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Rationally Speaking.
N. 28, September 2002
Why bother?
Why being liberal is not a lost cause?
I am what most people in the United States would
describe as an idealist, a progressive, a liberal,
a social democrat, or worse. Consequently, the
question that a few of my friends and I often
ask ourselves is: why bother? Let me explain.
The world some of us would like to see, and are
fighting to help bring about with our actions
and writings, is one in which more people will
use reason to make their decisions; fundamentalist
religion will be seen as silly at best, and profoundly
misguided and dangerous at worst; the environment
will be thought of a real priority; war will not
be possible because of a truly civilized international
system of police and tribunals (you know, just
like modern societies are an improvement over
the law of the jungle?); and human beings will
engage not in the search for profit or shallow
consumerism but in the pursuit of true happiness
and fulfillment. Scary, eh?
Now, the world in which we actually live is apparently
characterized by rampant superstition and nonsense;
fundamentalist religion is seen as a respectable,
even enviable, way of life; the environment keeps
taking a beating notwithstanding international
conferences and political pledges; wars are been
fought all over the planet and more are in the
planning; and many of our societys role
models are among the shallowest (movie and sports
stars) and meanest (corporate executives) people
one can think of.
I repeat: why bother? I mean: in order to be
a liberal freethinker one has either to be a masochist
or a hopeless optimist, completely out of touch
with reality. We are bombarded with bad news every
day and from every corner. Yes, we had eight years
of Clinton, blessed be the memory of his presidency,
but he wasnt really a liberal or a progressive.
Rather, he was a fairly moderate Republican (yes,
you read correctly), and hardly slowed down the
onslaught of corporate interests and environmental
catastrophe that has been the hallmark of this
countrys policy since Reagan. To make it
even worse, now we have a president who was not
elected democratically (hey, I thought that happened
only in Third World countries!), who keeps showing
a callous disrespect for the environment and an
equally abominable close tie to big business,
and of whom (for some reason) most people keep
approving because he has character
(by which they must mean that he is able to lie
about his past better than Clinton did).
All of this sounds hopeless, and no matter what
my friends and I write or do, it will likely not
change perceptibly during our lifetime. Then again,
before yielding to depression and committing suicide
or, worse, going on annual pilgrimages to DisneyWorld,
we should consider the idea of different temporal
horizons of activism. You see, all that I have
described so far happens at what I think of as
the mid-time horizon, i.e., stretches of time
that can be measured on the order of a human life.
But there are at least two additional horizons
to consider if you are as stubborn an optimist
as I am.
First, there is the near-time horizon. This is
the here and now, in which we can make a huge
difference at the local level. Our doings and
writings can touch people in countless ways. Its
true: I get testimonials via email every week.
Our actions can make a difference between a school
board adopting a textbook that teaches the nonsense
of creationism and another based on the best science
available. This will affect thousands of kids,
immediately! True, a protest at the local nuclear
plant may go completely unnoticed; but other causes,
like the No-Global movement, have made themselves
heard the world over (despite the obvious irony
intrinsic in such success
). Furthermore,
things do change in major ways, from time to time.
Lets not forget that the Soviet Union and
the Berlin wall crumbled in front of our eyes
after having been apparently unfaltering symbols
of oppression for decades. Equally surprisingly,
Nelson Mandela went from political prisoner to
head of state in South Africa, and the Milosovic
government in the former Yugoslavia disappeared.
These things dont happen if we leave the
field entirely to conservative and regressive
forces.
Then there is the long-time horizon. I know most
people think history is boring, but thats
a pity, because they would find that things do
change during the course of human history and,
often enough, for the better. A few decades ago
it would have been perfectly acceptable to enforce
racist laws in the United States; today this is
unthinkable. Not long before that, women were
not allowed to vote, while now all political parties
consistently court them. Slavery was sanctioned
in Western countries until the 19th century, but
it is now actively fought everywhere in the world.
Religious fundamentalists may have a large influence
on the cultural and political life of the United
States and the Middle East, but that is a far
cry from the absolute dominance of religious bigotry
that characterized several centuries of Western
history deservedly referred to as the dark
ages. And the environment wasnt even
an issue until the second half of the 20th century.
These long-term changes, like the short-term ones
listed above, were made possible by the continuous
action of people who kept protesting, marching
and writing to further human flourishing in the
broadest possible sense. Most of them saw no perceptible
change for the better during their life times,
but they believed it would eventually come if
they kept up the struggle. They were right.
I am under no illusion that this column or anything
I do will change the world, but I do know that
people are positively affected by what is written
and done in the here and now. And I know that
it is because of my friends and colleagues who
keep protesting against nonsense, greed and repression
that we can conceive of a better future for humanity.
Indeed, to some extent, that future has already
happened.
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