French writer Guillaume Faye’s 1998 book, recently translated as Archeofuturism: European Visions of the
Post-Catastrophic Age, is part novel, part polemic. Politically on the European New Right, Faye
casts conceptual fireworks capable of illuminating anyone’s perspective. You don’t have to agree with every word to reel
at the deepest insights. He is no
optimist but rather the most rigorous realist:
“Deprived of its
quasi-religious basis – belief in progress as a historical necessity – the
present civilisation has started its decline…
The ascending line of progress, which was meant to lead to the
redemptive eschatology of a heavenly end of history, is now being replaced by
the winding, unpredictable and mysterious flow of this very same history. An intellectual revolution is taking place:
people are starting to perceive – without daring openly to state it – that the
old paradigm according to which ‘the life of humanity, on both an individual
and collective level, is getting better and better every day thanks to science,
the spread of democracy and egalitarian emancipation’ is quite simply false…
It will take
twenty or thirty years for the pernicious effects of growth to manifest
themselves, but after a deceptive phase in which living standards appear to be
improving (and which is now coming to an end) they will certainly hit
hard. The increase in production and
trade leads to new forms of cooperation, but also multiplies the causes of
conflict and expressions of nationalistic chauvinism – and everywhere feeds the
counter-fire of religious fanaticism.
Communication is branching out across the world, while solitude plagues
individuals and a sense of despair takes hold in communities.”
Europe’s place in this world is a highly
vulnerable one, open to ‘cultural cleansing’ by once-colonised peoples now demanding
their turn at dealing out domination, death and destruction. An effective response cannot just be about
defence but must embrace collective security in every sense. Doing nothing is not a viable option: less than 40 years ago, Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria were all relatively stable societies, to which the saying 'stranger things have happened' would simply not be applied. Faye’s solution is the European Union, but
not as we know it:
“The solution to
help us defend ourselves must be a radical one: a ‘good’ federation (one I
believe should be based on autonomous regions) capable of imposing itself as a
genuine state and exercising a weighty influence on the international scene as
a real world power. A federation of this
kind could only emerge after a shock, once the pseudo-federation we have now
has shown all its impotence and noxiousness.
I believe the
right strategy would be to lead a revolution within the European Union, in such
a way as to radically transform it – and not make a backward-looking return to
the nation-states system, which in any case would be incapable of defending
us. In history, only structural changes
can reverse what exists and bring revolutions about – not circumstantial changes…
The only hope for
salvation in this dark age of ours lies in the attempt to build a federation –
the great federation Nineteenth century visionaries had foreseen: the United States of Europe. A federation of this kind would be capable of
standing up to the American one, of creating a protected and self-centred
continental economic space, and of curbing the rise of Islam and demographic
colonisation from Africa and Asia…
Despite all its
defects, I believe the present European Union will be the prelude to a genuine
federation, according to a dialectic process: for when catastrophe hits, the
present Union, in its impotence, will have to undergo revolutionary change
(this, and not any dangerous restoration of the nation-state model is the path
we will have to pursue)… a powerful
Europe, in my view, cannot but derive from the federation of autonomous
European regions, as the great differences in size between European nations
prevents the building of any viable federal and political union (as shown by the
current, stupid attempt to do so).
For this reason,
we must approach the European Union of today with Machiavellian cynicism in
order to subvert it from within… Quite
simply, this appalling Union has the simple yet great merit of making the whole
world reason in terms of Europe. It also has the advantage of assigning a
greater significance to regions, the future bricks of a federal empire, which
are connected to the kind of ethnic identity the cold and crisis-ridden states
of today have lost… The future regions
must be granted large powers with respect to internal matters (cultural,
linguistic, educational, etc.), as a return to regional identity on a European
level would only contribute to our common strength. Different but united: for united we stand,
divided we fall.”
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