Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Charlie Hebdo and Europe’s Inability to Get Angry - Part Two
by Tom Kando
In my previous post, I asked whether the European opinion leaders had lost the capacity for anger when Europeans are under attack.
Obviously, there are still plenty of people in Europe who are capable of anger. These are the politically incorrect. They are the rednecks. They are the equivalent of what Jerry Falwell used to call the “silent majority.” They represent the political RIGHT. Many of them support very unsympathetic characters, some of them with fascistoid tendencies. They are “populists,” often nativists, and racists. They follow demagogues such as Geert Wilders in Holland and his equivalents elsewhere. France has Marine Le Pen, fretting about the Arabization of her country. Hungary has its Jobbik movement, a sinister fascist group that has lynched gypsies. There are the people who recently attacked, damaged and burned mosques in Sweden. There are the people who have been marching to kick immigrants out of Germany. It is noteworthy that xenophobia is strongest in the EASTERN part of Germany, precisely where there are the fewest immigrants. These groups are the equivalent of America’s Tea Party and its Republican Party.
I strongly oppose such groups, which range over a spectrum from mildly conservative to outright fascist. Their retrograde views offer no solution whatsoever.
However, there are inescapable similarities between what is going on in the world today and the Roman world two thousand years ago. Will history repeat itself? Ancient Rome was under similar external pressure, a pressure which was demographic, cultural and violent. Then too, the fundamental challenge for civilized society was: how to respond to those pressures, in the long run? Christianity became an essential part of that response. That was a catastrophe. Those lofty moral values were no match for the destructive violence descending upon the civilized world at that time.
“Liberty;” “equality;” “democracy;” “tolerance;” “diversity;” lofty words all. Add to that “western guilt feelings.” But how do these concepts help, when what you have on the other side is seething, self-righteous and empowering rage and hatred?
Yes, there are also American drones and aircraft carriers. Killing is done by all, no question about it.
But is it true, as the Western intellectual elites keep telling us, that “the problem is not with Islam or with the Muslim people” ? We are constantly reminded that 99% of Muslims are not terrorists. (Actually, this is faint comfort, as 1% of a billion and a half Muslims would be 15 million terrorists....Let’s hope not. Furthermore, while most Muslims may not be terrorists, most terrorists today are, alas, Muslims).
So is there a problem with Islam, or not? For a discussion of this question, see Madeleine’s excellent January 17 post, “Muslims Urged to Condemn Terrorists: What Madness!”
It is also clear that anti-Semitism is on the rise. Jews are being attacked, killed and they are fleeing from France, Belgium and elsewhere, where they live in fear. Radical Islam manifests itself from Boko Haram in Nigeria to the Uyghurs in Western China, and of course groups such as Al Qaeda and ISIS, which try to outdo each other in barbarism. There are the radicalized youngsters who go from the West to the Middle East for training and indoctrination, and then return to Europe to slaughter innocents in the streets of Paris and Brussels. Some are merely misguided, some are psychopaths. The most monstrous players in this theater are the Imams and the mullahs, cowardly and despicable old men who, from the safety of their mosques, brainwash and send children as young as ten years old to their gruesome deaths and mass murders, strapped with explosives, used as flesh-and-blood suicide bombs. Is there any punishment commensurate with the evil of these old men?
Are the western elites making a mistake? Does the man in the street perceive the threat more clearly? Christianity did not save Rome or Europe. In time, a new world emerged, one better than the one left in shambles.
I have no doubt that the world will some day be a better place than it is today. The West will be a very different place, both culturally and demographically. It will be diverse, heterogeneous and colorful. It will be an amalgam of the West and the East. The identity of entire continents - Europe among them - will be different. Change is inevitable, but it is accompanied by strife. Societies’ identities change, but this involves conflict, power struggle and violence. The old resists the new. This is normal.
I reject American jingoism and the glorification of war, as in “American Sniper.” To suggest that the US will have to go to war against Iran if that country acquires nuclear weapons, as Republicans like McCain desire, borders on insanity. To advocate American “boots on the ground” in places like Syria and Yemen is absurd.
I have a problem with BOTH American saber rattling AND European pacifism. Both are very dangerous. To his great credit, Obama’s middle-of-the-road approach has so far kept us safe without plunging us into new catastrophic military adventures.
Today, there are on both sides of the Atlantic masses of people who, in reaction to the violence, perceive a threat, and there are those who choose not to see things that way. It is widely said that many of the former are uneducated, nativist, knee-jerk xenophobes. As to the latter, they are the West’s liberal elite, the equivalent of the Christians in ancient Rome. The speeches and articles of professors and liberal politicians and columnists urging all to embrace each other rather than to get angry are admirable, but are they also imbecile?
© Tom Kando 2015
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7 comments:
Tom I am not sure what histories of Rome you have read but they do not conform to any that I have read. Rome collapsed for a couple of reasons but none of them were based on external pressures. Rome grew heavy with an administrative structure that was ungovernable. In part because of the size of the empire and in part because of the corruption in the Roman legal and administrative systems.
In this case I think the person on the street has it more correct than the elites. Militant Islam is a threat. We should treat it as a threat. All the baloney from the left about trying to negotiate with them is utter nonsense. Obama's unwillingness to call terrorism - terrorism is caused by his rigid adherence to political correctness. And the person on the street knows it is just plain silly.
The liberal elites have almost nothing in common with the Christians of the Roman era - even in its decline. They are more like the Roman administrators who could not figure out how to deal with the Christians.
I have been critically thinking about this entire subject because our nation is in the grip of fear and as Americans we need to take a stand and promote peace and unity;part of me thinks that we need to create coalitions that speak to better social justice globally and a while another part of me thinks that the leaders need to speak out against these injustices w better policies in place; either way,I and many Americans are in a lot of pain over these atrocities and how do we stop the social bleeding? These are senseless killings and the taking out of atrocities on groups/people because of their ethnicity/cultural heritage, etc.,. is wrong! I see my brother and my sister when I look into the eyes of another human being and it starts with each of us looking inside of our heart and then demanding a world where we can walk down the street and to the park and sit in the movie theater and not have to fear for our lives. We need to take a stand and require our political leaders to create a safer world. I don't know how to do this; however I do know that we spend millions of dollars creating new gadgets and ideas;it is time to start investing in think tanks where we can come together as a community all races, creeds, and cultures and problem solve because at the end of the day we want to each feel safe and this involves humanizing ourselves; I am human and you are human and with this said we need to have a common system of justice and that points to the basic common values values of decency and self-respect. My heart is pained by all the senseless killings; these are people's mothers and fathers and and sons and daughters and brothers and sisters; we need to bring the message of brotherly and sisterly love down to a personal level and keep it real!
Gail
Great articles Tom
Thanks for your comments. Peter likes what I wrote, and Gail’s feelings are genuine.
As to Jonathan - Aw shucks, and here for once I thought he and I might agree...If Attila the Hun, the Visigoths, the Ostrogoths, the Lombards, the Vandals, the Burgundians, the Franks, the Allemannis and a host of other invading tribes did not represent “external pressure,” I don’t know what would!
i think the conflict is between nilism and the contemporary west which is materialism primarially. In the late 60s the counter culture lead to change because there was a movement by artists. I think the west needs a movement by artists in all genres celebrating values more hip and appealing than materialism, sexism, and violence.
Tom:
A couple of things. There has been e-mail "chatter" about the extent to which Sniper is an anti-war movie. That was certainly how I perceived it. (Yes, I'm not normal.) Second, there was a recent NYT graphic from PEW which showed the actual percentage of Muslims in a European country compared to the perception of the number of Muslims in a country. Needless to say, the perception is much greater (sometimes 3X) than reality.
Regarding the values advocated by Carol, I couldn't agree more.
Scott: whether "American Sniper" was anti-war or not, its popularity and the applause it received from the audience at the end, when we saw it, suggest that the public, at least, was in a somewhat "flag-waving" mood.
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