culture.
Exceptions to the gendered and
heterosexual norm are at one moment deemed to be non-negotiably “given” as
natural, even biological facts (nature), and at the next deemed to be valid
individual preferences (culture).
Why
liberalism hurts the poor
Liberalism, then, drives the attempt to displace the heterosexual norm – which leads to the (shockingly illiberal) criminalisation of those who do not endorse either gay practice or gay marriage.
Liberalism, then, drives the attempt to displace the heterosexual norm – which leads to the (shockingly illiberal) criminalisation of those who do not endorse either gay practice or gay marriage.
But liberalism includes capitalism: in the end, liberalism
defines people as simply property-owners, narcissistic self-owners, choosers
and consumers.
Aquinas thought that our natural orientation to something
outside ourselves was fundamental to our being.
Liberalism, by contrast, denies the importance of relationships.
Liberalism, by contrast, denies the importance of relationships.
Thereby it encourages the undoing of
community, locality and beauty – and also marriage and the family.
And there is, naturally, money to be made out of all this.
And there is, naturally, money to be made out of all this.
Husbands, wives, children and adolescents (this last
an invention of the market) are more effective and exploitable consumers when
they are isolated.
Fluctuating identities and fluid preferences, including as
to sexual orientation, consume still more, more often and more variously in
terms of products and services.
The fact that the market also continues to
promote the nuclear family as the norm is not here to the point – of course it
will make money from both the “normal” and the “deviant” and still more from
their dispute.
Ultimately, profits will accrue from reducing the heterosexual
norm to the status of just another “lifestyle choice”.
The populist (as opposed to the well-heeled and
ultra-liberal) faction amongst Brexiteers and Trumpists implicitly see all
this – and realise that the marginalising of the family, as of secure labour,
coherent community and safe environment, is not in their interests.
For, as RR
Reno and others have pointed out, the poor or relatively poor simply
cannot afford the experimentation with sex, drugs and lifestyle that can be
afforded by those cushioned by wealth.
Thus the result of sexual
liberalism and the decay of marriage as a norm for working people is too often
women left on their own with babies, and young men (shorn of their traditional
chivalric and regular breadwinning dignity) driven to suicide.
The
intellectuals’ mistake
I repeat that there are some people who really do have a psychic disparity with their gendered body.
I repeat that there are some people who really do have a psychic disparity with their gendered body.
They
may be a very small minority, but they should be listened to – and liberalism
has certainly helped us to treat them with understanding and compassion.
But we should still consider irremediable psychic
disparity with one’s gendered body to be a highly rare exception, and
normatively one should assume (with the sensus communis of all ages) that gender indeed
follows upon biological sex.
Otherwise, one is embracing a most bizarre dualism
of mind and body or soul and body.
Normatively, we will identify
with the indications of our given bodies and be propelled by them towards
attraction to “the other” body, or alternatively (in the case of gay people) to
“the same”.
But this is too much for liberalism, which finds such thought
“essentialist” and limiting.
For liberalism, inner feelings about sexual
identity and attraction may imply that I am not really in the “right” body, or
alternatively that it is my right to choose the body that I “really” want.
There have also been stories, following the same logic, about people choosing
to be disabled, to be of “another race” or even another species.
So two controversial points about
transgenderism follow from this.
First, that we are not talking here about
simply the discovery of “another” minority condition that demands recognition
and emancipation, but rather about a necessary extended footnote to the
rendering of homosexuality as the new norm.
For once we give equal status to
attraction towards “the same” as to attraction towards “the other”, we have
already rendered sexual difference a subordinate irrelevance.
Secondly, that the contradiction
I described earlier is still there: “transgender” oscillates between being
merely a matter of choice, and being something unchosen, something lodged in a
presumed non-pathological soul.
A neurological or corporeal basis
for transgender seems unlikely.
It is just possible that genuine neurological
evidence will alter our perspectives on all this, but so far it is very
inconclusive.
In any case, the mere discovery of a neurological equivalent to a
state of psychic/corporeal confusion is unlikely to show which came first – the
formation of the brain or of a person’s psychological responses to social
interactions.
Arguably, the psychology is more likely to come first, given the
known extreme responsiveness of the habits of synapses to our patterns of
behaviour.
Unless one could identify an
unambiguously physical source at the genetic level for an abnormality of brain
functioning, it would be very difficult to presume that transgender has
ultimately neurological causes.
If transgender is alternatively
considered to be a matter of choice, then one might suppose that collectively
we should encourage people to stay in the bodies and psychic guise they were
born with, since that is more likely to further social happiness and the
perpetuation of the human race – or more immediately, the continuance of the
European legacy (however much one may allow for the conversion and
inculturation of incomers).
Yet already there are suggestions and practices
which demand that gender-neutrality be rendered normative, so that children can
eventually choose (but how, with what guidance, with what formed habits?) their
own gendered identity mix.
This is to ignore the overwhelming evidence familiar to
us all (with no need for dubious accounts of experiments and
statistics) for biologically-given gendered behaviour in babies and
infants.
So educating children this way is a recommendation for liberal tyranny
and oppression.
Most people rightly think any such educational programme is
nuts.
They are the intellectuals, and the liberal academics are the lunatics.
And without bodily sexual
difference, there would of course be no prompting to the social imagination of
gender.
This is the very simple point that is naïvely overlooked as too naïve
by the Butlerian thinkers.
It is dangerous to suggest that any and every claim
to be in the wrong body requires the expenditure of scarce health resources,
rather than some form of guidance.
If we treat gender identity as so easily
laid aside, we could lose our bedrock understanding of what human nature is.
The
new intolerance
The present is here in some ways
less tolerant than the past.
As with homosexuality, past cultures did not so
readily label transgender tendencies, much less make them all-defining of
someone’s identity (think of late Victorian broadmindedness here, as in the
case of the strange archiepiscopal Benson family).
Instead, previous
generations allowed that young girls might often be boys and – a little less
readily – vice-versa.
Screeds of nonsense are now written and enacted about
gender-bending in Shakespeare as “subversive”, but the whole point about such
ironic games is that they depended on seeing gender as a bi-substantial
absolute (i.e., to be human is to be either male or female, period), while recognising
that our deepest spiritual souls transcend gender even as they do not wholly do
so.
By comparison, transgender as
promoted today is a deadly earnest attempt to abolish gender altogether.
Naturally, this promotion is most of all directed towards adolescents and
children (rendering our fears, legitimate and not, over child abuse, somewhat
hypocritical) by the commercial music industry.
What comes after transgender?
Surely no gender at all, but only the lone self, wandering trapped in a
labyrinth of endlessly binary forking paths, by which it is more controlled
than it can ever be controlling.
With gender vanishes sex, save for
self-pleasuring, and with both sex and gender vanishes the most fundamental
mode of eros and relationality: that between man and woman.
Most
non-tyrannical human self-government has been built on male-female
relationality, as Ivan Illich showed.
It also provides the metaphors on which
most of religion is founded, from Hinduism to the Wisdom literature of the
Bible.
And with this vanishing, reproduction would be more and
more removed from the sphere of free and loving relationships and handed over
to market forces and state scientific control.
Increasingly isolated
individuals would still want babies and it would be in the interests of both
commerce and the state to provide them with the artificial means to do so and
to seek to exert influence over that process and its outcome.
This
is just what Aldous Huxley predicted in his Brave New World, whose title of
course ironically invokes the founding cultural shock of the recognition of
sexual difference in Shakespeare’s The Tempest.
His brave new dystopia is really a world that
puts an end to the true human novelty.
It is not surprising if the
majority of people feel threatened by transgender obsessions, both for the way
in which they themselves are perceived and for the fate of their children and
their own way of life.
Dimly, perhaps, they also discern the post-humanist
direction in which this is all heading.
Both the unchurched and Christian
dissenters may have now obliquely spoken up for the western and Christian
legacy more abruptly and absolutely than the mainline churches.
The cult of transgender is of
course but one manifestation of a rejected liberalism, but it is highly symptomatic.
And it may well be one of the things that has provoked an altogether unexpected
populist reaction.
Like so many, I do not admire much of the form this takes.
But the people may sense that, in this case as in others, things have gone too
far, and they are by no means wrong.
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