Author Topic: Rod Dreher: Pride Going Before The Fall  (Read 223 times)

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Offline Kamaji

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Rod Dreher: Pride Going Before The Fall
« on: July 04, 2022, 08:09:12 pm »
Pride Going Before The Fall

By Rod Dreher
July 4, 2022

Extraordinary e-mail from a reader in Mexico City, commenting on my “Quo Vadis, America?” post:

Quote
    Good piece this morning, well stated. The disengagement of the American public from the American project — though not, at least on the right, from the idea of America — will be fatal for the republic if unreversed.

    Here in Mexico City there is obviously no celebration of the Fourth of July outside of what the local American Society is producing, but we do have very much in evidence the same forces that are laboring to bring the American experiment to an end — in the name of an alien and elite-imposed ideology that rejects the foundational values of the United States and Mexico alike. To illustrate, I am attaching here two photographs from the tail end of “pride” month — el mes de orgullo — here in Mexico City.  The one with the giant Mexican flag is from the Zocalo, the historic center plaza of the great city. This was the center of the old Aztec city as well — you have to imagine it ringed with stepped pyramids and human blood — and now it sports much more prosaic structures in the European style. The important thing is that they are festooned with what you see here: gigantic sexual-identity banners. This kind of thing doesn’t happen, on the Zocalo, without state endorsement.

    The other photograph is of the building that houses the municipal legislature — basically the congress of Mexico City — and it too is draped with sexual-identity flags, this time at explicit government order. What does the Mexican state (presently under a brand of socialist-left leadership) endorse and promulgate? Well, it’s this. These are its core values. Note especially the centrality of the transgender flag, placed between the two rainbow flags. Whether it is meant to send a message or not, as metaphor it is near perfection.

    It’s quite extraordinary on several levels. The disconnect from Mexican history and the values that animated it is profound: the Mexican War for Independence began with an insurgent army carrying a banner of the Virgen de Guadalupe, and ended with a rebel army carrying a flag symbolizing the “Three Guarantees” of “Religión, Independencia y Unión” — by which was meant independent Mexico would be an explicitly Catholic state with liberal equality for all its citizens. It is impossible to reconcile its founding with this thing now: if anything, we could expect the heroes of Mexican independence in Morelos, Guerrero, Hidalgo, et al., to likely rise up against the current regime. Moving forward a century to the era of the Mexican Revolution, there is absolute certainty as to what socially conservative figures like Emiliano Zapata and Pancho Villa would have thought.

    The disconnect from the Mexican present is equally profound. The Mexican state is generally agreed to have lost control of 30% to 40% of its sovereign territory to criminal cartels in the past ten to fifteen years. The middle class, ascendant a decade ago, is now staggering under a combination of insecurity and economic stagnation brought on by a combination of endemic armed conflict and leftist-governance bungling. You can’t wander Mexico City, as I have, without eventually encountering some heartbreaking plea — expressed in a protest encampment, a poster, or a permanent exhibit — for children and loved ones who have been “disappeared” by the military, by police, or by criminal cartels, assuming there is much difference. The murder rate here is spiking (which, in a Mexican context, is really saying something), and business is fleeing. Mexico, which possesses immeasurable potential in its extraordinary people, grand cultural inheritance, and immense natural riches, is gripped in existential crisis.

    So what does the regime here focus on? Rainbow and transgender flags. There was a big “pride” march last Sunday where the mayor — and likely next Mexican president — Claudia Sheinbaum, appeared. Sure, your neighborhoods in Itzapalapa are wracked by crime, no one in the city has clean drinking water from the municipal supply, and someone executed a group of young men in tourist-favorite Coyoacan last week, but just look at what the city provides now. You can change your gender identity on government documents! You can marry someone of the same sex! The city runs sex-change clinics! We’re painting crosswalks in rainbow colors!

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Source:  https://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/mexico-city-lgbt-pride-goes-before-fall/