Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 15 – Many
commentators have now answered US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s question, “Why
should US taxpayers be interested in Ukraine?”
But they have failed to point out why that is the wrong question – and why
it reflects a profound change in the United States with far larger and more dangerous
implications than some might think.
It is quite clear that American citizens have a profound interest in
supporting Ukraine as a fellow democracy that has been invaded by a
dictatorship that is dedicated to overthrowing the basic principles of the West
– the rule of law, the supremacy of citizenship over ethnicity, and the right
of nations to self-determination.
And while is also quite clear that
Americans as taxpayers have an interest in supporting Ukraine because those basic
political principles have contributed to the growth of the US and the world
economy, focusing on or more precisely reducing Americans and their interests
from citizens to taxpayers reflects a dangerous habit of mind.
Not only does it detract attention
from political questions which are central in the Ukrainian case, but it
encourages a selfish and individualistic rather than generous and collective
spirit that so often has informed American actions in the world at their
best. And that shift, if it continues,
makes such noble actions not just in support of Ukraine far more unlikely.
In 1939, Peter F. Drucker published
his now classic study, The End of
Economic Man, in which he argued the rise of politics at the expense of
economics in many countries carried with
it the risk of totalitarianism, a diagnosis of the world of the 1930s
with which no one can seriously disagree.
But now the pendulum has swung in
the opposition direction and some scholar is likely to write a sequel with a
title like The End of Political Man to
capture the rise of economic man (consumer or taxpayer) at the expense of
political man (citizen), a development that undermines national cohesion and makes
collective action less and less likely.
I support Ukraine and its fight
against Russian aggression because I am an American citizen, someone informed
by the values of this country as outlined in its founding documents and
reaffirmed by so many leaders over the last two centuries. I do not want to be reduced to the far lesser
status of a taxpayer alone.
That is not in my interest, the
interest of my country, the interest of Ukraine, or the interest of the
world. Secretary Tillerson asked the
wrong question because asking his question is to put the defense of these
interests all at risk.
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