When Did The West Begin To Fall?

I hear you say: the 70s, the 60s... if only you knew how bad things really are.

We are badly underestimating the problem

The 1960s were not a good decade for the culture war. We saw the introduction of the birth control pill, the peak of the civil rights movement (a communist movement), and the beginning of America’s habit of getting into senseless wars with Vietnam. The 1950s are often considered, formally or informally, to be the peak of American civilization. There’s good reasoning behind this, but for the purposes of our strategy we have to think a little bit bigger than that.

The truth is, the decline of the West began long before then. This is evident in the works of great men whose writing sounds like it was written in 2014. Consider this observation by G.K. Chesterton, a great Christian apologist (emphasis added):

Let us suppose a man wanted a particular kind of world; say, a blue world. He would have no cause to complain of the slightness or swiftness of his task; he might toil for a long time at the transformation; he could work away (in every sense) until all was blue. He could have heroic adventures; the putting of the last touches to a blue tiger. He could have fairy dreams; the dawn of a blue moon. But if he worked hard, that high-minded reformer would certainly (from his own point of view) leave the world better and bluer than he found it. If he altered a blade of grass to his favourite colour every day, he would get on slowly. But if he altered his favourite colour every day, he would not get on at all. If, after reading a fresh philosopher, he started to paint everything red or yellow, his work would be thrown away: there would be nothing to show except a few blue tigers walking about, specimens of his early bad manner. This is exactly the position of the average modern thinker. It will be said that this is avowedly a preposterous example. But it is literally the fact of recent history. The great and grave changes in our political civilization all belonged to the early nineteenth century, not to the later.

G.K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy (1908)

Evidently, the ever-changing “current thing” mindset is more than 100 years old, even if only minds like Chesterton were able to express it so clearly as this. Notably, he considers this development to have been nearly a hundred years old when he noticed it, in 1908. Our problem has been brewing for at least 200 years, then.

What led us to this?

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