Exiles

Guest Post by The Zman

Exile is a central part of human existence, most certainly as old as human settlement and probably predating it. Human are a social animals. Banishment and ostracism are primeval weapons, wielded by human groups for the worst crimes like sacrilege, murder and subversion. Exile as a punishment is based in the understanding that much of who we are as a human is based on or relationship with others. Our role in the group is who we are, so therefore being forced out of the group is a nullification of one’s identity.

Death, of course, is the ultimate nullification. For a group of humans to decide that one of their own must die is the acknowledgement that the person can never be a part of the group. Who they are is not just out of sync with the group. It is a danger to the very existence of the group. Exile, in contrast, assumes the exiled can be reformed. It offers the exiled at least some opportunity to regain himself and become a part of the group again. Alternatively, he can find a new group where he belongs.

While exile is as old as man, it is also as modern as man too. In fact, we would not have modernity without the prominent role of exiles in the human story. The Bolsheviks, for example, came out of exile to rock the old order and begin close to a century of struggle in the West. The Iranian revolution was engineered by exiles, who ushered in half a century of unrest in the Muslim world. Of course, America was born as an enclave for exiles, men divorced from the old country and starting new in the wilderness.

A useful way to understand the role of exile in shaping the West is to think about the birth of conservatism in Europe. Unlike everything else in modern thought, it was not the result of the Enlightenment, but rather a consequence of the French Revolution. The destruction, terror and wars that resulted from the revolution, created a generation of exiles, divorced from their lands, their people and their way of life. Their struggle to understand the revolution and formulate a response, was the birth of conservatism in the West.

Today, of course, there is never any discussion of how the revolution transformed the aristocracy of Europe. The radicals who rule over the West, like chimps looking in a mirror, can never stop obsessing over their antecedents. The revolution, however, fundamentally altered the elite of Europe. There was the material changes, of course, as they were forced to abandon their lands and flee to neighboring lands. There were also a spiritual and intellectual changes that resulted in being exiled from their homes.

The French aristocrat living in Vienna, for example, suddenly found himself around a new elite, with different habits and different tastes. This sudden juxtaposition gave these aristocrats a new perspective on their own culture. Prior to exile, they had no reason to think about why they lived as they did. It was just the way things were as they entered the world. In exile, they had to examine why it was their way of life existed, why they existed, and why it was swept away by the revolution.

In other words, exile created a romanticism for that lost past, but also an intellectual framework to understand how that old order was lost and how best to respond to the radicalism that was unleashed on society. Further, the restoration cemented the point that the old order was gone for good. The saying among conservatives at the time was that the restored king Louis XVIII was not sitting on the Bourbon throne, he was sitting on the throne of Napoleon. It was an acknowledgement that there was no going back.

In this age, exile explains why northern conservatism was a shabby response to northern radicalism. The conservative was not the result of exile. He was always as much a part of the ruling ethos as the radical. The relationship between the American conservative and the American radical was always as codependents. The radical needed the conservative as a foil, while the conservative needed the radical for a reason to exist. Without one, the other could never exist as an independent mode of thought.

The closest America has come to having an authentic conservatism was in the South where the conquered and displaced planter class had to reconcile the loss of their past with a way forward as a region elite. It never really worked, as there could never be a restoration, even an artificial one. The anathematization of Southern culture has been so through and complete in the 20th century, that now the very symbols of it are treated as an affront to public morality. That aristocracy was exterminated, not exiled.

What may be happening in this age of cultural upheaval, however, is the birth of a new class of exiles. White men of the older generation are seeing the world in which they were born slowly succumbing to the darkness of multiculturalism. Theirs is not a romanticism for that old age, but a growing anger at its loss. The BoomerCon takes a lot of grief, and deservedly so, but every day that group inches closer toward identity politics as the only available response to the gathering darkness.

In the younger generations, there can be no romanticism or an angry response to the loss of old white America. Instead, there is an acceptance that old white America can never be restored. There’s also a reconsideration of what created mid-century America and what sent it rocketing into the abyss of self-abnegation. These are the new exiles, divorced from the past, cut off from their culture and hounded by the radicals of this revolution, as the aristocrats of France were hounded by the Jacobins.

The defect in the conservative response to 18th century radicalism was it could never get past its own romanticism. The conservatives of that age were still surrounded by the results of their lost culture. In every city center, in every local village, they were reminded of the glorious past. As a result, the conservatism of Europe was always destined to be a compromise with radicalism. Constitutional monarchy was an effort to retain the spirit of the past, inhabiting the sterile, lifeless body of social democracy.

This generation of exiles will have the benefit of not living in a museum. In a way, the radical destruction of the symbols and language of old white America is doing a service to the exiles of today and tomorrow. Without the ghosts of the past, clawing at the present, the response to today’s radicalism can be independent and new. Today’s exile will not be animated by a longing for a lost past, but instead be haunted by the unrealized present and an anger at the radicals who foreclosed his future.

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21 Comments
unit472
unit472
December 13, 2018 10:35 am

I’d suggest that the only reason today’s left would not consign ‘white America’ to Indian style reservations is because their voters are utterly dependant on the fuel and food white America produces although I, as an aging white male, would not protest being consigned to a white Bantustan in Eureka, California or where I am now in Sarasota, Florida. Just get the nigs out and let us live in peace. But, of course, the left would not treat us as Navajos or the Sioux with our own tribal domains. No, we would have to be ‘re-educated’ and our females turned over to negro thugs desperate to escape their own negritude.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  unit472
December 13, 2018 10:57 am

That’s a very good point. They don’t want us gone as they are almost entirely dependent upon the various skill sets and possessions (food production, infrastructure maintenance, engineering, tax revenues and property) of the White underclass. What they want is enslavement as a form of reparations- we OWE them our land, money, labor and industry as a means of making up for the past. That we ourselves are not responsible and that they are not the victims is an unspoken reality that must never raise it’s head. Collectivists believe in collective punishment.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  hardscrabble farmer
December 13, 2018 2:32 pm

This may be a prime example of how public education has failed Black America. Look at the way the poorest city dwelling Black lives in America. Compare that to third world Africa. They should be kissing the ass of whoever decided to haul their ancestors over here. They should also have been made aware it wasn’t any of us who had anything to do with it regardless.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  hardscrabble farmer
December 13, 2018 3:12 pm

unit & farmer,
i disagree w/both of you–
these nut job activists that are driving the leadership of the left are so arrogant & also so full of misplaced rage that they won’t realize that they need us & many of them won’t care until it’s too late–

AC
AC
  unit472
December 13, 2018 1:34 pm

….because their voters are utterly dependant on the fuel and food white America produces

Those things must also transit the ‘great empty spaces’ between their cities.
That is a weapon in our hands. Think about how to use it.

Old Shoe
Old Shoe
December 13, 2018 11:41 am

We all live life in different segments. One only knows that which their time has shown them. I’m the old boomer. I remember 1st world America. White America. White men dreamed it. Then white men did it. I feel privileged to have experienced it. I’m sorry we allowed America to sink to the depths it has. Truth be told, we never saw it coming. We actually believed if we shared our culture and values other peoples would see the benefits and rise to join us. Never happened. Like trying to put lipstick on a pig. Fact is, people are different. Races are different. And no amount of wishful thinking or legislation will make it otherwise. See to your own. Because you’re on your own.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
December 13, 2018 11:51 am

The Robespierres among us will end up fleeing to Israel or getting the chop, while the feckless minorities involved in destroying their own host will inevitably run into another Napolean…But unless Americans give up their weapons, I don’t see any way this plot cannot end in a massive bloodbath. Certainly, no one with any courage or sense will consent to being sent to a reeducation camp or similar extermination mechanism…

Grizzly Bare
Grizzly Bare
December 13, 2018 12:26 pm

I think Ayn Rand was onto something with Atlas Shrugged. The productive people of America should opt out of the collective and stop feeding the leviathan beast that is the federal government and the mega corporations that feed off of it. The ballot box is a complete waste of time. The soap box is worthwhile and offers some hope. The cartridge box is a can of worms best left as an absolute last resort. Starving the beast might just have some merit. You don’t have to get everyone on board, just the most productive.

Self imposed exile of the most productive class would be effectively exiling all who feed from the nipple of the state.

BB
BB
  Grizzly Bare
December 13, 2018 12:56 pm

The old America will never come back . We are going to have a type of succession in which we go our separate ways. If not there will be massive bloodshed.I can not stop hating these treasonous bastards. I hate white liberals progressives ,I hate most blacks. Don’t know many Hispanics . Don’t know any Asians. Don’t know any Jews . There I have said it
It’s hard not to be a racist when I know what’s motivating these people .It pure envy and hate . They want us dead .The ever demanding minorities and white progressives elites hate us because like it or not we represent Christianity . Christ is the real target . They figure if they can destroy Christianity then can rule the people of color with ease . Behind all of this is a deep hatred of Christ and what He is. The Bible tells me they are going to get what they want. The Appalachian mountains look better every day.

Grizzly Bare
Grizzly Bare
  BB
December 13, 2018 1:21 pm

I’m off grid in the Ozarks in a county that is completely lacking in diversity (95% white). It’s a poor area, but the property taxes are cheap. I heat with wood, hunt, fish and garden. Don’t need much money. Yes BB, I think you may have said it better than I did. Succession is our only hope. Call it exile or succession, but I have removed myself as much as humanly possible from the elements of society that disgust me, and I refuse to contribute to it except what I absolutely must. I leave my property to go spend time with friends, but not much else. There is not one single traffic light in this entire county. I love it.

Old Shoe
Old Shoe
  Grizzly Bare
December 13, 2018 1:36 pm

I envy ya.

no one
no one
  Grizzly Bare
December 13, 2018 1:44 pm

We aren’t completely off grid here in the Ozarks but we could make do with wood heat, access to our well via hand pump, our other survival gear in place.

When the lights go out here, they go out. We love it too.

Diogenes
Diogenes
December 13, 2018 2:41 pm
Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
December 13, 2018 6:06 pm

Well put. About 4 or so years ago, I fully realized (reognized, named, embraced) that there was nothing left to “conserve” in the US. It was all gone, all I held dear and important. Left with baubles and kitchy gew-gaws, acompanied by evermore hectoring, the old ideals are truly gone.

Now I wonder what is coming next. Oddly hopeful, with a strong undercurrent of dread. Which prevails depends on the day and latest input it seems. Usually hope. But I have no children, and thus much less direct, personal interest. If I did have kids, I am pretty sure I would be more dread and a hell of a lot more moving as near off grid as I could get with them, to avoid the debris field (s?) I am sure are in the 5-10 year future. If we are lucky, there will be a lot of mess and dust followed by a quick new start. If not… That is where the dread lies.

dunno y
dunno y
December 14, 2018 5:36 am

Those ghosts are actually my honor in thy father and his before him. The response being something neither had to endure and only in that regard new. Awareness of the here and now which leads me to anger, sometimes rage although my future isn’t over yet even thou my dreams might be. Dreams come and go but my future is a one time deal and the real treasure they can never take away. Exile is something enforced or voluntary so be very clear which it is before raising emotion to action.
Superb last paragraph and definitely a keeper many cheers.