Michael O'Meara, American Renaissance, June 29, 2012
How the sexual revolution is destroying the West.
Guillaume Faye, Sexe et dévoiement, Éditions du Lore, 2011, €26.00, 376 pp, (soft cover, in French).
Four years after Guillaume Faye’s La Nouvelle question juive (The New Jewish Question, 2007)
alienated many of his admirers and apparently caused him to retreat
from identitarianism and Euro-nationalism, his latest work signals a
definite return, reminding us of why he remains one of the most creative
thinkers defending the future of the white race.
In this 400-page book, which is an essay and not a work of
scholarship, Mr. Faye’s central concern is the family, and the
catastrophic impact the rising number of divorces and broken households
is having on white demographic renewal. In linking family decline to its
demographic and civilizational consequences, he dissects the larger
social pathologies associated with the “inverted” sexuality now
disfiguring European life. These pathologies include the de-virilization
and feminization of white men, the normalization of homosexuality,
feminist androgyny, Third-World colonization, miscegenation, the loss of
bio-anthropological norms (like the blond Jesus)—and all that comes
with the denial of biological reality.

At the core of Mr. Faye’s argument is the contention that sexuality
constitutes a people’s fundamental basis; it governs its reproduction
and ensures its survival. Thus, it is the key to any analysis of
contemporary society.
As the ethologist Konrad Lorenz and the anthropologist/social
theorist Arnold Gehlen (both of whom have influenced Mr. Faye) have
demonstrated, there is nothing automatic or spontaneous in human
sexuality, as it is in other animals. Man’s body may be like those of
the higher mammals, but it is also a cultural, plastic one with few
governing instincts. Socioeconomic, ideological, and emotional
imperatives play a major role in shaping human behavior, especially in
the higher civilizations.
Given, moreover, that humanity is no monolith, there can be no
universal form of sexual behavior, and thus the sexuality, like
everything else, of Europeans differs from that of non-Europeans. In the
United States and Brazil, for example, the sexual practices and family
forms of blacks are still very unlike those of whites, despite ten
generations in these European-founded countries. Every form of
sexuality, Mr. Faye argues, stems from a specific bioculture (a
historically-defined “stock”), which varies according to time and
people. Human behavior is thus for him always the result of a native,
inborn ethno-psychology, historically embodied in cultural, religious,
and ideological superstructures.
The higher, more creative the culture the more sexuality also tends
to depend on fragile, individual factors—such as desire, libido,
self-interest—in contrast to less developed cultures, whose reproduction
relies more on collective and instinctive factors. High cultures
consequently reproduce less and low cultures more, though the latter
suffer far greater infant mortality (an equilibrium that was upset only
in the 20th century, when high cultures intervened to reduce the infant
mortality of lower cultures, thereby setting off today’s explosive
Third-World population growth).
Despite these differences and despite the world’s great variety of
family forms and sexual customs, the overwhelming majority of peoples
and races nevertheless prohibit incest, pedophilia, racially mixed
marriages, homosexual unions, and “unparented” children.
By contravening many of these traditional prohibitions in recent
decades, Western civilization has embarked on a process that Mr. Faye
calls derailment, which is evident in the profound social and mental
pathologies that follow the inversion of “natural” (i.e., historic or
ancient) norms—inversions that have been legitimized in the name of
morality, freedom, and equality.
Sexe et dévoiement is an essay, then, about the practices
and ideologies currently affecting European sexuality and about how
these practices and ideologies are leading Europeans into a
self-defeating struggle against nature—against their nature, upon which their biocivilization rests.
The Death of the Family
Since the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, expressions of
egalitarianism and a nihilistic individualism have helped undermine the
family, bringing it to the critical stage it has reached today. Of
these, the most destructive for Mr. Faye has been the ideology of
libidinal love (championed by the so-called “sexual liberation” movement
of the period), which confused recreational sex with freedom,
disconnected sex from reproduction, and treated traditional
social/cultural norms as forms of oppression.

The “liberationists” of the 1960s—the first generation raised on
TV—were linked to the New Left, which saw all restraint as oppressive
and all individuals as interchangeable. They were convinced that all
things were possible, as they sought to free desire from the
“oppressive” mores of what Mr. Faye calls the “bourgeois family.”
This ‘60s-style sexual liberation, he notes, was “Anglo-Saxon” in
origin, motivated by a shift from prudery to the opposite extreme.
Originally, this middle-class, Protestant prudery confined sexuality to
the monogamous nuclear family, which represented a compromise between
individual desire and familial interests. This compromise preserved the
family line and reared children to carry it on.
In the 1960s, when the Boomers came of age, the puritans passed to
the other extreme, jettisoning their sexual “squeamishness” and joining
the movement to liberate the libido. In practice, this meant abolishing
conjugal fidelity, heterosexual dominance, “patriarchy,” and whatever
taboos opposed the feel-good “philosophy” of the liberationists. As the
Sorbonne’s walls proclaimed in ‘68: “It’s prohibited to prohibit.” The
“rights” of individual desire and happiness would henceforth come at the
expense of all the prohibitions that had formerly made the family
viable. Mr. Faye does not mention it, but American-style consumerism was
beginning to take hold in Western Europe at the same time, promoting
self-indulgent materialism and the pursuit of pleasure.
Americans pioneered the ideology of sexual liberation, along with gay
pride and the porn industry, but a significant number of “ordinary”
white Americans resist their elites’ anti-traditional sexual ideology.
Salt Lake City here prevails over Las Vegas. The Washington Leviathan
nevertheless continues to use these ideologies and practices to subvert
non-liberal societies, though not always with success: The Russians have
rebuffed “international opinion” and refuse to tolerate gay pride
parades.
Europeans, by contrast, have been qualitatively more influenced by
the “libertine revolutionaries,” and Mr. Faye’s work speaks more to
Europeans than to Americans, though it seems likely that the European
experience will sooner or later come to the United States.
Against the backdrop of ‘60s-style sexual liberation, personal sexual
relations were reconceived as a strictly individualistic and libidinal
“love,” based on the belief that this highly inflated emotional state
was too important to limit to conjugal monogamy. Marriages based on
impulsive sexual attractions and the “hormonal tempests” they set off
have since become the tomb not just of stable families, but increasingly
of Europe herself.

For with this adolescent cult of sexualized love that elevates the
desires of the solitary individual above his communal and familial
duties, there comes another kind of short-sighted, feel-good liberal
ideology that destroys collective imperatives: the cult of human rights.
This flood of discourses and laws promoting brotherhood and anti-racism
are synonymous with de-virilizition, ethnomaschoism, and the
destruction of Europe’s historic identity.
Romantic love, which is impulsive on principle, and sexual liberation
have destroyed stable families. This “casino of pleasure” may be
passionate, but it is also ephemeral and compelled by egoism. Indeed,
almost all sentiments grouped under the rubric of love, Mr. Faye
contends, are egoistic and self-interested. Love in this sense is an
investment from which one expects a return—one loves to be loved. A
family of this kind is thus one inclined to allow superficial or
immediate considerations to prevail over established, time-tested ones.
Similarly, the rupture of such conjugal unions seems almost unavoidable,
for once the pact of love is broken—and a strictly libidinal love
always fades—the union dissolves.
The death of the “oppressive” bourgeois family at the hands of the
emancipation movements of the ‘60s has given rise to unstable
stepfamilies, no-fault divorce, teenage mothers, single-parent homes,
abandoned children, homosexual “families,” unisex ideology, new sexual
categories, and an increasingly isolated and frustrated individual
delivered over almost entirely to his own caprices.
The egoism governing such love-based families produces few children.
To the degree that married couples today even want children, it seems to
Mr. Faye less for the sake of sons and daughters to continue the line
and more for the sake of a baby to pamper, a living toy that is an
adjunct to their consumerism. And since the infant is idolized in this
way, parents feel little responsibility for disciplining him. They
subscribe to the “cult of the child,” which considers children to be
“noble savages” rather than beings that need instruction.

The result is that children lack self-control and an ethic of
obedience. Their development is compromised and their socialization
neglected. These post-‘60s families also tend to be short lived, which
means children are frequently traumatized by broken homes, raised by
single parents or in stepfamilies, where their intellectual development
is stunted and their blood ties confused. Without stable families and a
sense of lineage, they lose all sense of ethnic or national
consciousness and fail to understand why miscegenation and immigration
ought to be opposed. The destruction of stable families, Mr. Faye
surmises, bears directly on the present social-sexual chaos and the
impending destruction of Europe’s racial stock.
Against the sexual liberationists, Mr. Faye upholds the model of the
past. Though perhaps no longer possible, the stable couples of the
bourgeois family structure put familial and communal interests over
amorous ones, to the long-term welfare of both the couple and the
children. Conjugal love came, as a result, to be impressed with
friendship, partnership, and habitual attachments, for the couple was
not defined as a self-contained amorous symbiosis, but as the pillar of a
larger family architecture. This made conjugal love moderate and
balanced rather than passionate. It was sustained by habit, tenderness,
interest, care of the children, and la douceur du foyer (“the comforts of home”). Sexual desire remained, but in most cases declined in intensity or dissipated in time.
This family structure was extraordinarily stable. It assured the
lineage, raised properly-socialized children, respected women, and won
the support of law and custom. There were, of course, compromises and
even hypocrisies (as men satisfied libidinal urgings in brothels), but
in any case the family, the basic cell of society, was protected—even
privileged.
The great irony of sexual liberation and its ensuing destruction of
the bourgeois family is that it has obviously not brought greater
happiness or freedom, but rather greater alienation and misery. In this
spirit, the media now routinely (almost obsessively) sexualizes the
universe, but sex has become more virtual than real: There is more
pornography but fewer children. Once the “rights” of desire were
emancipated, sex took on a different meaning, the family collapsed,
sexual identity was increasingly confused, and perversions and
transgressions became greater and more serious. As everyone set off in
pursuit of an illusory libidinal fulfillment, the population became
correspondently more atomized, uprooted, and miscegenated. In France
today, 30 percent of all adults are single and there are even reports of
a new “asexuality” in reaction to the sexualization of everything.
There is a civilization-destroying tragedy here: for, once Europeans
are deprived of their family lineage, they cease to transmit their
cultural and genetic heritage and thus lose all sense of who they are.
This is critical to everything else. As the historians Michael
Mitterauer and Reinhard Sieder write: “The family is one of the most
archaic forms of social community, and at all times men have used the
family as a model for the formation of human societies.” The loss of
family stability, and thus the collapse of the family as society’s basic
cell, Mr. Faye emphasizes, not only dissolves social relations, it
brings disorder and makes all tyrannies possible. Once sexual
emancipation helps turn society into a highly individualized, Balkanized
mass, totalitarianism—not Soviet or fascist, but US progressive—becomes
increasingly likely.
The Idolatry of Homosexuality
Homophilia and feminism are the most important children of the
cultural revolution. They share, as such, much of the same ideological
baggage that denies biological realities and makes war on the family.
Mr. Faye claims that in the late 1960s, when homosexuals began demanding
legal equality, they were fully within their rights. Homosexuality in
his view is a genetic affliction affecting fewer than 5 percent of
males, but he does not object to homosexuals practices within the
privacy of the bedroom. What he finds objectionable is the confusion of
private and public realms and the assertion of homophilia as a social
norm. Worse, he claims that in much elite discourse, homosexuals have
quickly gone from being pariahs to privileged beings, who flaunt their
alleged “superiority” over heterosexuals, who are seen as old-fashioned,
outmoded, ridiculous. Heterosexuals are like women who center their
lives on the care of children rather than on a career, and are thus
something bizarre and implicitly opposed to liberal-style
“emancipation.”

Mr. Faye, who is by no means a prude, contends that female
homosexuality is considerably different from and less damaging than male
homosexuality. Most lesbians, in his view, are bisexual, rather than
purely homosexual, and for whatever reason have turned against men. This
he sees as a reflection on men. Even in traditional societies, women
who engaged in homosexuality retained their femininity and so were not
so shocking as their male counterparts. By contrast, male homosexuality
was considered abhorrent, because it violated the nature of masculinity,
making men no longer “properly” male and thus something mutant. To
those who evoke the ancient glories of Athens as a counter-argument, Mr.
Faye, a long-time Graeco-Latinist, says that in the period when a
certain form of pederasty was tolerated, no adult male ever achieved
respectability if he was not married, devoted to the interests of his
family and clan, and, above all, was never to be “made of woman,” i.e.,
penetrated.
Like feminism, homophilia holds that humans are bisexual at birth
and, willfully or not, choose their sexual orientation—as if anatomical
differences are insignificant and all humans are a blank slate upon
which they inscribe their self-chosen “destiny.” This view lacks any
scientific credibility, to be sure, even if it is professed in our elite
universities. Like anti-racism, it denies biological realities
incompatible with the reigning dogmas. Facts, though, have rarely stood
in the way of faith or ideology—or, in the way of secular 20th-century
ideologies that have become religious faiths.
Despite its progressive and emancipatory pretensions, homophilia,
like sexual liberation in general, is entirely self-centered and
indifferent to future and past, promoting “lifestyles” hostile to family
formation and thus to white reproduction. Homophilia here marches hand
in hand with anti-racism, denying the significance of biological
differences and the imperatives of white survival.

This subversive ideology now even aspires to re-invent homosexuals as
the flowers of society: liberators preparing the way to joy, liberty,
fraternity, tolerance, social well-being, good taste, etc. As vice is
transformed into virtue, homosexuality allegedly introduces a new sense
of play and gaiety to the one-dimensional society of sad, heterosexual
males. Except, Mr. Faye insists, there’s nothing genuinely gay about the
gays, for theirs is a condition of stress and disequilibrium. At odds
with their own nature, homosexuality is often a Calvary—and not because
of social oppression, but because of those endogenous reasons
(particularly their attraction to their own sex) that condemn them to a
reproductive and genetic dead end.
In its public displays as gay pride, hemophilia defines itself as
narcissistic, exhibitionist, and infantile, thus revealing those traits
specific to its abnormal condition. In any case, a community worthy of
itself, Mr. Faye tells us, is founded on shared values, on achievements,
on origins—not on a dysgenic sexual orientation.
Schizophrenic Feminism
The reigning egalitarianism is always extending itself, trying to
force genuine sexuality, individuality, demography, race, etc., to
conform to its tenets. The demand that women have the same legal rights
and opportunities as men, Mr. Faye thinks, was entirely just, especially
for Europeans—and especially Celtic, Scandinavian, and Germanic
Europeans—for their cultures have long respected the humanity of women.
Indeed, he considers legal equality the single great accomplishment of
feminism. But feminism has since been transformed into another utopian
egalitarianism that makes sexes, like races, equivalent and
interchangeable. Mr. Faye, though, refuses to equate legal equality with
natural equality, for such an ideological muddling denies obvious
biological differences, offending both science and common sense.
The dogma that differences between men and women are simply cultural
derives from a feminist behaviorism in which women are seen as potential
men, and femininity is treated as a social distortion. In Simone de
Beauvoir’s formulation: “One is not born a woman, one becomes one.”
Feminists therefore affirm the equality and interchangeability of men
and women, yet at the same time they reject femininity, which they
consider something inferior and imposed. The feminist model is thus the
man, and feminism’s New Woman is simply his “photocopy.” In trying to
suppress the specifically feminine in this way, feminism aims to
masculinize women and feminize men in the image of its androgynous
ideal.

Justin Beiber
This is like the anti-racist ideal of the mixed race or half-caste.
This unisex ideology characterizes the mother as a slave and the devoted
wife as a fool. In practice, it even rejects the biological functions
of the female body, aspiring to a masculinism that imitates men and
seeks to emulate them socially, politically, and otherwise. Feminism is
anti-feminine—anti-mother and anti-family—and ultimately
anti-reproduction.
Anatomical differences, however, have consequences. Male humans, like
males of other species, always differ from females and behave
differently. Male superiority in achievement—conceptual, mathematical,
artistic, political, and otherwise—is often explained away as the result
of female oppression. Mr. Faye rejects this, though he acknowledges
that in many areas of life, for just or unjust reasons, women do suffer
disadvantages; many non-whites practice outright subjugation of women.
Male physical strength may also enable men to dominate women. But
generally, Mr. Faye sees a rough equality of intelligence between men
and women. Their main differences, he contends, are psychological and
characterological, for men tend to be more outwardly oriented
than women. As such, they use their intelligence more in competition,
innovation, and discovery. They are usually more aggressive, more
competitive, more vain and narcissistic than women who, by contrast, are
more inclined to be emotionally loyal, submissive, prudent, temperate,
and far-sighted.
Men and women are better viewed as organic complements, rather than
as inferior or superior. From Homer to Cervantes to Mme. de Stäel, the
image of women, their realms and their work, however diverse and
complicated, have differed from that of men. Women may be able to handle
most masculine tasks, but at the same time their disposition differs
from men, especially in the realm of creativity.
This is vitally important for Mr. Faye. In all sectors of practical
intelligence they perform as well as men, but not in their capacity for
imaginative projection, which detaches and abstracts one’s self from
contingent reality for the sake of imagining another. This is true in
practically all areas: epic poetry, science, invention, religion, even
cuisine and design. It is not from female brains, he notes, that have
emerged submarines, space flight, philosophical systems, great political
and economic theories, and the major scientific discoveries (Mme. Curie
being the exception). Most of the great breakthroughs have been made by
men and it has had nothing to do with women being oppressed. Feminine
dreams are simply not the same as masculine ones, which search the
impossible, the risky, the unreal.

Mme. Curie, French-Polish physicist and chemist.
Akin, then, in spirit to homophilia, anti-racism, and ‘60s-style
sexual liberation, feminism’s rejection of biological realities and its
effort to masculinize women end up not just distorting what it
supposedly champions—women—it reveals its totally egoistic and
present-oriented nature, for it rejects women as mothers and thus
rejects the reproduction of the race.
Conclusion
Sexe et dévoiement treats a variety of other issues:
Christian and Islamic views of sexuality; immigration and the different
sexual practices it brings, some of which are extremely primitive and
brutal; the role of prostitution; and the effect new bio-technologies
will have on sexuality.
From the above discussion of the family, homophilia, and feminism,
the reader should already sense the direction of Mr. Faye’s arguments,
as he relates individual sexuality to certain macro-changes now forcing
European civilization off its rails. His perspective is especially
illuminating in that he is one of very few authors who link the decline
of the white race to larger questions of civilization, sex, and
demography.
Nevertheless I would make several criticisms. Like the European New
Right as a whole, he tends to be overly simplistic in attributing the
origins of the maladies he depicts to the secularization of certain
Christian notions, such as equality and love. He also places the blame
for undesirable social/economic developments on cultural/ideological
influences rather than depicting a more realistic dialectical
relationship of mutual causation. Likewise, he fails to consider the
ethnocidal effects on Europe of America’s imperial supremacy, with its
post-European rules of behavior and its anti-Christian policies.
But having said that—and after having written reviews of many of
Guillaume Faye’s works over the last 10 years, and reading many other
books that have made me more critical of aspects of his thought—I think
whatever his “failings,” they pale in comparison to the light he sheds
on the ethnocidal forces now bearing down on the white race.