The Pan-European Journal
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The Pan-European Journal
@PanEuropeanJrnl
Pan-European News Magazine affiliated w/ @AveEuropae Columns | Commentary | Infographics



All answers as to who or what man actually is point to one fundamental anthropological truth: every answer serves human beings in their quest for self-preservation. The multiplicity of views, outlooks, and conceptions of things hints at something deeper - that human beings are creatures who cannot not compete, cannot not seek to impose their self-conception, cannot not build hierarchies. And yet they are also creatures who genuinely need community, genuinely need rule, and are genuinely capable of elaborating the most sophisticated cultural and moral frameworks. Those frameworks, however, are never simply what they claim to be.

NOW: Moscow refineries are on fire again amid Ukrainian drone attacks.

Putin encourages "mixed marriages" between Slavic Russians and non-Slavic Russians as a "security buffer" against civil strife. This is Putin the Eurasianist



I often think of our old kings. Whenever I am tired, I think of them. Whenever things are uncomfortable, I think of them. I must admit that I am ashamed of Sweden as it looks today. But things can change as long as there is a will. It is not over. No surrender!



The driving force behind Joseph de Maistre's thought is his anthropology, which is sound and historically grounded. This is because the Christian notion of original sin is far more realistic than any tabula rasa conception of man. Maistre's thought emerges from the age of mass politics and totality unleashed by the Revolution. In many respects, this marks a transition in "right-wing thought": the worship of the ancien régime and an absolutist conception of sovereignty as a countermeasure against Revolution. The old defence of estates, rights, and societas civilis became untenable once its "metaphysical" and sociological foundations were destroyed. We see this reaction directly in Maistre, and in Donoso Cortés it morphs into total despair as it takes the form of arbitrary dictatorship - something Schmitt himself criticises him for. Among devout Christian reactionaries especially, a form of eschatology still influences their thinking, which gives rise to a kind of kathetonic thinking that I would argue is psychologically damaging because it produces what in contemporary zoomer parlance might be called "doomerism." When the forces of fate - and the movement they produce through time - are seen as a dissolving force that "cannot be stopped" but only "restrained," the result is a rabid authoritarianism that amounts to little more than a band-aid, meant to let a half-dead corpse draw a few more breaths in an otherwise miserable world conquered by "paganism." This is one reason why devout reactionaries and conservatives, when true to their beliefs, often end up neurotic. To take Maistre seriously beyond his anthropology - and thus beyond his view of power - is less a serious political stance than a form of romanticism. It is also worth noting that people often cite Maistre's essay On Sovereignty as a key work of right-wing thought, when the "real" Maistre is better found in the Saint Petersburg Dialogues. The former is an early, post-revolutionary work, containing a curious mix of different strains of thought. At times it reads like it is written by a moderate constitutionalist, almost as if a Montesquieu was speaking. There is even sections arguing for a type of utilitarianism; and at times it feels like he has recently read Bentham seriously. Moreover, Maistre's notion of sovereignty there is nearly indistinguishable from Rousseau's: sovereignty for him is a centralised will that reigns, not necessarily one that rules. This makes for a rather interesting and frankly confused mix of thought. I think it's safe to say that anyone seriously invoking Joseph de Maistre does so because he represents the "complete opposite" of the current order of things - which said person, of course, opposes. Moreover, such citations often seem to serve merely as a signal that "one is in on the bit," that "I am part of the gang." It is frankly a sort of larp, and there are authors far more worth reading: Thomas Hobbes, Max Weber, Carl Schmitt, Reinhart Koselleck, Panajotis Kondylis, Gianfranco Poggi, Charles Tilly, etc. These authors give you a far more comprehensive grasp of the overall transformation we have undergone in modernity, and allow you to contemplate solutions to actual problems more coherently, rather than simply lamenting that "things suck and here is why." Just a final note: You should still definitely read Joseph de Maistre.







"NATO's role needs to be redefined," French far-right front-runner Jordan Bardella told us. "We are not in favor of leaving NATO. But we are in favor of leaving NATO's integrated command," he said. 🎦 Watch the full interview and read our analysis: politico.eu/article/france…





PETE HEGSETH: "Marxists are our enemies. Not political opponents, but real enemies."


🇺🇦🇪🇺🇵🇱 Negotiations on EU accession may be difficult for Kyiv, as the baggage of European law is increasing, and the technical process even in Poland took 7 years, - Polish Foreign Minister



🚨 Tyson Fury got his own walkout at the UFC White House event He says he hopes to fight Anthony Joshua later this year, and reveals Dana White will be making a MASSIVE announcement involving him soon 👀

🚨 BREAKING: Russian strike hits the historic Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, a world-famous Orthodox monastery and UNESCO site, igniting fire on the roof of the Dormition Cathedral.


WAKE UP! IT'S FIGHT NIGHT. 🇺🇸🥊