Dear
New Resident,
Welcome
to Administrative Unit 34B.
We
trust that the time you spend in our prefecture will be healthful and
prosperous. We ask you to speedily sign the standard paper work and releases,
and also to surrender your former identification card and to carry your new
identification card at all times. Among other documents, we ask for a complete
list of all your friends, partners, and biological relatives, living here or
elsewhere, so that when the last such person dies, we can take down your grave
stone (should you reject cremation).
Tomorrow
is the inter-prefecture semi-finals in football. We hope to see you there and
rooting for our home team. “BEEs Sting”
In a slightly more rarified event, Homer Smith, one of our centenarians, will
be interviewed on Friday at 1 pm in Great Prefecture Hall by Station 1. Smith
was at the signing of the paperwork—some 60 years ago—which effectuated the division
of old District 34 into our modern prefectures: A, B, and C. The Smith
interview is open to the public and free.
Our
administrative unit’s official motto is: Health,
Fairness, Environment, Culture. So it should not surprise you that we chose
you among other applicants seeking to immigrate to our (now your) prefecture
because you have (as far as we can discover) no strongly held views, on
anything. We believe that (former) outsiders like you from distant regions add
to our ever-growing cultural diversity, but we seek to do so in a way that
guarantees our social cohesion.
In
the event that you violate a minor domestic regulation (i.e., under Schedule 1
and its annex) and you are under 18, you will be assigned community service and
ordered to apologize to any victims of your wrongdoing (should they remain
alive). If you violate a major domestic regulation (i.e., under Schedule 2 and
its annex) and you are over 18, you will be sent down for correction, but we
cannot send you back to your former prefecture, as it is in political disarray
and your human rights may be threatened by your return there. Your statutory right
to residence vests after 60 days; your statutory right to vote in municipal
elections vests after 6 months; your statutory right to vote in prefecture-wide
elections and for an inter-prefecture delegate vests after 1 year. These
notifications are in accord with the Inter-Prefecture Notifications & Paperwork
Regulation, Official Journal and Records 13/4401, as amended, 16/8899, as
amended, 25/1276.
Sincerely,
/s/
Senior
New Residents’ Facilitator
Did
you see the April 1, 2016 “Munk Debate?” The resolution debated was:
“Be it resolved, give us your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free . . . .”It was on the global refugee crisis, particularly the crisis in Europe. The participants were, in support of the motion, Louise Arbour & Simon Schama, and against the motion, Nigel Farage & Mark Steyn. The full debate was live streamed and then posted on Youtube, but it has since been taken down. If you register with the Munk Debates on its website, and it is for free, you can see the full debate. It is available here.
I
am not going to comment on the debate’s details. It is worth watching in full.
There are several good reviews, including one by Douglas Murray, of the Henry
Jackson Society, in The Spectator.
I
think there was some deep support among the speakers and the audience that
Western society has to be more assertive and actively integrate newcomers. [at 56:00–57:45
Steyn, at 1:03:30ff Steyn & Schama] Steyn made the point that to do that
Western societies have to stand for something, have to believe something, have
to have a history, language, and culture. There
has to be something for the newcomer to integrate into.
I
am not entirely sure Louise Arbour agreed with that above.
Who is Louise Arbour?:
Again, at one point, Steyn stated:
Who is Louise Arbour?:
“The Honourable Louise Arbour’s career of public service includes sitting on the Supreme Court of Canada from 1999 to 2004, acting as the Chief Prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, and serving as the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. She was CEO of the renowned International Crisis Group from 2009 to 2014. Arbour is a Companion of the Order of Canada and recipient of twenty-seven honorary degrees.
Arbour is a member of the Global Commission on Drug Policy and of the International Commission Against the Death Penalty. She is also a member of the Advisory Board of The Coalition for the International Criminal Court. She chaired an inquiry commission that investigated certain events at the Prison for Women in Kingston, Ontario, and has also served as a member of the Global Commission on Elections, Democracy and Security.
Arbour has been a Companion of the Order of Canada since 2007 and a Grand Officer of the Ordre national du Québec since 2009, as well as a Commander of the Légion d'honneur, and has been decorated by both Spain, Colombia and Belgium. She is currently a jurist in residence at Borden Ladner Gervais LLP.”
[here]
Again, at one point, Steyn stated:
Holding a passport does not make you Canadian and does not make you Belgian and does not make you French. [at 1:04:30]
Later,
Arbour stated:
If you have a Canadian passport, you are a Canadian citizen. [at 1:12:34]
As
a technical, legal matter, Canadian nationals get to hold Canadian passports, and
they are “Canadian citizens” in this legal sense and also in the everyday
layperson’s sense. But if that is all it means to be a Canadian
citizen, you can kiss social cohesion and integration in the West goodbye.
And,
Louise Arbour welcomes you to Administrative Unit 34B.
Seth
PS: My co-bloggers do good work. So,
please have a look around New Reform Club.
PPS: Here are links to Mark Steyn's posts on the Munk Debate. [here] [here] [here] [here]
PPS: Here are links to Mark Steyn's posts on the Munk Debate. [here] [here] [here] [here]
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
Seth Barrett Tillman, 'Louise Arbour Welcomes You To Administrative Unit 34B,' New Reform Club (Apr. 10, 2016, 3:38 PM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2016/04/louise-arbour-welcomes-you-to.html>;
Seth Barrett Tillman, 'Louise Arbour Welcomes You To Administrative Unit 34B,' New Reform Club (Apr. 10, 2016, 3:38 PM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2016/04/louise-arbour-welcomes-you-to.html>;
Seth Barrett Tillman, 'Part II, Louise Arbour's Millions [of migrants] [of undocumented aliens] [of asylum seekers] [of stateless persons] [of internally displaced persons],' New Reform Club (Apr. 11, 2016, 7:38 AM), < reformclub.blogspot.com/2016/04/part-i>;
My
prior post is here: Seth
Barrett Tillman, Trump Voters and Modern
American Legal Academia, The New Reform Club (Apr. 8, 2016,
5:41 AM)
But if that is all it means to be a Canadian citizen, you can kiss social cohesion and integration in the West good-by.
ReplyDeleteGood-by, then. The left does not believe in the concepts of "society" or "culture" unless it's somebody else's, in which case it must be revered.
Their belief is in government and government alone, that Western bourgeois democracy and the welfare state is sufficient for all man's goods and ills.
The universal homogenous state, home of The Last Man.
The End of History was never linked to a specifically American model of social or political organization. Following Alexandre Kojève, the Russian-French philosopher who inspired my original argument, I believe that the European Union more accurately reflects what the world will look like at the end of history than the contemporary United States. The EU's attempt to transcend sovereignty and traditional power politics by establishing a transnational rule of law is much more in line with a "post-historical" world than the Americans' continuing belief in God, national sovereignty, and their military.