Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Western Superiority

Our current conflict in the Middle East has been characterized by some as a "war of ideas." While I am in substantial agreement with this distinction, great deals of people in the west seem to be uncomfortable with the premise. Who are we, they say, to claim an ideological and moral superiority over the east? The thought seems to be that ethics are culturally contingent, indeed, that ethics are a subjective worldview where right and wrong is really a gray area.

Many who take issue with conclusions of this sort will argue that there really are moral truths in this world, much in the same way that there are scientific truths. They will ask why, if we would not be tempted to consult the third world on issues of technology or economics, why should we be reluctant to make similar criticisms of their ethics? Civilizations of this sort have simply not advanced to the point where they are in a position to make legitimate claims about the way the world is. It is no accident, after all, that the term "third world" exists.

Before I go on, I would like to dispel the notion that claims of this sort of are racist, which they are surely not. Consider that at the height of its power in the 16th and 17th centuries, the Ottoman Empire was one of the foremost civilizations in the world. The Ottomans were an Islamic tradition, but contributed mightily to mathematics, astronomy, and the modern calendar. They were an exceptionally tolerant civilization, as Jews and Christians lived relatively undisturbed under Ottoman rule. This is in stark contrast to a Europe during this time that was burning "heretics" at the stake and converting Muslims and Jews to Christianity in violent fashion. It is reasonable to say, at that point in history, that white culture was inferior to Mesopotamian (Middle Eastern) culture. Clearly, therefore, notions of racism are false.

Typical arguments against the equality of cultures are unavoidably abstract, however, as it is difficult in cultural discourse to make evidentiary claims supporting one side or the other. As an aspiring historian, I would like to map this debate onto a historical perspective. One of the principle conflicts of the 20th century was western liberalism vs. far eastern communism. A common historical view is that the west, especially United States, overstated communism as a threat and was largely paranoid in its dealings with the spreading communist doctrine. While this may be true to a degree, we will see that communism, as a worldview, was incredibly destructive and the direct cause of a level of human misery that may be unmatched in human history. Communist movements in the Soviet Union, The People's Republic of China, and Cambodia saw affronts to basic human rights that western liberalism could not possibly create. Joseph Stalin's Great Purge, which caused the murder of more than 1 million Soviet citizens, directly correlated with the suppression of political dissent inherent in communist doctrine. Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge, who claimed the lives of more than 2 million Cambodians, were a communist regime bent on purging ethnic Vietnamese, Muslim and Christian Cambodians, and Buddhist monks from the Cambodian population. The Khmer Rouge targeted these groups as opponents to communist Cambodia. Finally, Mao Zedong, following his victory over the Chinese Nationalists in the Chinese Civil War, declared the beginning of the communist People's Republic of China in 1949. One of the first acts under this regime was massive land reform, which called for the redistribution of wealthy land owner holdings to the Chinese peasantry. As most land owners in China were reluctant to give up their land, Mao oversaw the slaughter of resisting land owners in order to enforce the new reforms. The maintenance of the new communist China required the deaths of an estimated 2 million people.

We may be tempted to make a distinction here between what, on the surface, seem to be political grievances. I would submit, however, that when such movements lead to the abject extermination of millions of people, the motivation ceases to be merely political. When the maintenance of "political" ideas includes mass graves, we have left politics behind for the sort of ideology that is manifestly evil. Would anyone hesitate to say that the ideals of the west were just plain better than eastern collectivism here? One simply cannot attribute liberal democracy to the sort of human destruction that one can easily attribute to the eastern ideological patterns of the 20th century. There are those who will stand up in 2007 and claim that it is arrogant to claim western moral superiority, and receive relatively little pressure for taking such a stance. I wonder just how ridiculous these people would look making the same claims in 1950, as Chinese land owners were being taken behind their homes and executed for refusing to submit to the new communist regime. It is important that our discourse begin to point out just how wayward this thinking is, or we will be unable to criticize with sufficient vigor the sort of evil ideas about the world that have already begun knocking at our door.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

i dont understand this entry...i dont think there is really a debate that western ideals are better...its just that some people are afraid to say it

Anonymous said...

ethics and morality are not scientific, and they have no absolutes. our society does not agree with that of the muslim world, but our superior standing in the world does not automatically put our values above theirs. economic success does not grant monopolies on what is right

Anonymous said...

i admire your attempt to make ethics black and white, but i think you fall short. as the caliphate said, there are no absolutes to call upon here. it is a war of ideas, but there is no way to know for sure if we are fighting on the right side.

Anonymous said...

western arrogance at its best. this is typical pithy american thinking

Anonymous said...

if western ethics are based on judeo-christian principles, than there is no way to say they are better than that of islamic principles. both books lay their claim to morality in ancient books, all of which proclaim their own infallibility. therefore it isnt a battle of ideals, its a battle of faiths.

Anonymous said...

the comparison with Mao, Pol Pot, and Stalin is not legitimate. you make good points but they are ruined by a bad analogy.

Anonymous said...

caliphate is exactly right. Some people are afraid to say it because views such as the ones expressed here by kingdom come, klaw, etc. are the very same expressed by the elites of western society. The same people who believe they are intellectually superior to all us other ignorant rubes, like far-left college professor on campuses across this country who indoctrinate their students with the idiotic drivel that the west is morally equivalent to the Muslim world. The same Muslim world that stones women for being raped, gives the death penalty for apostasy, won't allow woman to drive, hangs homosexuals, holds violent protests over cartoons, and on and on and on. How arrogant of me to think that it is wrong to hang homosexuals, right klaw.

I challenge any of these idiots to go and live in the morally equivalent country of Iran or Saudi Arabia, or how about Sudan. Put up or shut up.

Any country or culture that does not believe that it's values and morals are superior to others will not ultimately survive.

Morals are not relative. If you believe that they are, then you have no morals.

Anonymous said...

Scene: A Muslim community in France.

Klaw witnesses a Muslim father brutally stab his 14 year old daughter for the crime of being seen alone with a boy (honor killing). Although he is repulsed and sickened, he says nothing, does nothing to stop it because he is unable to judge this man. It is their culture. Who is he? He is not better after all. He does not go to the police. He believes it is arrogant for him to assert his western beliefs over this man originally from the east. So by remaining quiet, he choses to defend the indefensible.

Anonymous said...

walker,

You mean to tell me that you cannot say that the principle of "love the sinner" is not morally superior to "kill the unbeliever or relegate them to second class citizenship"? What are you smoking, son?

Our laws are based on Judeo-Christian ethics. Most Muslim countries base their laws on sharia. Whose laws would you rather live under and why?

Anonymous said...

kingdom come,

So your telling me that the value of woman having the same rights as men is equal or inferior to woman having little rights? So by sharia law, a woman who is raped must have 5 men as witnesses in order to prove that she was raped, and this is equally of value to you? It must be because to say otherwise would mean that you are asserting that the way we treat women in our court system is superior.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous: American values are not Judeo-Christian. the heritage of our founding documents attests to this. the constitution is about as secular a document as one will find in government anywhere. the establishment clause and the remainder of the first amendment are liberal humanist values, not "judeo-christian." in fact, the most ardent opponent of liberal democracy at its beginning in the west was the christian establishment (see French Revolution, Calvinism, Lutheranism in 18th centry). what is the basis of judeo-christian values? the ten commandments? of the 10 of them, only 2 have similar laws in american government: killing and stealing, neither of which christianity or judiasm have a monopoly on. killing and stealing is a value held by non judeo-christian nations all over the world today and in world history. human beings can easily get to murder and stealing being unethical without the pages of the bible. i think its safe to say that thomas jefferson helped define american values, and is he not famous for promoting a "wall of seperation between church and state"?

Anonymous said...

i would like to also comment the post made by anonymous about "loving the sinner" being a superior moral value to "killing the unbeliever." firstly, "loving the sinner" is not an american value in the first place. the legality and practice of capital punishment in the U.S. should be evidence enough of this. the death penalty (which enjoys popular support in opinion polls) is a curious method of punishing our criminals if americans do indeed "love" their sinners. secondly, loving sinners is not a moral position anyway. do i "love" the theocratic suicide murderers? no. i wish to encompass their defeat. it is positively immoral to say that one loved them. it is disgraceful, cowardly, and masochistic. this is not to say that i believe the sharia is moral on any level, i just wont stand for the idea that loving the sinner is a moral position. to answer the question posed to me, i would rather live under our laws, but that question misses the point entirely. if you were to ask most muslims which laws they would rather live under, they would say the sharia. they would say this because their values are defined by the region and culture they were born and raised in. if you were born in iran and raised in the islamic tradition you would undoubtedly answer the same way. it is for this reason that values are relative.

Anonymous said...

i won't disagree with your main premise, but (let's say our ethics are superior and ideally everyone would follow them), does that mean that we can impose them? is it possible to force an ethical outlook on an entire culture without committing the kinds of atrocities you outlined (purging the dissenters)? I suspect that it is not. And if it isn't possible, then couldn't we attribute the "evil" of the dictators you mentioned to the fact that they were trying to bring an entire society into an ideological position for which it wasn't ready, rather than the inherent inferiority of eastern collectivism? Regardless of our moral standing, cultural values have to develop over time.

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