Chart Westcott in TAC: Carlson’s Christian Charity Is Not Statecraft

This is an important critique of Carlson because of Carlson’s very elevated position in mainstream conservatism. It essentially attacks Carlson’s deluded moral individualism based on his interpretation of Christian religious ideas. It manages to thread the needle between Carlson’s advocacy of an ideology which is sure to be a loser in the multicultural West, while at the same time remaining within the conservative mainstream by avoiding White identity politics—yet still managing to condemn Islam as a completely non-Western form of collectivism. As Westcott notes,
Immigration, war, and internal security are necessarily decided at the group level, taking into account statistical risk, historical experience, and civilizational compatibility. Emotional language about “hatred” of one group or another is irrelevant to these decisions. A state that governs as a confessor rather than as a sovereign will not survive. This category error runs throughout Carlson’s argument and is most clearly exposed in his assertion that he does not know anyone “who’s been killed by radical Islam” in the last twenty-four years.
And:
Carlson treats any discussion of group behavior as though it were an accusation of inherited guilt. That is false. States routinely make, and should make, group-based judgments because groups behave differently.
My only critique is that Westcott ignores another very dangerous and powerful collectivist group: Judaism. He seems claims that
The United States historically succeeded in part because it selectively admitted people from cultures that could be absorbed into an Anglo-American civic framework that encompassed secular law, free speech including sacrilege, religious pluralism, and loyalty to the nation over sectarian identity
We are seeing ever more clearly that Judaism has not been absorbed into “an Anglo-American civic framework.” The organized Jewish community has led efforts to open up Western societies to aggressive, collectivist cultures such as Islam, shut down free speech, fund Israel and fight  costly wars for Israel; and it’s obvious that prominent Jews like Ben Shapiro, Mark Levin, Bari Weiss, Miriam Adelson, Larry and David Ellison—just to name a few that come to mind—not to mention a great many of their fellow Jews in the Jewish political mainstream are far more loyal to Israel than to the United States.
Judaism is collectivist to the core, with entirely different moral codes depending on whether Jews are non-Jews are being considered. Judaism and Islam are both collectivist to the core; neither belong in the West.
Yes, Islamic extremism threatens Western civilization.
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(Erin Granzow via The Heritage Foundation)

Tucker Carlson, in a recent interview with The American Conservative that sparked significant controversy, was right to insist that Christianity rejects collective guilt at the level of individual moral judgment. But when reflecting on the supposed phenomenon of “rising Islamophobia,” he made a fundamental and dangerous mistake by attempting to translate that moral axiom into political principle. Individual morality cannot be policy. States do not govern souls; they govern populations.

Immigration, war, and internal security are necessarily decided at the group level, taking into account statistical risk, historical experience, and civilizational compatibility. Emotional language about “hatred” of one group or another is irrelevant to these decisions. A state that governs as a confessor rather than as a sovereign will not survive. This category error runs throughout Carlson’s argument and is most clearly exposed in his assertion that he does not know anyone “who’s been killed by radical Islam” in the last twenty-four years.

Public policy cannot be made on the basis of personal acquaintance. Islamic threats are not evenly distributed. They strike first at journalists, soldiers, aid workers, police, dissidents, and civilians unlucky enough to be in the wrong place. The absence of Carlson’s personal proximity to violence is not evidence of its irrelevance; it is possibly evidence of insulation. But in this case, even the claim itself is false.

In 2014, Steven Sotloff, a freelance journalist who had written for The Daily Caller—which Carlson co-founded in 2010—was captured by ISIS in Syria and publicly beheaded. Sotloff was not a soldier. He was not a combatant. He was a young American reporter working in the orbit of Carlson’s own media enterprise. His murder was part of a deliberate campaign of ideological terror carried out in full view of the world. That Tucker overlooked, or perhaps forgot, the murder of Sotloff only reinforces the danger of basing national policy on anecdote, memory, or emotional framing.

Terrorism itself is not even the core issue of Islamic extremism. Civilizations rarely collapse from spectacular violence alone. They erode through demographic pressure, parallel legal systems, self-censorship, intimidation, and the gradual replacement of one moral order by another. The grooming gangs of Britain and the increases in rape rates across Europe due to Islamic immigration speak plainly enough.

Which brings us to the very question Carlson glosses over: Islam itself.

Collective punishment is not an aberration within Islam; it is embedded in its jurisprudence and historical practice. Apostasy and blasphemy are criminal. Loyalty is owed first to the ummah, the community of believers, not to the nation-state. These are not extremist distortions; they are mainstream doctrines openly taught in Islamic law. Their application on American soil, being revealed concurrent with Tucker’s words, is self-evident in the fraudulent predations of the Somali population of Minnesota.

None of this is a moral condemnation of individual Muslims. It is a structural observation about the belief system that is Islam and the political implications of that system. Confusing those two categories is how serious analysis becomes impossible. Carlson treats any discussion of group behavior as though it were an accusation of inherited guilt. That is false. States routinely make, and should make, group-based judgments because groups behave differently. Insurance companies do it. Militaries do it. Epidemiologists do it. Immigration policy has always done it. Only in the late-modern West has acknowledging the obvious reality of group differences been declared immoral.

The United States historically succeeded in part because it selectively admitted people from cultures that could be absorbed into an Anglo-American civic framework that encompassed secular law, free speech including sacrilege, religious pluralism, and loyalty to the nation over sectarian identity. These are all concepts Carlson claims to value. Large-scale Muslim immigration has repeatedly failed this test in Europe and is beginning to fail it here. How and why is he glossing over such an obvious pattern?

There is a final irony that deserves to be stated plainly. For decades, Americans were sent abroad to fight men animated, in large part, by Islamic extremism. Now, having declared those wars misguided or immoral, we are told that adherents of that same ideology should be welcomed wholesale and treated as future citizens without discernment. Even if the wars were wrong, it does not follow that the ideology was benign, or that importing it strengthens the nation.

The American people—and yes, we are a people—can hold two truths at once: that every human soul has dignity, and that not every belief system is compatible with the American way of life. Christian charity governs how individuals treat one another. Our statecraft should govern whether a people endure and thrive. Carlson’s confusion of Christian morality with the necessities of statecraft is a category error that could easily doom the nation. The lessons of Europe are writ large. We import extremist adherents of Islam at our own risk.

3 replies
  1. Joe Webb
    Joe Webb says:

    Tucker is not a “useful idiot”, although at the level of normal political discourse these days, he is. Useful, not an idiot, but taking a cue from Trumpstein, he cultivates a holier-than-thou religion derived personal-saintliness wherein he by fiat, declares human beings are all essentially equal, whatever that means. He posits this equality of souls, I guess, by usurping a Jesus, whatever that is, declaration that we are all God’s creatures, etc. and then imports this religious , dubious claim into secular affairs, as the author here makes very clear. Tucker is a lay mega-church personality with good showmanship like Trumpstein.

    Separation of church and state is a practical adoption of a complex argument which has had a huge amount of words devoted to examining the very large issues, both historical and jurisprudential, that have been boiled down to the simple formula of ‘separation of church and state.’ This practical wisdom has stood the test of time (Aristotle…having a decent respect for the opinions of mankind (meaning White folks of European descent) and solves lots of problems, as anyone can discern and accept.)

    Colored folks all over the world do not accept “separation” and this is probably genetically determined, something that Tucker formally rejects. He commands that Equality of persons rules out any racialist or nationalist thinking. Tucker is therefore a totalitarian. If you do not accept Equality, you are a nazi, or something other than a good liberal thinking/tolerant human being and Episcopalian… (Somebody should invite Tucker to a discussion of Evolution, different traits evolved over centuries and millennia.). Tucker therefor is a totalitarian himself inasmuch as he expels folks who disagree with him from membership in the human community. Tucker also denies tribe, nation, nationalism….which are all simple evolution derived biological propensities. Family is good, individualism is good, collectivism is bad. Tucker should instruct the Jews on Tribe, etc.

    One of the reasons for sovereignty accorded to different nation-states is that we do not all agree on several fundamentals. OK, go in peace and thrive, if you can. “I disagree with you but will defend to the death( my death) your right to a difference of opinion.” Voltaire?

    Tucker will expel anyone who does not share his Godly views. In other words, he will not defend to his death your right to say race difference exist. Instead he will , sorry, valorize Your death for saying race differences exist.

    Tucker, to repeat, is a totalitarian, not a Christian (not that I qualify as one who can decide who is a Christian and who is not.)

    Tucker, useful up to a point, but probably confused inasmuch as he probably welcomes third world folks to join the great Concourse of Human Beings, God’s creation of 8 billion these days, who all want to come to the European derived countries to enjoy the wealth of what White men have created , and not pay their way, or for that matter, subscribe to Tucker’s lay preacher Theology of Peace & Love & universal brotherhood. Tribalism based on religion or ethnicity is universal, but Tucker has his own fatwa, backed up by church and Liberal state, that we are just Individuals who “agree” to a social contract. This is the fundamental error of statecraft in the West. We humans are tribal, groupish/collectivistic/social and biological (before wordy pronouncements).
    . Tucker is a fool, but useful for now.

  2. Joe Webb
    Joe Webb says:

    my local SF Bay Area classical music station, recently affiliated with an LA outfit ( I figured when I heard it was going to do so…oh oh…Jews ). Yes it has happened and jewprop and modernist crap, usually by Jews, stains the local airways. I call up and complain about the jewish-LA contamination on my radio. So far the Jews have not traced me down and sent massed/cia out for a friendly visit.

    the local Bay Area name is KDFC, 888-966-5454. I just pointed out to them that Israel yesterday has cut off humanitarian aid to Gaza…and they have the hutzpah to hustle the goyim for more money to the jews.
    They never stop. Thank god they never shut up. It is leading to the death of the Jewish Power.

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