LATEST

CHARBONNEAU — The fictional arc of democracy

COLUMN — “Why do they hate us?” is the plaintive cry when Western countries are attacked by ostensible terrorists. The simple answer is that we invaded Iran and Afghanistan and made a bad situation worse; reduced a stable, tribal, primitive, though brutal, country to the ashes from which ISIS could rise.

CharbonneauhedThe more complex answer, and the one hardest to accept, is that not everyone in the world believes in the values of liberal democracies. That’s hard to accept because we see the arc of enlightened societies leading towards the things we hold dear: freedom of speech and assembly, constitutional rights enforced by the rule of law, protection of minorities, equality of women, the right of all children to attend school.

In our chauvinistic view, our enlightened civilization has evolved to the pinnacle of societies and it’s our wish, no, our duty, to spread our values to the dark and backward corners of the globe.

Our assumption that democracy and liberal values are intertwined is somewhat naïve, says author John Gray in Harper’s magazine. Gray points to earlier generations of liberal thinkers who saw no necessary connection between the two. Indeed, they envisioned democratic societies that were hostile to liberal values.

One of those thinkers was Jean-Jacques Rousseau and his principle of “general will.” Paraphrasing from the Wikipedia article, general will is the common expression of an identifiable group as conveyed through their customs, laws, and practices. The goal of general will is harmony, not liberal values, or even democracy. As such, “general will can be found In the principles of prescribed law of all civilized nations, in the social practices of savage and barbarous peoples; in the tacit agreements obtaining amongst the enemies of mankind,” according to one interpreter of Rousseau.

Although we are reluctant to admit it, the principle of general will is illustrated by how we conduct our daily lives without much thought of liberal values. “Freedom” is trotted out on occasions like Remembrance Day as something veterans fought for. Gray puts it this way:

“Most human beings, most of the time, care about other things more than they care about being free. Many will vote readily for an illiberal government if it promises security against violence or hardship, protects a way of life to which they are attached, and denies freedom to people they hate.”

This being a federal election year, Conservative campaigning illustrates the appeal of general will: good economic management not affordable education for all; laws that allow government spying not civil rights; protection against perceived jihadists in Canada (despite scant evidence) not freedom of speech.

Do they hate us because we don’t live up to our liberal values that we trot out on special occasions but otherwise keep in a tightly-sealed jar on the shelf?

No, they hate us for their own hermetically sealed values, such as the corrupting force that music and fashion have on women in decadent Western societies.

We misunderstand the principles of their societies almost as much as we are blind to ours. That said, I am a shameless chauvinist. We must rise above the basic government that general will prescribes.

David Charbonneau is a retired TRU electronics instructor who hosts a blog at http://www.eyeviewkamloops.wordpress.com.

Mel Rothenburger's avatar
About Mel Rothenburger (11675 Articles)
ArmchairMayor.ca is a forum about Kamloops and the world. It has more than one million views. Mel Rothenburger is the former Editor of The Daily News in Kamloops, B.C. (retiring in 2012), and past mayor of Kamloops (1999-2005). At ArmchairMayor.ca he is the publisher, editor, news editor, city editor, reporter, webmaster, and just about anything else you can think of. He is grateful for the contributions of several local columnists. This blog doesn't require a subscription but gratefully accepts donations to help defray costs.

2 Comments on CHARBONNEAU — The fictional arc of democracy

  1. Unknown's avatar Walter Trkla // February 14, 2015 at 4:28 PM // Reply

    Here is your democracy at work. In Minsk we just had a round table discussion about Ukraine and guess what was agreed. Lots of nonsense signed by a Ukrainian without authority to sign—Kuchma. But, look what they agreed on —–pardons and amnesties—. Blanket amnesty for all the war crimes (including MH-17 and Odessa “barbecue”). .—Now do tell me about our democracy, when Obama was consulted and Harper afterwards did they agree to this as well if not Mr. Harper you need to shout from the rooftops that terrorists that shoot down civilian planes will not get an amnesty in Canada or anywhere where Canada has a say.=== Disgusting people.

    Like

  2. The Doomsday clock is ticking , wilful blindness ignores that we share that fate ! Stupid is as stupid does !

    Like

Leave a comment