WaPo | There is, of course, a healthy nationalism that has often been part of
the expansion of liberty and democracy. Britons and Americans take pride
that their countries embody values they hold dear. Poles and now
Ukrainians take pride in their struggles for independence and success.
But today we seem to be witnessing mostly a different kind of
nationalism, based on fear, insecurity and anxiety. And, as the
philosopher Isaiah Berlin has noted, like a bent twig, this kind of nationalism always springs back with a vengeance.
Why is this happening now? One explanation is
that as globalization and technological revolutions race ahead and
transform the world, people feel uneasy with the pace of change and
search for something to hold on to for succor and stability. If the bond
is strongest at the level of the nation, nationalism surges. But if the
national project is fragile or viewed as illegitimate, then you see the
pull of older, deeper forces. From Catalonia to Scotland to the Middle
East, subnational identities have taken on new meaning and urgency.
It
is a strange mixture of insecurity and assertiveness. People worry that
their society is changing beyond recognition and that they are being
ruled by vast, distant forces — the European Union in Brussels, the
International Monetary Fund or the federal government in Washington —
that are beyond their control. And by people who do not share their
values.
In the United States, we do see one parallel: the rise of the tea party. Scholars Vanessa Williamson and Theda Skocpol concluded that immigration is a central issue — perhaps the central issue — for tea party members, something that has been reinforced by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor’s loss in his primary election
in Virginia. I don’t recognize my country anymore, say Mike Huckabee,
Glenn Beck and many others on the right. The same line could be repeated
by every one of those European nationalists who won in the polls in
May.
In an age of globalization, elites have discussions about political ideology — more government, less government — but, as Samuel Huntington
noted many years ago, the bottom-up force that seems to be moving the
world these days is political identity. The questions that fill people
with emotion are “Who are we?” and, more ominously, “Who are we not?”
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