Europe and much of the rich world today is faced with a moral
dilemma surrounding a tidal wave of desperate migrants massing at their
borders fleeing war and poverty in their respective homelands. It’s a
no-brainer. Migrants are seeking a “better life” in the First World and a
slice of that legendary welfare state pie that keeps even the lowliest
and most unproductive of the First World’s citizens living in relative
comfort and security. Indeed, even Third World Philippines was subject
to the same emotional blackmail when faced with a boatload of Rohingya refugees fleeing persecution in Burma.
Does the First World owe these migrants and refugees anything?
That depends on the perspective you take. Europe itself was once a
source of virulent undesirable immigrants and refugees. When an entire
continent of warlike, often barbaric kingsmen perfected long-haul sea
navigation, they spread all over the world bringing not just explorers,
adventurers, and merchants but a vast rabble of fortune-seekers,
criminals, and indentured labourers to colonise the world.
Contrary to what European historic literature asserts, the world at
the time was not necessarily theirs to “civilise”. Indeed, rich
magnificent empires and kingdoms were already flourishing in the
farthest corners of the world in China, the Indian subcontinent,
southeast Asia, central and south America, the South Pacific and the
Australian continent and surrounding islands.
The downfall of all these non-European civilisations at the dawn of
European imperial conquest could serve as a lesson to 21st Century
Europe and North America today.
Kingdoms in East Asia, the Indian sub-continent and South America
were all not lacking in military organisation and power to repel the
initial wave of European invaders. Indeed, the ships that Ming Dynasty
China at the time were building utterly dwarfed in size, speed, and
firepower any of the ships of the most powerful European navies at the
time. But it was not military power that won the world for Europe in the
16th through 17th Centuries. It was the complacency and insularity of
these established kingdoms that eventually did them in.
The non-European world succumbed to European domination under the
weight their own accumulated delusion that theirs was the superior world
view.
Despite the Aztec and Inca armies outnumbering the small band of Spanish conquistadores
tens of thousands to one, they did not see these hulking fair-skinned
bearded smelly men as a significant threat on first encounter and went
as far as inviting them into the inner sanctums of their palaces to meet
with their emperors. By the time the hapless American natives realised
what happened, it was too late.
China and India, for their part, addicted themselves to European trinkets and manufactured goods. They also got addicted to opium. Indeed, drug trafficking was one of the most profitable British trades in the Far East, and the Taipans
who lorded it over the trade enjoyed powerful lobbies in the British
imperial government which obliged by passing legislation to further
entrench these traders in their Far Eastern markets.
Today we see the same pattern happening all over the world.
Immigrants who have gained a solid footing in the societies of their
affluent hosts have become gateways for virulent ideas — and products —
to entrench themselves. The newly “tolerant” societies of Western Europe
and North America have changed their stance on immigrants from one of
enforcing assimilation to one of advocating “multi-culturalism”. Much of
the drug trade in the First World are facilitated by foreign or
ethnically-defined “mafias” and even locals who engage in the trade deal
mainly with a supply pipeline brokered by these mafias. More disturbing
are the acts of terrorism perpetrated by First World migrant “citizens”
who derive moral ascendancy for their heinous acts from thought leaders
pontificating about their brand of righteousness in some desert kingdom
halfway around the world.
It is therefore hardly surprising that far-right politics are back in
vogue. In the United States, the popular billionaire Donald Trump has
defined his bid for President around a simple but resonant catchphrase:
“Taking our country back”
Back from who or what exactly? It does not take a rocket scientist to fill in the blanks.
Unfortunately for the trendy hipster “progressives” who spend their
days sipping their lattes in the cafes of their expensive coastal
cities, the United States’ heartland of disgruntled unemployed voters
remain an electoral force to reckon with. And, as such, many political
observers are now on their recliners, one arm around a popcorn bucket
and fingers on their iPads, poised to “live-tweet” the looming circus
that is about to engulf the planet’s mightiest nation.
Is history repeating itself on a massive scale? It looks like it. The
same old familiar motivations underlie China’s current expansionist
leanings — energy and raw materials. It is gearing up to secure access
to both along all possible fronts — political, economic, and military.
And unlike Western democracies hobbled by modern “humanist” ideologies,
China is unencumbered by the naive scruples and Western-styled ethics
that keep the First World and their satellite crony states
tightly-leashed to “international law”.
The only way for entire societies and ways of life to prevail is to
re-visit that ancient innovation that underpinned Western civilisation’s
rise to world domination: smarts. Unlike the hapless sods that
fell underneath European conquest in the 16th to 18th Centuries, Europe
and its derivative civilisations today enjoy (and will continue to enjoy
over the foreseeable future) a commanding position as the primary
source of the bulk of humanity’s advancement along the fields of science
and technology. It should start using this knowledge wisely — the
old-fashioned way.
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