Not of
democracy but of demagogy.

It is a
victory of the hard right over the moderate right and of the radical over the
liberal left.

It is a
victory of xenophobia in both camps, of long-simmering hate for the immigrant
and of obsession with the enemy within.

It is the
revenge of those throughout the United Kingdom who could not bear to hear Barack Obama, Francois Hollande, Angela Merkel and others offering their views on a matter that was
theirs to decide.

It is, in
other words, a victory of sovereignism at its most rancid; of nationalism at
its most idiotic.

It is the
victory of fusty England over an England open to the world and fully in touch
with its glorious past.

It is the
defeat of the Other before the puffed up I, the defeat of complexity before the
dictatorship of the simplistic.

It is the
victory of the followers of Nigel Farage over the “political-media class” and
“global elites” who supposedly “take their orders from Brussels.”

Abroad, it
is a victory for Donald Trump, who was one of the first, if not the first, to
welcome the historic vote, and for Vladimir Putin, whose dream and whose
plan—this cannot be repeated too loudly or too often—has long been the break-up
of the European Union.

It is a
victory, in France, for the Le Pens on the right and their twins on the left
who dream of a French variant of the Brexit while not knowing the first thing
about the
intelligence,
heroism, radicalism, or rationality of the culture in which they live.

It is a
victory, in Spain, for Podemos and its cartoonish indignados.

In Italy for
the 5 Star Movement and its clownish leaders.

In Central
Europe for those who, having pocketed their EU dividends, are ready to dissolve
the Union .

It is a
victory for those everywhere who were just waiting for a chance to get out
while the getting was good—and it is thus the beginning of a process of
disintegration that no one yet knows how to stop.

It is the victory of the mob of Fritz Lang’s Metropolis over Renoir’s “Boating
Party.”

It is the victory of the wreckers and dimwitted leftists,
of drunken skinheads and hooligans, of illiterate rebels and bull-headed neonationalists.

It is a victory for those who, in imitation of
the unbelievable Donald braying “We will make America great again!” as his
yellow pompadour snaps like a lasso, dream of building a wall between “the
Muslims” and themselves.

It will be declaimed in every language, dialect,
slang, and patois.

It will be pronounced while grumbling, bashing
heads, turning away the other, pushing him into the sea, forbidding him from
returning, while saying haughtily, “I, sir, am English!”—or Scottish, French,
German, or any other nationality.

And each time it will be a victory of ignorance over
knowledge.

Each time it will be a victory of the petty over
the great, of brutishness over spirit.

Because, British friends, by “great” I do not
mean the “plutocrats” or the “bureaucrats”.

I do not mean the “privileged,” whose heads
everyone in your country and everywhere else now seems to want to see impaled
on a pike.

Those whom the Brexit took out while taking
Britain out of Europe are not, alas, the “oligarchs” decried by the podium
thumpers.

The greats are the agents and the inspiration of
the true greatness of every people.

The greats are the inventors of this splendid
dream full of the brilliance of Dante, Goethe, Dickens, Byron, Husserl and Jean
Monnet—a dream called Europe.

Those are the greats that you are cutting down
to size.

It is Europe
itself, Europe as Europe, that is dissolving into the nothingness of your
resentment.

It is true that Europe played a part in its own death.

Certainly this strange defeat is also the defeat
of a bloodless entity that scorned its own soul, history, and vocation. There
is no doubt that the Europe we are executing had been moribund for years,
incarnated in listless, ghostly leaders whose historical error was to believe
that the end of history had arrived and that they could sleep the sleep of the
last man on earth provided they remembered to turn on the automatic sprinklers—that
is too true.

That responsibility for the catastrophe also
lies with political leaders who preferred, having consulted their spin doctors and
sociologists, to massage events along the line of least resistance and in a fog
of ahistoricism, to shrug off the rumbling of looming storms, and to wrap themselves
in a newspeak that has always been used more to impose silence than to speak
truth—that is equally obvious.

But we must not permit the British majority who
voted “Leave”, or those who have applauded the outcome, tell us that their real
intention was to advocate for some vague “Europe of the people.”

Because
this Brexit does not signal the victory of “another Europe” but rather of “no
Europe at all.”

It is not
the dawn of a reconstruction but the possible twilight of an ambitious project of
civilization set in motion by a band that included a certain Winston Churchill.

Unless we
pull ourselves together, last Thursday will mark the consecration of the grisly
International of the sworn enemies of enlightenment and the eternal adversaries
of democracy and human rights.

Europe
certainly was unworthy of herself.

Her
leaders were pusillanimous and lazy.

Her captains
were set in their ways, and their art of governing was somnolent.

But what is coming in place of this garden of
the Finzi-Continis is a globalized suburb where, because one sees only garden
gnomes, it is possible to forget that once there was Michelangelo.

Between those resigned to let this world rot in
the Trumpian dumpsters of gun-toting, cowboy-booted “greater America,” or under
the spell of a Putinism that is reinventing the language of dictatorship or,
since Friday morning, in the desolation of a Great Britain turning its back on
its own greatness—between those current realities and the heat of an oven from
which the most frightening demons of Europe emerged lies but a single human
lifetime.

So the choice is clear.

If Europeans do not seize the moment,
yesterday’s referendum will be remembered as the baptism of a Holy Alliance of
the dark horsemen of the new reaction—baptized not in the waters of the Jordan
but on the banks of the Thames.

Either we emerge together—through strong words
matched by decisive action—from a crisis that is without precedent in the past
70 years, or, across the broad spectrum of modern pre-totalitarian languages,
where grimaces vie with belches as forms
of expression, incompetence with vulgarity, and love of the abyss with hate for
the other, the worst of humanity will come surging back.