It's no accident that the English-speaking nations are the ones most
devoted to law and individual rights
Asked, early in his presidency, whether he believed in American
exceptionalism, Barack Obama gave a
telling reply. "I believe in American exceptionalism, just as I suspect
the Brits believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek
exceptionalism."
The first part of that answer is fascinating (we'll come back to the Greeks
in a bit). Most Brits do indeed believe in British exceptionalism. But here's
the thing: They define it in almost exactly the same way that Americans do.
British exceptionalism, like its American cousin, has traditionally been held
to reside in a series of values and institutions: personal liberty, free
contract, jury trials, uncensored newspapers, regular elections, habeas corpus,
open competition, secure property, religious pluralism.
The conceit of our era is to assume that these ideals are somehow the
natural condition of an advanced society—that all nations will get around to
them once they become rich enough and educated enough. In fact, these ideals
were developed overwhelmingly in the language in which you are reading these
words. You don't have to go back very far to find a time when freedom under the
law was more or less confined to the Anglosphere: the community of
English-speaking democracies.
In August 1941, when Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Winston Churchill met on
the deck of HMS Prince of Wales off Newfoundland, no one believed that there
was anything inevitable about the triumph of what the Nazis and Communists both
called "decadent Anglo-Saxon capitalism." They called it
"decadent" for a reason. Across the Eurasian landmass, freedom and
democracy had retreated before authoritarianism, then thought to be the coming
force. Though a small number of European countries had had their parliamentary
systems overthrown by invaders, many more had turned to autocracy on their own,
without needing to be occupied: Austria, Bulgaria, Estonia, Germany, Greece,
Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain.
Churchill, of all people, knew that the affinity between the United States
and the rest of the English-speaking world rested on more than a congruence of
parliamentary systems, and he was determined to display that cultural affinity
to maximum advantage when he met FDR.
It was a Sunday morning, and the British and American crewmen were paraded
jointly on the decks of HMS Prince of Wales for a religious service. The prime
minister was determined that "every detail be perfect," and the
readings and hymns were meticulously chosen. The sailors listened as a chaplain
read from Joshua 1 in the language of the King James Bible, revered in both
nations: "As I was with Moses, so I will be with thee: I will not fail
thee, nor forsake thee. Be strong and of a good courage."
The prime minister was delighted. "The same language, the same hymns
and, more or less, the same ideals," he enthused. The same ideals: That
was no platitude. The world was in the middle of the second of the three great
global confrontations of the 20th century, in which countries that elevated the
individual over the state contended for mastery against countries that did the
opposite. The list of nations that were on the right side in all three of those
conflicts is a short one, but it includes the Anglophone democracies.
We often use the word "Western" as a shorthand for
liberal-democratic values, but we're really being polite. What we mean is
countries that have adopted the Anglo-American system of government. The spread
of "Western" values was, in truth, a series of military victories by
the Anglosphere.
I realize that all this might seem strange to American readers. Am I not
diluting the uniqueness of the U.S., the world's only propositional state, by
lumping it in with the rest of the Anglosphere? Wasn't the republic founded in
a violent rejection of the British Empire? Didn't Paul Revere rouse a nation
with his cry of "the British are coming"?
Actually, no. That would have been a remarkably odd thing to yell at a
Massachusetts population that had never considered itself anything other than
British (what the plucky Boston silversmith actually shouted was "The
regulars are coming out!"). The American Founders were arguing not for the
rejection but for the assertion of what they took to be their birthright as
Englishmen. They were revolutionaries in the 18th-century sense of the word,
whereby a revolution was understood to be a complete turn of the wheel: a
setting upright of that which had been placed on its head.
Alexis de Tocqueville is widely quoted these days as a witness to American
exceptionalism. Quoted, but evidently not so widely read, since at the very
beginning of "Democracy in America," he flags up what is to be his
main argument, namely, that the New World allowed the national characteristics
of Europe's nations the freest possible expression. Just as French America
exaggerated the autocracy and seigneurialism of Louis XIV's France, and Spanish
America the ramshackle obscurantism of Philip IV's Spain, so English America
(as he called it) exaggerated the localism, the libertarianism and the
mercantilism of the mother country: "The American is the Englishman left
to himself."
What made the Anglosphere different? Foreign visitors through the centuries
remarked on a number of peculiar characteristics: the profusion of nonstate
organizations, clubs, charities and foundations; the cheerful materialism of
the population; the strong county institutions, including locally chosen law
officers and judges; the easy coexistence of different denominations (religious
toleration wasn't unique to the Anglosphere, but religious equality—that is,
freedom for every sect to proselytize—was almost unknown in the rest of the
world). They were struck by the weakness, in both law and custom, of the
extended family, and by the converse emphasis on individualism. They wondered
at the stubborn elevation of private property over raison d'état, of personal
freedom over collective need.
Many of them, including Tocqueville and Montesquieu, connected the liberty
that English-speakers took for granted to geography. Outside North America,
most of the Anglosphere is an extended archipelago: Great Britain, Ireland,
Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, the more democratic Caribbean states.
North America, although not literally isolated, was geopolitically more remote
than any of them, "kindly separated by nature and a wide ocean," as
Jefferson put it in his 1801 inaugural address, "from the exterminating
havoc [of Europe]."
Isolation meant that there was no need for a standing army in peacetime,
which in turn meant that the government had no mechanism for internal
repression. When rulers wanted something, usually revenue, they had to ask
nicely, by summoning people's representatives in an assembly. It is no
coincidence that the world's oldest parliaments—England, Iceland, the Faroes,
the Isle of Man—are on islands.
Above all, liberty was tied up with something that foreign observers could
only marvel at: the miracle of the common law. Laws weren't written down in the
abstract and then applied to particular disputes; they built up, like a coral
reef, case by case. They came not from the state but from the people. The
common law wasn't a tool of government but an ally of liberty: It placed itself
across the path of the Stuarts and George III; it ruled that the bonds of
slavery disappeared the moment a man set foot on English soil.
There was a fashion for florid prose in the 18th century, but the second
American president, John Adams, wasn't exaggerating when he identified the
Anglosphere's beautiful, anomalous legal system—which today covers most
English-speaking countries plus Israel, almost an honorary member of the club,
alongside the Netherlands and the Nordic countries—as the ultimate guarantor of
freedom: "The liberty, the unalienable, indefeasible rights of men, the
honor and dignity of human nature... and the universal happiness of
individuals, were never so skillfully and successfully consulted as in that
most excellent monument of human art, the common law of England."
Freedom under the law is a portable commodity, passed on through
intellectual exchange rather than gene flow. Anyone can benefit from
constitutional liberty simply by adopting the right institutions and the
cultural assumptions that go with them. The Anglosphere is why Bermuda is not
Haiti, why Singapore is not Indonesia, why Hong Kong is not China—and, for that
matter, not Macau. As the distinguished Indian writer Madhav Das Nalapat,
holder of the Unesco Peace Chair, puts it, the Anglosphere is defined not by
racial affinity but "by the blood of the mind."
At a time when most countries defined citizenship by ancestry, Britain was
unusual in developing a civil rather than an ethnic nationality. The U.S., as
so often, distilled and intensified a tendency that had been present in Great
Britain, explicitly defining itself as a creedal polity: Anyone can become
American simply by signing up to the values inherent in the Constitution.
There is, of course, a flip-side. If the U.S. abandons its political
structures, it will lose its identity more thoroughly than states that define
nationality by blood or territory. Power is shifting from the 50 states to
Washington, D.C., from elected representatives to federal bureaucrats, from citizens
to the government. As the U.S. moves toward European-style health care, day
care, college education, carbon taxes, foreign policy and spending levels, so
it becomes less prosperous, less confident and less free.
We sometimes talk of the English-speaking nations as having a culture of
independence. But culture does not exist, numinously, alongside institutions;
it is a product of institutions. People respond to incentives. Make enough
people dependent on the state, and it won't be long before Americans start
behaving and voting like…well, like Greeks.
Which brings us back to Mr. Obama's curiously qualified defense of American
exceptionalism. Outside the Anglosphere, people have traditionally
expected—indeed, demanded—far more state intervention. They look to the
government to solve their problems, and when the government fails, they become
petulant.
That is the point that much of Europe has reached now. Greeks, like many
Europeans, spent decades increasing their consumption without increasing their
production. They voted for politicians who promised to keep the good times
going and rejected those who argued for fiscal restraint. Even now, as the
calamity overwhelms them, they refuse to take responsibility for their own
affairs by leaving the euro and running their own economy. It's what happens
when an electorate is systematically infantilized.
The owl of Minerva, wrote Hegel, spreads its wings only with the gathering
of the dusk. Since the middle of the 18th century, the hegemony of the
English-speaking peoples has drawn many other nations into a uniquely free,
democratic and wealthy world order. The Anglo-American imperium is, by most
measures, reaching its twilight. But the values of the Anglosphere,
particularly the unique emphasis on individualism, ought to be perfectly suited
to the Internet age. And such values can take root anywhere.
Perhaps the most important geopolitical question of the 21st century is
this: Will India define itself primarily as a member of the Anglosphere or as
an Asian power? In the decades after independence, India did what all former
colonies do, adopting policies aimed at underlining its differences from the
former occupier. Successive governments promoted autarky, the Hindi language
and equidistance between the Western and Soviet blocs.
But India has long since passed its moment of maximum orbital distance from
the other Anglophone democracies. The traits that continue to set it apart from
most of its neighbors are, for want of a better shorthand, Anglosphere
characteristics.
In India, governments come and go as the result of elections, without
anyone being exiled or shot. The armed forces stay out of politics. English is
the language of government and of most universities and businesses. Property
rights and free contract are secured by a common-law system, which remains open
to individuals seeking redress. Shared values lead to shared habits. When, in
the aftermath of the tsunami 10 years ago, the U.S., Australian and Indian
navies coordinated the relief effort, they found an interoperability that goes
beyond even that found among NATO allies.
If India were to take its place at the heart of a loose Anglosphere
network, based on free trade and military alliance, the future would suddenly
look a great deal brighter. Of course, to join such a free trade area, the U.K.
and Ireland would have to leave the EU. But
that's another story.
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