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I do not intend to endorse the neocon view uncritically here, certainly, but Kagan speaks in the tradition of an older view, that of Russell Kirk, and before him Sir Edmund Burke, in ways that seem ancient history and perhaps even unrecognizeable in conservative political circles today.
That's just what we who have been broken by the fall do. We don't want to face the truth about what God says we are really like, we prefer to keep our illusions intact, and so we project a world that is little impacted by sin. We think that "enlightened" nations should naturally live in peace and harmony and certainly never invade Georgia. We hold hands and sing with
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The theory that talks with antagonistic nations are the way to start is born out neither by history nor the Bible. All the well-known "successful" talks came, not as an incentive to change, but because those at the table had self-interested motives that led them to the table. As Joshua Muravchik has reiterated in his September article in commentary magazine, the dramatic 1972 Richard Nixon trip to China was not a catalyst to change, but the consequence of change as China sought ways to counter a stronger and antagonistic Soviet Union and to increase it's own oil independence. Consider modern (and forgotten) examples of diplomacy when self-interest was not engaged: Johnson with Alexei Kosygin in 1967 (Czechoslovakia's "Prague Spring" is crushed by Soviets the next year), Nixon with Brezhnev in 1972 (SALT I--a year later the Soviets were found to have armed Egypt and Syria for their surprise attack on Israel), Carter and Brezhnev in 1979 (the new SALT agreement--a few months later, the Soviets invaded Afghanistan).
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Every counter-biblical ideology has found its center in its understanding of what man is (basically good) and what salvation is (enlightened thinking or hard work or what others think). Those who founded this country, in the main, agreed that, because people (and we might add here, nations) are self-interested and self-motivated, there need to be constraints and checks that prevent them from having too much control over others.
And, frankly, I can't be sure (I don't know) if President Saakashvili, for all his New York savoir-faire,
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Dr. Kagan: After all, had mankind truly progressed so far? The most destructive century in all the millennia of human history was only just concluding. Our modern, supposedly enlightened era produced the greatest of horrors -- the massive aggressions, the "total wars," the famines and the genocides -- and the perpetrators of these horrors were among the world's most advanced and enlightened nations. Recognition of this terrible reality -- that modernity had produced not greater good but only worse forms of evil -- was a staple of philosophical
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There still remains one answer for those who trust what the Bible says about anthropology. We are broken. Marvelous and broken. And in need of restoration. And no party, no government, no leader but Jesus Christ can fix what is so tragically broken about us. We are just that broken. Always worse than we think. Hard work can't fix us. What someone else thinks about us can't fix us. Only a strong Jesus, whose followers were not Young Republicans (think of the apostle Paul
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Christians are given no other way to change society than to be ambassadors of this Jesus, lower-level functionaries whose value depends on faithfully delivering the words of their Monarch, and not their own. Broken, weak, humble things through which His light shines, not because they are obnoxious and obstreperous and self-consumed, but because they look like Him and, because they trust the strength of their Savior to preserve them, live with a gentle fearlessness that I have not yet seen, nor expect to, in our nation's politics, and for that matter, often find wanting in myself. Who shall save me from this body of sin? But thanks be to God Who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
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