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Pat Buchanan on Darwin
Kevin MacDonald
July 1, 2009
Pat Buchanan
is without doubt the most incisive political commentator that we have. His
writings on the
death of the West,
immigration, the
neocon influence in the
Republican Party, and the
Israel Lobby are
brilliant and courageous, and they certainly have won him no friends among the
most powerful forces in the Republican Party or among the watchdogs of political
correctness.
So it is with a great deal of ambivalence that I must disagree with his recent op-ed “Making a monkey out of Darwin.” The article and the book it relies on, by Eugene G. Windchy, are a compendium of Creationist ideas claiming that Darwinism has no scientific basis and that it has led to great evil. I have discussed some of these issues in a previous article on Ben Stein’s movie Expelled which links Darwinism to the Holocaust and represents the scientific community of evolutionists as an oppressive Inquisition-like establishment bent on squelching heresy (obviously far more true of the $PLC and the ADL).
One particularly objectionable claim is that Karl Marx was
inspired by Darwin. Marxism is far more associated with Lamarck’s idea that
people can inherit the characteristics that their ancestors acquired during
their lives. The inheritance of acquired characteristics is the exact opposite
of Darwin’s view that the basic mechanism of evolution is natural selection —
the selective retention of genetic variants because they result in increased
survival and reproductive success.
Lamarckism, not Darwinism, became official ideology in the Soviet Union — the idea being that it would be easy to reshape human nature and produce the new Soviet Man. Famously, Trofim Lysenko applied this to agriculture, hoping to get plants to change their genetic characteristics by exposing them to harsh arctic climates.
This set
back Soviet agriculture for decades, but the results were far worse for humans.
Lamarckians believed that it would be easy to change the culture and train
people to be good socialists. Then their children would inherit those traits and
voila,
it would usher in a golden age where
people would not have nasty, capitalist traits like greed, envy, and
selfishness. In the meantime, it was eminently reasonable to simply exterminate
those who didn’t get with the program and who clung to their pre-revolutionary
ways. In the end, the Lamarckians in the Soviet Union rationalized the murder of
many millions of their fellow citizens in the name of creating the new Soviet
man.
Creationists
who link Darwin with evil should also think long and hard about the fact that
genocides and a great many
other evils have been carried out under religious ideologies. Christiane
Amanpour’s
God’s Warriors
on
Jews,
Christians, and
Muslims
certainly shows that religious
ideology can motivate the most extreme of fanaticisms, from Jihad to much of the
The problem of evil is
very much with us and continues to haunt all ideologies and scientific theories
that address it. For a great many people, it is completely incomprehensible that
a God would allow all the violence, pain, and suffering that have always been
the fate of so many humans — and animals. Positing a God to explain human
behavior and human traits is useless. It doesn’t really explain anything,
because we then have to ask why He would make us to be so prone to inflict
suffering on others. And why would he create animals that inflict so much
suffering on other animals.
The scientific route of
explaining human evil as resulting from Darwinian natural selection for traits
that were adaptive in spreading the genes of our ancestors is unacceptable to
many because it seems to justify violence and aggression. As Buchanan notes,
racial nationalism in the period prior to World War I was very much in the air
and was invoked by some advocates of war. But wars and genocides occurred long
before World War I — without any Darwinian ideology.
And
at least some wars would not have occurred if the war mongers had been good
Darwinians. For example, the Civil War was a
cousin's war fought between closely related men from different
British sub-cultures.
Whatever the political and economic complexities that led
to the Civil War, it was the Yankee moral condemnation of slavery that inspired
and justified the massive carnage of closely related Anglo-Americans on behalf
of slaves from Africa. (See
here.) Militarily, the war with the Confederacy
was the greatest sacrifice in lives and property ever made by Americans. From a
Darwinian perspective it was a disaster in which mass murder of cousins was
rationalized by a moral ideal.
Or consider World War II, the subject of Buchanan’s
brilliant
The Unnecessary War.
It was indeed an unnecessary war — and one that would not have been launched
by a British Darwinian. Buchanan is quite correct that Winston Churchill should
live in infamy for his role in promoting both World War I and World War II. But
did Churchill and the rest of the British elite who jumped over the cliff with
him act like good Darwinians?
Buchanan is quite correct to point to Churchill’s
bellicosity, his vanity, and his desire for personal power; and there are strong
hints of his corruption as a result of being rescued from near bankruptcy after
the stock market crash of 1929. But if Churchill was a good Darwinian, he would
have been able to control these all too human impulses and think rationally
about the long term good of his people. (Yes,
evolutionists do believe that humans can control
their primitive tendencies.) It simply made no sense to go to all out war with
the closely related Germans over German hegemony over the continent — especially
because in order to win, Britain had to make an alliance with the Soviet Union,
the most murderous regime in history. The victory of the Soviet Union, made
possible by military aid from the West, then subjected Eastern Europe to decades
of brutality and economic stagnation, and it led to a prolonged and destructive
Cold War. But from the standpoint of the West, all this sacrifice was endured in
order to destroy genetically closer Germans. Churchill himself seems to have
reveled in the destruction even of German civilians.
No Darwinian would have done this. But Churchill — an
egomaniacal, short-sighted, vainglorious war monger unaware of his ethnic
genetic interests — loved it.
Buchanan also fails to see how the defeat of Darwinism in the social sciences
has led to all the ills that he deplores in the US and the contemporary West.
The period from around 1890 to 1924 was a period of ethnic defense in the United
States, and Darwinism
was a potent tool in the hands of immigration restrictionists. Bluebloods like
Henry Cabot Lodge
and
Madison Grant
were extolling the virtues of Northern Europeans and funding the movement
to end immigration — a battle that ended with the ethnically defensive
immigration law of 1924 that was reaffirmed by the 1952 McCarran-Walter act. But
at the same time, academic anthropology was coming under the control of the
Boasians for whom the entire idea of race was anathema.
I have
argued that
Boasian anthropology is a Jewish intellectual movement that had the effect of
undercutting Americans' natural desire for an ethnically homogeneous culture. As
immigration historian John Higham
noted, by the time of
the final victory in 1965, which removed national origins and racial ancestry
from immigration policy and opened up immigration to all human groups, the
Boasian perspective of cultural determinism and anti-biologism had become
standard academic wisdom. The result was that “it became intellectually
fashionable to discount the very existence of persistent ethnic differences. The
whole reaction deprived popular race feelings of a powerful ideological weapon.”
The demise
of Darwinism had major implications because it removed the only intellectually
viable source of opposition to cosmopolitan ideology and a cultural pluralist
model of America. In the absence of an intellectually respectable defense,
ethnic defense was left to conservative religion and the popular attitudes of
the less educated. These were no match for the cosmopolitan intellectual elite
who quickly became ensconced in all the elite institutions of the US—especially
the media and the academic world. In a very real sense, the demise of Darwinism
has led to the death of the West that
Buchanan deplores. Without an intellectually compelling and
scientifically based ideology of ethnic defense, it was not possible to erect
barriers against the invasion of other peoples.
As I noted
elsewhere,
Darwin did indeed have a
dangerous idea.
Evolutionary theory points to the deep structure of genocide as a particularly
violent form of ethnic competition. But ethnic competition is ethnic competition
whether its carried out in an orgy of violence, or by forcible removal of people
from land on the
And it could be argued that adopting an explicitly Darwinian perspective would
actually lead to less genocide. For example, by understanding that ethnonational
aspirations are a normal consequence of our evolutionary psychology, we could at
least build societies that, unlike the
My alternate
view of the 20th century in America is that if a robust Darwinian intellectual
elite had remained in place, the cosmopolitan revolution that opened up America
to immigration of all peoples never would have occurred. The immigration
restrictionism of the 1920s would have been institutionalized in all the elite
institutions of the United States, and it would have developed an increasingly
sophisticated theoretical underpinning as the evolutionary understanding of
human behavior progressed. Immigration policy would have been carefully
formulated to ensure that immigrants were genetically similar to the founding
stock — just as American immigration policy was crafted until 1965.
I close with a quote from
Stephen Jay Gould where Buchanan follows Windchy in distorting a comment
by Stephen Jay Gould. Based on his reading of the fossil record, Gould had
proposed that evolution was less gradual than Darwin supposed, while certainly
not disagreeing with Darwin’s central view on natural selection.
But most of
all I am saddened by a trend I am just beginning to discern among my colleagues.
I sense that some now wish to mute the healthy debate about theory that has
brought new life to evolutionary biology. It provides grist for creationist
mills, they say, even if only by distortion. Perhaps we should lie low and rally
around the flag of strict Darwinism, at least for the moment—a kind of old-time
religion on our part.
But we
should borrow another metaphor and recognize that we too have to tread a
straight and narrow path, surrounded by roads to perdition. For if we ever begin
to suppress our search to understand nature, to quench our own intellectual
excitement in a misguided effort to present a united front where it does not and
should not exist, then we are truly lost.
I can’t say that I am a fan of Stephen Jay Gould because of
his role in
attempting to shape Darwinism to his leftist sympathies and, I think, his sense
of Jewish interests. But I certainly agree that we have to continue to attempt
to understand nature and let the chips fall where they may.
Kevin MacDonald is a professor of
psychology at California State University–Long Beach.
Permanent URL:
http://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/articles/MacDonald-Windchy.html
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