What was valued was not an orientation toward the kingdom of heaven but confidence that America offered a utopian alternative to it.
The Age of Nihilism: Christendom from the Great War to the Culture Wars, by John Strickland
Strickland begins this chapter on liberalism with World War Two (he has offered much work on the reasons and drivers behind liberalism in the many earlier chapters). With Nazi fascism defeated, communism in the east and liberalism in the west were left to stand off against each other.
Toward the war’s conclusion, of course, the west, led by the United States, would carpet bomb Dresden and drop nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Total warfare had exposed the shortcomings of utopia to all Christendom.
I think this was well exposed in the Great War, and in the United States in the (so-called) Civil War before this. Yet, I take Strickland’s point: without the transcendent, every strongman is quite sure of what utopia should look like.
America was the free world; Nazi Germany, the slave world. One must live and one must die. Propaganda through film and other means would help shape these narratives. Ideology replaced Christianity, and therefore it was up to ideology (liberalism) to offer the solution against another ideology (fascism).
John Locke offered inspiration. The United States was the first nation to embrace this liberal philosophy, this ideology as the basis for societal formation. Individual liberty was to become the highest good, and it was the trademark of the United States.
The individual was free to define and create himself. John Stuart Mill kept it simple: pleasure and happiness, these would guide. Utilitarianism. This was determined on a case-by-case basis; nothing transcendent here. A free exchange of ideas would provide the light to shine the way.
…individuals would reach conclusions about right and wrong on their own. This would yield a utopia of individual liberty.
Post-war America had a mission: to spread this ideal around the world; to evangelize. American exceptionalism. Of course, this trend started from the beginning – a manifest destiny took the former colonies to the west coast of North America and beyond. Now all of Western Europe was at her feet, as was Japan in the Far East.
Religious diversity would drive a strengthened national identity. Protestants, Catholics, Orthodox from eastern Europe, Jews. Given this diversity, another uniting force was required, and the nation-state was happy to offer the alternative.
The “American Way.” It has been observed that this phrase appeared in the New York Times about 700 times from the Civil War to 1932. In just the subsequent decade, coincidentally coinciding with the build up to war – a war that most Americans didn’t want – it appeared over 2200 times.
The “American Dream.” This phrase was coined in 1931 – not really the dreamiest of times. Each individual had an “inherent right to be restricted by no barriers.” Man’s nature is not fixed – a plasticity, to be shaped individually.